People v. Andrade ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    No. 2-19-0797
    Order filed August 16, 2021
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
    except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(l).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Kane County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 17-CF-1678
    )
    ALEJANDRO ANDRADE,                     ) Honorable
    ) Kathryn D. Karayannis,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Zenoff and Schostok concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1    Held: At defendant’s trial where he claimed self-defense for stabbing his brother in a
    domestic fight, the trial court properly excluded audio of bodycam footage from the
    officers as they spoke with defendant and his brother after the dispute. The
    evidence of their respective demeanors was not, as defendant claimed, relevant
    circumstantial evidence as to who was the aggressor in the quarrel.
    ¶2    Following a jury trial, defendant, Alejandro Andrade, was convicted of two counts of
    domestic battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1), (a)(2) (West 2016)) and one count of aggravated
    battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.05(f)(1) (West 2016)) and sentenced to 24 months’ probation. He
    
    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    appeals, contending that the trial court erred by barring him from playing for the jury portions of
    the audio from two officers’ bodycam recordings. We affirm.
    ¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4     At trial, Wilfrido Lorenzo testified that he is defendant’s brother. On September 4, 2017,
    there was a family cookout at the home the brothers shared. Defendant was out of work at the
    time. Lorenzo had tried to get defendant hired by his employer but had recently learned that
    defendant would not be hired.
    ¶5     Sometime during the day of the cookout, Lorenzo and defendant went to the liquor store.
    During the ride, Lorenzo told defendant that his employer was not going to hire him. Defendant
    became angry and began driving erratically. He was still upset when they returned home, but the
    two were separated during most of the party because Lorenzo was cooking.
    ¶6     After everyone else had left, defendant and Lorenzo were cleaning up. When they had
    finished, they were in the garage. Lorenzo set out a chair for defendant, offered him a beer, and
    asked if he was still mad at him. They initially had a civil conversation, but defendant began to
    get louder and started cursing. Lorenzo closed the overhead door so as not to disturb the neighbors.
    Defendant appeared highly intoxicated.
    ¶7     Defendant began pushing Lorenzo across the garage. When Lorenzo’s back was against
    the wall, defendant lunged at him again. Lorenzo pushed back and defendant fell into some
    bicycles. Defendant got back up, went after Lorenzo again, and the two exchanged punches for a
    couple of minutes. At some point, defendant fell to his knees. Lorenzo told him not to get back
    up and walked away.
    ¶8     Thinking the fight was over, Lorenzo left the garage and walked toward the rear of the
    house. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw defendant approaching. Believing that defendant was
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    going to punch him again, Lorenzo turned around and raised his arm. He then realized that
    defendant had a knife. Lorenzo grabbed defendant’s arm and punched him in the nose. Lorenzo
    thought that the knife fell out of defendant’s hand. Lorenzo turned and walked up the stairs to the
    house. He saw defendant’s reflection in the patio door. Thinking that defendant was trying to stab
    him again, Lorenzo turned and kicked defendant in the face, sending him into a flower bed. When
    Lorenzo got inside the house, he realized his shirt was wet. His girlfriend told him that he had
    been stabbed. After changing his shirt, Lorenzo saw that the police and an ambulance had arrived.
    He had not called them. Lorenzo was willing to speak to the police and went to the door to meet
    them. At the time, due to adrenaline, Lorenzo did not feel the stab wound and believed he was
    okay. He “remember[ed] telling them that [he] didn’t want to go to a certain hospital [that] they
    were trying to send [him] to.” He was upset because there “was a lot that just went on, especially
    with [his] brother,” but he was not angry with the police. Lorenzo told the police that he did not
    have the right to let them into the house because it was not his house. Lorenzo was eventually
    transported to a hospital, where he received stitches for his wound. At the hospital, the police
    asked Lorenzo if he wanted to provide a written statement. He refused and told the police that he
    did not want to press charges.
    ¶9     Officer Ryan Nelis testified that he responded to the scene. He encountered defendant
    walking down the driveway. He had injuries to his face and blood coming from his nose.
    Defendant had difficulty walking, and Nelis believed that he was intoxicated.
