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Christopher
RICHEE
Handyman Pleads
Guilty to '96 Slaying;
Defendant Maintains
Innocence After Deal
By Tom Rybarczyk
- Chicago Tribune
Jan. 31, 2006
Despite a written
statement proclaiming his innocence, former handyman Christopher Richee
pleaded guilty Monday to the 1996 killing of a Florida woman in the
Crestwood motel where he worked, ensuring he would not be sentenced to
life in prison.
Before Richee's retrial was to
begin, Cook County Circuit Judge Thomas Panichi accepted the prosecution
and defense request that Richee receive 40 years in prison for the
machete slaying of Nan Toder, 33, of Hollywood, Fla.
"I wish I could understand more
about how something like this happened," Panichi said of the slaying. "I
guess there could be something said for Mr. Richee not putting the
family and friends of the victim through a long, tedious and brutal
trial."
Toder's family, who clasped
hands in the front row of the jury box at the proceeding, expressed
little relief that Richee, 37, was headed back to prison, after the
Illinois Appellate Court last year reversed a 2002 guilty verdict in the
case.
"I think the last time after
trial I referred to him as a subhuman species, and I still do," said Sol
Toder, the victim's father, who was joined by his wife and other family
members. "It's just horrible that the Appellate Court overturned the
decision. There's a chance now that this beast can be out."
Still, the Toder family, some of
whom glared at Richee as he affirmed his guilty plea to Panichi, agreed
with the prosecutors' strategy about the deal. With the plea, Richee
could be out of prison in 13 to 14 years because the judge credited him
with six years he has served since the original indictment.
His family looked on stoically,
seldom glancing to the side of the courtroom where the Toders sat. After
the proceeding, Richee's mother Lindy called the plea bargain a victory
for her son.
"I am so happy that he took the
plea. I want to see him again before I die," said the 69-year-old woman.
"Just because he said it, it doesn't mean he is guilty."
Richee released a handwritten
statement to the media in which he contradicted his admission of killing
Toder.
"I stand here today and still
maintain my innocence," Richee wrote in his statement. "But as prepared
as [my public defenders] are, I still have no faith in the system that
charged me with the crime in the first place. I just can't risk spending
the rest of my life in jail for something I didn't do."
Prosecutors said in the first
trial that Richee tried to make Toder's killing look like the work of an
outsider who picked the lock to get into her room. No DNA evidence was
presented linking Richee.
Prosecutors were counting on
testimony from people who knew Richee, including a onetime friend who
told police Richee had asked him to remove a bloody towel from his room
days after the murder. Also, his former lover told authorities a machete
disappeared from a display case in Richee's home around the time of the
slaying.
Authorities alleged that Richee--described
as a thrill killer in the original trial--plotted the slaying, possibly
for months, disabling the deadbolt lock on the door between the
adjoining room and Toder's room. As the hotel's maintenance manager, he
had intimate knowledge of the locks and was one of the first to respond
to the gruesome scene inside the hotel room where Toder's body was posed,
her feet tied up with a telephone cord.
Toder, who was in the area for a
seminar, did not know Richee, prosecutors said.
A Cook County jury convicted
Richee of the killing, and a judge sentenced him to natural life in
prison in 2003. But last January the Appellate Court ruled that evidence
of two robberies Richee allegedly committed should have been ruled
inadmissible, even though prosecutors believed they showed parallels to
Toder's slaying.
Scott Cassidy, one of three Cook
County assistant state's attorneys working the case, said the Appellate
Court's decision "substantially impaired our case."
"It was an integral part of the
case," Cassidy said. "In a circumstantial case--which this was--when
some of the pieces of the puzzle are taken away, it's hard to prove to a
fact-finder beyond a reasonable doubt" that the defendant committed the
crime.
Tom Justic, one of Richee's
three public defenders, said he was satisfied with the deal, adding "it
worked out as well as we could have expected" short of a not-guilty
verdict.
Sol Toder called the experience
like "going through hell again."
Since Richee's 2002 conviction,
the Toder family has settled out of court with hotel owners for $4.6
million, vowing to use the money to raise hotel safety awareness and to
press for laws requiring background checks on employees with access to
keys.
So far, the Toders have pushed
lawmakers in their home state of Pennsylvania to enact such legislation.
Sol Toder has constructed a red handout folder with a gold key and a
small cutout photo glued to the outside of it that reads: "You are the
key to Nan's Law."
Nan’s Law
The worst murderers
are the thrill killers.
While no killing is ever acceptable, it’s possible to understand at
least what drives a sexual sadist or desperate criminal to slay someone.
The ones that make absolutely no sense and can not be justified under
any set of morals are the killings where someone does it just to see if
he or she can get away with it.
In January 2006, Christopher
Richee pleaded guilty to murdering Nan Toder at a suburban Chicago hotel
and received a 40-year prison term. The 39-year-old former hotel
handyman could be out of prison in a little over a decade because of
time he has already served.
Richee was convicted once before
of plotting Toder’s killing and sentenced to a term of natural life
behind bars, but his conviction was overturned after the appellate court
ruled that evidence at his trial of other crimes introduced show to a
common method of operation only served to inflame the jury against him.
Normally, one’s prior bad acts are
not supposed to be brought before a jury, but Illinois law has a
modus operandi exception that allows for mention of a pattern of
criminal behavior so distinct that separate offenses are recognized as
the work of the same person. The offenses need not be identical but must
share features which are distinctive when considered together.
The state had brought up a series
of burglaries that Richee committed, but the appeals court found that
the trial court erred in admitting evidence of the burglaries under the
modus operandi exception because they did not share with each
other or with the murder such distinctive features that they tended to
prove the defendant guilty of murder.
Although he pleaded guilty to
murder, Richee handed out a statement to the media denying any
connection to Toder’s 1996 murder.
“I stand here today and still maintain my innocence,” Richee wrote in
his statement. “But as prepared as (my lawyers) are, I still have no
faith in the system that charged me with the crime in the first place. I
just can’t risk spending the rest of my life in jail for something I
didn’t do.”
Keep in mind that this statement
came from a man who once told his boss he enjoyed throwing cats into
tree shredders. At worst that shows he is probably capable of anything,
and at best it shows a very twisted sense of humor.
Toder was in Chicago for a
training seminar in December 1996 and was alone in her motel room.
Sadly, she had taken precautions to safeguard herself from harm — but
she had no idea that there was really nothing she could have done to
protect herself from a man whose sole motivation to kill was to see if
he pull off the perfect crime.
