Court Opinion

ID: 9918898
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-16 22:03:38.109131+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:06:35.043157
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except
            in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

                                        2024 IL App (3d) 220456-U

                                 Order filed January 16, 2024
      ____________________________________________________________________________

                                                  IN THE

                                    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                             THIRD DISTRICT

                                                    2024

      THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF                       )      Appeal from the Circuit Court
      ILLINOIS,                                        )      of the 12th Judicial Circuit,
                                                       )      Will County, Illinois,
             Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )
                                                       )      Appeal No. 3-22-0456
             v.                                        )      Circuit No. 21-CM-975
                                                       )
      BRANDON L. TATUM,                                )      Honorable
                                                       )      Chrystel L. Gavlin,
             Defendant-Appellant.                      )      Judge, Presiding.
      ____________________________________________________________________________

            JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the judgment of the court.
            Justices Peterson and Davenport concurred in the judgment.
      ____________________________________________________________________________

                                                 ORDER

¶1          Held: The State presented insufficient evidence to convict the defendant of resisting a
                  peace officer.

¶2          The defendant, Brandon L. Tatum, appeals his conviction of resisting a peace officer,

     arguing that the evidence was insufficient to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

¶3                                         I. BACKGROUND
¶4          The State charged the defendant by information with resisting a peace officer (720 ILCS

     5/31-1(a), (a-5) (West 2020)) in that he knowingly resisted “a peace officer engaged in the

     execution of his official duties” when the defendant “pulled his arm away during handcuffing.”

     The matter proceeded to a jury trial.

¶5          Officer Noe Mozo testified that on May 11, 2021, he was being field trained by Officer

     Antwane Windmon for the Metra Commuter Agency while they patrolled the Metra stations.

     General patrol duties included checking for “property damage, people sleeping inside the shelters,

     and just anything that can be considered foul play.” At approximately 2 a.m., Mozo noticed a man

     sleeping on a bench at the Joliet station while on his way to another station. Mozo did not stop at

     that time. Approximately 30 or 40 minutes later, Mozo returned and observed “the same individual

     sleeping on the same bench in the same form.” The defendant was lying on a bench with a blanket

     covering his feet to his neck. When Mozo inquired why the defendant was at the station, the

     defendant responded that he did not “have to tell” Mozo anything. The defendant refused to

     provide his identification after multiple requests. Mozo also requested several times that the

     defendant show his hands, which the defendant refused. Mozo explained that whether he could

     “see a person’s hands” is a matter of officer safety. Based on the defendant’s “non-compliance,”

     the officers went “hands on” and “plac[ed]” the defendant on the ground. Mozo was unable to gain

     control of the defendant’s left arm, which was “tucked *** under [the defendant’s] chest,” and the

     defendant was “very tense” and “kept pulling away.” Eventually, Windmon forced the defendant’s

     compliance by using a taser.

¶6          On cross-examination, Mozo indicated that he could not identify the defendant as the

     person lying on the bench when he first passed the station. Mozo testified that the train station was

     a known location for loitering and trespassing. However, the station did not have any no trespass

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     signs or notices, the officers gave no verbal orders to the defendant to vacate the premises, and

     they had not received any complaints about the defendant trespassing. Mozo explained that “[t]he

     whole point of *** making contact was to gain experience seeing that I was a relatively new

     officer, and the intention was to *** inform [the defendant] that he couldn’t be at the station.”

     Mozo acknowledged that potential patrons must be on the platform to board the train. Counsel

     asked if Mozo had “any reason to believe that there was a weapon underneath” the defendant’s

     blanket. Mozo stated, “[w]e asked him to see his hands. Normally people that aren’t hiding

     anything or don’t have anything usually show me their hands.” Mozo also stated that “the way that

     [the defendant] was conducting himself *** alerted [Mozo] and alerted *** Windmon that [the

     defendant’s] hands were underneath the blanket.” Following a search of the defendant and his

     items, the officers did not locate any weapons.

