People v. Crowder , 431 Ill. Dec. 178 ( 2018 )


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    2018 IL App (1st) 161226
    FIRST DIVISION
    November 13, 2018
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    No. 1-16-1226
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                          )      Appeal from the
    )      Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                    )      Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                            )      No. 14 CR 17189
    )
    CLAUDE CROWDER,                                               )      Honorable
    )      Mary Colleen Roberts,
    Defendant-Appellant.                                   )      Judge Presiding.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Pierce and Griffin concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Defendant, Claude Crowder (Claude or Mr. Crowder), was convicted of aggravated
    unlawful use of a weapon (AUUW) after a bench trial and was sentenced to one year of
    imprisonment. Claude’s felony conviction was based on his brief possession of a handgun legally
    possessed by his father, Sammie, during an altercation started by others. On appeal, Claude
    argues we should reverse his conviction because his possession of the handgun was necessary for
    him to defend himself and his father after three men—one of whom appeared to be reaching for a
    “bulge” that Claude believed was a weapon—attacked them without provocation. Claude also
    argues, and the State concedes, that we should correct the mittimus to reflect that he did not use a
    handgun while in a vehicle. However, it is not necessary for us to reach that issue since we
    reverse Claude’s conviction.
    No. 1-16-1226
    ¶2                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3     Claude was charged with one count of reckless discharge of a firearm and six counts of
    AUUW. In his August 4, 2015, answer to discovery, Claude stated that he would “rely on the
    State’s inability to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt” and “assert the defense of defense
    of others: to wit, his father, Sammie Crowder.” Claude waived his right to a jury trial, and the
    State proceeded to a bench trial on all seven counts.
    ¶4     At the September 24, 2015, bench trial, Sammie Crowder and Chicago police officer
    Damen Balesteri testified in the State’s case-in-chief, and Claude testified in his own defense.
    ¶5     The witnesses testified that, on the night of September 16, 2014, Sammie, who was 73
    years old, and Claude, who was 28 years old, drove to the home of Claude’s wife, Pearlina, with
    whom Claude had a strained relationship. They drove there to pick up Claude’s young daughter
    and some clothes for Claude’s aunt’s funeral, which they planned to attend the next day.
    ¶6     Sammie and Claude arrived at the home around 10 p.m. Claude went to the front door
    while Sammie waited in the car. Claude knocked at both the door and the front window several
    times and received no answer, although the lights were on and several people could be seen in
    the living room. Sammie testified that, “because of previous incidents,” he got out of the car to
    convince his son that they should leave—they could buy clothes and leave for the funeral later.
    At that time, Sammie was lawfully carrying a loaded, .380-caliber Glock handgun in a holster on
    his right hip, for which he had a valid firearm owner’s identification (FOID) card and a
    concealed carry license (CCL).
    ¶7     Both Sammie and Claude were on the front porch and were about to leave when the door
    opened and three men appeared in the doorway. On the left was Louis Woods and on the right
    was Andrew Jackson—both brothers of Claude’s wife, Pearlina. Claude testified that he knew
    2
    No. 1-16-1226
    the man in the middle only by the street name of “Ra-Ra.” Claude testified that Louis was
    roughly six-and-a-half feet tall and that Andrew was of average height and build. According to
    Sammie, Ra-Ra was “huge *** over 400 [pounds].” The witnesses agreed that, with no
    provocation and no words exchanged, Louis swung his fist at Claude. According to Sammie,
    Louis’s fist immediately hit Sammie on his upper shoulder, causing him to fall backward, lose
    his balance, fall off the left side of the porch, which did not have a railing, and hit the ground
    five feet below. Claude testified that Louis’s fist connected with him in the jaw before it struck
    Sammie’s shoulder and caused him to fall off the porch.
    ¶8     Claude testified that that there were rocks on the ground under the porch and he “didn’t
    know if [his father] had hit his head on one of those rocks and knocked himself unconscious.” He
    ran down to check on his father, who appeared to be injured, and called his name multiple times.