Nan had turned down a dinner invitation from the president of her
company, choosing instead to work out at a local gym and pick up fast
food for a meal in her room. After entering her room, she placed her
suit case against the front door of room, locked the deadbolt and
probably considered herself to be secure for the night.
At around 10 p.m., she called her mother in Pennsylvania just to check
in and the retired for the night.
Unbeknownst to her, Richee had
been planning his crime for weeks. He wanted to commit the perfect
locked-room murder as if this was some sort of Agatha Christie detective
novel. Nan Todor was tragically a victim of opportunity. As head of
maintenance at the motel, Richee had just learned that the next day a
new lock system would be put in place that would allow the hotel to
create a computer trail of entry and exits into rooms. The existing
system did not have any tracking mechanism.
Nan was in room 227, which shared an adjoining door to 229, a room
specifically adapted for handicapped guests and often left vacant. She
requested a wake-up call for the next morning so she could catch a
flight back to Florida.
Richee believed he was smarter
than everyone else and Nan just happened to be in the wrong place at the
wrong time.
Nan went to sleep, not knowing that Richee had previously rigged the
door between 229 and 227 in such a way that it would appear locked, but
that would allow him to slip into the room to commit the crime.
Two wake-up calls to room 227 went
unanswered on December 13, 1996 before the housekeeper and her
supervisor managed to force open the door and enter the room.
There, they found Nan lying on her back on the floor between the beds,
her body posed by the killer for shock value. She lay propped up on her
elbows, her head back, and her feet bound by telephone cord. Her panty
hose had been tied around her neck. The killer used a machete as his
implement of murder. She was nearly nude, but there was no evidence of
sexual assault, and the room appeared to have been burglarized. A bloody
washcloth that contained DNA from someone other than Nan was left in the
room. Prosecutors said Richee grabbed it from another room sometime
earlier and left it at the scene to throw police off the track.
Police were summoned and Richee
led them to the crime scene. Three times, the responding officer had to
tell Richee not to enter the crime scene, but he repeatedly disregarded
those orders.
The night before the murders,
Richee showed up at the hotel despite the fact that he was off-duty.
Using the pretense of turning on the Christmas lights, he showed up
dressed in a dark sweater, jeans and white tennis shoes. The night desk
clerk testified that the bright white tennis shoes struck her as being
unusual because prior to that evening she had seen defendant wear dirty
shoes. Richee told her that he got them for Christmas from his mother
and rarely wore them. They then went to the back office to talk. Later,
she saw Richee looking at the hotel’s computer, where he could determine
which rooms were occupied.
She last saw him at 12:30 p.m. His
presence at the hotel when off-duty was unusual, she said.
Richee was a suspect from the beginning, but there was no evidence to
arrest him. It would take several years for detectives to piece together
enough circumstantial evidence to implicate him in the killing.
On the night of the murder, he
complained of a stomach ache and sent his girlfriend home around 11 p.m.
Four days after the killing, she asked Richee if he had gone out that
night after she left, and he said yes, he had gone out to buy a burrito.
He had previously shaved off all of the hair from his body except from
his head. Prosecutors believe he did this to avoid leaving trace
evidence.
A week after
the murder Richee called a friend and told him that the police were
going to search his house. Richee asked the buddy to remove a bloody
towel from his bedroom, which he did. Later, the friend went to Richee’s
house. He noticed that the machete that Richee normally kept in a cargo
net was no longer there. Later, in the garage, he saw the blade of a
machete that resembled the one he had previously seen in the cargo net,
but the handle was missing. The friend asked what happened to the
machete and Richee told him he was “screwing around with it and the
handle broke.”
Most telling, when the friend asked Richee if he had “killed the girl,”
Richee asked what he thought and, when the friend said “no,” Richee said
“stick with that.”
The friend, however, eventually went to police with his suspicions and
Richee’s perfect crime began to unravel.
MarkGribben.com
No. 1-03-0136
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. CHRISTOPHER RICHEE,Defendant-Appellant.
January 19, 2005
Appeal
from the Circuit Court of Cook County
PRESIDING JUSTICE KARNEZIS delivered the opinion of
the court:
Following a jury trial,
defendant Christopher Richee was convicted of first degree murder and
was sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, defendant argues: (1) the
trial court improperly admitted other crimes evidence; (2) the trial
court erred in denying his motion in limine; (3) the trial
court improperly admitted evidence that was irrelevant and prejudicial;
(4) the prosecutor made improper remarks during closing argument; and
(5) he was denied a fair trial by the cumulative effect of errors. We
find that the admission of other crimes evidence and the quantity of
evidence presented relating thereto was error.
BACKGROUND
Nan Toder, a Florida resident,
was visiting the Chicago area, training for her new position as vice-president
of Vance Wholesale Floral Company (Vance) in Florida. Toder arrived in
Chicago on December 9, 1996, and was staying in Room 227 at the Hampton
Inn in Crestwood, Illinois. She was to return home to Florida on
December 13, 1996.
On the evening of December 12,
1996, Toder declined a dinner invitation with the president of Vance,
went to a nearby gym, and then visited Jewel Food Stores where she made
several purchases at 8:25 p.m. She returned to the hotel at
approximately 8:54 p.m. and entered the hotel through the front lobby
area alone. She was carrying a Wendy's bag and asked the front desk for
a 5 a.m. wake-up call the next morning. She spoke with her mother on the
phone at 9:56 p.m.
The body of Nan Toder was
discovered on the morning of December 13, 1996. The victim of murder,
she had been strangled with a pair of pantyhose, bound with telephone
cords and slashed in the back of the head several times causing massive
bleeding. Her body was found on the floor between two beds.
Defendant, the maintenance
manager of the Hampton Inn in Crestwood, was indicted for the murder in
December of 1999.
EVIDENCE AT TRIAL
Defendant is not challenging the
sufficiency of the evidence in this case. Therefore, we will discuss
only those facts relevant to the disposition of this appeal.
On the morning of December 13,
1996, two wake-up calls to Toder's room went unanswered. Concepcion
Dominguez, a housekeeper employed at the Hampton Inn, was making her
rounds on the morning of December 13, 1996. At about 10:15 a.m.,
Dominguez knocked on the door of Room 227. There was no response, so
Dominguez used her metal key to access the room. Her metal key opened
all of the hallway doors on the second floor. The door to Room 227 would
not open. She then summoned her supervisor, Mirta Arroyo. Arroyo also
tried to open the door of Room 227 with her metal key but the door only
opened slightly. Arroyo then knelt down and pushed away what was on the
other side of the door, and the door opened. It appeared that a suitcase
had been blocking the door. Once the door was fully open, Dominguez
noticed that there was blood all over the bed. When Arroyo saw blood on
the bed, she told Dominguez to go down the hallway. Arroyo summoned
hotel manager Brenda Randazzo. Arroyo and Randazzo returned to Room 227
and Randazzo used her master key to unlock the door. Upon entering the
room a second time, the two viewed the body of Nan Toder lying between
the two beds and quickly exited the room. Defendant came to Room 226,
where staff members had congregated, and asked what was going on.
