People v. Tatum

2019 IL App (1st) 162403
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 13, 2021
Docket1-16-2403
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 162403 (People v. Tatum) 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. Tatum, 2019 IL App (1st) 162403 (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Digitally signed by Reporter of Decisions Reason: I attest to Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and integrity of this document Appellate Court Date: 2021.04.13 10:27:07 -05'00'

People v. Tatum, 2019 IL App (1st) 162403

Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Caption SYLVESTER TATUM, Defendant-Appellant.

District & No. First District, Third Division No. 1-16-2403

Filed August 7, 2019 Rehearing denied October 7, 2019

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 13-CR-3551;the Review Hon. Thomas V. Gainer Jr., Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed.

Counsel on James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Sarah Curry, of State Appellate Appeal Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.

Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg, John E. Nowak, and Mari R. Hatzenbuehler, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.

Panel JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Howse concurred in the judgment and opinion. OPINION

¶1 Defendant Sylvester Tatum was jumped and beaten on a street corner. By all accounts, he was furious that his best friend, Levi Stubblefield, stood by during the beating and let him fend for himself. Moments later, the two friends went inside defendant’s apartment building, where several gunshots were soon fired. Stubblefield’s body was found in a vacant apartment on the first floor where defendant, Stubblefield, and others from the neighborhood often hung out. The State’s theory at trial was that defendant, feeling abandoned and betrayed, killed Stubblefield in a fit of rage. The jury agreed and found defendant guilty of first degree murder. ¶2 On appeal, defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction, that his right to a speedy trial was violated, that the State impermissibly bolstered the credibility of two key witnesses with their prior consistent statements, and that the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed the jury to view graphic autopsy photos that had little or no probative value. We affirm.

¶3 BACKGROUND ¶4 I ¶5 By November 4, 2011, Stubblefield’s mother, Arbrett, and his sister, Latoya, had grown concerned. They had neither seen nor heard from Stubblefield for at least a couple of days, which was unusual. Latoya spoke to the police, who told her to find the last person to be seen with her brother. Latoya went to see defendant, a close friend of the family since childhood. Defendant told Latoya that he had not seen Stubblefield. He also said that he was beaten up two days earlier, on November 2, and that Stubblefield did not come to his aid during the fight. Defendant and Latoya filed a missing persons report together. ¶6 The next day, Arbrett, Latoya, and Latoya’s husband, Lamont, went to defendant’s home, a first-floor apartment at 320 North Pine Street in Chicago. Latoya asked defendant to help them look for Stubblefield in the building. Defendant directed them to an apartment on the second floor, but Latoya wanted to check the vacant apartment on the first floor, which she knew to be a hangout spot that her brother frequented. (To be precise, the building is 320-322 North Pine Street; it has two front entrances, one corresponding to each address. The vacant apartment is on the 320 side; defendant’s apartment is on the 322 side. But other than Detective Mike Mancuso, the witnesses referred to the building as 320 North Pine, without any further distinction.) ¶7 Stubblefield’s family and defendant went to the vacant apartment. The door was locked, and defendant did not let them in. Through the front window, Arbrett and Latoya saw shell casings on the floor. Arbrett then saw the lower half of her son’s body. The family called the police, and after a forced entry, Stubblefield’s dead body was found just inside the front door. He had numerous gunshot wounds. ¶8 Late in 2012, about a year after Stubblefield’s murder, the police issued an investigative alert for defendant. He was arrested in January 2013 and soon indicted for this offense. ¶9 The evidence implicating defendant came from three principal occurrence witnesses— Christopher Randolph, Tyisha Hillard, and Al Thompson—who testified for the State. These witnesses all knew defendant and Stubblefield and considered them friends. And they all had prior convictions. (Mostly, but not exclusively, drug cases.) At the time of trial, Randolph was

-2- on parole from his most recent conviction, Thompson had a pending UUWF charge, and Hillard was on probation for escape on an underlying drug case. Hillard also had a pending case for contempt, having failed to obey a witness subpoena issued by the trial court in this case. She frankly acknowledged that she did not want to testify. Thompson was equally clear that he only begrudgingly talked to the police.

¶ 10 II ¶ 11 Randolph testified that on November 2, 2011, he was hanging out in front of a small retail strip near the intersection of Central Avenue and Lake Street. Defendant and Stubblefield were both there. Four or five guys from the neighborhood, all in their teens or twenties, arrived. They were all relatives—a son and some nephews—of one “Robert K.” Randolph. The other witnesses all agreed that it was “fair to describe” Robert K. as a “dangerous man,” “off the west side,” who was “involved in not so legal activities” and who was no friend to either defendant or Stubblefield. But the witnesses were reluctant to say more than that. Randolph, in particular, denied knowing whether that retail strip was Robert K.’s drug turf. ¶ 12 Robert K.’s relatives unleashed a “straight whooping” on defendant. They fought with him and “jumped up and down on” him for several minutes, while defendant struggled in vain to defend himself. They did not attack Stubblefield, who “was sitting off to the side” and did not try to help defendant during the beating. ¶ 13 After the beating, defendant, Stubblefield, and Randolph all left the retail strip. Robert K.’s relatives stayed there. Defendant walked back to his apartment building on Pine Street, a block east of Central Avenue. Stubblefield followed, walking right behind him. Randolph, who lived across the street from defendant, headed back the same way. But he kept his distance, on the opposite side of the street, because he wasn’t sure if the fighting would continue—and because “there is known to be shooting around there,” particularly in the aftermath of a fight. ¶ 14 On the walk back, defendant was visibly mad at Stubblefield, and the two got into a “heated argument.” On direct examination, Randolph testified that he couldn’t hear what they were arguing about. On cross-examination, Randolph acknowledged that he had told the grand jury otherwise: Defendant and Stubblefield met up or “reconvene[d]” after the beating and had a “heated argument or verbal confrontation *** concerning why [Stubblefield] didn’t help [defendant].” (After tiptoeing into some further areas of Randolph’s grand jury testimony, including the apparent motive for the beating, defense counsel withdrew those questions, and the trial court instructed the jury to disregard them. But as we read the record, the question about the argument between Stubblefield and defendant stood.) ¶ 15 Defendant and Stubblefield went inside defendant’s apartment building, through one of the front entrances on Pine Street. (Randolph did not say which one.) Randolph saw them from the gangway of his building, directly across the street, where he was smoking a cigarette. Other people were out and about, “like a woman walking her dog,” but there was “no group of people” or “nothing like that” on the block, and nobody else in the immediate vicinity of defendant’s apartment building.

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People v. Tatum
2019 IL App (1st) 162403 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
2019 IL App (1st) 162403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tatum-illappct-2021.