In re Lashun H. ( 1996 )


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  •                                    FIFTH DIVISION
    October 11, 1996
    No. 1-95-0183
    In re LASHUN H., a Minor                )    Appeal from the
    )    Circuit Court of
    (The People of the State of Illinois,   )    Cook County.
    )
    Petitioner-Appellee,     )
    )
    v.                                 )
    )
    Lashun H., a Minor,                     )    Honorable
    )    Maureen Durkin Roy,
    Respondent-Appellant).   )    Judge Presiding.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE McNULTY delivered the opinion of the court:
    Respondent Lashun H. was adjudicated delinquent for first-
    degree murder and committed to the Department of Corrections.
    Respondent claims on appeal that the trial court erred in:  (1)
    finding that respondent s confession was voluntarily given; (2)
    holding that respondent had knowingly and intelligently waived his
    privilege against self-incrimination; (3) curtailing his cross-
    examination of witnesses during the suppression hearing; (4)
    adjudicating first-degree murder when respondent had a valid claim
    for self-defense; and (5) adjudicating first-degree murder when
    respondent held an unreasonable belief that the use of force in
    self-defense was justified.  We reverse and remand.
    On March 12, 1994, the decedent, Antoine Brown, was playing
    with a group of about 20 boys at 5119 West Adams in Chicago.
    Respondent, Ralph Anderson and two other boys approached decedent
    and the other boys.  A confrontation ensued in which the decedent
    was killed by a gunshot wound in the back.  Respondent and Anderson
    were arrested, charged and tried for the shooting.  Respondent was
    14 years old at the time of the incident.
    Before the adjudicatory hearing, respondent sought to suppress
    a statement given by him to police the day after the shooting.  In
    the suppression hearing, Officer Luis Bergos testified that he went
    to respondent s home on the day of the shooting and asked
    respondent s mother, Brenda, about respondent's whereabouts.
    Officer Bergos left a number where he could be reached.  Brenda
    later testified that Officer Bergos told her that the police would
    shoot respondent if they found him with his hands in his pockets,
    but Officer Bergos denied making that statement.
    Officer Mike Walter testified that Brenda called him and told
    him that her son was at the house of Calvin Hudson, his uncle.
    Officer Walter drove to Brenda s home and she accompanied him to
    Hudson s home.  According to Officer Walter, respondent was awake
    and in the dining room when they arrived.  Officer Walter informed
    respondent of his Miranda rights, asked respondent whether he
    understood each of his rights and asked respondent if he wished to
    talk to the police. Respondent indicated that he understood his
    rights and would cooperate with the police.  Officer Walter found
    respondent to be coherent.  Officer Walter asked respondent where
    the gun used in the shooting was and respondent said that he gave it
    to his friend Terrell Wyatt so that Wyatt could hide it.  Officer
    Walter then took respondent and his mother to Terrell Wyatt s house.
    Terrell was not home, but his mother knew where he might be.
    Terrell s mother led them to a house a block away, where they
    recovered the gun.  Officer Walter and other officers then took
    respondent and his mother to the 15th District police station.
    Officer Walter was then asked by Detective Dolan to bring all
    witnesses to the incident to Area Five police headquarters.
    When they arrived at Area Five, the officers took respondent
    upstairs and asked Brenda to wait downstairs.  Officer Walter
    testified that respondent s mother did not ask to go upstairs and
    respondent did not ask to have his mother come upstairs.
    Respondent s uncle, Calvin Hudson, testified that respondent
    fell asleep at his house on the night of the shooting.  Hudson
    testified that police came to his house with their guns drawn and
    went to the bedroom to wake respondent.  The officers then picked
    respondent up, searched him, took him into the dining room and
    handcuffed him.  The officers asked respondent about a shooting and
    a gun and then put him in a squad car.  Hudson went with respondent
    in a police car to the 15th District police station, while Brenda
    went to the station in a different police car.  Hudson testified
    that one of the officers in the car said something like, "You should
    not have shot this boy," and respondent stated that he did not shoot
    the boy.  Hudson also heard an officer say they recovered a gun.  At
    the 15th District  police station, Brenda asked the officers when
    she could see respondent.  An officer told Brenda she could see her
    son in 5 or 10 minutes, but for the entire time they remained at the
    15th District station, she was not allowed to see her son.
    Police officers then drove respondent, Hudson and Brenda in the
    back seat of a squad car to the Area Five police station.  When they
    arrived at the Area Five police station, respondent was taken
    upstairs and Hudson and Brenda were told to wait in a waiting room.
