People v. Jakes , 2013 IL App (1st) 113057 ( 2014 )


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  •                                   Illinois Official Reports
    Appellate Court
    People v. Jakes, 2013 IL App (1st) 113057
    Appellate Court              THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
    Caption                      ANTHONY JAKES, Defendant-Appellant.
    District & No.               First District, Third Division
    Docket No. 1-11-3057
    Filed                        December 11, 2013
    Held                         The denial of defendant’s postconviction petition alleging that two
    (Note: This syllabus         detectives obtained his confession through the use of threats and
    constitutes no part of the   beatings was reversed and the cause was remanded with directions to
    opinion of the court but     allow defendant to seek discovery of evidence supporting his
    has been prepared by the     allegations of official misconduct and to amend his petition based on
    Reporter of Decisions        any such evidence he might discover, notwithstanding the State’s
    for the convenience of       contention that there were no allegations of police misconduct at the
    the reader.)                 time defendant’s motion for discovery was denied, since police
    misconduct was adequately alleged in the initial petition and the trial
    court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s motion for
    discovery in relation to his petition.
    Decision Under               Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 92-CR-5073; the
    Review                       Hon. Nicholas Ford and the Hon. Michael Toomin, Judges, presiding.
    Judgment                     Reversed and remanded.
    Counsel on               Loevy & Loevy, of Chicago (Tara Thompson, Jon Loevy, Russell
    Appeal                   Ainsworth, and Debra Loevy-Reyes, of counsel), for appellant.
    Anita M. Alvarez, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg and
    Christine Cook, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the
    People.
    Panel                    JUSTICE NEVILLE delivered the judgment of the court, with
    opinion.
    Presiding Justice Hyman and Justice Mason concurred in the
    judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1         This case involves a postconviction petitioner’s right to discovery. A jury found Anthony
    Jakes guilty of murder, based largely on a confession Jakes signed after questioning by
    Detectives Michael Kill and Kenneth Boudreau. Jakes testified that he signed the statement
    because Kill beat him and threatened him while Boudreau watched. Kill and Boudreau denied
    that they beat or threatened Jakes. The jury and the trial court that assessed the credibility of
    Kill, Boudreau and Jakes never heard evidence that Kill and Boudreau beat and threatened
    suspects in other cases to obtain signed confessions and that they committed perjury to
    convince courts and juries to rely on the coerced confessions.
    ¶2         Jakes filed a postconviction petition and he sought discovery concerning the misconduct of
    Kill and Boudreau in other cases. The circuit court denied the motion for discovery and then
    held that the evidence Jakes presented without discovery did not sufficiently establish Kill’s
    pattern and practice of beating and threatening suspects to get them to sign confessions. The
    circuit court dismissed the postconviction petition without holding an evidentiary hearing on
    the allegations of Kill’s and Boudreau’s misconduct. We hold that the trial court abused its
    discretion when it denied Jakes’ motion for discovery concerning the misconduct of Kill and
    Boudreau in other cases. We reverse and remand for further proceedings on the postconviction
    petition.
    ¶3                                      BACKGROUND
    ¶4        On September 15, 1991, a police officer found Rafael Garcia lying in the street, dying from
    multiple gunshot wounds, next to a car with a broken window on the passenger side. Around
    12:30 p.m. the following day, Officer Thomas Pack went to a home near the murder scene
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    where Jakes, then 15 years old, lived with his aunt, Jessie Mae Jones. After entering the home,
    Officer Pack permitted Jakes to put on his clothes, and then Pack took Jakes to police
    headquarters. Kill and Boudreau began interviewing Jakes after 4 p.m. Police also picked up
    Gus Robinson on September 16, 1991, for questioning about the murder of Garcia. Around
    4:30 a.m. on September 17, 1991, Jakes signed a statement an assistant State’s Attorney wrote
    out. Robinson signed a statement around the same time, after eight hours of questioning.