¶7          Windmon testified that he approached the defendant for a trespassing investigation because

     the station was closed and the trains were not running. Upon contact, the officers asked the

     defendant to sit up and show his hands for officer safety and to “make sure he didn’t have any

     weapons.” Windmon explained that the officers

                    “didn’t know what was under the [blanket]. [The defendant] could have had a

                    weapon, a gun. It could have been anything. So just to make sure he didn’t have

                    anything, we wanted to see his hands, *** have him sit up and we could have a full

                    view of his body.”

     The defendant refused after multiple requests. Windmon described the defendant as “very

     hostile[,]” “avoiding questions, cursing,” and “fully uncooperative.” Following these refusals to

     cooperate, the officers detained the defendant in what Windmon described as a “Terry stop.” After

     making physical contact, the defendant continued to refuse to comply when asked to place his arms

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     behind his back. Following Windmon’s warnings, he used a taser to “gain control of the

     defendant’s arms.”

¶8          The State entered Windmon’s body camera footage of the incident into evidence. The video

     showed the defendant instantly informing the officers that he was waiting for the train. Mozo

     responded by asking the defendant for his name and identification. The defendant informed the

     officers that he would not give them his information. Immediately after, officers ordered the

     defendant to “sit up, take the blanket off” several times so they could see the defendant’s hands.

     The defendant informed the officers that he was waiting for the train and knew when the train

     arrived. Windmon stated that was “irrelevant.” Again, Windmon requested the defendant to

     remove his blanket so he could “see [his] hands” and make sure he did not have any weapons. The

     defendant indicated that he did not have any weapons and that he was not going to remove his

     blanket because he was “not bothering nobody” and was “minding [his] business.” At this point,

     the officers put their gloves on. The defendant indicated that his train was arriving at 4 a.m. Mozo

     told the defendant that he “can’t be here.” Windmon informed the defendant that they had “zero

     intentions of arresting” him, and again ordered the defendant to “sit up” and “take the blanket off.”

     The defendant asked why the officers were bothering him, and Mozo responded that the defendant

     refused to give them his identification. The defendant stated, “I don’t have to.” The officers

     responded that the defendant had to give them his identification. When Windmon again asked for

     his name, the defendant responded, “don’t worry about all that.” As the officers approached the

     defendant, he removed both hands from under the blanket, one of which clearly held a cell phone.

     Approximately three seconds later, Windmon made physical contact with the defendant by

     grabbing the phone from his hands. In an apparent explanation for the contact, Windmon stated

     that they asked the defendant “to do something” and he “didn’t want to do it.” During the

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       commotion, the defendant again informed the officers that he was waiting on the train and that he

       had a ticket. A train horn can be heard in the background. After being put on the ground, the

       defendant stated, “get the fuck away from me.” The officers began to place the handcuffs on the

       defendant. The officers threatened to tase the defendant if he did not place both hands behind his

       back. Approximately 12 seconds later, Windmon tased the defendant and secured handcuffs. After,

       the defendant asked the officers, “this how you treat people who waiting on the train,” Mozo

       responded, “we asked you to give us something.”

¶9            On cross-examination, Windmon stated that he saw the defendant’s hands holding a cell

       phone and not a weapon before he made physical contact with the defendant. Windmon indicated

       that they had not received complaints of the defendant trespassing. No signs were posted on the

       platform preventing individuals from being there. Windmon did not ask the defendant to leave.

       There are no gates or fences to prevent people from entering the platform when it is closed.

       Windmon testified that “[a]s a representative of Metra,” he was “authorized to dictate when

       somebody is trespassing.” Windmon stated that it was a Metra policy that forbids individuals from

       being at the station “[i]f the trains aren’t running.” Windmon first observed the defendant at the

       station at approximately 2 a.m., made contact around 3 a.m., and the first train would have been

       arriving at 4 a.m. When asked whether it was “against the policy to be on the platform an hour

       early” for a train, Windmon responded that the defendant was more than an hour early. Windmon

       explained that he did not ask the defendant for his ticket because he “[n]ever got that far in the

       conversation,” since the defendant “refused to comply with our first orders.”

