People v. Wallace

2022 IL App (1st) 191241-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 2022
Docket1-19-1241
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (1st) 191241-U (People v. Wallace) 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. Wallace, 2022 IL App (1st) 191241-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL App (1st) 191241-U

No. 1-19-1241

Order filed June 30, 2022.

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 DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County ) v. ) 16 CR 8096 ) WILLIAM WALLACE, ) The Honorable ) Ursula Walowski, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The evidence was sufficient to sustain defendant’s convictions for aggravated criminal sexual assault and attempted aggravated criminal sexual assault. In addition, the latter conviction did not violate the one-act, one crime doctrine, and any error in the jury instructions did not rise to plain error. Per the parties’ agreement, defendant’s aggravated battery conviction is vacated.

¶2 Following a jury trial, defendant William Wallace was found guilty of the aggravated

criminal sexual assault, attempted aggravated criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual No. 1-19-1241

abuse and aggravated battery of 30-year-old N.W. On appeal, defendant asserts that (1) the State

failed to prove that he sexually penetrated N.W.’s sex organ, as required to sustain his conviction

for aggravated criminal sexual assault; (2) his conviction for attempted aggravated criminal

sexual assault violates the one-act, one-crime doctrine; (3) the evidence was insufficient to

sustain that conviction; (4) the trial court erroneously instructed the jury that it could consider an

uncharged offense as evidence of his propensity to commit the charged offenses; and (5) his

aggravated battery conviction must be vacated. For the following reasons, we vacate defendant’s

aggravated battery conviction and affirm the court’s judgment in all other respects.

¶3 I. Background

¶4 Before trial, the State filed a motion to allow other crimes evidence, namely, evidence

that defendant assaulted 16-year-old M.S immediately before he assaulted N.W. The State

argued that such evidence was part of a continuing narrative but was otherwise admissible as

evidence of defendant’s propensity to commit sex offenses (725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(a)(1) (West

2016)). The evidence also spoke to N.W.’s credibility, consent, motive, modus operandi,

identity, intent and the absence of mistake. The court granted that motion.

¶5 At trial, M.S. testified that on April 29, 2016, she lived in a second-floor apartment at 216

North Kilbourn with her mother, brothers and grandparents. Just after 8 p.m., M.S. was outside

with family members, heading up the stairs into their home, when she felt a hand grab her

“booty, like a tight firm grip.” She was grabbed “not all the way in the middle but like, you

know, when you go grip like cup under.”

¶6 M.S. said, “that man just touched me,” and ran upstairs. Her mother M.J. initially

responded, “Girl, stop playing,” having apparently not yet seen defendant, but M.J. then turned

around, elbowed defendant and asked what he was doing. Upstairs in their apartment, M.S.

2 No. 1-19-1241

called 911 and M.J. told M.S.’s grandfather what had happened. M.S. saw from the window that

defendant, now on the ground across the street, was fighting with another woman who was

screaming for help. M.J. and M.S.’s grandparents went to the woman’s aid, kicking and fighting

defendant, without any reaction on his part, until the police arrived. The recording of M.S.’s 911

call was played for the jury.

¶7 M.J. testified that on the night in question, her family was walking in a single file line to

enter the house when M.S., who was in front of M.J., said, “Mom, that man touched me.”

Initially, M.J. did not see anyone and said, "Girl, quit playing," or “Girl, go in the house.” When

M.J. turned to her right, however, she saw defendant, who was just a few inches away. She

pushed everyone inside and elbowed defendant in the face. He just stood there and looked at her.

Once M.J. was upstairs, she told her father C.S. what was happening. She and her father then

joined her mother V.S. in the enclosed porch downstairs. Defendant continued standing there,

looking back and forth between them, his phone and the front door.

¶8 When a woman across the street closed her car door, defendant looked in her direction

and sprinted toward her “like a cat on a rat.” After grabbing her, he threw her on the ground.

While lying somewhat sideways on the ground, defendant had his arm around her neck while his

other hand pulled her shirt up and her pants down. He rubbed “on her bra, across her breasts,

[and] her privates.” In addition, he “was in her pants moving around shuffling, like, by her

vagina.” M.J. also testified that defendant’s hand was “[o]n her vagina, like in that area,” as his

fingers moved around in her underwear. He also kissed her face and mouth and put his tongue in

her mouth. During this, the woman yelled for help, held onto her underwear and fought. M.J. and

her parents also fought defendant, kicking and punching him. When the police arrived, M.J. saw

that defendant’s phone displayed pornography and his penis was hanging out of his zipper. The

3 No. 1-19-1241

testimony of V.S. and C.S. substantially corroborated much of M.J.’s testimony regarding

defendant’s attack on N.W.

¶9 N.W. testified that at 8:30 p.m. on the day in question, she was at her sister’s home

located at 217 North Kilbourn. After getting a cigarette from her car, she started walking back to

her sister’s home. People outside were yelling and cursing but she kept walking. Then, defendant

grabbed her from behind and got her to the ground. She testified, “he was trying to hump my

face and he was trying to pull my clothes down.” Defendant subsequently repositioned himself

so that they were face to face and he pulled her shirt up, putting her bare breast in his mouth. At

some point, he put his mouth on her mouth. As he tried to lower her pants, she tried to pull them

back up, but he ultimately managed to pull her pants down to her midthigh area and pulled her

underwear down so that her vagina was exposed. N.W. further testified that defendant put “his

finger down there.” Specifically, “[i]t was like he was trying to go inside. He was moving his

finger around and trying to find my vagina. He had his fingers inside my lips trying to go inside.”

She reiterated that defendant “had his fingers inside the lips of [her] vagina.” Although N.W.

testified that his finger made contact with or pressed her vagina, she denied that his finger ever

“fully [went] into the hole of the vaginal opening.”

¶ 10 During the attack, N.W. was screaming for help and fighting defendant. In addition to

attacking N.W., defendant was holding his phone, which displayed pornography. After about 10

to 15 minutes, an older couple started hitting defendant. Somehow, N.W. got him off of her and

ran back inside, during which time the police arrived. N.W. spoke to the police on the scene and

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2022 IL App (1st) 191241-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wallace-illappct-2022.