    ¶5       According to the statement Jakes signed, on September 15, 1991, Arnold Day, a friend of
    Jakes, asked Jakes to watch for police while Day robbed a man he saw in a nearby sandwich
    shop. As Jakes walked to the corner, he met Robinson. He asked Robinson to help him watch
    for police. Robinson refused to help and drove off. Jakes told Day he saw no police in the area.
    When the intended victim left the sandwich shop, Day said to him, “This is a stickup.” The
    man ran to his car and started it. Day then shot the man through the car’s passenger window.
    Jakes ran home. He looked out at the street and saw the man moving on the ground.
    ¶6       Photographs taken on September 18, 1991, one day after Jakes signed the statement,
    showed that Jakes had several fresh bruises. A doctor examined Jakes in custody on September
    20, 1991.
    ¶7       Robinson signed a statement that said that on September 15, 1991, Jakes, who knew
    Robinson from the neighborhood, asked Robinson to help watch for police while Day robbed a
    man. Robinson refused to help. As he drove away, he heard some gunshots.
    ¶8       Prosecutors charged Jakes with murder and attempted robbery. Jakes moved to quash his
    arrest and suppress the statement he signed. At the hearing on the suppression motion, the State
    admitted that police had no warrant when they picked up Jakes from his home. Jakes testified
    that when police came to his home on September 16, 1991, they slammed him against a wall
    and handcuffed him. At the police station, one of the officers put his hands in Jakes’ pocket
    then showed Jakes a tinfoil packet that the officer said held cocaine. Jakes did not know where
    the tinfoil packet came from. Kill accused Jakes of shooting Garcia. When Jakes said he knew
    nothing about it, Kill slapped him and threatened to push him out a window. Kill said some
    Latin Kings would attack Jakes’ family, if Kill asked them to do so. Kill knocked Jakes on the
    floor and kicked him while Boudreau watched. Jakes identified the photographs taken on
    September 18, 1991, and he testified that the photographs showed the injuries Kill inflicted on
    Jakes’ arm, leg, side, stomach and back. Jakes eventually signed the statement the assistant
    State’s Attorney wrote out. Jakes admitted that he did not tell the doctor at the jail, the police,
    or the assistant State’s Attorney how he sustained the injuries. Because of Kill’s beating and
    threats, Jakes signed the statement that said police treated him well. Jakes testified that he did
    not get into any physical fight on September 15 or 16 before he came to the police station, and
    he never said to any officer that such a fight had occurred.
    ¶9       Jakes’ aunt, Jones, testified that police entered her home without her permission and
    brought Jakes out of his bedroom in handcuffs. Pack testified that Jones permitted him and
    other officers to enter and go to Jakes’ bedroom. According to Pack, police did not handcuff
    Jakes in his home. Jakes agreed to come to the police station for questioning. Pack found the
    tinfoil packet of cocaine in the pocket of the pants Jakes chose to put on when police picked
    him up for questioning. Pack arrested Jakes at the police station after finding the drugs.
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    ¶ 10        Kill testified that he never struck or threatened Jakes, and Jakes volunteered information
    about the murder and his contact with Robinson. Boudreau testified that Jakes told him that
    three black men fought with him on September 16, 1991. The prosecution argued that the fight,
    and not police brutality, explained Jakes’ bruises.
    ¶ 11        The trial court found the testimony of the officers more credible than the testimony of Jakes
    and Jones. The court denied the motion to quash the arrest and suppress the statement.
    ¶ 12        At trial, Robinson testified in accord with the statement he signed. Robinson, who had two
    prior felony convictions, admitted that prosecutors agreed not to charge him with contempt for
    failing to show up for a scheduled court date if he testified in accord with the statement an
    assistant State’s Attorney wrote out and Robinson signed.
    ¶ 13        Police officers testified about their investigation into Garcia’s murder. No physical
    evidence or testimony, apart from Robinson’s statement, tied Jakes to the crime. The assistant
    State’s Attorney read into the record the statement Jakes signed. The statement included no
    verifiable, correct details about the crime that the police did not know before questioning
    Jakes.