Randazzo informed defendant that there had been a murder and instructed
him not to enter Room 227. Arroyo then observed defendant use his key to
enter Room 227. He came out several seconds later.
Crestwood police officer John
Barolga was on patrol on December 13, 1996, when he received a call of a
possible homicide at the Hampton Inn. When he arrived, he was greeted by
defendant, who took him to the second floor and directed him to Room
227, where he opened the door with a key. Defendant stated that he did
not have any knowledge about where the victim was located within the
room. Officer Barolga ordered defendant to stay out of the room.
Officer Barolga entered the room
and noticed the black suitcase just inside the door. He also saw,
immediately to his right, a door that led to Room 229, an adjoining room.
He proceeded into the room and saw a bloody pillow and bedspread on the
bed closest to the door. Officer Barolga also observed a towel on the
bathroom floor that appeared to have blood on it. While he was in the
bathroom looking around, he observed defendant enter the room, pass the
bathroom where he was standing, and continue moving toward the main room.
Officer Barolga again ordered defendant to stay out of the room.
Defendant then backed up and stopped in the vicinity of the doorway.
Office Barolga again ordered defendant to leave.
Officer Barolga saw Toder's dead
body lying on the floor between two beds. Toder lay on her back, propped
up on her elbows with her head tilted back. She was wearing a robe,
which was open, exposing her breasts and pubic area. Her neck was bound
by pantyhose and a phone cord was wrapped around her left wrist. A
bedspread partially covered her legs. He later observed that Toder's
feet were also bound with a phone cord.
Dexter Bartlett was found
qualified by the court to testify as an expert in crime scene
investigations. He responded to the Hampton Inn at approximately 10:33
a.m., on December 13, 1996, and viewed Toder's body in Room 227. He
indicated that her injuries were not readily apparent but that her body
had been "posed." Based on his observations, he opined that Toder was
attacked while lying face down on the bed closest to the door. In
addition, based on the blood transfer patterns found on the bed, he
opined that the offender used a machete and had worn gloves.
Bartlett also observed that Room
227 was in disarray. Items appeared to have been thrown on the floor
after Toder was attacked. He opined that the crime scene was "staged."
Bartlett examined the locks on
the outside of the door to Room 227. He observed that the door had two
locks on its exterior; an upper locking device that was operated by a
key card and a lower locking device that was operated by a metal key.
There were marks and partial damage to the lock operated by a metal key.
Bartlett opined that the marks were made by someone inserting a
screwdriver or other similar device and moving it up and down. Filings
were found on the carpet in the hallway outside Room 227. Despite the
damage, the lock was still in good working order.
There were three locking devices
on the inside of the door in Room 227 leading to the hallway. The
uppermost locking device was a security lock which could only be
activated from inside the room and which could not be opened with a key.
It would allow the person inside the room to open the door slightly to
look outside into the hallway. The second lock was a deadbolt that could
only be activated from inside the room. The third lock was a passive
door lock that automatically locks from the outside if the door is
closed. All three locking devices were in working order on the morning
of December 13, 1996.
Bartlett initially concluded
that the point of entry into Toder's room was the door leading from the
hallway to Room 227. At that time, however, Bartlett was unaware that
the housekeeping staff had initially been unable to get that door open
because of the suitcase that was right inside the door. After learning
this information, Bartlett opined that the point of entry into Toder's
room was the door from adjoining Room 229.
The deadbolt on Toder's
adjoining door was found locked. There was no way to unlock the deadbolt
on Toder's adjoining door from inside Room 229. If the small metal bar
from the deadbolt lock on Toder's adjoining door were removed, the lock
would appear to be locked although it would actually be disconnected. In
addition to deactivating the deadbolt on the adjoining door, a person
seeking to gain entry into Toder's room would have to place tape on the
striker bolt or on the hole in the door frame. This would have to be
done before Toder entered her room.
Bartlett also believed that it
would be impossible for Toder's killer to leave her room through the
hallway door because of the suitcase. In order to exit, the killer would
have to again take apart the locking mechanism in Toder's adjoining door,
replace the metal bar and remove the tape. The killer would not be able
to lock the deadbolt on Toder's adjoining door if he was in Room 229. He
would have to come back into Toder's room later and lock the deadbolt on
her adjoining door.
Rod Englert, an expert in the
field of crime scene reconstruction and bloodstain interpretation,
viewed reports and approximately 400 photographs from the crime scene,
as well as individual articles of clothing and bedding taken from Room
227. Englert opined, based on his examination of all of the items, that
Toder was sleeping, lying face down on the bed closest to the door with
her head at the head of the bed when she was approached from behind.
Englert also opined that the massive amount of blood on the bed came
from multiple blows to Toder's head. Given that the wounds on Toder's
head were parallel, Englert believed that Toder did not fight back. He
also opined that the wounds to Toder's head were caused by a machete.
The bloody imprint of a machete was left on the bed sheet. The offender
likely wore gloves because no fingerprints were recovered from the sheet.
DNA samples were taken from the bed sheet and none of the DNA matched
that of defendant.
With respect to the position of
the body, Englert opined that after the attack, Toder's body was pulled
from the bed onto the floor. Englert testified that Toder's body had
been posed.
Lisa Dellorto was working at the
front desk of the Hampton Inn on the evening of December 12, 1996, from
11 p.m. to 7 a.m. She received a telephone call from defendant shortly
after she arrived at work. Defendant told Dellorto that he was at Bongo
Johnny's, a bar and dance club in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, and asked
Dellorto if she wanted him to bring her a burrito. Dellorto said no.
Defendant said he was coming to the hotel anyway and was bringing a
burrito for himself.
Shortly thereafter, defendant
arrived at the hotel. Dellorto was in the guest lobby area and did not
see defendant enter through the main hotel entrance but saw him standing
at the front desk. Defendant was dressed in a dark sweater, jeans and
white tennis shoes. Defendant's tennis shoes struck Dellorto as being
unusual because prior to that evening she had seen defendant wear dirty
shoes, so Dellorto asked defendant about his shoes. Defendant told her
that he got them for Christmas from his mother and rarely wore them.
