The People v. Basile

190 N.E. 307, 356 Ill. 171
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1934
DocketNo. 22274. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 190 N.E. 307 (The People v. Basile) 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. Basile, 190 N.E. 307, 356 Ill. 171 (Ill. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

Tony Rocco, Emil Manzone, Dominic DeNardi and Richard Basile were indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the murder of Maurice Marcusson. George Chevas was charged with being an accessory after the fact. The defendants Basile and Chevas were tried together, the abstract not showing exactly what became of the case as to Rocco, Manzone and DeNardi. Chevas was acquitted, and the plaintiff in error, Basile, having been found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment, prosecutes this writ of error.

Mitchell Goldenstein was the only witness to the murder who testified. The evidence given by him was, in substance, that on the afternoon of January 20, 1933, he was sitting on the stairway on the ninth floor of the building known as 323 West Jackson boulevard, in Chicago, from which position he had a view down the hallway; that two fellows ran into the wash-room and that both of them then came out, and Marcusson, who was killed, came out of room 901. Marcusson was a police officer but at the time of the homicide was off duty and in plain clothes. Goldenstein testified that Marcusson talked to the two men whom he had seen come out of the wash-room, and that Tony Rocco, one of them, pulled a gun, put it against Marcusson’s side and shot him three times. On cross-examination he stated that Marcusson pulled a gun before Rocco did and that he saw a police badge. This is the only evidence as to the actual homicide.

The defendant Chevas and the plaintiff in error, Basile, were arrested in connection with this crime. After being questioned between twenty-four and thirty hours while kept imprisoned and without food, each made a statement or confession. The confession of Chevas, which was admitted in evidence, had typed at the top of it the following: “Now, George, my name is Bernard M. Kennedy. I am assigned to the twenty-second district, Maxwell street. You are now under arrest in connection with the attempt robbery and shooting of Ptlm. Morris Marcusson on the ninth floor of 323 West Jackson blvd. on the 20th day of January, 1933, in the attempt robbery of the loan company in room 903.” The confession of the plaintiff in error, which need not be quoted in full, implicated him with the other defendants in a plan or conspiracy to- commit a robbery on the ninth floor of the building at 323 West Jackson boulevard, with an admission that before starting on the trip Tony Rocco had said that they were going to visit a dress shop in the building, inquire about buying a dress and then “stick the place up.” The confession reveals further details of the procedure. It states that plaintiff in error borrowed the car of Chevas, went to the home of DeNardi, where the other conspirators were gathered, and from there to the business district where the crime was committed; that he was the driver of the car and circled the block bounded by Jackson, Franklin, VanBuren and Market streets after letting the other defendants out of the car; that Manzone and DeNardi came back and jumped into the car and told him that Rocco had been shot by police officers; that he thereupon drove the car away from the scene of the crime, and gave details as to the route followed and his own actions until his arrest.

Upon the trial of the case the police officers gave very conflicting statements as to how the confessions were obtained and in relating the incidents contradicted themselves and each other, in some instances retracting previous statements made by them, admitting them to have been wrong. They all denied that any violence had been used in securing the confessions, but did not deny that the defendants had been kept without food for a long period of time. Neither was it denied that one of the officers had struck Chevas about a week previously, which corroborated Chevas’ statement to that effect and that he was still in fear of the officer. Plaintiff in error testified that he had been struck and beaten and that an officer had threatened to throw him out of the window if he did not confess. Chevas testified that he was promised he could go home immediately if he would sign the statement. The testimony of the officers was of such a character as to seriously detract from their credibility — so much so that at the close of all of the preliminary evidence as to the taking of the confessions the trial court said: “I might say off the record that it is a musty confession business — the way they got these confessions — but that is not for me to pass on.”

Many errors are assigned as to the admission of the confessions, the giving and refusal of instructions, the limitation of cross-examination, remarks of the court and of the prosecuting attorney, and other matters. Since most of the errors complained of revolve about the admissibility of the confessions it will be unnecessary to consider these assigned errors in detail.

Regardless of all other questions of admissibility, it was clearly incompetent to permit that part of the statement of Chevas which is hereinabove quoted to go to the jury. It can be characterized. as nothing less than direct testimony on the part of the police officer that there had been an attempted robbery and a shooting of policeman Marcusson on the ninth floor of the building at 323 West Jackson boulevard. There is no evidence in the record that there was any attempted robbery or any crime of any sort committed at that time and place other than the shooting of Marcusson, and it was erroneous to permit officer Kennedy to insert such a statement into the record by way of a heading or statement in Chevas’ alleged confession.

The law is well settled that a voluntary confession is admissible in evidence and an involuntary one is not. (People v. Buckminster, 274 Ill. 435; People v. Vinci, 295 id. 419.) The difficulty in each case is one of applying the rule to the facts before the court. As we said in the Vinci case, supra, a confession is regarded as voluntary when it proceeds from a spontaneous expression of the mind, free from the influence of any extraneous disturbing cause. The rule is, that upon a preliminary inquiry by the court to determine the admissibility of a confession the burden is upon the People to show that it was voluntarily made. (People v. Frugoli, 324 Ill. 324.) The record in this case casts grave doubt upon the claim that the confessions were voluntarily made, and that the trial court was of the same mind is sufficiently evidenced by his remarks. Keeping a prisoner without food and under a barrage of questions for a day or more is not conducive to any voluntary action on his part, and we will not approve this method of securing evidence.

Since the case must be remanded for a new trial there is one other point which must receive consideration. The only evidence connecting the plaintiff in error with the homicide on the ninth floor of the building in question is his own confession. According to this statement he became a party to a plan for holding up a dress shop at this location. There is no evidence that there was any hold-up or an attempted hold-up.

In Lamb v. People, 96 Ill. 73, the defendant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. He and other burglars had stolen a quantity of merchandise which was afterwards hauled in an express wagon to a pawnshop. While the goods were being unloaded a police officer came upon the scene and was shot and killed by someone near the wagon.

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Bluebook (online)
190 N.E. 307, 356 Ill. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-basile-ill-1934.