    His father “moved a little bit,” and Claude tried to lift him but could not. Claude heard the men
    above yelling threats and obscenities at him, and he saw Ra-Ra reach for a bulge under his shirt
    that Claude believed was a weapon. Claude testified that, as he stood over his father, the threats
    and yelling increased, and that he heard one of the three men yell “I will empty the caps in his
    a**.” Claude then grabbed his father’s handgun from its holster and fired one shot vertically into
    the air. He testified that he did this “for protection for me and my father.” Claude then backed
    away from the porch, holding the gun up in the air, thinking he would thereby draw the men
    away from his father. He did not fire again but turned and ran down the street, without looking
    behind him. The parties agreed that the time between when Claude left the porch and when he
    was stopped by the police was only a matter of minutes.
    ¶9     Claude testified that, although he did not see Louis with a weapon that night, he “kn[e]w
    Louis well enough to know that he may have had or does have a weapon,” and that he had seen
    3
    No. 1-16-1226
    Ra-Ra with a weapon in the past. He acknowledged on cross-examination that Ra-Ra never
    pulled a weapon from under his shirt and that he did not tell the officers on the scene about the
    bulge. He claimed that he did tell this to Officer Balesteri later at the station.
    ¶ 10    Officer Balesteri testified that he was on duty in the area when he received a call at 10:22
    p.m. of a man with a gun, and that the person who called gave the officer an IR (incident report)
    number, which allowed the officer to pull up a picture of Claude on the portable computer in his
    police vehicle. The officer found Claude roughly a block from the scene of the altercation,
    conducted a protective pat-down of him, and discovered the handgun. Claude told Officer
    Balesteri that he had manually ejected bullets from the handgun and guided the officer to the
    ejected bullets. The officer testified that there were two rounds remaining in the handgun, and
    that he recovered two intact ejected bullets from where Claude pointed them out, along with one
    spent shell casing at the scene of the altercation. Officer Balesteri testified that Claude had no
    FOID card or CCL on him that night. Officer Balesteri testified that, after he was placed under
    arrest and read his Miranda rights, Claude told Officer Balesteri that “he shot the gun off
    because he was pissed off.” At trial, Claude acknowledged telling this to the officer, but
    explained that he “didn’t mean it in the sense where [he was] just a reckless person,” but rather
    that he was “pissed off to the fact that they had hurt [his father].”
    ¶ 11    Officer Balesteri testified that he and other police officers took statements from various
    witnesses the night of the altercation. Sammie’s statement the night of the incident differed from
    his trial testimony only to the extent that, in his statement, he told the police that someone
    pushed his son who then fell against him, rather than, as he testified at trial, that he was hit
    directly. Claude’s testimony was consistent with his statement to the police the night of the
    incident except that, according to Officer Balesteri, he did not tell the police about the bulge in
    4
    No. 1-16-1226
    Ra-Ra’s shirt.
    ¶ 12   The State admitted into evidence a certification from the Illinois State Police Department,
    stating that, as of November 12, 2014, an individual named Claude Crowder with a birth date of
    May 29, 1986, did not have a FOID card or CCL.
    ¶ 13   Defense counsel argued in closing that the parties agreed on most of the facts: that
    Claude fired the gun once, walked away in order to “deflect the violence that’s going on with the
    people on the porch away from his father,” then started to take the remaining bullets out of the
    handgun. Counsel asked the trial court “to find that the actions of Claude Crowder were
    allowable *** in the situation and under the law.” The State responded that it had proved every
    element of both reckless discharge and AUUW, and that there was no imminent threat to Claude
    or Sammie to justify Claude’s unlawful possession of his father’s handgun.
    ¶ 14   The trial court found Claude not guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm, concluding that
    Claude “shot that firearm in the air intentionally,” that he did not shoot it “in anyone’s direction
    nor did he shoot it recklessly,” and therefore that Claude “did not endanger the bodily safety” of
    anyone. However, the trial court found Claude guilty on all six counts of AUUW predicated on
    his unauthorized possession of the handgun. The trial court’s entire ruling on this issue was as
    follows:
    “I find the evidence has been uncontroverted. The defendant had a gun on
    him. He carried it on his person. And so the State has met each and every element
    of each and every one of those offenses. So I find the defendant guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt.”