¶ 10          On re-direct examination, Windmon stated that part of an investigation into trespassing

       consisted of obtaining an individual’s identification and “securing” officer safety. Windmon

       explained that he knew the Joliet Police Department told homeless individuals to go to the Metra

                                                       5
       platform to “stay warm.” If these individuals “were under the impression that they could be there,”

       Metra police would not arrest them for trespassing. Windmon testified that the defendant informed

       the officers that he did not have any weapons, and the officers did not locate any weapons among

       the defendant’s personal items. Windmon did not know if the defendant had been told by the Joliet

       police to go to the platform, and he did not inform the defendant that he could not be there.

¶ 11          The defendant testified that on the date in question, he walked for approximately one hour

       from the hospital to the Joliet station and was unsure exactly when he arrived. The defendant had

       a ticket in his wallet for the train that he expected to arrive at approximately 4:30 a.m. to take him

       to his job in Chicago. The defendant had his blanket, phone, phone charger, wallet, and

       identification card. The defendant was watching videos on his phone while he waited for the train

       when Mozo and Windmon confronted him. The officers first asked for the defendant’s

       identification, and the defendant said he was not going to give it to them. The defendant was

       “pissed” and felt like the officers were harassing him. The officers then began asking the defendant

       to show his hands when “one thing led to another, and they grabbed [the defendant]” even though

       his hands were “already visible.” They “thr[ew]” the defendant on the ground. The defendant stated

       that one arm was already behind his back at this point, but the other arm was “stuck” under his

       stomach. The defendant was not able to put that arm “all the way” behind his back due to nerve

       damage from a prior injury. The defendant did not have any weapons on him. The defendant did

       not see any signs that prohibited him from being at the station. He thought the station was open

       because the lights were on in the “main” building, and this meant someone was working the ticket

       counter.

¶ 12          On cross-examination, the defendant thought that the officers confronted him at

       approximately 3:30 a.m. The defendant left the hospital shortly after 2 a.m. and arrived at the

                                                         6
       station around 3 a.m. When the officers approached, the defendant had his arms under the blanket

       to keep them warm. The defendant agreed that the officers first asked for his name and

       identification, and the defendant refused to give them that information. At this point, the defendant

       was still covered from the shoulders down. After several requests, the defendant removed his hands

       from the blanket. When the officer saw the defendant’s phone, “that’s when he grabbed” him. The

       defendant did not remember if he had his hands out of the blanket before or after the officers

       approached him. On re-direct examination, the defendant indicated that he did not want to make

       fast movements once the officers approached him. The defendant removed his hands from the

       blanket with his phone to record the officers because he “felt like the situation might get out of

       hand.”

¶ 13            The jury found the defendant guilty of resisting a peace officer. The court sentenced the

       defendant to 24 months’ conditional discharge. The defendant appealed.

¶ 14                                              II. ANALYSIS

¶ 15            On appeal, the defendant argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to

       sustain his conviction of resisting a peace officer. The defendant reasons, inter alia, that the

       officers were not engaged in an authorized act to justify a Terry stop. In a challenge to the

       sufficiency of the evidence, “ ‘the relevant question 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.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) People v. Collins, 106

       Ill. 2d 237, 261 (1985) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 318 (1979)). “When presented

       with a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, it is not the function of this court to retry the

       defendant.” Id. Thus, “the reviewing court must allow all reasonable inferences from the record in

       favor of the prosecution.” People v. Cunningham, 212 Ill. 2d 274, 280 (2004). “A conviction will

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       be reversed only where the evidence is so unreasonable, improbable, or unsatisfactory that it

       justifies a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt.” People v. Belknap, 2014 IL 117094, ¶ 67.

