People v. Pepitone , 432 Ill. Dec. 55 ( 2019 )


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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
                                      No. 2-15-1161
    Opinion filed May 15, 2019
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Du Page County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 15-CM-1769
    )
    MARC A. PEPITONE,                      ) Honorable
    ) Alexander McGimpsey,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE HUTCHINSON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Jorgensen and Schostok concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Following a bench trial, defendant, Marc A. Pepitone, was found guilty of being a child
    sex offender in a public park pursuant to section 11-9.4-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 (Code)
    (720 ILCS 5/11-9.4-1 (West 2014)) and was sentenced to 202 days in the Du Page County jail.
    Defendant appeals, contending that section 11-9.4-1 is unconstitutional as applied to him because
    it violates the ex post facto provisions of both the United States and Illinois Constitutions.
    Because section 11-9.4-1 does not retroactively apply to defendant, we determine that the law
    does not violate the ex post facto clauses. We thus affirm the trial court’s ruling.
    ¶2                                      I. BACKGROUND
    
    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    ¶3     On May 31, 2015, defendant was charged with one count of being a child sex offender in
    a public park. Defendant waived his right to a jury trial and proceeded to a bench trial on
    September 8, 2015. At trial, the State called Du Page County Forest Preserve Officer Krist
    Schroeder, who testified that he was on duty, in uniform, and in a marked police car in Blackwell
    Forest Preserve, located in Warrenville, on May 31. At approximately 2:40 p.m., while
    positioned in the preserve’s south parking lot, Officer Schroeder saw a green Ford van without a
    front license plate drive into the parking lot. He ran the registration from the back license plate
    and discovered that the registered owner was a child sex offender. Officer Schroeder watched the
    van park near the restrooms. He then observed a man exit the vehicle and enter the restroom. He
    identified the man as defendant. When defendant exited the restroom, he stopped and appeared to
    read an information sign about the preserve before getting back into the van.
    ¶4     Officer Schroeder testified that defendant then pulled the van alongside his marked police
    car. Defendant asked Officer Schroeder if the fishing was good in the preserve and whether a
    license was needed to fish there. After receiving affirmative answers to both questions, defendant
    stated that he “was going to check the place out” and proceeded farther into the preserve toward
    the boat launching area. Officer Schroeder followed defendant and initiated a traffic stop in the
    boat launch parking lot for a missing front license plate. Defendant provided his license, and
    Office Schroeder noticed that his name matched the van’s registered owner.
    ¶5     Officer Schroeder testified that a second officer arrived at the scene to assist in arresting
    defendant. After he was arrested and Mirandized, defendant stated that he did not know that he
    was within the forest preserve. Officer Schroeder then testified that there is only one entrance for
    motor vehicles into the preserve and that the entrance has a large, wooden sign that says
    “Blackwell Forest Preserve.” A little farther into the preserve, there is a smaller sign that lists the
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    hours of operation. Finally, along the route that motor vehicles must take to enter the preserve,
    there is an information center that provides all of the rules for the preserve.
    ¶6     On cross-examination, Officer Schroeder testified that, in his incident report, he wrote
    that defendant stated that he did not know that “driving through” a forest preserve constituted
    being “present” there. On redirect examination, Officer Schroeder stated that the information
    sign that defendant appeared to be reading upon exiting the restroom also was marked with the
    words “forest preserve.” Before resting its case, the State introduced into evidence a certified
    copy of defendant’s 1999 conviction of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child.
    ¶7     Defendant moved for a directed finding, arguing that the State had not met its burden to
    prove that he was knowingly within a forest preserve. In denying defendant’s motion, the trial
    court pointed to the circumstantial evidence of the marked police car, the information sign
    bearing the words “forest preserve” in the parking lot, defendant’s conversation with Officer
    Schroeder, and the large, wooden sign saying “Blackwell Forest Preserve” at the entrance for
    motor vehicles. The defense rested without presenting any evidence.
    ¶8     In its closing argument, the State discussed the statute at issue and its burden to prove
    that defendant was a child sex offender who was knowingly present in a public park. The State
    argued that it proved each element, noting that anyone convicted of predatory criminal sexual
    assault of a child is deemed to be a child sex offender. Defendant’s counsel argued that
    defendant was not knowingly in the preserve.