    ¶ 15   In his written motion for reconsideration, Claude argued that he “did not plan for any
    violence, or any use of a weapon,” nor did he even bring a gun with him on the night of the
    5
    No. 1-16-1226
    altercation. Rather, he “only defended his father by shooting the gun in the air, and took it away
    from the violent situation.” Claude argued that he was acquitted of reckless discharge and only
    remained in illegal possession of the weapon “for a matter of a couple of minutes, at most,”
    during which he was unloading the handgun before fully cooperating with police to locate the
    ejected bullets and submit to arrest. Under these circumstances, Claude argued, he should not
    have been found guilty of AUUW for possessing a firearm without a FOID card.
    ¶ 16   On January 20, 2016, the trial court heard argument on Claude’s motion to reconsider his
    guilty verdict and his motion for a new trial. Defense counsel argued that this was “something
    that was a spontaneous event [after which Claude] took himself away from the situation” and
    “[n]ever endangered anyone at the scene.” The State responded that Claude “did assert defense
    of another,” but that “you can’t bring a gun to a fist fight,” that he did not have a FOID card, and
    that “there is no necessity because he had no right *** he could have punched him [and] that
    would have been a defense of another person.” In reply, counsel for Claude argued he was
    protecting his father in an emergency, and “it was a necessity that—even [to] have it in his
    hand.” The trial court denied Claude’s motion to reconsider and his motion for a new trial,
    without comment.
    ¶ 17   On March 30, 2016, the trial court merged Claude’s AUUW charges into a single count
    and sentenced Claude, who had no felony background, to the minimum sentence, which was one
    year of incarceration, with credit for 188 days he had spent on electronic monitoring.
    ¶ 18                                   II. JURISDICTION
    ¶ 19   Claude was sentenced on March 30, 2016, and filed his notice of appeal that same day.
    We have jurisdiction pursuant to article VI, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution and Illinois
    Supreme Court Rules 603 and 606, governing appeals from final judgments of conviction in
    6
    No. 1-16-1226
    criminal cases. Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, § 6; Ill. S. Ct. Rs. 603, 606 (eff. Feb. 6, 2013).
    ¶ 20                                       III. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 21    Claude was convicted of AUUW under section 24-1.6(a) of the Criminal Code of 2012,
    in that (1) he knowingly carried or concealed on his person an uncased and loaded pistol; (2) at a
    time when he was not on his own land, in his own abode, or in a fixed place of business, or he
    was on public land; (3) that pistol was immediately accessible to him at the time he carried it;
    and (4) he did not have a FOID card or CCL. 720 ILCS 5/24-1.6(a)(1), (a)(3)(C); (a)(2),
    (a)(3)(A), (a)(3)(C), (a)(3)(A-5) (West 2014). The burden of proving the defendant’s guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt always rests on the State (People v. Abadia, 
    328 Ill. App. 3d 669
    , 679
    (2001)), and once an affirmative defense has been raised, the State has the burden of proving the
    defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt as to that issue (People v. Guja, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 140046
    , ¶ 46).
    ¶ 22    Claude argues that the evidence at trial was insufficient to support a conviction for
    AUUW, based on possessing a weapon without a FOID card, because the evidence demonstrated
    that, under the circumstances, it was necessary for him to possess the firearm in question to
    adequately defend himself and his father. When considering the sufficiency of the evidence, the
    relevant question on appeal is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Hall, 
    194 Ill. 2d 305
    , 329-30 (2000) (citing Jackson v.
    Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)).
    ¶ 23    To properly raise an affirmative defense, a defendant is required to present some
    evidence on the issue, unless the State’s evidence itself raises the defense. People v. Kite, 
    153 Ill. 2d
    40, 44-45 (1992). “Generally, the quantum of proof necessary to raise an affirmative defense
    7
    No. 1-16-1226
    is evidence sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to defendant’s guilt or innocence,” which is a
    relatively low threshold. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 44.
    ¶ 24   Use of force in self defense or defense of another includes the following elements:
    (1) unlawful force threatened against a person, (2) the person threatened was not the aggressor,
    (3) the danger of harm was imminent, (4) the use of force (by the threatened person) was
    necessary, (5) the person threatened actually and subjectively believed a danger existed that
    required the use of force applied, and (6) the beliefs of the person threatened were objectively
    reasonable. People v. Gray, 
    2017 IL 120958
    , ¶ 50 (citing 720 ILCS 5/7-1 (West 2014)).