¶ 16          Here, the defendant was charged with resisting a peace officer, which required the State to

       prove that the defendant knowingly resisted the performance of an individual he knew was a police

       officer “of any authorized act within his *** official capacity.” 720 ILCS 5/31-1(a) (West 2020).

       The act must be one that the officer was authorized to perform. People v. Hilgenberg, 223 Ill. App.

       3d 286, 289 (1991). A Terry stop may be an authorized act that, if resisted, can be the basis of a

       conviction for resisting a peace officer. People v. Johnson, 285 Ill. App. 3d 307, 309 (1996).

       However, to be considered an authorized act, the officer must have observed unusual conduct

       leading to a reasonable, articulable suspicion that the person in question has committed or is about

       to commit a crime. 725 ILCS 5/107-14 (West 2020); see Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 21 (1968); see

       also People v. Kipfer, 356 Ill. App. 3d 132, 137 (2005). Thus, if the officers were not engaged in

       an authorized act or, otherwise stated, did not have a reasonable belief required under Terry to

       justify an investigative stop when the defendant resisted, the defendant’s conviction must be

       reversed. People v. Slaymaker, 2015 IL App (2d) 130528, ¶ 12.

¶ 17          Relevant factors to consider when determining whether an officer had reasonable suspicion

       to conduct a Terry stop an individual include whether: (1) the stop occurred in a high crime area;

       (2) it was late at night or early in the morning; (3) the person engaged in “unprovoked flight”

       (Illinois v. Wardlow, 528 U.S. 119, 125 (2000)); and (4) the person’s behavior was consistent with

       the officer’s knowledge of criminal activity. People v. Lozano, 2023 IL 128609, ¶ 38. “Viewed as

       a whole, the situation confronting the police officer must be so far from the ordinary that any

       competent officer would be expected to act quickly.” People v. Thomas, 198 Ill. 2d 103, 110

       (2001). We must view the facts from the perspective of a reasonable officer in that situation, rather

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       than analytical hindsight. Id. The facts supporting the officer’s suspicion need not reach the level

       of probable cause, but they must amount to more than a mere hunch. Id.

¶ 18          At the outset, we note that the officers conducted a Terry stop due to the belief that the

       defendant could be trespassing. A person is guilty of trespassing when he or she, after receiving

       notice, “knowingly and without lawful authority enters or remains within or on a building.” 720

       ILCS 5/21-3(a)(1), (2) (West 2020); see also id. § 21-5 (a person commits criminal trespass to

       State supported land when, after receiving notice “from the State or its representative that the entry

       is forbidden”). At the time of the stop, the facts available to the officers were that members of the

       Joliet Police Department were known to inform homeless individuals that they could use the Metra

       platforms to get warm during inclement weather, and there were no signs posted on or around the

       platform to inform anyone when they were or were not permitted to be on the platform. The

       platform was open, and no gates or doors prevented entry, nor had the officers received any

       complaints of an individual trespassing. While the officers saw someone on the platform at 2 a.m.,

       they could not identify the defendant as that individual. The officers approached the defendant on

       the platform at approximately 3 a.m., and the trains began running at 4 a.m. However, an individual

       waiting for a train an hour early is not “so far from the ordinary that any competent officer would

       be expected to act quickly.” Thomas, 198 Ill. 2d at 110. Further, at no point did the officers order

       the defendant to leave. The defendant had no notice to vacate the premises, nor was he given an

       opportunity to leave. We find that the defendant’s mere presence on the platform, without any

       other evidence, was insufficient to justify a Terry stop. See People v. Lozano, 2023 IL 128609,

       ¶ 37 (“The officer must be able to articulate more than an inchoate and unparticularized suspicion

       or hunch of criminal activity.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) (quoting Wardlow, 528 U.S. at

       123-24)). Given the information available to the officers, we cannot say that these facts lead to a

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       reasonable, articulable suspicion that the defendant had committed or was about to commit a crime.