    ¶ 10   Nelis went to the house to speak to Lorenzo while another officer spoke with defendant.
    Nelis saw a stab wound on Lorenzo’s left shoulder. Lorenzo was uncooperative. He did not want
    to press charges, go to the hospital, or allow the officer to enter the house. Lorenzo did eventually
    go to the hospital but continued to be uncooperative.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    ¶ 11   Defendant testified that he got into an argument with Lorenzo about 30 minutes before the
    cookout ended. Afterward, while defendant was cleaning the garage, Lorenzo entered and closed
    the overhead garage door. Because of their prior argument, defendant felt uncomfortable with
    Lorenzo in the garage. When Lorenzo grabbed two chairs and set them down across from each
    other, defendant decided to leave. Lorenzo then rushed at defendant, shoulder-bumped him, and
    prevented him from leaving the garage.
    ¶ 12   When defendant attempted to physically move Lorenzo out of the way, the latter pushed
    him so that he fell into some bicycles. As defendant tried to get up, Lorenzo punched him in the
    face, causing his nose to bleed. Defendant tried to crawl away as Lorenzo punched him repeatedly
    in the back of the head. Defendant asked Lorenzo over and over to stop hitting him, but he
    continued.
    ¶ 13   As defendant was on the ground, he came across his knife, which had been knocked to the
    floor. Defendant picked up the knife and, as Lorenzo swung to hit him again, he swung the knife
    at Lorenzo. Lorenzo ran into the house, and defendant used the phone in the garage to call 911.
    The jury heard a recording of the 911 call.
    ¶ 14   Defendant’s sister, Iraida Andrade, testified that Lorenzo had spoken to her about what
    happened. Lorenzo told her that his argument with defendant concerned Lorenzo’s baby’s mother.
    Lorenzo said that he got on top of defendant and kicked him while he was on his hands and knees.
    ¶ 15   Officer Sean Callahan testified that, as he responded to the scene, he encountered defendant
    bleeding and stumbling down the driveway. Callahan helped defendant to sit on the curb and
    called for an ambulance.
    ¶ 16   During the defense case, a portion of Callahan’s bodycam footage from the night in
    question was played for the jury. The video was played without audio. The trial court denied
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    defendant’s request to play portions of the audio from Nelis’s and Callahan’s bodycams. The court
    found that the statements on the audio were either hearsay that was not subject to an exception or
    impermissible collateral impeachment.
    ¶ 17    The jury was instructed on self-defense. It found defendant guilty of two counts of
    domestic battery and one count of aggravated battery. The court sentenced him to 24 months’
    probation. Defendant timely appealed.
    ¶ 18                                       II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 19    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by barring the audio clips from Nelis’s and
    Callahan’s bodycams. He argues generally that “[b]ody cameras are arguably the best source of
    unbiased information available when police interact with people at the scene of a crime.” He
    contends that the audio of Nelis’s interaction with Lorenzo was relevant because his “tone and
    mannerisms,” along with his reluctance to allow the police into his home and to go to the hospital,
    were evidence that he was the initial aggressor in the fight. See People v. Frazier, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 172250
    , ¶ 40 (a defendant acts in self-defense when, inter alia, he is not the initial aggressor).
    Defendant contends that the evidence was not hearsay because he was not offering it to prove the
    truth of the matters asserted, e.g., that Lorenzo did not want to go to the hospital. Defendant
    emphasizes that he would not have wanted to introduce the audio to prove the truth of Lorenzo’s
    statements, because in some portions Lorenzo blamed defendant for starting the fight.
    Alternatively, defendant contends that the statements were admissible as excited utterances, given
    that Lorenzo’s agitation was likely the result of the fight.
    ¶ 20    Conversely, defendant contends that the audio of his calm and cooperative demeanor while
    speaking with Callahan was proof that he was not the initial aggressor. He argues alternatively
    that the statements qualified as excited utterances.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    ¶ 21   The State responds as follows. Evidence of the combatants’ respective demeanors after
    the fight was not relevant to prove who was the initial aggressor. Moreover, the evidence was
    hearsay and not admissible as an excited utterance. Defendant’s statements on the audio were
    similar to his trial testimony and thus were inadmissible prior consistent statements. Finally, the
    evidence was cumulative, given that defendant, Lorenzo, and the officers testified to much of the
    same information.
