We are asked to decide whether a statement, made by a codefendant or witness and used to induce an illegally detained suspect to confess, can support attenuation absent a finding that the statement was legally obtained. Our appellate courts have addressed this issue indirectly and reached different results. Compare People v. Klimawicze,
Following a jury trial, defendant Ralph Hopkins was convicted of one count of armed robbery and one count of attempted armed robbery and sentenced to concurrent prison terms of 12 years. This court vacated the convictions and sentences on appeal after finding that the police lacked probable cause to arrest defendant. People v. Hopkins,
The facts relevant to defendant's arrest are contained in Hopkins I and will be repeated to the extent necessary to dispose of defendant's arguments in this appeal. Defendant was arrested on the night of December 9, 2000, following a report of an attempted armed robbery of Beverly Hajek at 10:40 p.m. in Oak Lawn. Shortly after defendant was arrested, police picked up Jeffrey Sampson, who allegedly assisted defendant in attempting to rob Hajek. Shortly after his arrest, Sampson made a statement implicating himself and defendant in the crime. In the early morning hours of December 10, 2000, defendant confessed to the attempted armed robbery of Hajek. The following evening, *937 defendant confessed to the armed robbery of Alfonso Casarrubias, which occurred in Evergreen Park about one hour before the attempted armed robbery of Hajek. At issue is whether those confessions were properly admitted at trial.
The illegality of an arrest does not necessarily prevent the admission of a defendant's postarrest statement confessing to a crime. "Evidence collected following an illegal arrest may be admissible if it is sufficiently attenuated from any illegality." Klimawicze,
We considered attenuation in defendant's first appeal and found that the record was not sufficient to address whether there were intervening circumstances. Hopkins I,
"The record shows that defendant testified that he did not receive Miranda warnings and that the police engaged in misconduct. The police officers gave testimony rebutting defendant's claims, including their statements that Miranda warnings were given repeatedly and that the police did not engage in misconduct. The trial court's conclusion that the officers' testimony was more credible than defendant's was not against the manifest weight of the evidence and will not be disturbed on review. The amount of time between defendant's arrest and his statement can be calculated at approximately six hours based on documents of record. The key information that is not available in the record is on the question of whether there were intervening circumstances." Hopkins I,
. 363 Ill. App. 3d at 983
Intervening circumstances are those that break the causal connection between the taint of unconstitutional police conduct and the defendant's confession. Klimawicze,
On remand, the State presented police testimony that defendant confessed to the attempted armed robbery of Hajek immediately after being confronted with Sampson's statement. Defendant did not present rebuttal evidence and the trial court held defendant's confession was sufficiently attenuated from the illegal arrest to make admission of that statement proper. Defendant appeals.
We apply a mixed standard of review in addressing the propriety of the trial court's finding that defendant's confessions were admissible despite the illegal arrest. See People v. Pitman,
Defendant argues that Sampson's statement was illegally obtained and, for this reason, cannot be an attenuating circumstance. See People v.Jackson,
We find Klimawicze persuasive authority for finding that the State is not required to prove the legality of intervening evidence. The defendant in Klimawicze confessed to killing her mother after being confronted with two statements, one made by a codefendant and another made by a witness.Klimawicze,
The Klimawicze court not only relied on the record to determine the legality of the intervening evidence, but also implied, in the case of the witness's statement, that the defendant had the duty to show the statement was illegally obtained. Klimawicze,
Without probable cause, the police in Austin took the defendant and three other men into custody for questioning on a murder that had been committed two months earlier. Austin,
We believe, in a case such as this one, where a witness's or codefendant's statement induces an accused to confess, that statement will be deemed an intervening circumstance supporting attenuation absent evidence, made part of the record, that the statement was illegally obtained. The record here does not contain evidence that Sampson's statement was illegally obtained. Sampson pled guilty to attempted armed robbery and did not challenge his arrest or confession. The fact that Sampson was arrested at approximately the same time as defendant and in the same general area is not sufficient to overcome the presumption that the statement was legally obtained. We conclude the State met its burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that defendant's confession was sufficiently attenuated from his illegal arrest and admissible into evidence on this ground.
Defendant alternatively argues Sampson's statement can only act to attenuate his confession to the attempted armed robbery of Beverly Hajek and not his confession, made more than a day later, of the armed robbery of Alfonso Casarrubias. Defendant's argument fails to take into account that police had intervening probable cause to keep defendant in custody after his first confession. See People v. Wilberton,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
WOLFSON and R.E. GORDON, JJ., concur. *941