They then went to the back office to talk. Later, she saw defendant
looking at the hotel's computer, which was used strictly for hotel
information. Looking at the hotel computer, one could determine which
rooms were occupied. Dellorto last saw defendant on the evening of
December 12, 1996, at approximately 12:30 p.m., when defendant told her
that he was going to turn on the hotel's outside Christmas lights.
Dellorto also testified that she
was familiar with the key system at the Hampton Inn. A master key was
kept at the front desk. Any employees who came in through the front desk
area would have access to that key.
Brenda Randazzo testified that
she was the general manager of the Hampton Inn on December 12, 1996. On
December 12, 1996, defendant worked his normal hours of 7 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. As manager, she was familiar with the locking systems in the hotel.
Randazzo had a master metal key that could open the lock on the outside
of a hotel room door. The key would operate even if the deadbolt lock
was activated. The other department managers, including Wendy Heberling,
the assistant manager, Mirta Arroyo, the executive housekeeper, and
defendant, had master keys. There was a fifth master key that was kept
in a locked box on the wall in the back office. This key was still in
the locked box on the morning of December 13, 1996. The key that was
kept at the front desk was not capable of overriding a deadbolt on the
hotel room door.
A new locking system came into
effect at the Hampton Inn on December 13, 1996, in the afternoon. A
meeting was held on December 12, 1996, regarding the new locking system.
A representative of the company installing the new locking system was
present at the meeting and explained to the hotel staff, including
defendant, how the new locks would work.
The new locking system was a
computerized electric locking system. A new lock was to be installed on
the outside of each hotel room door. The managers would receive new
master key cards. The managers' master cards would be capable of
circumventing the same locks that they circumvented under the old system.
The computerized locking system would record information as to whose key
was used to enter a hotel room, if it was a guest key, a maintenance key
or a housekeeping key, and the time the key was used to enter the room.
This information would not be available from the locking system as it
existed on December 12, 1996.
Jill Paoletti testified that she
and defendant were dating in December of 1996. At approximately 8:30
p.m. on the evening of December 12, 1996, she went to defendant's house
in Burbank, Illinois. She left defendant's house at approximately 11
p.m. that same evening after defendant complained of having a
stomachache.
Paoletti had a conversation with
the police on December 16, 1996. Following that conversation, Paoletti
spoke with defendant. She asked him if he had gone out on the evening of
December 12, 1996, after she left his house. Defendant stated that he
went out to get a burrito because he was hungry. Paoletti found this "unusual"
considering that defendant wasn't feeling well and he normally did not
eat late in the evening.
Paoletti testified on cross-examination
that during the three years she dated defendant, she was in defendant's
bedroom two or three times a week. Paoletti saw a hunting knife with a
serrated blade in defendant's bedroom. The knife was approximately eight
inches long but could have been longer. She also testified that she had
sexual relations with defendant several times during her menstrual
period. Defendant would clean himself with a towel and put the towel on
the floor next to the bed. Paoletti could not recall if she was
menstruating the week that Toder was murdered.
Patricia Yodka testified that
she was having a secret relationship with defendant in December 1996.
She normally met defendant and his friend Mike Duello on Tuesday and
Thursday nights at Bongo Johnny's. Yodka would then go to defendant's
house. In the first week of December 1996, defendant shaved his legs,
pubic hair, arm pits and facial hair but not his head hair.
On Thursday, December 12, 1996,
Yodka went to Bongo Johnny's but defendant did not show up. At 2:30
a.m., on the morning of December 13, 1996, Yodka went to defendant's
house and knocked on his bedroom door, which was accessible from the
outside. Defendant answered the door and told Yodka that "tonight's not
a good night, that I have puke all over me, and he shut the door."
Yodka also testified that during
her relationship with defendant, defendant would ask her to pose nude.
He wanted Yodka to lie on her back with her arms back, her knees bent,
her legs sprawled open and her head either up or back. Defendant also
once took a picture of her while she slept.
Defendant's friend, Michael
Duello, testified that on the evening of December 16, 1996, defendant
called him, telling him that the police were going to search his house
and asked defendant to remove a bloody towel from his bedroom. Duello
disposed of the bloody towel in a Dumpster.
About a week later, Duello went
to defendant's house. He noticed that the machete that defendant
normally kept in a cargo net was no longer there. Later, in the garage,
Duello saw the blade of a machete that resembled the one he had
previously seen in the cargo net, but the handle was missing. Duello
asked defendant what happened to the machete and defendant told him he
was "screwing around with it and the handle broke." Duello asked
defendant if he had "killed the girl." Defendant asked Duello what he
thought and, when Duello said "no," defendant said "stick with that."
Duello again asked defendant whether he had done it, and defendant told
him no, and then yes, and then no.
Jill Alexejun testified that she
and defendant dated in 1994. During that time Alexejun worked as an
assistant manager for the Lincoln Property Company. Defendant worked as
a maintenance technician for the same company. As part of defendant's
job with the company, he changed locks on apartment doors. Alexejun saw
defendant gain access to vacant apartments on several occasions. If the
knob lock was locked, defendant used a screwdriver to unlock it; if the
deadbolt was locked, he used a drill. She also testified that she
witnessed defendant unlock a door with a credit card.
Dr. Cogan, the medical examiner,
testified that he performed the autopsy on Toder. The parties stipulated
to Dr. Cogan's expertise in the field of forensic pathology. Dr. Cogan
determined that the cause of death was multiple injuries. Dr. Cogan also
testified that the cuts to Toder's head could have been caused by a
machete. Dr. Cogan could not determine the exact time of death.
The State presented evidence of
other crimes. Two witnesses testified about a burglary that had occurred
at Hollywood Park, an amusement facility in Crestwood, Illinois (the
Hollywood Park burglary) in the spring of 1992. Six witnesses testified
regarding burglaries that occurred at the Old Willow Springs Shopping
Center (the Willow Springs burglaries) on March 9, 1998.
A jury convicted defendant of
first degree murder. The court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment.
ANALYSIS
Defendant first contends that
the trial court erred in admitting evidence of defendant's two prior
burglaries under the modus operandi exception because they did
not share with each other, or with the murder, such distinctive features
that they tended to prove defendant guilty of murder. In the alternative,
defendant argues that even if the other crimes evidence was properly
admitted to establish modus operandi, the evidence was more
prejudicial than probative.