    ¶ 22   Evidentiary rulings are generally within the trial court’s sound discretion, and we will not
    disturb such rulings absent an abuse of that discretion. People v. Caffey, 
    205 Ill. 2d 52
    , 89 (2001).
    An abuse of discretion occurs only where the trial court’s ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable,
    or where no reasonable person would take the trial court’s view. 
    Id.
     Defendant contends, however,
    that we should review the trial court’s ruling de novo because the “ ‘trial court’s exercise of
    discretion has been frustrated by an erroneous rule of law.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting People v. Williams, 
    188 Ill. 2d 365
    , 369 (1999)). We disagree. Here, as in Caffey, the trial court based its ruling on the
    specific facts of the case and not on a broadly applicable rule. Thus, we review its decision for an
    abuse of discretion.
    ¶ 23   Defendant argues that the body camera evidence, recorded immediately after the event,
    was highly probative. Section 10-30 of the Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera Act (50
    ILCS 706/10-30 (West 2016)) provides that body camera recordings “may be used as evidence in
    any administrative, judicial, legislative, or disciplinary proceeding.” However, nothing in this
    section manifests an intent to override the normal rules of evidence regarding relevancy and
    hearsay.
    ¶ 24   First, as to Lorenzo’s interaction with Nelis, we agree with the State that evidence of
    Lorenzo’s demeanor after the fight was simply not relevant to whether he was the initial aggressor.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    In deciding the admissibility of evidence, “[t]he court must ask whether the proferred evidence
    fairly tends to prove or disprove the offense charged and whether that evidence is relevant in that
    it tends to make the question of guilt more or less probable.” People v. Wheeler, 
    226 Ill. 2d 92
    ,
    132 (2007). Moreover, the trial court has the discretion to reject even relevant evidence if it has
    little probative value due to its remoteness, uncertainty, or unfairly prejudicial nature. Id.; see also
    Ill. R. Evid. 403 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
    ¶ 25    It is not surprising that Lorenzo would be upset after a fight in which he had been stabbed.
    Indeed, in arguing that the Lorenzo’s statements were excited utterances, defendant concedes that
    “the fight between [Lorenzo] and [defendant] was an event ‘sufficiently startling’ to elicit an exited
    [sic] utterance.” Thus, Lorenzo’s agitation after the fight does not make it more or less likely that
    he was the initial aggressor. It is at least equally likely that his agitation was the result of simply
    the fight itself. Yelling, by itself, “is no indication of violent behavior.” People v. Cruzado, 
    299 Ill. App. 3d 131
    , 137 (1998).
    ¶ 26    Similarly, that Lorenzo was reluctant to go to the hospital or to allow the police into his
    home in the early morning hours simply has nothing to do with whether he started the fight
    sometime earlier. Even if he were the victim (which he claimed he was, in speaking with Nelis),
    Lorenzo might not have wanted any further inconvenience.
    ¶ 27    Further, Lorenzo’s statements to Nelis did not qualify as excited utterances.            For a
    statement to be admissible under the excited-utterance exception there must be an occurrence
    sufficiently startling to produce a spontaneous and unreflecting statement, an absence of time for
    the declarant to fabricate a statement, and a statement relating to the circumstances of the
    occurrence. Ill. R. Evid. 803(2) (eff. Sept. 28, 2011); People v. Busch, 
    2020 IL App (2d) 180229
    ,
    ¶ 41. An excited utterance is admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule and, as such, is offered
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    to prove the truth of the matter asserted. See Ill. R. Evid. 801(c) (eff. Oct. 15, 2015) (hearsay is
    an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted); see also People v.
    Tenney, 
    205 Ill. 2d 411
    , 432-33 (2002).