    Hudson remained at the station until 4 a.m., during which time
    Brenda asked two or three times whether she could see respondent,
    but was refused.
    Respondent s mother, Brenda Henry, testified that on the day of
    the shooting, Officer Bergos came to her house looking for
    respondent and informed her that if the officers "caught
    [respondent] with his hands in his pocket[s] they were going to
    shoot him."  When Brenda learned that respondent was at Calvin
    Hudson s house, she informed the police and the police came to her
    house and took her to Hudson s house.  Four officers entered
    Hudson s house with their guns drawn, went to the bedroom, woke
    respondent up, took him to the dining room, handcuffed him and asked
    him where the gun was.  The police denied that they awakened
    respondent.  Shortly before midnight, the police drove her in one
    car and respondent in another to Terrell Wyatt s house, where they
    recovered a gun.  The police then took them to the Chicago Avenue
    police station and put Brenda in a waiting room.  Although Brenda
    asked to see respondent, she did not see him until 3 a.m. when the
    officers drove her and Calvin Hudson in a police car with respondent
    to the Area Five police station.  Upon arrival at the station,
    respondent and Brenda were separated.  Brenda asked five times
    whether she could see respondent, but was refused.  At one point,
    she went upstairs in an attempt to see respondent, but was sent back
    downstairs.  When she finally saw respondent sometime after 6 a.m.,
    he had his head down and tears in his eyes.  Respondent told her
    that he was not the shooter.
    Youth Officer Pulius testified that he was assigned to assist
    respondent in his questioning by Detective Dolan.  Officer Pulius
    met with respondent at the Area Five station and gave him his
    Miranda warnings and explained to respondent that he was there to
    protect his rights.  Officer Pulius asked respondent whether he
    understood his rights, and respondent stated that he did.  Officer
    Pulius then warned respondent that he could be tried as an adult and
    asked if he understood the gravity of the situation, and respondent
    indicated that he did.  Respondent then agreed to speak to Officer
    Pulius and Detective Dolan.  Officer Pulius testified that
    respondent declined food on two occasions and respondent received a
    drink and went to the washroom.  Respondent was a little nervous but
    was coherent and answered the detective s questions intelligently.
    Respondent never asked to speak to his parents or an attorney.
    Officer Pulius testified that he asked one of the detectives whether
    respondent s parents had been contacted and was told that
    respondent s parents had been notified, but were not at the station.
    Officer Pulius never informed respondent that his mother could be
    with him during the interview nor did he ask respondent whether he
    wanted his parents there.  Officer Pulius admitted that the police
    guidelines state that a parent, relative or friend should be present
    whenever a minor is interviewed.
    Detective John Dolan testified that he interviewed respondent
    at Area Five headquarters.  Detective Dolan had two conversations
    with respondent.  Officer Pulius was present during both
    conversations.  Although Detective Dolan knew that respondent s
    mother was at the station and had requested to be present during the
    questioning of her son, Detective Dolan would  not permit her to be
    present during his questioning of respondent.  Detective Dolan never
    informed respondent that his mother could be present during the
    questioning.  The first round of questioning began at 3:30 a.m. and
    lasted for about 15 minutes.  Respondent claimed that Ralph Anderson
    was the shooter and that Anderson handed the gun to him.  Detective
    Dolan then interviewed other witnesses for two hours.  When Dolan
    returned to respondent at 5:45 a.m., respondent appeared to be
    sleeping.  However, according to Detective Dolan, respondent
    appeared coherent, alert and responsive.  Detective Dolan told
    respondent that witnesses had implicated him as the shooter.
    However, Detective Dolan did not tell him that other witnesses had
    implicated Anderson as the shooter.  Detective Dolan told respondent
    that one of the witnesses had said respondent had a knife and
    respondent admitted that he had a knife in his possession.  Shortly
    before 6:15 a.m., respondent made an incriminating statement.
    Respondent stated that he and several friends were surrounded by a
    larger group, one of whom hit one of his friends.  Another
    individual took a swing at respondent and missed, at which time
    respondent fired a gun, which he had up the right sleeve of his
    jacket.  Respondent's statement was never reduced to writing or
    signed, nor was it taken in the presence of an assistant State s
    Attorney.
    School psychologist Irvine Hassman testified that respondent s
    reading and spelling levels were those of a seven-year-old and his
    math comprehension was that of a 12-year-old.  Respondent met with
    a learning disability specialist for 40 minutes each school day.