Generally, evidence of other
crimes is inadmissible where that evidence is relevant solely to
demonstrate defendant's propensity to engage in criminal activity.
People v. Heard, 187 Ill. 2d 36, 58, 718 N.E.2d 58, 70 (1999). This
is because "[s]uch evidence overpersuades the jury, which might convict
the defendant only because it feels he or she is a bad person deserving
punishment." People v. Lindgren, 79 Ill. 2d 129, 137, 402 N.E.2d
238, 242 (1980). Such evidence is admissible however, where relevant for
any purpose other than to show the propensity to commit crime.
People v. Illgen, 145 Ill. 2d 353, 365, 583 N.E.2d 515, 519 (1991).
Evidence is relevant generally
if it has any tendency to make the existence of a fact of consequence
more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.
People v. Peeples, 155 Ill. 2d 422, 455-56, 616 N.E.2d 294, 309
(1993). Evidence of other crimes is relevant to prove modus operandi,
intent, identity, motive or absence of mistake. People v. McKibbins,
96 Ill. 2d 176, 182, 449 N.E.2d 821, 823 (1983).
"The modus operandi or
'method of working' exception refers to a pattern of criminal behavior
so distinct that separate offenses are recognizedas the work of the same
person. [Citation.] Between the offense offered to prove modus
operandi and the offense charged, there must be a clear connection
which creates a logical inference that, if defendant committed the
former offense, he also committed the latter. [Citation.] This inference
arises when both crimes share peculiar and distinctive features not
shared by most offenses of the same type and which, therefore, earmark
the offenses as one person's handiwork. [Citation.] The offenses need
not be identical but must share features which, although common to
similar crimes in general, are distinctive when considered together."
People v. Berry, 244 Ill. App. 3d 14, 21, 613 N.E.2d 1126, 1132
(1991).
When evidence of other crimes is
offered, even if relevant for a permissible purpose, it may be excluded
if its prejudicial effect substantially outweighs its probative value.
Heard, 187 Ill. 2d at 58, 718 N.E.2d at 70. A trial court
should exclude other crimes evidence when the prejudicial effect
substantially outweighs the probative value. Illgen, 145 Ill.
2d at 365, 583 N.E.2d at 519. The admissibility of other crimes evidence
rests within the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be
disturbed absent an abuse of discretion. People v. Robinson,
167 Ill. 2d 53, 63, 656 N.E.2d 1090, 1094 (1995).
The Hollywood Park Burglary
Patrick Brennan testified that
he and defendant were friends in March 1992. During that month, he and
defendant had a conversation wherein defendant indicated that he was
considering breaking into Hollywood Park to steal money from the office
safe and asked for Brennan's help. Defendant was a manager at Hollywood
Park at that time. Hollywood Park is an amusement facility containing
video games and miniature golf located in Crestwood, Illinois. Defendant
told Brennan that he wanted to make the burglary look like it was not an
"inside job."
About a week later, Brennan and
defendant had another conversation. Defendant told Brennan that he had
figured out a way to get into the safe and showed Brennan a plastic key.
Brennan described the key as being "clear plexiglass" hanging on a
string from defendant's mirror. Defendant told Brennan that he had made
a copy of the key that the armored car drivers used to get into the safe
by heating up a piece of plexiglass, sticking it in the hole and
grinding it down. Defendant indicated that he had tested the key in the
safe and that it worked. Defendant told Brennan to dress in normal
clothes with black clothes over them and to bring a pair of gloves.
The next day defendant called
Brennan at approximately 6 p.m. and told him that he would be picking
him up. Defendant arrived at Brennan's home at 9 p.m. The two
transferred what Brennan believed to be a hoe from defendant's truck to
the trunk of another vehicle and left for Hollywood Park. Defendant
stated that he had borrowed the hoe from Hollywood Park and was using it
as an excuse to go there.
When they arrived, defendant
pulled the car around the back. Defendant went in through the front and
indicated that he was going to open the back door. Defendant then came
through the back door, came to the trunk of the car and removed the hoe.
Defendant and Brennan went into the building's maintenance room through
the back door. Once inside, defendant instructed Brennan to use the
ladder inside the maintenance room to access the roof. Defendant went to
park the car, returned on foot and joined Brennan on the roof. They
waited for the park to close. Defendant had in his possession a backpack
with tools including a chisel, hammer, tin snips, needle-nose pliers,
flashlight and a rope, and a two way radio.
Once the park closed, defendant
paced off a location on the building's roof above the office where he
wanted to cut a hole. Defendant then kicked the stones away and started
to cut. Brennan observed defendant "beat a hole with the chisel to get
it started and use tin snips to open it up." After defendant began to
cut the hole, Brennan acted as a lookout. Both defendant and Brennan
were wearing gloves.
After the hole was cut,
defendant went into the building through the hole. A minute or two later,
defendant began handing bags of money to Brennan through the hole in the
roof. Defendant handed three bags of money and the safe door to Brennan.
Defendant then climbed back through the hole and onto the roof.
Defendant threw the safe door over the west side of the building. The
bags of cash were put into defendant's backpack. Brennan and defendant
got down from the roof by scaling the wall using a rope looped around an
air conditioning unit. Once they got down, they were able to free the
rope from the air conditioning unit. Defendant then retrieved the safe
door and the two went to the car, which was parked less than a mile away.
At the car, defendant and
Brennan stripped off their black clothing and put everything, including
the bags of cash and the safe door, in the trunk. Defendant then drove
to a body of water at Ridgeland Avenue and threw the safe door in. They
then proceeded back to Brennan's house, where defendant gave Brennan one
of the bags, which held approximately $5,000 to $7,000 in cash.
Defendant kept the other two bags, which Brennan estimated contained
$18,000 to $20,000. Defendant told Brennan that if anyone began asking
questions regarding the burglary "it never happened." During the middle
of the night that same night, Brennan remembered that defendant left the
radio on top of the building. He called defendant the next morning to
tell him and defendant said he would take care of it.
Chris Paliga testified that he
is the current owner of Hollywood Park and has owned it since 1996. In
April of 1992, Paliga was the general manager of Hollywood Park.
Defendant was the manager. Paliga testified as to the general outlay of
the building and the surrounding premises. He testified that the back
door of the building leads to a maintenance room. Inside the maintenance
room is a ladder that provides access to the roof. He also gave
testimony in great detail regarding the building's security system.
Given his managerial position, defendant knew that there was no alarm
system on the second floor.
