THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. SHAWN M. LEONARD, Defendant-Appellant.
NO. 4-23-0413
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FOURTH DISTRICT
April 3, 2024
2024 IL App (4th) 230413-U
Honorable Debra D. Schafer, Judge Presiding.
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). FILED April 3, 2024 Carla Bender 4th District Appellate Court, IL. Appeal from the Circuit Court of Winnebago County No. 20CF563.
Justices Harris and Knecht concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶ 1 Held: By incurring a felony conviction, even a nonviolent felony conviction, a citizen forever loses the constitutional right to have a firearm for the defense of his person and his house.
¶ 2 In a stipulated bench trial, the circuit court of Winnebago County found defendant, Shawn M. Leonard, guilty of count V of an indictment, a count that charged him with being an armed habitual criminal.
¶ 3 I. BACKGROUND
¶ 5 The State elected to try counts I, II, and IV first. Defendant waived a jury trial. The circuit court found him guilty of counts II and IV but not guilty of count I.
¶ 6 Immediately before the bench trial on count III, which had been severed, a grand jury returned a fifth count against defendant. Count V charged him with being an armed habitual criminal (
¶ 7 The parties agreed to a stipulated bench trial on count V and to the dismissal of count III. The stipulation on count V was essentially as follows. In response to a report of suspected child abuse, police officers went to a residence to perform a welfare check. The occupants of the residence were defendant, H.S.L., and S.L. H.S.L. was taken into protective custody, and the police interviewed S.L. and defendant. S.L. would testify that as the police interviewed her, she gave them permission to search the residence. In the ensuing search, the police found a loaded 9-millimeter pistol on the backrest of a couch. S.L. would further testify that the pistol belonged to defendant, he had possessed the pistol for a month, and he was accustomed to keeping the pistol where the police had found it, on the backrest of the couch. According to laboratory testing, defendant could not be excluded as one of the contributors of DNA that was found on the pistol. He previously was convicted of burglary in case No. 09-CF-738 and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon in case No. 11-CF-2657.
¶ 9 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 10 A. The Armed Habitual Criminal Statute
¶ 11 Section 24-1.7(a)(1) and (2) of the
“(a) A person commits the offense of being an armed habitual criminal if he *** possesses *** any firearm after having been convicted a total of 2 or more times of any combination of the following offenses:
(1) a forcible felony as defined in Section 2-8 of this Code [(
id. § 2-8)]; [or](2) unlawful use of a weapon by a felon ***.”
Section 2-8 in turn defines a ” ‘[f]orcible felony’ ” as including “burglary.”
¶ 12 According to the stipulation, which the prosecutor, defense counsel, and defendant signed, defendant had two prior qualifying convictions when, on March 16, 2020, the police found the pistol on the backrest of the couch. The prior convictions were (to quote the stipulation) “Burglary in 09-CF-738 (a forcible felony) and Unlawful Use of a Weapon by a Felon in 11-CF-2657.” Given those prior convictions, defendant‘s subsequent possession of the pistol on the couch was an offense of “being an armed habitual criminal” (
¶ 14 Defendant contends that, facially and as applied to him, the armed habitual criminal statute violates the second amendment (
¶ 15 However, under our decisions in People v. Boyce, 2023 IL App (4th) 221113-U, ¶ 14, and People v. Langston, 2023 IL App (4th) 230162-U, ¶ 19, defendant‘s previous felony convictions make him not a law-abiding citizen and, therefore, not protected by the second amendment. By incurring a felony conviction, even a nonviolent felony conviction, a citizen forever loses the constitutional right to have a firearm for the defense of his person and his house.
¶ 17 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit court‘s judgment.
¶ 18 Affirmed.