    Hassman testified that he could not determine whether respondent
    could understand Miranda warnings.  Hassman read from a report of
    respondent s language therapist, who wrote that respondent s
    receptive and expressive language as relating to understanding words
    was somewhat limited, but his ability to communicate on an everyday
    basis with teachers and students was within normal limits for his
    age.  Respondent received Ds and Fs in school, but Hassman stated
    that could have resulted from respondent choosing not to complete
    his work.  Respondent had not taken an I.Q. test, which would have
    given a clearer picture of respondent s cognitive skills.
    The trial court denied respondent s motion to suppress his
    statement, holding that under the totality of the circumstances,
    respondent s will was not overborne.  The court also determined that
    Hassman s testimony did not support a finding that respondent did
    not understand his Miranda rights.
    At the adjudicatory hearing, the State introduced respondent s
    statement into evidence.  The State also presented witnesses to
    testify that they saw respondent shoot the victim and heard
    respondent claim that he had shot someone.  Respondent attempted to
    impeach the State s witnesses and presented evidence to implicate
    Anderson as the shooter.  The court acquitted Anderson and entered
    a finding of delinquency on respondent and sentenced him to the
    Department of Corrections.
    Respondent first claims on appeal that the trial court erred in
    finding his confession voluntary and denying his motion to suppress
    his confession.  The receiving of an incriminating statement made by
    a juvenile in the absence of counsel is a sensitive concern
    requiring great care to assure that the juvenile s confession was
    neither coerced or suggested, nor a product of fright or despair.
    People v. Prude, 
    66 Ill. 2d 470
    , 
    363 N.E.2d 371
    (1977).  The test is
    whether, under the totality of the circumstances, the statement was
    made freely, without compulsion or inducement, with consideration
    given to the characteristics of the accused as well as the details
    of the interrogation.  People v. Prim, 
    53 Ill. 2d 62
    , 
    289 N.E.2d 601
    (1972).  Relevant factors in determining whether a confession was
    voluntary under the totality of the circumstances include the age,
    intelligence, experience and physical condition of the accused, the
    length and intensity of the interrogation, and the existence of any
    threats, promises, or physical coercion.  People v. Martin, 
    102 Ill. 2d
    412, 
    466 N.E.2d 228
    (1984).  When a juvenile is involved,
    additional factors come into play, such as the time of day and the
    presence of a parent or other adult interested in the juvenile s
    welfare.  People v. Brown, 
    235 Ill. App. 3d 479
    , 
    601 N.E.2d 1190
    (1992).  A reviewing court will not disturb a finding by the trial
    court on the voluntariness of a confession unless the finding is
    contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.  People v. Davis,
    
    97 Ill. 2d 1
    , 
    452 N.E.2d 525
    (1983).
    We have carefully reviewed all of the circumstances surrounding
    respondent s confession and conclude that the trial court s
    determination that respondent s confession was voluntary is against
    the manifest weight of the evidence.  The coercive nature of the 14-
    year-old respondent s encounter with the police began immediately
    upon respondent s arrest at his uncle s house. The police arrived at
    respondent s uncle s home shortly before midnight and entered the
    house with guns drawn.  Respondent and his mother were taken to the
    15th District police station in separate police cars.  Upon arrival
    at the station, respondent s mother and uncle were taken to a
    waiting room and respondent was taken upstairs.  Respondent was not
    permitted to speak with either his mother or uncle.  When respondent
    was later transported to Area Five police headquarters, his mother
    and uncle were driven in the same police car, but respondent did not
    have an opportunity to confer with them since no interrogation
    occurred at that time, police officers were in the front seat of the
    car and Terrell Wyatt, who had interests antagonistic to respondent,
    was seated in the back.  Respondent s mother and uncle testified
    that respondent's mother made repeated requests while at both
    stations to see respondent, but her requests were denied.  The
    detectives were fully aware of Brenda s presence at the Area Five
    police station, since she was taken to the station by police
    officers and she made her presence known to officers in the station.
    However, Detective Dolan testified that he would not permit
    respondent's mother to be present during his interrogation of
    respondent.