    ¶ 14        Jakes again testified about the circumstances of his arrest and the beating and threats that
    caused him to sign the false statement. Kill repeated his testimony that Jakes volunteered the
    confession, including the encounter with Robinson. Kill swore that he did not coerce or
    threaten Jakes in any way. Boudreau corroborated Kill’s testimony, swearing that he never saw
    any officer strike or threaten Jakes.
    ¶ 15        The jury found Jakes guilty of armed robbery and murder. The trial court sentenced Jakes
    to 40 years in prison for murder and 15 years for attempted armed robbery, with the sentences
    to run concurrently. The appellate court affirmed the conviction and sentences on direct
    appeal. People v. Jakes, No. 1-93-4471 (1995) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule
    23).
    ¶ 16        In 1996, Jakes filed a postconviction petition and the circuit court appointed counsel to
    represent him in postconviction proceedings. Counsel sought multiple continuances in a quest
    for evidence to support Jakes’ assertion in his postconviction petition that Kill beat him and
    threatened him to induce him to sign the false statement used as evidence at trial. Due to an
    ongoing investigation into criminal conduct by several police officers, including Kill and
    Boudreau, counsel had very limited access to evidence that Kill and Boudreau coerced other
    suspects to sign confessions and committed perjury to obtain convictions based on the coerced
    confessions.
    ¶ 17        In 2004, counsel finally stopped trying to obtain evidence of misconduct by Kill and
    Boudreau in other cases to support Jakes’ postconviction petition. The attorney filed a
    supplement to Jakes’ postconviction petition, adding allegations of ineffective assistance of
    trial and appellate counsel. The attorney asserted that Jakes’ trial counsel had failed to
    investigate the crime scene adequately. If trial counsel had thoroughly investigated the crime
    scene, he would have realized that Jakes could not have seen Garcia dying on the street from
    his window because no window in the home Jakes shared with Jones had a view of the street.
    According to the supplement to the postconviction petition, the evidence of a false assertion in
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    the written statement Jakes signed would have supported Jakes’ testimony at trial that he
    signed the false statement because Kill beat and threatened him while Boudreau watched.
    ¶ 18       The circuit court granted the State’s motion to dismiss the postconviction petition and its
    supplement. The appellate court held that, in this case, with very closely balanced evidence,
    the petition and its supporting documents substantially showed that Jakes received ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel for failure to adequately investigate the crime scene and ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel for failure to raise ineffective assistance of trial counsel on the
    direct appeal. People v. Jakes, No. 1-04-1388 (2006) (unpublished order under Supreme Court
    Rule 23). Accordingly, the appellate court reversed the dismissal of the postconviction petition
    and remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing. Jakes, No. 1-04-1388. The appellate court
    noted that Jakes and his postconviction counsel, through no fault of their own, had not
    produced evidence from other victims to support his claims of police brutality and perjury. The
    appellate court said, “since this case is being reversed and remanded, Jakes may amend his
    petition and address his police brutality claim on remand.” Jakes, No. 1-04-1388, slip op. at
    17-18.
    ¶ 19       On remand, Jakes filed a motion for discovery of evidence of past misconduct by Kill and
    Boudreau to impeach their testimony and support Jakes’ claim regarding the statement he
    signed. The circuit court denied the motion for discovery. Instead, the court told counsel that if
    Jakes wished to pursue his misconduct claims against Kill and Boudreau, he needed to file a
    supplemental petition based on evidence he could present without discovery.