    ¶ 25   The State’s first argument is that self defense is not available to negate a charge of
    AUUW because the second amendment allows the State to impose regulations for carrying
    weapons. According to the State, “the failure to have been issued a currently valid license under
    the Concealed Carry Act at the time of the offense, means that defendant’s reliance upon his
    right to self defense is not valid as his conduct is not protected by the Second Amendment right
    to self defense.” The State cites no case law in support of this proposition, and it is simply not
    correct. Claude nowhere asks to be permitted to walk around armed with a firearm without a
    FOID card or CCL, in derogation of the state’s clear power to meaningfully regulate the
    possession of firearms. See People v. Aguilar, 
    2013 IL 112116
    , ¶ 21. Rather, he acknowledges
    that his possession violated the law but argues that his brief, unlawful possession of a handgun
    was justified because it was necessary to defend himself and his father.
    ¶ 26   Prior to oral argument, the defense brought to this court’s attention the decision in
    Harmon v. State, 
    849 N.E.2d 726
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2006). In that case the Indiana Court of Appeals
    held that evidence of self defense should have been allowed on a charge of unlawful possession
    of a firearm by a violent felon. The Indiana court agreed with courts of several other states that
    8
    No. 1-16-1226
    the prohibition on a felon possessing a firearm was “not intended to affect his or her right to use
    a concealable firearm in self-defense,” but only “to prohibit members of the affected classes
    from arming themselves with concealable firearms or having such weapons in their custody or
    control in circumstances other than those in which the right to use deadly force in self-defense
    exists or reasonably appears to exist.” 
    Id. at 734.
    ¶ 27   There appears to be no Illinois case raising this precise issue, but this court accepted the
    analogous defense of necessity for an unlawful possession of a gun in People v. Gullens, 2017 IL
    App (3d) 160668. In Gullens, we reviewed the revocation of a defendant’s conditional discharge
    for a prior felony conviction after he was found to have been in unlawful possession of a
    handgun for approximately 10 minutes between discovering that his associate stole it and
    returning it to its owner. 
    Id. ¶¶ 19-25.
    The defendant had gone to a local gun store with several
    other people and left without realizing that one of them stole a handgun from the store. 
    Id. ¶ 5.
    Later that day, he learned of the theft and took the handgun from his friend in order to
    immediately return it. 
    Id. ¶ 12.
    The State argued that as soon as the defendant took the handgun,
    he committed unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon in violation of the terms of his
    conditional discharge. 
    Id. ¶¶ 7,
    24. However, the defendant argued that he was blameless in the
    circumstances of the theft and that his only reasonable option was to take the stolen gun back to
    the store because he doubted his friend would do so, and he did not want the gun to be sold or
    used in a future crime. 
    Id. ¶ 23.
    ¶ 28   We agreed, finding that the defendant in Gullens was “without blame in occasioning or
    developing the situation that resulted in the theft,” returning the gun himself was the sole option
    available, and returning it “undoubtedly promoted a higher value than refraining from being a
    felon in possession of a weapon for the 10 minutes it took to return the gun to the store.” 
    Id. 9 No.
    1-16-1226
    ¶ 29   Self defense, defense of another, and necessity are all justification defenses that employ a
    similar balancing of the circumstances a defendant faced against the actions he took. See 720
    ILCS 5/7-1, 7-13 (West 2014); see also People v. Houser, 
    305 Ill. App. 3d 384
    , 392 (1999)
    (noting that, although “compulsion and necessity defenses are comprised of different elements,”
    the two “are closely linked, sharing the same factual basis”). For all the reasons that necessity
    can be raised as a defense to an AAUW charge, so can self defense—which is itself a type of
    necessity, justifying the use of force when an immediate, greater evil threatens a person who
    initiated no violence and had no other recourse. The State’s right and need to regulate guns does
    not mean that a criminal defendant cannot raise such a defense to a gun charge.
    ¶ 30   On the merits of self defense, the State claims that it negated elements (1), (2), and (4)—
    respectively, that imminent unlawful force was threatened, that Claude was not the aggressor,
    and that the use of force by Claude was necessary. Gray, 
    2017 IL 120958
    , ¶ 50. However, in our
    view, no reasonable trier of fact could have found any of these elements to be missing or that the
    threat was not imminent. The facts were undisputed that the three men who answered the door
    pushed the defendant or his father and continued to threaten to use further force by yelling, in
    reference to Claude, “I will empty the caps in his a**.” The evidence is also undisputed that
    Claude had come to pick up his daughter and his clothes, not to pick a fight. The unrebutted
    testimony was that Claude and his father were attacked without provocation, 73-year-old
    Sammie suffered injuries as a result of being knocked off of the porch, and the three men coming
    out of the house were continuing to threaten them. All of this transpired before Claude reached
    for the handgun, and none of it was initiated by him. The entire episode took only minutes.