    Detective Dolan questioned respondent for 15 minutes at 3:30
    a.m. and respondent denied that he was the shooter. Respondent was
    then left alone in the interview room until 5:50 a.m. while the
    police conducted further investigation.  At 5:50 Detective Dolan
    woke respondent up and questioned him for another 25 minutes.  While
    the detective informed respondent that witnesses had identified him
    as the shooter, he never informed respondent that other witnesses
    had identified Anderson as the shooter.  While Detective Dolan
    claimed that respondent confessed at about 6:15 a.m., respondent was
    never requested to sign a formal waiver of his rights, this
    confession was never reduced to writing and was never given to
    respondent to review and sign.  Respondent s mother was not allowed
    to see him until after he confessed.  When respondent saw his
    mother, he informed her that he was not the shooter.  All of these
    factors, combined with respondent s learning disability and minimal
    prior contact with the juvenile justice system, lead us to conclude
    that respondent s confession was not voluntary.
    Although a juvenile does not have a per se right to consult
    with a parent before questioning or to have the parent present
    during questioning, the presence or absence of the parent is a
    factor in evaluating the voluntariness of a confession under the
    totality of the circumstances.  People v. Brown, 
    182 Ill. App. 3d 1046
    , 1053, 
    538 N.E.2d 909
    (1989).  In People v. Montanez, 273 Ill.
    App. 3d 844, 
    652 N.E.2d 1271
    (1995), the 15-year-old defendant was
    arrested at 9 p.m. and taken to Area Five police headquarters.
    Before either a youth officer or the defendant s mother arrived at
    the station, a detective began questioning the defendant.  The
    detective read the defendant her Miranda warnings, and the defendant
    stated that she understood her rights and would make a statement.
    Youth Officer Pulius arrived at 12:30 a.m. after defendant gave her
    statement.  Pulius was, however, present for defendant s next three
    conversations with the detective, which concluded sometime after
    6:15 a.m.   An assistant State s Attorney spoke with defendant at
    1:15 a.m., advised her of her rights and told her that she would be
    treated as an adult.  After speaking with the assistant State s
    Attorney, defendant agreed to make a statement in the presence of a
    court reporter.  The assistant State s Attorney read the statement
    to the defendant and the defendant made corrections to the statement
    and then signed it.
    The defendant s mother testified that at 10 p.m., she learned
    that her daughter was in custody, but the detectives told her that
    she could not see her daughter at that time but they would notify
    her when she could.  At 2 a.m., when the defendant s mother still
    had not heard from the police, she went to the station.  She was
    told to wait in a waiting room, but instead went upstairs to find
    the defendant.  She was told to leave, but went back upstairs every
    hour or so in an attempt to see her daughter.  She was finally
    allowed to see her daughter at 8:30 a.m., after her daughter had
    made an incriminating statement.
    The court reversed the trial court s denial of defendant s
    motion to suppress, finding that the defendant s confession was not
    voluntary since she was "interrogated throughout the night as part
    of a pattern of police conduct designed to elicit a confession, as
    well as to obstruct parental counselling."  Montanez, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d
    at 855.  The court found that the mother, who had been present at
    the station for over six hours, had demonstrated an interest in her
    daughter's welfare.  However, the police repeatedly attempted to
    question the minor without prior parental counseling, thereby
    obstructing the mother s attempts to communicate with her daughter
    until after her daughter s confession had been reduced to writing
    and signed.  Such police conduct is material in determining
    voluntariness of a minor defendant s confession.  Montanez, 273 Ill.
    App. 3d at 852.
    Courts have repeatedly held that police conduct which
    frustrates a parent s attempts to confer with her child prior to or
    during questioning is significant in determining voluntariness of a
    confession.  In People v. Knox, 
    186 Ill. App. 3d 808
    , 
    542 N.E.2d 910
    (1989), for example, when the defendant was arrested at his home at
    9:40 p.m., his father could not accompany him to the station because
    he was caring for his young children and defendant's mother was not
    home.  Defendant s mother arrived at the station at 10:10 p.m. as
    soon as she learned of his arrest.  She identified herself at the
    front desk and was told to wait.  At 12 midnight, she was told that
    defendant had already confessed and she should go home. At 2:45, an
    assistant State s Attorney reduced defendant s statement to writing
    and defendant corrected and signed the statement.
    In reversing the denial of defendant s motion to suppress, the
    court found that the police had "contributed significantly to
    eliminating any opportunity defendant had from speaking to his
    mother at the police station."  
    Knox, 186 Ill. App. 3d at 813-14
    .
    In evaluating the evidence, the court stated:
    "We do not believe such conduct by police is
    consistent with the great care required where a
    juvenile s incriminating statement is received.  At
    worst, the police purposefully precluded defendant s
    mother from contact with defendant by neglecting to see
    if defendant s mother had arrived until after such time
    as defendant had completed his confession.  At best, the
    police simply subjected defendant to the same routine
    questioning of a criminal suspect without special regard
    for his youth.  Either scenario is impermissible and
    casts some doubt over the voluntariness of defendant s
    statement."  
