delivered the opinion of the court:
On our motion these cases are consolidated for disposition because they present identical issues common to several or all defendants.
These convictions arose following the arrest of 73 people, including defendants, who staged a protest at a medical facility in Champaign which provides abortion services. Each defendant was convicted of criminal trespass to real property in violation of section 21 — 3(a) of the Criminal Code of 1961 (Code) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, par. 21 — 3(a)) and no question is raised about the sufficiency of those convictions. In addition, four defendants — Derengoski, Beatty, Wendt, and Watson — were convicted of resisting a peace officer in violation of section 31 — 1 of the Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch, 38, par. 31 — 1). Each defendant, as part of the sentence he or she received, was ordered to pay $68.50 in restitution to the Champaign police department, which represents the proportionate share of the additional costs the department incurred in policing the protest.
On appeal, the defendants convicted of resisting a peace officer contend the informations by which they were charged were duplicitous and void. In addition, all defendants challenge the restitution order contending the Champaign police department is not a “victim” within the meaning of the restitution statute. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, par. 1005 — 5 — 6.) We affirm the convictions and reverse the restitution awards.
The informations charging defendants Derengoski, Beatty, Wendt, and Watson are substantively identical. They state that the offense of resisting a peace officer was committed:
“in that said defendant knowingly resisted the performance of John Gnagey, Wayne Roosevelt, Roosevelt, Brent Colclasure, Jeff Jolley, Rob Morris, Jeff Munds, Thomas Walton, John Schweighart, James Summers, Donald Carter, Melinda Kumler, and/or Donald Shepard, of an authorized act within their official capacity, namely: the arrest and booking of defendant knowing John Gnagey, Wayne Roosevelt, Brent Colclasure, Jeff Jolley, Rob Morris, Jeff Munds, Thomas Walton, John Schweighart, James Summers, Donald Carter, Melinda Kumler, and/or Donald Shepard to be peace officers engaged in the execution of their official duties, in that defendant lay limp and had to be lifted and carried from the property located at 301 E. Springfield Ave., Champaign, Illinois, by stretcher.” (Emphasis added.)
The only deviation from the quoted language involves the inclusion of the name of an additional police officer, Michael Paulus, in the informations pertaining to defendants Wendt and Watson.
Relying upon People v. Heard (1970),
In Heard, the supreme court held that a charge which follows the language of the statute defining the crime and uses the disjunctive “or” will not be sufficient where the statute names disparate and alternative acts, any of which will constitute the offense. (Heard,
No such problem arises in this case. The single act with which defendants were charged was they resisted a peace officer by lying limp, requiring that they be lifted and carried from the property of the clinic. The identity of the particular peace officer or officers whom each defendant resisted is not an element of the offense. All that is required is that any police officer be resisted in the manner charged. For this reason, the charge is not duplicitous because it does not allege disparate or alternative elements of the offense. People v. Baugh (1986),
Next, each defendant challenges the restitution award which ordered reimbursement of $68.50 to the Champaign County police department for the pro rata expenses the department incurred in effectuating the arrest of all of the protestors. At the various sentencing hearings, evidence was introduced that the Department incurred substantial manpower costs in controlling the demonstration which resulted in the arrest of 73 people. Among these costs, totalling $5,000.92, were $3,293.97 in overtime salary for police officers, $221.39 for a SWAT team, $1,032 for summoning the fire department, $168 to feed the police officers, and $85.56 in overtime for a clerk to subsequently calculate the expenses incurred by the Department.
The State concedes that the vast weight of authority has held that a police department or government agency is not considered a “victim” within the meaning of the restitution statute (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, par. 1005—5—6). (People v. Chaney (1989),
Notwithstanding this authority, the State asserts, without citation to authority, that this precedent is without statutory “textual foundation” and, in any event, these overtime expenses are extraordinary expenditures for which the State ought to be reimbursed. However, as the court stated in Evans, it would “strain the commonly accepted understanding of the word ‘victim’ so as to include the [governmental] agency” (Evans,
The authority cited by the State, People v. Strebin (1991),
In this case, no such situation is present. There is no “private” victim who is being made whole by the government for criminal conduct. These expenses were incurred solely as a result of the police department’s ongoing, normal duty to maintain public order. To the extent the public may be entitled to a “remedy,” the court is entitled to consider imposing a fine upon a defendant, an authorized disposition for these offenses. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, pars. 1005—9—1(a)(2), (a)(3).) Because the trial court erred in awarding restitution to the Champaign police department, that portion of its orders is reversed.
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ convictions and sentences, except for the restitution order, are affirmed. The restitution orders are reversed.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
KNECHT and COOK, JJ., concur.