    ¶ 28   Whether a statement is admissible as an excited utterance depends upon the totality of the
    circumstances. People v. Williams, 
    193 Ill. 2d 306
    , 352 (2000). Such an analysis encompasses
    several factors, including the amount of time that has passed since the incident, the mental and
    physical condition of the declarant, the nature of the event, and the presence or absence of self-
    interest. People v. Sutton, 
    233 Ill. 2d 89
    , 107 (2009). The key inquiry, however, is “whether the
    statement was made while the excitement of the event predominated.” (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id.
    ¶ 29   Many of Lorenzo’s statements to Nelis did not relate to the occurrence itself but to
    collateral issues such as whether Lorenzo would go to the hospital, and thus they did not meet the
    elements of an excited utterance. Moreover, in other portions of the audio, Lorenzo blamed
    defendant for starting the fight. Hence, under defendant’s theory of the case, Lorenzo’s statements
    were not unreflecting accounts of the incident but, rather, had been fabricated. Because the
    statements were not offered for their truth, a hearsay exception does not apply.
    ¶ 30   In any event, we agree with the State that the evidence was essentially cumulative. Illinois
    Rule of Evidence 403 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) states:
    “Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially
    outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the
    jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of
    cumulative evidence.”
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    ¶ 31   Lorenzo testified that he was upset after the fight, that he did not want the police to go
    inside the house, and that he argued with Nelis about going to the hospital. Nelis, too, testified
    that Lorenzo was upset and uncooperative. 1 Thus, the recording was cumulative of other properly
    admitted evidence, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding it.
    ¶ 32   A similar analysis applies to the audio portion of Callahan’s interaction with defendant.
    Defendant’s calm demeanor after the fact simply had no relevance to whether he was the initial
    victim of an unprovoked assault. A fight is likely to change the combatants’ demeanors regardless
    of who initiated it. Lorenzo and Nelis testified that defendant appeared intoxicated, and Callahan
    testified that defendant’s face was bleeding. On the audio portion that defendant wanted to be
    played, he claims that he was very tired. Thus, his placidity after the fight was more likely the
    product of intoxication, pain, and exhaustion than of a clear conscience.
    ¶ 33   Moreover, defendant’s calm demeanor was inconsistent with an excited utterance.
    Although, as defendant argues, the recording was made a relatively short time after his 911 call
    (which was admitted as an excited utterance), the time factor is not dispositive. The key inquiry
    is whether the excitement of the event still predominated. Sutton, 
    233 Ill. 2d at 107
    . Here, it
    appears that defendant was intoxicated and exhausted rather than feeling the excitement of the
    event. Another factor is whether the statement was in the declarant’s self-interest. 
    Id.
     And
    1
    Lorenzo testified that he only objected to going to a specific hospital while Nelis implied
    that Lorenzo did not want to go the hospital at all. To the extent that the audio contradicted
    Lorenzo’s testimony on this point, it was inadmissible as collateral impeachment. See People v.
    Collins, 
    106 Ill. 2d 237
    , 269 (1985) (cross-examiner may not impeach a witness on a collateral
    matter; he or she must accept the witness’s answer).
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    2021 IL App (2d) 190797-U
    defendant’s statements, in which he blamed Lorenzo for starting the fight, were largely self-
    serving.
    ¶ 34   Finally, defendant and Callahan testified about their interaction, making the audio of the
    conversation cumulative. We agree with the State that proffering this evidence appears to have
    been defendant’s attempt to put his version of events before the jury a second time and, as such,
    was inadmissible as a prior consistent statement. Self-serving, out-of-court statements of a
    defendant are inadmissible hearsay. People v. Patterson, 
    154 Ill. 2d 414
    , 452 (1992). A prior
    consistent statement is admissible only to rebut an inference of recent fabrication or recent motive
    to testify falsely if the prior statement was made before the motive existed. People v. Lambert,
    
    288 Ill. App. 3d 450
    , 453 (1997). Defendant does not attempt to satisfy these criteria.
    ¶ 35                                   III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 36   The judgment of the circuit court of Kane County is affirmed.
    ¶ 37   Affirmed.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 2-19-0797

Filed Date: 8/16/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 7/30/2024