    ¶ 20       Counsel filed an amended postconviction petition to further support Jakes’ claim, in the
    original postconviction petition, that Kill threatened him and Kill and Boudreau lied under
    oath about the way they obtained Jakes’ signature on the statement the assistant State’s
    Attorney wrote. Jakes alleged, with supporting documents, that Kill participated in the beating
    and intimidation of Alnoraindus Burton in 1989; Mark Craighead in 1989; Jason Gray in 1986;
    Harold Hill in 1992; Ronald Kitchen in 1988; Anthony Robinson in 1988; Johnny Walker in
    1988; Phillip Walker in 1987; Demond Weston in 1990; Marcus Wiggins in 1991; Anthony
    Williams in 1992; and Eric Wilson in 1988. Jakes also alleged that Boudreau participated in
    the beating and intimidation of Arnold Day in 1992; Fred Ewing in 1993; Derrick Flewellen in
    1995; Jerry Gillespie in 1993; Oscar Gomez in 1995; Harold Hill in 1992; Alfonzia Neal in
    1991; John Plummer in 1992; Tyrone Reyna in 1993; Clayborn Smith in 1992; Darnell Stokes
    in 1993; Michael Taylor in 1994; Sean Tyler in 1994; Kilroy Watkins in 1992; Peter Williams
    in 1992; and Dan Young in 1992. The supporting documents included a few affidavits of the
    alleged victims, some complaints in lawsuits brought by the alleged victims, some decisions of
    appellate courts recounting the records in criminal cases brought against other alleged victims
    of Kill and Boudreau, and some transcripts of testimony in other lawsuits.
    ¶ 21       The State moved to dismiss all allegations of misconduct committed by Kill and Boudreau.
    The circuit court first dismissed as irrelevant all allegations of Boudreau’s extensive history of
    misconduct, because Jakes testified only that Boudreau watched while Kill beat him and
    threatened him. Next, the court struck as too remote in time all allegations of Kill’s misconduct
    before 1988, and all allegations supported by documents other than affidavits of the alleged
    victims. Even when the alleged victim testified about Kill’s crimes, the circuit court refused to
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    accept the testimony as grounds for an evidentiary hearing on the allegations or for permitting
    further discovery about the allegations. The circuit court eliminated from its consideration
    evidence related to all of Kill’s and Boudreau’s alleged victims other than Burton and Kitchen.
    The court then held that those two examples could not make enough of a pattern to support
    Jakes’ claim, and therefore the circuit court dismissed all of Jakes’ claims related to the
    misconduct of Kill and Boudreau.
    ¶ 22       At the hearing on Jakes’ claim that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance, his trial
    counsel testified that he drove to the crime scene and looked around through his car window,
    but he felt no need to inspect the scene more closely. He did not try to determine whether Jakes
    could have seen the street from his home because he did not consider the assertion that Jakes
    saw Garcia dying on the street a significant part of the statement Jakes signed. The attorney
    also said that he did not like to call police officers liars, so he did not want to challenge the
    credibility of Kill and Boudreau.
    ¶ 23       The circuit court agreed with Jakes’ trial counsel that the fact that Jakes could not have
    seen Garcia from his window constituted only an “inconsequential contradiction” that could
    not have persuaded the jury that Kill and Boudreau decided what should go into the statement
    to make it a credible confession, and that Jakes signed the false statement to stop the beatings
    and threats. The court denied the postconviction petition. Jakes now appeals.
    ¶ 24                                           ANALYSIS
    ¶ 25        Because the circuit court dismissed the allegations of police misconduct without holding
    an evidentiary hearing, we review the dismissal of those allegations de novo. People v. Fair,
    
    193 Ill. 2d 256
    , 260 (2000). The circuit court has discretion to order discovery in
    postconviction proceedings. Fair, 193 Ill. 2d at 264. The circuit court should permit discovery
    if the moving party establishes good cause for the request. Fair, 193 Ill. 2d at 264-65. The
    court should consider “the totality of the relevant circumstances, including the issues presented
    in the petition, ‘the scope of the discovery sought, the length of time between the conviction
    and the post-conviction proceeding, the burden [of granting discovery,] and the availability of
    the desired evidence through other sources.’ ” People v. Smith, 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 1095
    , 1113
    (2004) (quoting People ex rel. Daley v. Fitzgerald, 
    123 Ill. 2d 175
    , 183-84 (1988)). The
    appellate court should reverse the circuit court’s decision on a request for discovery in a
    postconviction proceeding only if the trial court abused its discretion. Fair, 193 Ill. 2d at 265.