       See Kipfer, 356 Ill. App. 3d at 137. As a result, the State failed to establish that the officers’ Terry

       stop that precipitated his resisting a peace officer offense was justified by articulable reasonable

       suspicion and amounted to an “authorized act.”

¶ 19           Even if we assume that the defendant’s mere presence on the platform before the train

       began running factored into his “unusual conduct” to justify the officers initial stop, in light of the

       applicability of only one Lozano factor—that it was early in the morning—no other facts otherwise

       indicate criminal activity to justify the Terry stop of the defendant. See Lozano, 2023 IL 128609,

       ¶ 38. Notably, there is no evidence that the stop was in a high crime area, that the defendant

       attempted to flee, or that the defendant’s behavior was consistent with the officer’s knowledge of

       criminal activity. Id. Moreover, whatever reasonable suspicion existed dissipated when the

       defendant informed officers that he had a ticket for the train. See People v. Pulido, 2017 IL App

       (3d) 150215, ¶ 52 (“[A]n investigative stop must cease once reasonable suspicion or probable

       cause dissipates.”); see also People v. Jones, 2015 IL App (2d) 130387, ¶ 16 (following a report

       of violence, an officer is “authorized to conduct some initial investigation,” however, upon finding

       no evidence of a crime, his authority to continue ended). The officers had ample opportunity to

       request to view the defendant’s train ticket but failed to do so. The officers cannot ignore or

       disregard new information from the defendant relevant to their trespassing investigation and insist

       that the defendant refused to provide information related to their investigation. As such, the

       officers lacked reasonable suspicion to justify their Terry stop, making it an unauthorized act and

       insufficient to support a conviction for resisting a peace officer.

¶ 20           Moreover, the officers failed to articulate any other criminal activity that they believed the

       defendant to have committed or was about to commit. Instead, the evidence showed that the

                                                         10
       officers immediately asked the defendant to tender his identification upon contact. See People v.

       Fernandez, 2011 IL App (2d) 100473, ¶ 13 (the court held that an individual subject to a Terry

       stop has no obligation to answer the questions of a police officer, and the refusal to identify himself

       or provide identification to police officers was insufficient evidence to support a conviction for

       resisting or obstructing a peace officer). This fact, coupled with the officers informing the

       defendant that they had no intention of arresting him, followed almost immediately by the

       defendant’s detention, indicates that the officers incorrectly believed they were justified in

       conducting a Terry stop of the defendant based solely on the refusal to tender his identification

       and his generally combative demeanor. See id. The facts presented are insufficient to justify a

       Terry stop and, thus, the officers’ actions were unauthorized. See Lozano, 2023 IL 128609, ¶ 37.

¶ 21           Finally, the defendant’s refusal to initially reveal his hands was insufficient to establish a

       reasonable suspicion that the defendant was armed and dangerous. First, the officers’ belief that

       the defendant “could have had a weapon,” without more, amounted to a mere “hunch,” which is

       insufficient to establish reasonable suspicion. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 22 (intrusions upon

       constitutionally guaranteed rights must be based on more than inarticulate hunches). Second,

       before the officers made physical contact, the defendant showed his hands and phone to the officer.

       See People v. Cope, 299 Ill. App. 3d 184, 189 (1998) (“Refraining from physical action or failing

       to cooperate with the police is generally not considered the same as resisting or obstructing an

       officer.”). The evidence showed that Windmon observed the defendant’s hands prior to making

       contact, as his first action was to remove the defendant’s phone from his hands. Not only did the

       officers lack reasonable articulable suspicion to justify their initial Terry stop, but the officers also

       lacked articulable suspicion once the defendant showed his hands. Windmon could clearly see,

       prior to making contact, that the defendant had his hands displayed and held a cell phone.

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       Therefore, the officers were not authorized or justified in conducting a Terry stop in this case, even

       taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, and therefore for the foregoing reasons,

       the evidence does not support the guilty verdict.

¶ 22                                           III. CONCLUSION

¶ 23          The judgment of the circuit court of Will County is reversed.

¶ 24          Reversed.

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