    ¶9     The trial court found defendant guilty. In so finding, the court noted that there was no real
    dispute that defendant was a child sex offender and was actually present in the preserve. As to
    whether defendant was knowingly present in the preserve, the court noted all the signage
    identifying the area as Blackwell Forest Preserve and the conversation that defendant had with
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    the officer in his marked squad car. The court found that, “in light of the circumstances, I think
    the circumstantial evidence and combined with the direct evidence, is overwhelming that the
    defendant knew he was in a forest preserve.” Finally, the court noted, “I understand the argument
    could be made that perhaps he didn’t know it was a violation of the law; but that is not a defense,
    as the Court is aware.”
    ¶ 10   Defendant timely filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that section 11-9.4-1 of the Code
    is an unconstitutional ex post facto law. The trial court heard argument on the motion on October
    19, 2015. Defendant’s counsel argued that defendant was not given notice that he would be
    precluded from entering any park or forest preserve when he pled guilty to the offense of
    predatory criminal sexual assault of a child in 1999. Counsel also discussed the factors outlined
    in Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 
    372 U.S. 144
    (1963), for identifying ex post facto laws.
    Counsel argued that a majority of these factors favored a finding for defendant.
    ¶ 11   The State argued that defendant’s motion would have been more appropriate as a pretrial
    motion to dismiss, and it had proved the elements of the crime as clearly identified in the statute.
    The State further argued that, as the trial court noted in its ruling, ignorance of the law is no
    defense for its violation and that the burden is on defendant, because of his status as a child sex
    offender, to “be aware of the laws affecting child sex offenders including this law that he cannot
    be present in any public park.”
    ¶ 12   On November 23, 2015, after reviewing the case law presented at the motion hearing, the
    trial court denied defendant’s motion. In denying the motion, the court found that section
    11-9.4-1 is not an unconstitutional ex post facto law, stating, “[b]ased upon the case law the
    Court has reviewed, I don’t find that the *** sex offender restrictions are punitive measures or
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    punitive requirements.” The court also found that the State was not required to prove that
    defendant had notice. The court then reaffirmed its ruling and closed the matter.
    ¶ 13    Defendant timely appealed. 1
    ¶ 14                                        II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 15    The facts at issue are not in dispute. Section 11-9.4-1 of the Code was enacted in 2011
    and amended in 2013. See Pub. Act 96-1099 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) (adding 720 ILCS 5/11-9.4-1);
    Pub. Act 97-698 (eff. Jan. 1, 2013) (amending 720 ILCS 11-9.4-1); Pub. Act 97-1109 (eff. Jan.
    1, 2013) (amending 720 ILCS 11-9.4-1). Defendant pled guilty to predatory criminal sexual
    assault of a child in 1999 and entered the forest preserve in 2015.
    ¶ 16    Defendant contends that section 11-9.4-1 of the Code violates the ex post facto clauses of
    both the United States and Illinois Constitutions as it applies to him, because he was convicted of
    being a child sex offender well before the statute was enacted. The State maintains that the
    statute does not violate the ex post facto clauses, as it is neither retroactive nor punitive.
    ¶ 17    “An as-applied challenge requires a showing that the statute violates the constitution as it
    applies to the facts and circumstances of the challenging party.” People v. Thompson, 
    2015 IL 118151
    , ¶ 36. All statutes carry a presumption of constitutionality, and courts will uphold
    statutes whenever reasonably possible, resolving all doubts in favor of their validity. People v.
    Stevens, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 150871
    , ¶ 15. To rebut the presumption, the party challenging a
    1
    On defendant’s motion, this appeal was held in abeyance pending a decision by the
    Illinois Supreme Court in People v. Pepitone, 
    2018 IL 122034
    . There, the supreme court remanded
    a similar case to the Third District Appellate Court for consideration of whether the statute in
    question violated the ex post facto clauses as applied to defendant. On June 27, 2018, following
    that remand, we vacated the stay in the present appeal.