    ¶ 26        The State argues that the trial court correctly denied the motion for discovery because at the
    time of the motion, the postconviction petition included no allegations of police misconduct.
    The State’s argument rests on a mistake. The initial postconviction petition, filed years before
    the discovery motion, included several allegations of police misconduct, and the discovery
    counsel sought would lend support to those allegations. Counsel’s decision not to repeat those
    allegations in his own submission to the court, labeled a supplement to the postconviction
    petition, does not remove the allegations from the petition. Before defense counsel requested
    discovery concerning police misconduct, the postconviction petition adequately alleged police
    misconduct.
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    ¶ 27       Our supreme court addressed the issue of postconviction discovery in Fair, 
    193 Ill. 2d 256
    .
    In Fair, Judge Foxgrover presided at Fair’s jury trial on a murder charge. The jury found Fair
    guilty. In a postconviction petition, Fair alleged that Foxgrover’s corruption violated Fair’s
    right to a fair trial. Foxgrover had pled guilty to 159 crimes, including theft, official
    misconduct, obstruction of justice and perjury. Fair sought discovery of evidence the State’s
    Attorney’s office gathered in its investigation into Foxgrover’s corruption. In particular, Fair
    requested Foxgrover’s confession and the interviews the State’s Attorney’s office conducted
    with witnesses to Foxgrover’s crimes. The circuit court denied the request for discovery.
    ¶ 28       Our supreme court acknowledged that Fair’s postconviction petition lacked specificity
    concerning Foxgrover’s corruption and its effect on the case against Fair. Fair, 193 Ill. 2d at
    266. The Fair court said:
    “The State argues that petitioner has not established good cause for his discovery
    request because nothing in the post-conviction petition suggests that a nexus exists
    [between Foxgrover’s crimes and the trial of Fair]. The State’s argument, however,
    puts petitioner in an impossible dilemma. According to the State, petitioner is entitled
    to seek out evidence that there is a nexus between Judge Foxgrover’s criminal conduct
    and petitioner’s trial only if he already possesses such evidence. The State also argues
    that allowing petitioner to conduct discovery will further delay the adjudication of this
    case. *** The finality of criminal convictions is a hollow achievement if the integrity of
    the judicial system which produces these convictions is open to question. Petitioner is
    entitled to an opportunity to find and present whatever evidence there may be which
    connects Judge Foxgrover’s criminal conduct to his ability to be an impartial judge at
    petitioner’s murder trial.” Fair, 193 Ill. 2d at 266-67.
    ¶ 29       Jakes’ petition included much more detail about the alleged official misconduct than the
    petition in Fair. Especially because the court found the allegations about most of the other
    alleged victims of Kill and Boudreau inadequately supported, irrelevant and insufficient to
    prove a pattern of coerced confessions and perjury, the detail included in the petition does not
    excuse the decision to deny discovery. The State’s Attorney’s office here, as in Fair, has much
    better access than the defense to evidence concerning the alleged official misconduct. The
    evidence of Kill’s and Boudreau’s misconduct in other cases can alter the relative credibility of
    Jakes, Jones, Kill and Boudreau in their testimony both at trial and at the hearing on the motion
    to suppress the statement Jakes signed. See People v. Mitchell, 2012 IL App (1st) 100907,
    ¶¶ 70-72. Following Fair, we find that the trial court abused its discretion when it denied
    Jakes’ motion for discovery related to his postconviction petition.
    ¶ 30       On remand, the circuit court should permit discovery of materials including “ ‘not only
    what is admissible at the trial, but also that which leads to what is admissible.’ ” People v.
