Case Information
*1 I LLINOIS O FFICIAL R EPORTS Supreme Court
People v. Taylor
,
Caption in Supreme THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellant, v. TERYCK Court: TAYLOR, Appellee.
Docket No. 110067
Filed October 6, 2011
Held When a videotape which contained a recognizable image of defendant night watchman stealing from a locked office desk and which had been ( Note: This syllabus copied from the hard drive of a video recorder that was connected to a constitutes no part of motion-activated surveillance camera met the foundation requirements, the opinion of the court but has been prepared under the “silent witness” theory, for establishing the accuracy and by the Reporter of reliability of the process that produced the recording and met the Decisions for the definition of an “original” so as not to be subject to the best evidence convenience of the rule–no abuse of discretion in admission and no plain error. reader . ) Decision Under Appeal from the Appellate Court for the Second District; heard in that court on appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, the Hon. Michael Review
J. Fusz, the Hon. Susan F. Hutchinson, the Hon. Ann B. Jorgensen and the Hon. Mary Seminara-Schostok, Judges, presiding.
Judgment Appellate court judgment reversed;
circuit court judgment affirmed. *2 Counsel on Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Springfield, and Michael J. Waller, State’s Attorney, of Waukegan (Michael A. Scodro, Solicitor General, Appeal
and Michael M. Glick and Retha Stotts, Assistant Attorneys General, of Chicago, and Patrick Delfino, Lawrence M. Bauer, Marshall M. Stevens and Richard S. London, of the Office of the State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor, of Elgin, of counsel), for the People.
Michael J. Pelletier, State Appellate Defender, Thomas A. Lilien, Deputy Defender, and Jack Hildebrand, Assistant Appellate Defender, of the Office of the State Appellate Defender, of Elgin, for appellee. Michael D. Carter, of Horwitz, Horwitz & Associates, of Chicago, for amicus curiae Illinois Trial Lawyers Association.
Justices JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Chief Justice Kilbride and Justices Freeman, Thomas, Garman, Karmeier, and Theis concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
The principal issue presented in this case is whether under the so-called “silent witness” theory, a videotape recording was properly admitted at defendant’s trial. The appellate court held that it was not and reversed defendant’s conviction for misdemeanor theft. 398 Ill. App. 3d 74. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the appellate court. BACKGROUND In 2005, several thefts occurred at the office of Kevin Marsh, dean of students at Deerfield High School in Deerfield, Illinois. Marsh had been collecting money for a fundraiser. He had placed the money in a bank pouch and then put the pouch in his office desk. Money disappeared several times from the pouch over weekends when Marsh’s office door had been locked. Following the thefts, Detective William Annen of the Deerfield police department met
with Marsh and suggested they set up a surveillance camera in Marsh’s office. On Friday, December 1, 2005, Annen set up the equipment, which consisted of a motion activated, wireless, digital camera concealed within a clock radio and a digital video recorder (DVR). Annen had only recently begun using such equipment. He testified that an employee at the store where he purchased the equipment had shown him how to set it up and use it. Annen further stated he read the instructions that came with the equipment. Annen explained how *3 the equipment worked:
“Simply *** plug in the camera which was inside of a clock radio, a working clock radio, that plugs into a power source. You aim that camera wherever you want to observe. That camera sends a signal to the wireless transmitter which is connected to the DVR which is a digital video recorder, just like a computer drive and that records the images that the camera sees.”
Annen testified that he placed the clock radio on Marsh’s desk, in front of the drawer from which the money had been taken. Annen tеsted the equipment by turning everything on and making sure there was a good picture coming from the camera. Annen stated that when any moving object came into the viewing area of the camera, the recording process would start.
¶ 5 On Monday, Annen returned to Marsh’s office and checked the equipment. He found that
the motion sensor had triggered the DVR and a recording had been made. However, the images on the recording were not visible due to insufficient light.
¶ 6 On Friday, December 9, Annen set up the equipment again and placed a small lamp on
Marsh’s desk. He left a note next to the lamp requesting that it be left on. ¶ 7 On Monday, December 12, Annen returned to Marsh’s office after Marsh advised him
$20 was missing from the pouch. At this time, the DVR, transmitter and camera were all still on. Again, the DVR had been triggered. Annen, along with Marsh and Paul Mocogni, the school’s facility manager, viewed the DVR recording. Marsh and Mocogni identified defendant, Teryck Taylor, as the individual in the recording. Defendant worked at the school as a night watchman.