    Knox, 186 Ill. App. 3d at 814
    .
    Similarly, in In re J.O., 
    231 Ill. App. 3d 853
    , 
    596 N.E.2d 1285
    (1992), although the 12-year-old respondent's parents were at
    the station, they were not allowed to confer with their son until
    after he had confessed.  In finding that respondent's statement
    had been properly suppressed, the court stated:
    "A juvenile s age and the fact that the interrogation
    occurred in the middle of the night may properly be
    considered in evaluating the voluntary nature of a
    confession. [Citation.]  Additionally, if parents have
    indicated an interest by their presence, then they
    should be allowed to confer with their children before
    any questio+ning begins, as well as be present when any
    questioning occurs."   In re 
    J.O., 231 Ill. App. 3d at 855
    .
    The court concluded that the presence or absence of a parent is
    one factor in evaluating the voluntary nature of a confession
    under the totality of the circumstances.
    In People v. Brown, 
    182 Ill. App. 3d 1046
    , 
    538 N.E.2d 909
    (1989), the court held that the fact that those questioning a
    defendant were unaware of the defendant's mother's presence at the
    police station was insufficient to avoid the obligation to allow
    a parent to see her child where the parent indicated an interest
    by her presence at the police station.  The court explained:
    "[T]he officers who know of the parent's presence have an
    affirmative duty to inform those actually questioning a
    juvenile of the parent's presence and request to see her
    child.  And, in order to ensure the true voluntariness of
    a statement, those questioning the juvenile have an
    affirmative duty to stop the questioning and allow the
    parent to confer with her child."  Brown, at 182 Ill.
    App. 3d at 1053-54.
    The police in the instant case clearly frustrated
    respondent's mother s attempts to confer with her son.  Respondent
    and his mother were taken to the 15th District police station in
    separate police cars.  Despite her requests, respondent's mother
    was not allowed to speak with her son at the station.  Although
    respondent's mother was transported to Area Five in the same car
    as her son, as discussed previously, she had no opportunity to
    confer with her son at that time.  Once at Area Five, respondent
    and his mother were again separated.  Although youth officer
    Pulius at Area Five claimed he was unaware that respondent's
    mother was at the Area Five station, other officers, including
    Officer Walter from the 15th District, who transported
    respondent's mother to the station, and Detective Dolan who
    interrogated respondent, were fully aware of the mother s presence
    at the station.  When youth officer Pulius asked whether
    respondent's parents had been contacted, a detective told him that
    respondent's parents had been notified but were not at the
    station.  This misrepresentation further indicates that the
    detectives did not want Officer Pulius to permit respondent's
    mother to confer with her son or to be present during the
    interrogation but instead attempted to create a coercive
    environment and extract a confession from respondent, although the
    mother had fully cooperated with the police during their
    investigation.
    While Officer Walter could not recall whether respondent or
    his mother requested to see one another while at the 15th District
    station, respondent's mother and uncle testified that respondent's
    mother requested to see her son several times but was refused.
    Furthermore, while Detective Dolan was aware that respondent's
    mother requested to be present during her son's questioning, he
    testified that he would not permit her to be present during the
    interview.  At one point, respondent's mother went upstairs in an
    attempt to see respondent, but she was sent back downstairs.
    Respondent's mother was not permitted to see her son until after
    6 a.m., after he had confessed.  Common sense leads us to conclude
    that respondent s mother would not have remained at station from
    midnight until after 6 a.m., without asking to see her son and
    being interested in seeing her son.  Her attempts, however, were
    clearly frustrated by the police so that they could create an
    intimidating atmosphere and obtain a confession.
    Just as the absence of a parent does not per se make a
    confession involuntary, we do not find the presence of a youth
    officer per se makes a confession voluntary. See People v.
    Gardner, 
    282 Ill. App. 3d 209
    , 218 (1996) at p.8, (in some cases
    where the defendant is prevented from seeing his parent or
    guardian, the presence of the youth officer would not be enough to
    demonstrate voluntariness).  We instead consider this a
    significant factor in determining that respondent s confession was
    not voluntary, along with the coercive nature of respondent s
    encounter with police, respondent s youth, his learning
    disabilities, his lack of experience with the criminal or juvenile
    justice system, and the failure of the detectives to contact an
    assistant State s Attorney or reduce respondent s statement to
    writing.
