People v. Suggs

2020 IL App (1st) 161632-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
Docket1-16-1632
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 161632-U (People v. Suggs) 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. Suggs, 2020 IL App (1st) 161632-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 161632-U No. 1-16-1632 Order filed March 31, 2020 Modified on rehearing June 1, 2020

First Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 15 CR 2090 ) JAMAL SUGGS, ) Honorable ) Timothy Joseph Joyce, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Griffin and Justice Pierce concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The State proved Jamal Suggs guilty of robbery and unlawful restraint beyond a reasonable doubt where the primary eyewitness provided a sufficiently reliable identification. The trial court improperly imposed a Class X sentence. We affirmed in part, vacated in part, and imposed a Class 2 sentence of seven years.

¶2 The trial court found Jamal Suggs guilty of robbery and unlawful restraint and imposed a

16-year sentence. The State’s principal witness identified Suggs as one of three men who robbed

a pharmacy. Suggs argues that his convictions rested entirely on this witness’s dubious

identification testimony. We disagree and affirm his conviction. While the robbery occurred No. 1-16-1632

quickly and under highly stressful circumstances, the eyewitness had seen Suggs in the pharmacy

every day for three days leading up to the robbery. The robber wore the same sweatshirt that

Suggs wore to the pharmacy the day before the robbery and the same eyewitness identified

Suggs in a photo array. Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, as we must,

we cannot say it was irrational for the trial court to find Suggs guilty.

¶3 Suggs also argues that the trial court improperly found him eligible for Class X

sentencing based on his criminal history. Specifically, he argues that the trial court should not

have considered his first predicate offense because, had he committed that offense at the time of

this offense, he would have been adjudicated delinquent as a juvenile, not convicted as an adult.

Following the reasoning of this court’s recent decision in People v. Miles, 2020 IL App (1st)

180736, we agree. We vacate Suggs’s Class X sentence and exercise our authority under Illinois

Supreme Court Rule 615(b)(4) to impose a Class 2 sentence of seven years.

¶4 Background

¶5 On the afternoon of December 19, 2014, three people robbed an independent pharmacy.

They took cash, a purse and cell phone, and two bottles of promethazine with codeine,

commonly known as “lean.” At Suggs’s bench trial, pharmacy employees Melene Jones and

Leanna Gryz testified that they saw three men come into the pharmacy at around 2:30 p.m. Jones

noticed the eyes of one of the offenders as “green and kind of buggy,” and he wore a blue hoodie

which had a “symbol of a horseshoe” on the front. On cross-examination, Jones agreed the

horseshoe symbol is the logo of the brand “True Religion.”

¶6 Jones saw the same person in the pharmacy each of the three days before the robbery. On

December 18, a man came in wearing a similar hoodie. He came in with a woman, who asked

-2- No. 1-16-1632

about medication. The man stood “behind her kind of peeking over the door.” After Jones told

them the pharmacy owner did not want the man in there, “him and the girl just turned around and

left out.” Surveillance footage from that day shows the man and the woman in the pharmacy for

20 seconds.

¶7 On December 17, Jones saw who she believed to be the same man and noticed “just skin

tone, [and] his eye color. That’s pretty much it.” The man “came to the window and proceeded to

ask [Jones] more questions about medication.” There is no surveillance video from this day. On

December 16, Jones saw the same man looking through a window in the pharmacy and asked if

she could help him. That day she noticed the man’s eyes, skin tone, height, and “small build.”

There is no surveillance video from this day either, but Jones estimated the entire encounter

lasted 30 to 35 seconds.

¶8 Responding Chicago Police Officer Francisco Luevano testified that Jones told him that

one of the robbers wore a black hooded sweatshirt and blue jeans and had brown eyes, another

wore a black hoodie, and the third robber wore a red jacket. Gryz could not give a description of

the offenders. Detective Ferguson similarly testified that Jones told him on the day of the robbery

that one offender had brown eyes and wore a black hooded sweatshirt, dark pants and boots,

another offender had a hoodie on and darker pants but she was unsure of his footwear, and she

did not get a good look at the third offender. Jones told Ferguson that one of the robbers was at

the pharmacy three consecutive days before the robbery.

¶9 A few days later, Detective Ferguson returned to the pharmacy and looked at surveillance

footage from December 18 and 19 multiple times with Jones and Gryz. In the surveillance

-3- No. 1-16-1632

footage from December 18, the offender who Jones identified as Suggs had on a dark colored

hooded sweatshirt with white piping and a True Religion horseshoe logo on the chest.

¶ 10 The video footage from the day of the robbery shows 41 seconds elapsing between the

time the three men walked up to the pharmacy counter to when they ran out of the store. One of

the men wore a dark colored hooded sweatshirt with white piping and True Religion logo like the

sweatshirt on the man who had been in the store the day before. The sweatshirt was tied tightly

around the man’s head and face, and he had a black mask covering the bottom half of his face—

only his eyes were visible.

¶ 11 The trial court found Suggs guilty of robbery and unlawful restraint. Though both Jones

and Gryz identified Suggs in court, because Gryz could not make a pretrial identification, the

court found that “the case turns on the testimony and efficacy of the identification of Mr. Suggs

by Ms. Jones.” In finding the identification sufficient, the court emphasized that the person in the

pharmacy on the 19th “was wearing his clothing in precisely the same manner as Mr. Suggs was

the day before.”

¶ 12 After a sentencing hearing, the court found that it was obligated to sentence Suggs as

Class X offender based on his criminal history, which included a 2011 felony conviction for

burglary and a 2012 felony conviction for robbery. The trial court sentenced Suggs to 16 years

in prison.

¶ 13 Analysis

¶ 14 Suggs challenges his conviction on reasonable doubt grounds, arguing the State’s key

witness failed to reliably identify him. He also raises several challenges to his sentence—two

arguments that the trial court erred in finding him eligible for Class X sentencing, and one

-4- No. 1-16-1632

argument challenging his sentence as excessive. We find the State proved Suggs guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt, but that the trial court erred in imposing a Class X sentence.

¶ 15 Reasonable Doubt

¶ 16 Suggs primarily argues that we should reverse his convictions outright because Jones’s

identification was so unreliable that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable

doubt.

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Related

People v. Williams
2021 IL App (1st) 191615 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2021)

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2020 IL App (1st) 161632-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-suggs-illappct-2020.