The People v. Auriene

198 N.E. 206, 361 Ill. 440
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1935
DocketNo. 23090. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 206 (The People v. Auriene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Auriene, 198 N.E. 206, 361 Ill. 440 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

James Auriene, Frank DeSalvo, Sam Perry and James Sarantakis .were indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for robbery with a pistol. The first three named were tried together by a jury, convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary. Auriene alone prosecutes a writ of error. His defense is an alibi.

On March 15, 1934, at about 1:15 P. M., five men in a Ford car drove into the alley of the Midwest Grocery Company, at Twenty-fourth street and Western avenue, in Chicago. Four of them, with drawn guns, entered the warehouse, held up the cashier, Harriet Ratkowski, and her assistant, Genevieve Rzeszewski, and escaped with about $738.

The testimony of Joseph Senski, assistant shipping clerk, tended to prove the following: He was on the rear platform in the alley when a Ford sedan drove up. Four of the five men got out. He identified Perry, DeSalvo and Auriene as three of them. Auriene had a blue-steel pistol and the other two men had shot-guns. .They forced him into the building, with Perry holding a shot-gun at his back. Auriene followed them. Twenty-two employees worked there. A number of them, including the witness and some customers, were lined up near a stairway during the hold-up, which took two or three minutes.

Ted Sejud, an assistant buyer, testified that he was on the shipping platform checking out groceries. Perry approached him with a sawed-off shot-gun and ordered him into the building, where he was forced to the wall with the other employees. Auriene was in the main aisle, about twenty feet away, and ordered them to keep in line and stood facing Sejud about a minute and a half. He had a handkerchief over a portion of his face and held a blue-steel revolver in his hand. DeSalvo had a shot-gun and ordered the employees to kneel and keep their heads down. The witness saw two other men with their faces disguised. One of them was named Antonelli and the other was James Sarantakis. Antonelli had a handkerchief on his face and Sarantakis had a black-silk scarf around his neck, which concealed the lower part of his face. About that time a receiving clerk started towards the' office, and Auriene dropped his hand with the handkerchief from his face, gestured with his gun and ordered the clerk back into the line-up. Auriene then went into the office, passing within four feet of the witness. At the conclusion of the hold-up the robbers ran out of the building. Auriene carried the cash drawer.

Genevieve Rzeszewski testified she and Harriet Ratkowski were in the cashier’s cage at the time of the robbery. Auriene came into the cage with a blue-steel revolver, took about $400 from her and about $338 from Miss Ratkowski. The lower part of his face was covered with a handkerchief tied at the back. While he was in the cage he dropped his gun, and as he stooped to pick it up the handkerchief dropped down and she had a good view of his full face: He replaced the handkerchief and opened the money drawer. She saw some tape on the handle of his revolver as he held it in his hand. Over objection she testified the gun found by a police officer when Auriene was arrested was of the same color and general appearance as the gun she saw in the cashier’s cage. The gun introduced in evidence had tape on the handle.

Senski testified defendant had on a blue serge suit, green fedora hat, dark lumber jacket and no overcoat. Sejud testified he had on a dirty pearl-gray felt hat and a dark gray top-coat and was five feet nine or ten inches tall. After the hold-up Sejud told his “boss” that Auriene was about five feet ten inches tall, weighed between 150 and 160 pounds, was dark complexioned, and had a large hook-nose and dark hair. He wore a hat but his hair could be seen. The car in which the men came was a 1932 two-door dark-maroon Ford coach, with yellow wheels. Miss Rzeszewski testified Auriene had on a gray hat and a dirty tweed overcoat. He was five feet nine or ten inches tall and weighed about 155 or 160 pounds. On March 26 she gave the officers the same description of his hat and coat and told them he had on a dark suit, white shirt and collar. The top-coat was not buttoned.

Immediately after the robbery three police officers arrived, interviewed eight or ten witnesses and made a report, in which one of the robbers was described as “24, 5 foot 11, 150 pounds, slim, dark-gray overcoat, gray hat, nickel-plated revolver.” Another of them was described as “140, dark complected, dark lumber jacket, dark-gray cap, glasses, blue-steel revolver.” The car was described as a black Ford sedan, license No. 500620. Officer Collopy testified the witnesses were all talking together, and he could not say which one gave him any of the descriptions.

Senski testified that he next saw the robbers at a show-up at the detective bureau on March 29, in company with Senski and Miss Rzeszewski, who testified that the visit to the detective bureau was on March 26. All three of them testified that there were from seven to nine men in the show-up line. Auriene testified there were six others with him. None of the witnesses said anything in the presence of defendants.

Auriene was arrested between 9 :oo and 9:3o P. M. on March 23, 1935, by police officers Strecke, Sprague and Smunsky. Strecke testified that they were cruising in a squad car and saw a Ford V-8 going at high speed. The siren on the police car was sounded but the Ford did not slacken its speed. The officers fired a couple of shots and then the Ford ran into a tree and stopped. When the officers came up Perry was inside the car, and Auriene was sitting on the running-board with the loaded revolver between his knees. Sprague testified that as the police car stopped the revolver dropped into the gutter. Auriene testified that when the police car came up he was standing near his car. He denied having possession of the revolver and testified that it was not picked up near the place where he stood. He denied being at the scene of the hold-up or that he was in company with Perry or DeSalvo at that time and denied knowing Sarantakis or Antonelli.' Pie owned a 1933 dark-maroon Ford Victoria coupe, with cream-colored wheels, license number 594451.

In support of Auriene’s alibi, Roy Rollins, who lived next door to defendant, engaged in general repair work on automobiles and as a millwright and other work, testified that on March 15, about 8:00 A. M., Auriene asked him to do some plumbing work for his uncle, Louis Ozzanto. They arrived at Ozzanto’s house about 8:45, took some measurements and did certain plumbing work. The work was finished some time after 2 :oo o’clock, and then the men had lunch and left about 4:00 o’clock. Auriene was there all the time. Ozzanto testified that on the previous evening he asked Auriene to help him and to bring someone to install the pipe. He corroborated Rollins’ testimony, and there was introduced in evidence a bill for the pipe and some fittings from the Gordon Hardware Company, dated March 15. Auriene testified similarly, but said they left the Ozzanto house at 3 :oo o’clock.

Sam Gordon, a clerk who made out the bill for pipe and fittings introduced in evidence, testified that on the day prior to his testimony (June 28) he examined the pipe and fittings in the basement of the Ozzanto house. The pipe and fittings he found there did not look like the ones described in the bill. They were old and rusty.

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198 N.E. 206, 361 Ill. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-auriene-ill-1935.