There were two safes in the
office. One safe had only two keys: one was kept in the manager's safe
and the other was in the possession of the armored car service. The
second safe was used on a daily basis for change and had a combination
lock. Paliga identified photographs of the safe as it existed in 2002
showing that the door had been replaced. He was also shown photographs
of the two safes as they existed in 1992.
On April 20, 1992, defendant
called him and told him that someone had burglarized the building.
Defendant sounded upset. Defendant told him that there was a hole cut in
the roof in the office area, a desk was standing on its side and some
things had been tossed around. When Paliga arrived at Hollywood Park, he
saw that defendant was upset. Defendant stated that he could not believe
someone would do something like that. He spend most of the morning
trying to calm defendant down. The police who investigated the scene
opined that the hole in the roof was cut from the inside.
The Willow Springs Burglaries
Willow Springs police officer
Paul McGrath testified that on March 9, 1998, he responded to the report
of a burglary at the Old Willow Shopping Center in Willow Springs,
Illinois. The Old Willow Shopping Center is a three-story commercial
building housing 10 to 25 businesses.
Officer McGrath spoke with the
business owner who reported the burglary. He observed that the door to
the business was broken in. There was physical damage to the doorway.
Officer McGrath noticed that gang graffiti had been spray painted on the
walls of the second-floor hallway and down the stairwell. Officer
McGrath believed the graffiti to be "fake." At the bottom of the
stairwell was a door leading outside. He examined the door and observed
that there was duct tape over the latch of the door to prevent the
locking mechanism from catching. Officer McGrath was shown 20
photographs of the premises depicting the graffiti in the hallways and
stairwell.
Robert Zygmunt testified that he
and defendant were friends. In March of 1998, he helped defendant
prepare for the opening of defendant's tanning spa. The tanning spa was
located on the second floor of the Old Willow Springs Shopping Center.
Later that same month, defendant came to Zygmunt's house with several
Gateway computers, including towers, printers and keyboards, as well as
a wastepaper basket filled with various other office-related items.
Defendant told Zygmunt that he had stolen the equipment from a business
in the building where his tanning spa was located. Defendant asked
Zygmunt to hold onto the equipment because he was being investigated by
the police. Defendant told Zygmunt that he could do whatever he wanted
with one of the computers, but he wanted Zygmunt to hold on to the other
one because he wanted it back at some point in time. Zygmunt sold one of
the computers for $100. Defendant told Zygmunt that if the police came
asking questions about the computers, he should tell them that defendant
bought them at the flea market. The police eventually interviewed
Zygmunt and he turned the remaining computer over to them.
Mary Ann Racilla testified that
she owns an environmental consulting firm called Environmental
Assessment Group that is located on the third floor of the Old Willow
Springs Shopping Center. Defendant's tanning spa was on the second floor
of the building. On March 9, 1998, she arrived at the building and
noticed that graffiti had been painted in the hallway. Her office had
been vandalized and several things had been stolen from her office
including a printer. The locking mechanism on the door that led to her
business was operable after the burglary.
David Lucado testified that he
is employed by Comprehensive Planning, Inc., located on the third floor
of the Old Willow Springs Shopping Center across the hall from
Environmental Assessment Group. On March 9, 1998, when he arrived at
work he noticed that the door to the office was open and that several
items were missing from the office, including two computers and a fax
machine.
Edward Doyle of the Cook County
sheriff's police department testified that on May 21, 1999, he executed
a search warrant on the tanning spa owned by defendant located in Old
Willow Springs Shopping Center. Office Doyle found a fax machine in the
bottom drawer of a file cabinet. The fax machine was missing its serial
number.
Thomas Weatherald testified that
he was employed with the Illinois State Police on May 21, 1999. On that
date, he had occasion to execute a search warrant on defendant's home at
8136 South Mobile in Burbank, Illinois. In the defendant's bedroom,
Weatherald discovered a set of speakers for a Gateway computer, and a
printer. These items, proceeds from the burglaries, were returned to
their rightful owner.
Modus Operandi
Analysis
The State urges us to find that
the trial court properly admitted the other crimes evidence because
substantial similarities existed between the instant offense of murder
and the prior offenses of burglary to admit them under a theory of
modus operandi in order to establish identity. Specifically, the
State offers five similarities between the Hollywood Park and Willow
Springs burglaries and the offense in the instant case. First, the
defendant was an "insider," a person having more than ordinary access to
all three locations. Second, defendant possessed the ability to commit
the offenses due to his knowledge of how to defeat locking mechanisms.
Third, defendant masked all three crime scenes, leaving false leads for
police in an attempt to divert their attention away from him. Fourth,
defendant was a "secondary" victim. Finally, defendant enlisted the
assistance of his friends.
In People v. Clay, 349
Ill. App. 3d 24, 811 N.E.2d 276 (2004), the defendant was convicted of
first degree murder and an armed robbery that occurred at a currency
exchange. The evidence at trial established that the defendant and two
other men entered a currency exchange together. One asked for change for
a dollar and after receiving the change picked up the receiver of a pay
phone located therein. The two other men left the exchange and the man
who received the change left shortly thereafter. One of the three men
returned a few minutes later and asked a different employee for change.
Once he received the change he also went to the pay phone. Thereafter,
he met an employee of United Armored who was carrying a bag of cash and
papers into the exchange at the doorway and fired a bullet from point-blank
range into the man's forehead. The man took the bag and left in a blue
compact car. The United Armored driver died minutes later. Clay,
349 Ill. App. 3d at 26, 811 N.E.2d at 278.
At the defendant's trial, the
State was allowed to introduce evidence of another robbery at a currency
exchange five months prior. In that robbery, an armored truck from
United Armored delivered cash to the currency exchange in the morning.
The owner of the exchange was present for the delivery. Shortly
thereafter, an employee of the exchange arrived for work. There were
several customers waiting for service. As the employee was preparing to
enter the employees-only area, one of the men in the waiting area
grabbed the employee, pulled a gun, and said, " '[O]pen up, mother
fucker, or I'll blow his head off.' " Clay, 349 Ill. App. 3d at
28, 811 N.E.2d at 280 . He then pushed the employee into the employees'
area and began yelling, " '[G]ive it up, mother fucker, give it up.' "
The employee loaded a bag with cash and the robber took the money and
left. Clay, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 28, 811 N.E.2d at 280.