¶ 8 On December 16, Mocogni, Sue Hebson, the school’s principal, and Barry Bolek, the
school’s assistant superintendent, met with defendant. During the interview, defendant admitted to stealing cash from Marsh’s office on December 10. However, defendant stated it was only $10. Defendant also admitted to taking cash on three to four other occasions. According to a Deerfield police report summary, authored by Annen, on December 16, Annen “made a copy of the video surveillance on the hard drive, specifically the segment where Taylor was in Marsh’s office[,] onto a VHS tape.” Annen removed the tape’s recording tab, and locked the VHS tape in his desk, “to be later locked in an evidence locker.” The report further stated that Annen viewed all the footage recorded by the DVR from December 9 to December 12 and that no one other than defendant went into Marsh’s office. Annen interviewed defendant on January 4, 2006. During this interview, according to
Annen, defendant admitted to stealing money from Marsh’s desk on December 10. Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion in limine to bar the State from using the VHS tape at trial, arguing that the State would be unable to lay a foundation for the VHS tape because it contained a 30-second skip. The trial court denied this motion, but the record does not include the reason for the denial. When the State sought to admit the VHS tape at trial, defendant objected on foundational
grounds, arguing that the video skips forward 30 seconds and the State failed to explain why the gap existed. Defense counsel also argued that it had not been shown that the camera was *4 working properly. The trial court advised the State to lay a better foundation. Annen then testified the camera was still working on December 12 as it had been on December 9. Defense counsel again objected, stating there were five elements for admission: “capability of the device [for] recording, competency of the operator, proper operation of the device, preservation of recording with no changes, additions or deletions and identification of the speakers.” Defense counsel took issue with the competency of Annen, since he was not present when the device recorded, and with the absence of proof that the motion sensor was operating properly. The trial court again advised the State to lay more foundation.
¶ 13 Annen then testified that, on December 9, he plugged a portable 13-inch monitor into the
feed from the DVR to determine if the devices were working properly. This allowed him to see what the camera was seeing. As the camera was on Marsh’s desk, Annen had Marsh walk in front of the camera to check that the motion sensor was working. When Marsh walked in front of the camera, the DVR turned on. According to Annen, this showed that the connection was working. At this point, Annen assumed the DVR was recording. When Annen returned to Marsh’s office on December 12, he again plugged his monitor into the DVR. Annen saw a live feed of Marsh’s desk. Everything was still on and working properly. Defense counsel again objected, arguing there was no proof the sensor was working between Friday the 9th and Monday the 12th. The trial court overruled the objection, finding that Annen’s testimony established the motion sensor was working over the weekend. The State was then allowed to play the video. The video, which is part of the record on appeal, contains two successive segments depicting a man in Marsh’s office at approximately 5 a.m. on Saturday, December 10. The first segment, which runs from 4:52:00 to 4:52:12, shows a man entering the frame from the right, crouching behind the desk, opening the drawer, and removing the bank pouch. While doing this, the man is looking around. The second segment, which runs from 4:52:41 to 4:52:49, shows the man still crouched behind the desk, then shows him rising and turning, and exiting the frame to the right. During the viewing of the videotape, defense counsel again objected, arguing that the State failed to show the recording was preserved without any changes, additions or deletions and that the 29-second skip in the tape from the end of the first segment to the beginning of the second, suggested that a portion of the tape was missing. Annen testified as follows:
“It is because, to my knowledge, there is a time lapse, a default setting of 30 seconds, that if the camera stops sensing motion, recording stops. As soon as it senses motion again, it started again. So what I am saying, if there was motion that the camera could not see, it would stop recording and then when he moved again, that being Mr. Taylor, the camera started again.
***
The camera can only see what you are seeing. It can’t see below the desk. It cannot see areas of the room not in the picture. If I was below the desk and not moving, and there wasn’t any view, you wouldn’t be able to see any motion in the camera. It would not activate.” After the trial judge viewed the tape, Annen testified that the recording shown to the
court was the recording he viewed on December 12 with Marsh and Mocogni and that it was *5 the recording taken from the DVR. Specifically, he testified:
“Q. As this recording exists, besides focusing your recording on this specific incident, has it been altered in any way?