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    statute must clearly establish that it violates the constitution. People v. Mosley, 
    2015 IL 115872
    ,
    ¶ 22. We review de novo whether a statute violates the ex post facto clauses as applied to a
    particular defendant. People v. Higgins, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 120888
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶ 18   Both the federal and state constitutions prohibit the Illinois legislature from passing an
    ex post facto law. U.S. Const., art I, § 10; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 16. Our supreme court has
    interpreted the Illinois ex post facto provision in step with the United States Supreme Court’s
    pronouncements. People v. Cornelius, 
    213 Ill. 2d 178
    , 207 (2004). These prohibitions forbid the
    legislature from enacting “any law which imposes a punishment for an act which was not
    punishable at the time it was committed; or imposes additional punishment to that then
    prescribed.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Weaver v. Graham, 
    450 U.S. 24
    , 28 (1981). The
    ex post facto provisions restrain the legislature “from enacting arbitrary or vindictive legislation,
    and assure[ ] that statutes provide fair warning of their effect.” 
    Cornelius, 213 Ill. 2d at 207
    . A
    criminal law is considered ex post facto if it is both retroactive and disadvantageous to a
    defendant. People v. Franklin, 
    135 Ill. 2d 78
    , 107 (1990). A law is retroactive if it applies to
    events that occurred before the law was enacted. People v. Brown, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 140508-B
    ,
    ¶ 12 (citing Lynce v. Mathis, 
    519 U.S. 433
    , 441 (1997)). A law is disadvantageous to a defendant
    if it criminalizes an act that was innocent when performed, increases the punishment for a
    previously committed offense, or alters the rules of evidence by making a conviction easier.
    People v. Malchow, 
    193 Ill. 2d 413
    , 418 (2000).
    ¶ 19   At the time of defendant’s present conviction, and still today, section 11-9.4-1 of the
    Code provided that “[i]t is unlawful for a sexual predator or a child sex offender to knowingly be
    present in any public park building or on real property comprising any public park.” 720 ILCS
    5/11-9.4-1(b) (West 2014). The term “child sex offender” is ascribed to any person who has been
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child. 
    Id. § 11-9.3(d)(1)(i)(A),
    (d)(2)(i). The
    term “public park” includes a “forest preserve, *** under the jurisdiction of the State or a unit of
    local government.” 
    Id. § 11-9.4-1(a).
    The first violation of section 11-9.4-1(b) is a Class A
    misdemeanor, and any subsequent violations are Class 4 felonies. 
    Id. § 11-9.4-1(d).
    ¶ 20   Defendant contends that the issue we must determine with respect to retroactivity is
    whether defendant’s status as a child sex offender was attributable solely to conduct that
    predated the enactment of section 11-9.4-1 of the Code. He argues that, because he was
    convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child in 1999, 12 years before the statute took
    effect, the statute is retroactive. Defendant also argues that the statute is punitive as applied to
    him, and he focuses the vast majority of his arguments on discussing the Mendoza-Martinez
    factors. In turn, the State contends that defendant’s status as a child sex offender was simply an
    element of the present crime and that, because the statute was enacted well after defendant
    obtained the status of a child sex offender, it is not retroactive. The State maintains that, because
    the statute is not retroactive, we do not need to discuss the Mendoza-Martinez factors to
    determine whether it is punitive. We agree with the State.
    ¶ 21   With respect to retroactivity, “[t]he critical question is whether the law changes the legal
    consequences of acts completed before its effective date.” 
    Weaver, 450 U.S. at 31
    . In Weaver, a
    Florida penal statute revised “gain-time,” time credited to reduce an inmate’s prison term for
    good conduct. The statute was found to be retroactive because it was implemented three years
    after the defendant’s conviction and “attache[d] legal consequences to a crime committed before
    the law took effect.” 
    Id. The Court
    held that the statute “substantially alters the consequences
    attached to a crime already completed, and therefore changes the quantum of punishment.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 33.
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    ¶ 22   Here, however, no additional legal consequences were attached to defendant based solely
    on his 1999 conviction of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child. Rather, defendant’s status
    as a child sex offender was an element of an entirely separate crime, which required that
    defendant commit an additional act. In this case, defendant’s conduct, being present in a park,
    occurred after the enactment of section 11-9.4-1 of the Code. Thus, defendant’s present
    conviction cannot be retroactive.