On appeal, the defendant argued
that the trial court should not have allowed the testimony regarding the
robbery of a different currency exchange under the modus operandi
exception. Clay, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 30, 811 N.E.2d at
282. This court agreed with defendant and found that the trial court
abused its discretion in allowing the testimony regarding the prior
robbery of the currency exchange. In reaching this conclusion, this
court found that the similarities between the two crimes "do not earmark
the two robberies as the work of the same individuals." Clay,
349 Ill. App. 3d at 33, 811 N.E.2d at 284. This court found the
differences in the crimes ("one crime occurred after delivery and the
robber announced a stickup of persons working for the exchange, while
the other occurred before delivery and the robber shot the deliveryman
without saying a word to him" (Clay, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 33-34,
811 N.E.2d at 284)) outweighed the similarity ("both crimes occurred
around the time of a delivery from United Armored" (Clay 349
Ill. App. 3d at 33, 811 N.E.2d at 284)).
Although we agree with the State
that some similarities exist between the three crimes, namely, that
defendant was an "insider" and he "covered his tracks," after reviewing
the record in the instant case, we find that, like Clay, those
similarities are insufficient to warrant the circuit court's admission
of other crimes evidence. Considering the facts of this case together
with the facts of the Hollywood Park burglary and the Willow Springs
burglaries in their entireties, the differences between the three crimes
plainly outweigh the similarities.
First, and most importantly,
this case involved a murder. Nan Toder was brutally slashed in the head
with a machete several times. She was found with pantyhose tied around
her neck and phone cords tied around her wrist and ankles. Neither the
Hollywood Park burglary nor the Willow Springs burglary involved a crime
of violence. In fact, there was no testimony with respect to either
burglary that there was anyone present other than defendant and his
accomplice. Additionally, a weapon was used in this case while there was
no indication that defendant carried or used a weapon in the Hollywood
Park or Willow Springs burglaries.
Defendant employed different
strategies in gaining access to the establishments. In the Hollywood
Park burglary, defendant gained access to the office by cutting a hole
in the roof and lowering himself down. He then used a key that he
fashioned out of plexiglass to open the safe. In the Willow Springs
burglaries, there was testimony that tape had been placed over the lock
on the building's exit door. The door to one of the offices that was
burglarized was damaged. The doors on the other offices that were
burglarized assumedly had no damage and the locks still worked. In the
instant case, it was opined that defendant accessed Toder's room through
the adjoining door by dismantling the deadbolt.
The locations of the crimes
differ significantly. Hollywood Park is an amusement center. Old Willow
Springs Shopping Center contains offices and retail establishments. The
Hampton Inn is a hotel.(1) Additionally,
the burglary of Hollywood Park occurred in 1992, while Toder's murder
occurred in 1996 and the Willow Springs burglaries occurred in 1998.
There are also distinct
differences in the items removed from each crime scene. In the Hollywood
Park burglary, defendant removed three bags of cash totaling
approximately $25,000. In the Willow Springs burglaries defendant took
computer equipment, a fax machine and office supplies. In the case
sub judice, although defendant was charged with felony murder based
on residential burglary and burglary in addition to murder, there was no
evidence presented that anything was taken from Toder's room.
Our discussion of the
differences between the murder in this case and the Hollywood Park and
Willow Springs burglaries could continue ad infinitum. The
salient differences significantly outweigh the similarities. Therefore,
we have no difficulty finding that the trial court abused its discretion
by permitting testimony concerning defendant's prior burglaries.
Even assuming arguendo
that the other crimes evidence was relevant and admissible to
demonstrate modus operandi in the case at bar, because the
identity of defendant was at issue, we find that the probative value of
such evidence is outweighed by its prejudicial effect. See People v.
Bedoya, 325 Ill. App. 3d 926, 940, 758 N.E.2d 366, 379 (2001).
Other crimes evidence, although
relevant, must not become a focal point of the trial. People v.
Thigpen, 306 Ill. App. 3d 29, 37, 713 N.E.2d 633, 639 (1999). The
trial court should prevent a "mini-trial" of a collateral offense.
People v. Nunley, 271 Ill. App. 3d 427, 432, 648 N.E.2d 1015, 1018
(1995). This can be accomplished by the careful limitation of the
details of the other crimes to what is necessary to "illuminate the
issue for which the other crime was introduced." Nunley, 271
Ill. App. 3d at 432, 648 N.E.2d at 1018.
In the instant case, the trial
court allowed the State to present two trials within a trial; one on the
Hollywood Park burglary, the other on the Willow Springs burglaries.
Both Thomas Brennan and Chris Paglia testified at great length and with
extraordinary specificity with respect to the Hollywood Park burglary.
The record shows the testimony of these two witnesses accounts for 101
pages of the total record. In addition, these two witnesses viewed five
photographs on direct examination. The jury also heard from six
witnesses with respect to the Willow Springs burglaries. While these
witnesses admittedly testified in less detail than Brennan and Paglia,
they viewed and testified to a total of 22 photographs depicting the
graffiti and the stolen equipment.
As if the presentation of
numerous other crimes witnesses was not excessive enough, the State
compounded the error by making repeated references to the Hollywood Park
and Willow Springs burglaries during closing argument. At closing
argument, the State outlined the alleged similarities between Toder's
murder and the Hollywood Park and Willow Springs burglaries. It
essentially attempted to persuade the jury that the murder and the
burglaries shared such indistinguishable characteristics, that if
defendant committed one, he necessarily committed the other.
The presentation of other crimes
evidence in this case was highly detailed and flagrantly excessive. We
have no doubt that this testimony and argument served to inflame the
jury and to "lure the factfinder into declaring guilt on a ground
different from proof specific to the offense charged." Old Chief v.
United States, 519 U.S. 172, 180, 136 L. Ed. 2d 574, 588, 117 S. Ct.
644, 650 (1997). Based on the cumulative evidence of other crimes in
this case, we cannot say that the jury did not convict defendant because
it felt defendant was a bad person deserving punishment. Lindgren,
79 Ill. 2d at 137, 402 N.E.2d at 242. Although the trial court did give
the jury limiting instructions regarding the other crimes evidence at
the conclusion of the evidence, the probative value of this evidence was
significantly outweighed by its prejudicial effect.
The State also suggests that if
we find the other crimes evidence to be inadmissible under the modus
operandi exception, we must consider whether the other crimes
evidence is alternatively independently admissible under the identity
exception. The State urges us to commence this analysis because
defendant "had several distinguishing characteristics that bore on the
question of the identity of the person who entered Nan Toder's room."