    Throughout that time, Claude retained a reasonable concern for his and his father’s safety.
    ¶ 31   The record also indicates that Claude saw a bulge under Ra-Ra’s shirt that Claude
    10
    No. 1-16-1226
    believed was a weapon. Innumerable cases in the search or seizure context stand for the
    proposition that such an observation, conveyed through credible and uncontroverted testimony,
    can give rise to the inference that a person is armed and presents an immediate danger. See, e.g.,
    People v. Morales, 
    221 Ill. App. 3d 13
    , 18 (1991) (a “characteristic bulge” in the suspect’s
    clothing gave a police officer reason to believe the defendant was armed). Although no handgun
    was recovered from the scene of the attack, no testimony in the record disputes Claude’s account
    that he believed Ra-Ra was armed.
    ¶ 32   It is also undisputed that the actions Claude took were reasonably necessary. He faced a
    genuine dilemma when the men on the porch continued to threaten him and his father.
    Regardless of whether the men who had attacked him had a gun, he had a legitimate fear of
    injury to himself and further injury to his father, who was already immobilized with injuries. It
    was not unreasonable for Claude to leave the scene with the weapon rather than leave it there,
    where the three aggressors could have used it and where his incapacitated father was neither able
    to secure it nor use it to defend himself. Claude’s conduct after leaving the altercation—
    manually unloading the handgun and identifying the ejected bullets for the police—reveals that
    Claude attempted to minimize or eliminate any harm resulting from his continued possession of
    the weapon. No rational trier of fact could have found that the State negated any element of
    Claude’s claim of self defense, and we find that defense justifies his conduct in this instance.
    ¶ 33   When this court at oral argument asked the State about the related defense of necessity, as
    opposed to self defense, the State responded that the necessity defense was likely the “proper
    situation that would apply to these facts.” Necessity does not require the defendant to show any
    imminent risk of harm. Rather, to establish a defense of necessity, the person claiming the
    defense (1) must be without blame in occasioning or developing the situation and (2) must have
    11
    No. 1-16-1226
    reasonably believed that his conduct was necessary to avoid a greater public or private injury
    than that which might have reasonably resulted from his own conduct. Guja, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 140046
    , ¶ 47 (citing 720 ILCS 5/7-13 (West 2014)). This “usually involves the choice between
    two admitted evils where other optional courses of action are unavailable, and ‘the conduct
    chosen must promote some higher value than the value of literal compliance with the law.’ ”
    People v. Boston, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 133497
    , ¶ 39 (quoting People v. Janik, 
    127 Ill. 2d 390
    , 399
    (1989)). In reference to this defense, the State does not suggest that any element is missing but
    only that the defense of necessity “was not raised at trial” or in Claude’s appellate briefs.
    ¶ 34   We do not fault the trial court, but since the defendant consistently argued that he had no
    choice but to grab the gun and since Claude’s own use of force was minimal, the trial court
    might have clarified with trial counsel whether the defense that Claude was asserting was really
    necessity, more than self defense. We note that in Gullens, 
    2017 IL App (3d) 160668
    , we
    recognized a necessity defense for the same kind of crime charged here and that, indeed,
    necessity might be even more on point than self defense.
    ¶ 35   In any event, no rational trier of fact could find the State carried its burden with respect to
    negating either the defense of self defense or the defense of necessity, based on the undisputed
    evidence presented at trial. We thus reverse Claude’s conviction for AUUW. This ruling makes it
    unnecessary to address Claude’s request that we correct his mittimus.
    ¶ 36                                    IV. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 37   For the above reasons, we reverse Claude’s conviction for AUUW.
    ¶ 38   Reversed.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-16-1226

Citation Numbers: 2018 IL App (1st) 161226, 127 N.E.3d 711, 431 Ill. Dec. 178

Filed Date: 11/14/2018

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023