    The officers' intimidation of respondent began when they
    entered his uncle s house at 11 p.m. with guns drawn.  While it is
    undisputed that the officers entered the house with their guns
    drawn, the dissent claims that there is no evidence that
    respondent ever saw a police gun out of its holster since
    respondent's mother and uncle testified that respondent was asleep
    when the police entered the house. However, Officer Walter
    testified that respondent was awake and in the dining room when
    the officers entered the house.  We must accept the officer's
    testimony as true, so as not to substitute our judgment for that
    of the trial court on this issue of credibility.  People v. Young,
    
    206 Ill. App. 3d 789
    , 
    564 N.E.2d 1254
    (1990).
    The intimidation continued as the police took respondent to
    one police station and then another, and detectives questioned him
    at 3:30 a.m. and again at 5:45 a.m., telling respondent only of
    the inculpatory and not exculpatory evidence the detectives had
    received from witnesses.  If respondent slept at all between his
    arrest at around 11 p.m. and his confession at about 6 a.m. the
    following morning, it was briefly between the conclusion of the
    first interview at 3:45 and the beginning of the second interview
    at 5:50 a.m.  See People v. McGhee, 154 Ill. App. 3d, 232, 
    507 N.E.2d 33
    (1987) (15-year-old defendant s statement found
    involuntary where the defendant was subjected to a lengthy
    interrogation, was lacking in sleep, the police failed to properly
    notify defendant s parents or a youth officer and failed to permit
    defendant s mother to see him at the police station prior to the
    time he made an inculpatory statement).  The detective's testimony
    that respondent appeared coherent during the questioning is not in
    itself determinative of the voluntariness of the statement.
    Respondent was even more vulnerable than an average 14-year-
    old since he had learning disabilities, a limited ability to
    express and understand words and the reading skills of a seven
    year old.  Respondent's prior contacts with the police were
    minimal and were not of the nature that would have lessened the
    intimidation inherent in this encounter with the police.  This was
    respondent s first referral to juvenile court.  While respondent
    had been charged with possession of controlled substance, that
    charge was screened out by the assistant State s Attorney after
    respondent successfully completed a drug education program.
    Respondent also had a station adjustment, but that is merely a
    verbal warning from the police that occurs when the police take a
    minor to the police station but release him after deciding not to
    refer the matter to juvenile court.  People v. D.B., 
    202 Ill. App. 3d
    194, 
    559 N.E.2d 873
    (1990).  Thus, neither of these prior
    experiences would have given respondent the sophistication or an
    understanding of how to conduct himself while being interrogated
    by police in a murder case.
    The voluntariness of respondent s confession in this case is
    even more suspect in light of the detectives  failure to call the
    felony review section of the State s Attorney s office and have an
    assistant State s Attorney present during any of the interviews
    with respondent.  Furthermore, respondent s statement was never
    reduced to writing and was therefore never given to respondent to
    check for accuracy and for signature.  When respondent was finally
    permitted to see his mother after giving his confession, he told
    her that he was not the shooter.  The fact that the detectives
    failed to call an assistant State's Attorney, or reduce
    respondent's statement to writing leads to the inference that the
    police knew respondent's confession was tenuous and were concerned
    that they could not get respondent to consistently repeat his
    confession.
    Taking into consideration the totality of the circumstances
    surrounding respondent's confession, we find respondent's
    confession involuntary.  The 14-year-old learning-disabled
    respondent, who had minimal previous contact with police, was
    brought to the station late at night, after being removed from his
    uncle's house at gunpoint.  He was interrogated throughout the
    early morning hours, separated from his family during the
    interrogation period, and gave a confession that was never reduced
    to writing.  Notwithstanding the presence of a youth officer
    during the final interrogation that resulted in the admission,
    these other circumstances convince us that the trial court's
    decision to deny respondent's motion to suppress was against the
    manifest weight of the evidence.
    In light of our decision to reverse the trial court s order
    denying respondent s motion to dismiss and to remand this case for
    a new trial, we need only briefly address one other contention
    raised by respondent in this appeal.  We note that if on remand
    the only evidence respondent presents to support his claim of
    self-defense is that his group was surrounded and someone took a
    swing at him, that evidence alone is insufficient to sustain
    respondent s claim that he feared imminent death or great bodily
    harm.
    Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, the trial court
    order denying respondent's motion to suppress is reversed and this
    cause is remanded for a new trial.
    Reversed and remanded.
    HOURIHANE, J., concurs.
    COUSINS, J., dissents.