Modus operandi and
identity "are two distinct exceptions to the exclusionary rule on
evidence of other crimes." People v. Tipton, 207 Ill. App. 3d
688, 695, 566 N.E.2d 352, 359 (1990). In Tipton, defendant was
prosecuted for aggravated sexual assault and armed robbery. Evidence
presented at trial showed that on September 27, 1986, at approximately
11 p.m., defendant approached the victim from behind as she was walking
westbound on Cornelia near the Ravenswood "el" stop. The defendant
raised his hand displaying a meat cleaver. Defendant said, " '[d]on't
say anything or I'll cut your head off.' " Holding the meat cleaver to
the victim's neck, defendant walked the victim to a nearby empty lot
where defendant demanded the money from the victim's purse. The victim
gave the defendant $5 that she had in her pocket. The defendant then
ordered the victim to stand up, and again holding the meat cleaver to
her neck , walked her down an alley between two garages. Once at the
garages, defendant removed all of the victim's clothing and ordered her
to perform various sexual acts. The victim gave a description of the
offender to the police and later identified the defendant in a police
lineup. Tipton, 207 Ill. App. 3d at 691-92, 566 N.E.2d at 356.
At trial, the State introduced
evidence of the prior armed robbery of Anne Penman to establish
modus operandi and identity. Penman testified that she was in the
vestibule of her apartment at 737 West Cornelia on September 27, 1986,
between 11:30 and 11:45 p.m., when she heard a voice behind her say, "
'[g]ive me your purse or I'll cut your head off.' " Penman turned and
saw a man whom she later identified as defendant and tossed him her
purse. She saw that defendant was carrying a meat cleaver in his hand.
Tipton, 207 Ill. App. 3d at 692-93, 566 N.E.2d at 357.
This court found that the trial
court properly admitted the testimony of Penman as other crimes evidence
to establish modus operandi and identity. Tipton, 207
Ill. App. 3d at 696. 566 N.E.2d at 358.
"Here the evidence at trial
showed that complainant and Penman were both approached on the same
evening, in the same vicinity, by a black male haling a meat cleaver.
The assailant threatened both women, stating that he would cut off their
heads. We do not believe it to be common to most rapes and robberies
that the perpetrator carries a meat cleaver and threatens decapitation."
Tipton, 207 Ill. App. 3d at 695, 566 N.E.2d at 358.
Although the State is correct
that identity can form a separate exception for allowing the admission
of evidence of other crimes, we find the State's identity argument is
subsumed in its identity- through-modus-operandi argument.
Similar to Tipton, it is not possible in this case to sever
that evidence which is admissible to prove identity through modus
operandi from that evidence that is admissible solely to prove
identity. Consequently, the State's argument that evidence of the
Hollywood Park burglary and the Willow Springs burglaries are admissible
independently to prove identity lacks merit.(2)
Finally, the State contends that
should we find the admission of other crimes evidence in this case was
erroneous, any error was purely harmless.
In People v. Wilkerson,
87 Ill. 2d 151, 157, 429 N.E.2d 526 (1981), our supreme court set out
three ways for measuring harmless error: (1) focusing on the error to
determine whether it might have contributed to the conviction; (2)
examining the other evidence in the case to see if overwhelming evidence
supports the conviction; and (3) determining whether the evidence is
cumulative or merely duplicates properly admitted evidence. See
People v. West, No. 1-02-2358 ( January 5, 2005).
As previously discussed, we
believe that the admission of the other crimes evidence in this case
undoubtedly contributed to defendant's conviction. There was no physical
evidence linking defendant to Toder's murder; no DNA, no hair, no
fingerprints, no eyewitnesses and no confession. "[E]rroneously admitted
other crimes evidence carries a high risk of prejudice and ordinarily
calls for reversal." People v. Howard, 303 Ill. App. 3d 726,
732 (1999). In purely circumstantial cases such as this one, other
crimes evidence, if improperly admitted, can never be harmless error.
The effect of this evidence deprived defendant of the right to a fair
trial, and the error was not harmless.
Given that we have determined
that the trial court committed reversible error by admitting evidence of
defendant's prior burglaries, we need not address defendant's remaining
claims. However, we will address defendant's argument that the trial
court erred in allowing evidence that defendant asked a former
girlfriend to pose nude because it is likely to reoccur on retrial.
Prior to trial, defendant
brought a motion in limine to bar the State from presenting "any
evidence regarding prior personal relationships between defendant and
former female acquaintances, any posing or modeling of or by those
acquaintance." The trial court denied defendant's motion. Defendant now
argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion in limine.
At trial, defendant's former
girlfriend, Patricia Yodka testified that while she was dating defendant,
he would have her pose nude. Defendant would instruct her to lay on her
back with her arms back, her knees bent, her legs sprawled open and her
head either up or back. At trial, the State argued in closing argument
that defendant "posed" Toder just as he "posed" Yodka. The State argues
that this evidence was properly admitted because of its probative value.
Evidence is relevant generally
if it has any tendency to make the existence of a fact of consequence
more probable or less probable that it would be without the evidence.
Peeples, 155 Ill. 2d at 455-56, 616 N.E.2d at 309. The decision
to admit or exclude evidence is left to the sound discretion of the
trial court judge
Nan Toder's body was found "posed,"
lying on the floor between two beds in Room 227. Dexter Bartlett
testified that Toder lay on her back, propped up on her elbows with her
head tilted back. She was wearing a robe, which was open, exposing her
breasts and pubic area. This description is strikingly similar to that
given by Yodka. We cannot therefore find that the testimony of Yodka was
irrelevant. The denial of defendant's motion in limine was not an abuse
of discretion.
For the reasons stated, the
judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for a
new trial. Because we are remanding this case for a new trial, we must
consider whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain a conviction
beyond a reasonable doubt. After a careful review of the record in this
case, we find that the evidence was sufficient to prove defendant guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, we find that there is no double
jeopardy impediment to a new trial. People v. Taylor, 76 Ill. 2d 289,
309 (1979). However, we note that we have made no finding as to
defendant's guilt that would be binding on retrial. People v. Fornear,
176 Ill. 2d 523 (1997).
Reversed and remanded.
HOFFMAN and SOUTH concurr.
1. Hollywood
Park and the Hampton Inn are both located in Crestwood, Illinois.
2.
The State cites several federal cases in support of this argument.
However, federal cases are not binding on this court. People
v. Doyle, 61 Ill. App. 3d 571, 577 (1978).
Sol and Lin Toder pose
in this 2003 picture with a photo of their daughter, Nan, who was
murdered in a Chicago hotel room. The Toders are pushing for Nan's Law,
which would
force changes in hotel and motel security.
(Post-Gazette)