    ¶ 23   The State suggests that this conclusion is supported by People v. Owens, 2018 IL App
    (4th) 170506. We agree. In Owens, the defendant appealed the trial court’s denial of his motion
    to dismiss the charge of failing to register as a sex offender under the Sex Offender Registration
    Act (SORA) (730 ILCS 150/3(a) (West 2016)), claiming that the SORA subjected him to double
    jeopardy. Owens, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 170506
    , ¶¶ 7-8. In rejecting the defendant’s argument, the
    appellate court noted that the defendant was not being reprosecuted for the underlying offense of
    criminal sexual assault, which required sexual penetration (see 720 ILCS 5/12-13 (West 1998)),
    but rather for the failure to register. Owens, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 170506
    , ¶ 22. “The State
    originally charged defendant with criminal sexual assault of which he was convicted. *** The
    State is now prosecuting defendant for his alleged failure to register. [Citation.] Obviously,
    failing to register is a completely different act than sexual penetration.” (Emphases in original.)
    
    Id. ¶ 24
      Although the defendant in Owens pursued a different legal challenge to his conviction,
    the court’s rationale applies to the case at hand. The defendant in Owens claimed that the SORA
    subjected him to double jeopardy because he was being punished twice for the same conduct: the
    initial conviction of criminal sexual assault and the subsequent conviction of failing to register as
    a sex offender. Similarly, here, defendant claims that his present conviction derived from the
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    conduct underlying his 1999 conviction. It did not. Defendant’s status as a child sex offender
    was merely an element of the present crime. See People v. Coats, 
    2018 IL 121926
    , ¶ 27 (“A
    felon’s status is *** a state of being.”). We note that status as an element of a crime is not unique
    to sex offenders. See People v. Leonard, 
    391 Ill. App. 3d 926
    (2009) (holding that the armed
    habitual criminal statute punishes defendants not because of their previous felony convictions but
    rather for a new offense and thus does not violate the ex post facto clauses).
    ¶ 25   Perhaps more on point is the rationale used by the Seventh Circuit in Vasquez v. Foxx,
    
    895 F.3d 515
    (7th Cir. 2018) (en banc). In Vasquez, the court held that Illinois’s residency
    restrictions on child sex offenders that were enacted after the defendants’ convictions, such as
    not living within 500 feet of a child day-care home (720 ILCS 5/11-9.3(b-10) (West 2012)), were
    not retroactive but rather prospective. 
    Vasquez, 895 F.3d at 520
    . The court reasoned that the
    residency restrictions merely created “new, prospective legal obligations based on the person’s
    prior history” and that a violation of these restrictions constituted an independent criminal act
    occurring after the law’s enactment. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. Thus, a
    child sex
    offender would be subject to criminal prosecution based not solely on his or her status but,
    rather, on that status in conjunction with the additional act of living within 500 feet of a day-care
    center. Id.; see also United States v. Leach, 
    639 F.3d 769
    (7th Cir. 2011) (holding that the federal
    Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act was not retroactive, because it applied only to
    conduct after its enactment).
    ¶ 26   Likewise, defendant was not punished here solely because of his status, which undeniably
    was attributed to him based on his conduct before section 11-9.4-1 of the Code was enacted.
    Rather, defendant was punished because of an act he committed nearly four years after the
    statute was enacted. Like the residency restrictions considered in Vasquez, section 11-9.4-1
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    2019 IL App (2d) 151161
    created a new, prospective legal obligation—prohibiting defendant from knowingly entering a
    public park. Thus, defendant was not subject to prosecution solely because of his status. He was
    convicted of a crime that required both his status and the additional act of knowingly being
    present in a public park. Because the statute only makes defendant’s status an element of a
    separate crime, and does not apply to his conduct before the statute was enacted, it is not
    retroactive.
    ¶ 27      Having held that section 11-9.4-1 of the Code does not retroactively apply to defendant,
    we need not consider whether the statute is disadvantageous to him. For a law to violate the
    ex post facto provisions, a law must be both retroactive and disadvantageous to a defendant. See
    
    Lynce, 519 U.S. at 441
    ; 
    Weaver, 450 U.S. at 29
    ; 
    Cornelius, 213 Ill. 2d at 207
    ; Fletcher v.
    Williams, 
    179 Ill. 2d 225
    , 230 (1997). Because section 11-9.4-1 of the Code is not retroactive, it
    does not violate the ex post facto clauses.
    ¶ 28                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 29      For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County.
    As a part of our judgment, we grant the State’s request that defendant be assessed $50 as costs for
    this appeal. 55 ILCS 5/4-2002(a) (West 2016); see also People v. Nicholls, 
    71 Ill. 2d 166
    , 178
    (1978).
    ¶ 30      Affirmed.
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