People v. Zoph

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 27, 2008
Docket2-06-0015 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Zoph (People v. Zoph) 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. Zoph, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

No. 2--06--0015 Filed: 3-27-08

______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) Appeal from the Circuit Court OF ILLINOIS, ) of Lake County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 04--CF--2440 ) JAMES E. ZOPH, ) Honorable ) John T. Phillips, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE O'MALLEY delivered the opinion of the court:

Following a jury trial in the circuit court of Lake County, defendant, James E. Zoph, appeals

his conviction of first-degree murder of a person 60 years of age or over by exceptionally brutal or

heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty (720 ILCS 5/9--1(b)(16) (West 2004)). Defendant

contends that he was deprived of a fair trial by a number of the prosecutor's remarks during rebuttal

closing argument and by the publication of certain prejudicially gruesome photographs of the victim.

We affirm.

The record on appeal is moderately voluminous. We therefore summarize only those facts

necessary for an understanding of the issues raised on appeal and to address those issues. Further

factual detail as necessary will be supplied in the analysis of defendant's contentions. No. 2--06--0015

The evidence adduced at defendant's jury trial revealed that, on June 29, 2004, in Zion,

Illinois, defendant's aunt, Wanda Walker, was found dead in the home she shared with her sister,

defendant's adoptive mother, Betty Zoph. Zoph had adopted defendant when he was about eight

years old, and defendant had lived in her home until about 1995, when defendant was in his mid-20s.

At the time of her death, Wanda Walker was a 66-year-old woman who was physically disabled.

Walker was discovered on the floor in the basement of her split-level ranch home. When she was

found, it appeared that she had been severely beaten about the head, neck, and chest. An autopsy

performed on Walker showed that the right side of her jaw was fractured, she had bleeding in her

brain, the hyoid bone in her neck was fractured, she had petechiae in her eyes, and eight ribs in her

upper chest, four on each side, had been broken as a result of the beating she experienced. Further,

when Walker was discovered, she had extensive bruising on her face and neck, and the bruising on

her face resembled the bottom of a shoe, or a shoe print. The injuries in her throat and the petechiae

were consistent with strangulation. Following his examination, the pathologist concluded that blunt-

force trauma caused Walker's death.

Police arrived at the murder scene in response to an alarm from the security system installed

in the home. Investigation of the murder scene revealed that the glass from a basement window had

been removed, apparently to frustrate the alarm system in the home. Above that window, there was

a smudged palm print. Comparison of the palm print revealed that it was not defendant's, nor did

it match anyone in the home. A sliding glass door was slightly ajar, and the officers used this to gain

initial access to the home. The bathroom toilet in the basement had a wad of tissue paper on the

bowl, above the water. Later testing of this tissue paper revealed that defendant's DNA was present

on the paper.

-2- No. 2--06--0015

At about 12:30 a.m. on June 30, 2004, defendant was arrested as he attempted to steal a car

from Ramey's Autobody in Winthrop Harbor. Defendant was discovered inside a GM pickup truck,

wearing rubber gloves, and with a screwdriver, a multitool, and a wrench in his pocket.

Defendant was interrogated by Waukegan police officer Charles Schletz and Zion police

officer Kevin Harris, both of whom are assigned to the Lake County Major Crimes Task Force.

Initially, defendant refused to speak or otherwise respond to the officers' questions. After a few

minutes, Harris began to read defendant his rights from a preprinted form. Defendant told the

officers that he understood his rights and then agreed to give them a statement.

Defendant admitted that he had been inside the Zoph house on the morning of June 29 (this

admission may have been prompted by Schletz's statement that the police knew defendant had been

in the Zoph house, because they had a witness who had seen defendant leaving the house).

Defendant stated that, on June 29, he had just returned from Indiana, having hitchhiked from

Evansville to Chicago. Defendant explained that he was in Indiana trying to investigate a will or

inheritance and visiting members of his mother and aunt's family who might have had some

information for him. Defendant took a train, intending to stop at Zion, but fell asleep and got off the

train in Winthrop Harbor. Defendant walked to the Zoph house, where he had grown up. He

explained that he had removed the glass from the basement window in order to bypass the alarm

system. He was in the basement looking for papers or documents related to the will or inheritance

he was investigating. Defendant told police that he was wearing a black T-shirt adorned with a

Maltese cross and also had black gloves and a duffel bag with some tools. Defendant was searching

in the basement when Walker came downstairs and discovered him. Walker asked defendant what

he was doing, and so defendant was not able to keep looking for the papers. Defendant made as if

-3- No. 2--06--0015

to walk past Walker. As he was passing Walker, defendant grabbed her in the crook of his arm and

began choking her. He continued to choke Walker until he believed she had passed out. Defendant

laid Walker down on the floor and resumed his search. While defendant was searching, Walker sat

up. Defendant "instinctively" kicked her in the head and Walker fell back onto the floor. Defendant

again resumed his search and Walker again sat up. Defendant "panicked and lost it." Defendant

admitted that he "kicked her, choked her neck with one hand and stomped her with [his] foot several

times until she stayed down." Defendant became frightened and fled the house, setting off the alarm

system. Defendant admitted that he knew he set off the alarm, and he ran along the alley behind the

house, then headed through Beulah Park and into the woods. In the woods, defendant threw away

the gloves and his T-shirt, and he discarded his duffel bag under some power lines on the east side

of Sheridan Road. Defendant then circled the woods four times in order to throw off any

bloodhounds that the police might employ to track him. In the evening, he visited a friend to get

a screwdriver and then made his way to Ramey Auto, where he tried to steal a car.

During the interrogation, defendant attempted to explain where he had discarded his gloves

and T-shirt. Defendant suggested he could show the officers better than he could explain, so the

officers and defendant traveled to Beulah Park. The officers had called for evidence technicians to

meet them at the park. There, defendant walked the officers to the approximate location where he

had discarded his clothing. The officers instructed the evidence technicians to search for the items

of clothing and returned defendant to the sheriff's department in Waukegan. The evidence

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People v. Zoph, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zoph-illappct-2008.