    Kladis, 2011 IL 110920, ¶ 26 (quoting Krupp v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    8 Ill. 2d 37
    , 41
    (1956)). The court should ensure that the parties use discovery to “ ‘enhance the truth-seeking
    process, to enable attorneys to better prepare for trial, to eliminate surprise and to promote an
    expeditious and final determination of controversies in accordance with the substantive rights
    of the parties.’ ” Kladis, 2011 IL 110920, ¶ 27 (quoting D.C. v. S.A., 
    178 Ill. 2d 551
    , 561
    (1997)). The court will need to determine whether the materials sought will help lead the
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    defense to find evidence that “ ‘tends to prove or disprove something in issue.’ ” Kladis, 2011
    IL 110920, ¶ 27 (quoting Bauter v. Reding, 
    68 Ill. App. 3d 171
    , 175 (1979)).
    ¶ 31       Because the matters in issue involve alleged beatings and threats by Kill, the court should
    permit discovery of evidence that affects the credibility of the testimony of Kill and Boudreau
    about the means by which they persuaded Jakes to sign the statement the assistant State’s
    Attorney wrote. Evidence of other cases in which Kill and Boudreau coerced confessions
    directly relates to the issues here. Evidence that Kill and Boudreau lied under oath in other
    proceedings, especially when those proceedings involved statements signed following
    interrogations by Kill or Boudreau, also should affect the credibility of their testimony here.
    See People v. Patterson, 
    192 Ill. 2d 93
    , 145 (2000). The court must permit sufficient discovery
    to establish a pattern or practice of coerced confessions and perjury, if Kill or Boudreau
    engaged in such practices. See Patterson, 192 Ill. 2d at 140. Kill himself, in a deposition, swore
    that he obtained confessions in 90% of the murder cases on which he worked, for a total of
    about 1,500 murder confessions in his career. He added that in 90% of those cases, defense
    attorneys filed motions to suppress “based on allegations of unnecessary use of physical
    force.”
    ¶ 32       The State argues that the trial court correctly held evidence that Boudreau beat other
    suspects and coerced them into signing confessions has no relevance here, because Jakes
    swore only that Boudreau watched Kill beating Jakes, and Jakes did not say Boudreau hit him.
    The State ignores the added coercive power that a second police officer brings to an enclosed
    interview room simply by watching while another officer brutally beats a suspect and verbally
    threatens to do worse. The officer’s silent acceptance of the crime committed by a fellow
    officer can help persuade their victim that no one associated with police will help him and he
    will face worse beatings if he tells a police officer, an assistant State’s Attorney, or a doctor
    working for the State about the beatings. Moreover, Boudreau’s testimony both at trial and on
    the motion to suppress puts his credibility in issue, and evidence that he committed perjury in
    other cases could significantly affect the credibility of his testimony here.
    ¶ 33       In light of our resolution of the discovery issue, we elect to wait to address the issue of
    whether the evidence presented at the evidentiary hearing requires reversal and remand for a
    new trial. We remand for discovery and a new evidentiary hearing.
    ¶ 34                                        CONCLUSION
    ¶ 35       Jakes’ initial postconviction petition included allegations that Detectives Kill and
    Boudreau used beatings and threats to persuade Jakes to sign a false confession and then lied
    under oath about the beatings and threats. The allegations of official misconduct merited
    discovery of any evidence in the State’s possession that could support Jakes’ allegations. Jakes
    may amend his postconviction petition in light of the discovery of evidence of other
    misconduct by Kill and Boudreau. The State may respond to the amended petition. The
    evidence provided in discovery may require a new evidentiary hearing, at which Jakes could
    present evidence that Kill and Boudreau have beaten suspects, coerced confessions, and
    provided perjured testimony in other cases. This court will review the trial court’s findings
    after the trial court has held an appropriate evidentiary hearing, for which defense counsel has
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    access to evidence bearing on the credibility of the testimony of Kill and Boudreau.
    Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings on the
    postconviction petition.
    ¶ 36      Reversed and remanded.
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