A. No.
Q. The 30 seconds that [defense counsel] referred to, do those 30 seconds exist on the recording?
A. No, they don’t.
Q. Why don’t they exist on the recording?
A. The camera only records when there is motion detected and the camera is set to record long enough to capture everything, I didn’t have it set long enough to record a longer period of time.” Annen stated the settings could be changed for the length of recording. The trial court
then inquired of Annen as to exactly what thаt meant. Annen responded:
“Well, your Honor, I am not an expert by any means. We had just gotten this unit, what I learned is that once it detected motion, it only recorded for a certain amount of time before it would stop if it didn’t detect any more motion.” Although Annen could not recall how long the system was set to record, he acknowledged it would have been at least 15 seconds. When the trial court asked Annen to explain why the recording stopped at 4:52:12, Annen stated:
“My only explanation, your Honor, is that when he [the defendant] crouched, he was crouched for a long enough time and still from the camera site up, he might have been–if he was moving his hands or doing anything below that site, it could have caused it to not sense any motion. As soon as he moved, that is when it kicked on again. You saw him rising and turning to leave the room, that is my best explanation.” Kevin Marsh and Paul Mocogni both testified on behalf of the State and were both shown
the videotape. They described what was depicted and identified defendant as the individual who appears in the tape. In finding defendant guilty, the trial court commented as follows:
“The video does have a missing segment of 30 seconds. I suppose a lot of things could have happened in that 30 seconds. There’s no evidence that anything did happen other than we missed some of the activity as far as the defendant. He had the pouch in his hand at one point. The officer, I’m convinced, gave a reasonable explanаtion of why we’re missing that 30 seconds. I don’t see any intentional destruction of evidence. He explained it was the motion sensor. *** But I’m satisfied the video does establish the defendant’s presence in the room where he had no authority to be. It shows him with the pouch, which he clearly had no authority to take. And that, along with the testimony about the missing money, I think is sufficient, even without the admissions, to convict, to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The trial court found defendant guilty of misdemeanor theft. Thereafter, defendant filed a motion to reconsider or in the alternative for a new trial,
arguing, inter alia , that the State had failed to lay a proper foundation and, therefore, the VHS tape should not have been admitted. Defendant again refеrred to the 30-second skip in the recording. In addressing defendant’s motion, the trial court commented as follows:
“With respect to the videotape, I think the record from the trial and my ruling on the motion in limine frankly addressed all of the issues that are raised in this motion. I viewed the videotape several times. I think we all agreed that according to the timer shown in the videotape, there was 30 seconds [defense counsel] referred to it as missing. I don’t know that I would so much refer to it as missing based on the explanation the officer gave. This was a motion actuated video recorder or camera. He testified that when it was initially installed it shut off after a period of time if there was no motion detected and gave an explanation for why we had a jump from one view of the defendant removing some objects from underneath the desk where the money was to be found missing, and then we showed another view again according to the timer starting 30 seconds later the defendant moving from that same position moving away and out of the room. The officer testified that he set it up, he was instructed as to how the video camera and recorder operated. He believed it to be working properly. There was no indication that this had changed in any way from the time he viewed it on Monday morning I believe after the money was found missing. *** I don’t think that frankly casts any doubt on the fact that it clearly showed the defendant in the room where the money was found missing, reaching under thе desk, looking furtively about and removing an object and doing something with an object which appeared to be consistent with the money purse or case that the money was contained in.”
Accordingly, the court found there was a proper foundation for admission of the tape and
denied defendant’s motion.
Defendant appealed. The appellate court reversed and remanded.
Citing to
People v. Vaden
,
¶ 24 ANALYSIS
¶ 25 Standard of Review
¶ 26 The parties dispute the standard of review. The State contends that we should review the
trial court’s decision to admit the VHS tape under an abuse of discretion standard. Defendant
contends that we should review the trial court’s decision to admit the VHS tape
de novo
because, according to defendant, “the legal admissibility of evidence on foundation grounds
‘is subject to a
de novo
standard of review.’ ” We agree with the State.
In
Cisarik v. Palos Community Hospital
,
videotapes are admissible on the same basis as photographs.
Cisarik
,
the VHS tape on the grounds that (1) the VHS tape was a duplicate recording; (2) the State failed to explain the process used to create the duplicate, (3) the State failed to show a chain of custody, and (4) the State failed to preserve the original recording. According to the State, defendant did not object on these grounds at trial or in his posttrial motion. We agree. At trial, defendant objected to the VHS tape on the following grounds: (1) there was a 30- second jump with no explanation; (2) the camеra was not working properly; (3) the evidence did not show Annen was competent to operate the equipment; and (4) the State failed to preserve the recording without changes, additions or deletions as shown by the 30-second jump. Contrary to defendant’s contention, the objections defendant made at trial do not encompass all of the challenges he now raises. Defendant maintains, however, that if we conclude he did in fact forfeit some of the
challenges he raises in this appeal, we should review them under the plain-error doctrine.
*8
Under the plain-error doctrine, this court will review forfeited challenges when: (1) a clear
or obvious error occurred and the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone
threatened to tip the scales of justice against the defendant; or (2) a clear or obvious error
occurred, and the error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial and
the integrity of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence.
People v.
Herron
,
Bateman Farrell,
Construction and Application of Silent Witness Theory
,
of a process that produces surveillance camera recordings. A majority of jurisdictions
addressing this issue have set forth various relevant factors to consider. See
United States v.
Reed
,
factors in determining whether a proper foundation had been laid for the admission of the VHS tape: (1) the device’s capability for recording and general reliability; (2) competency of the operator; (3) proper operation of the device; (4) showing the manner in which the recording was preserved (chain of custody); (5) identification of the persons, locale, оr objects depicted; and (6) explanation of any copying or duplication process. We agree that these factors may be considered when determining whether the process by which a *10 surveillance videotape was produced was reliable. However, like other jurisdictions, we emphasize that this list of factors is nonexclusive. Each case must be evaluated on its own and depending on the facts of the case, some of the factors may not be relevant or additional factors may need to be considered. The dispositive issue in every case is the accuracy and reliability of the process that produced the recording. Although we agree with the appellate cоurt’s choice of factors to consider, we disagree
with the appellate court’s conclusion that the evidence failed to demonstrate the VHS tape was admissible. The appellate court concluded that the State failed to establish the camera was working properly; failed to give an explanation of the process of copying the recording from the DVR to the VHS tape; failed to establish a sufficient chain of custody; failed to preserve the original; and failed to establish there were no alterations, deletions, or changes made to the original. As such, the appellate court found that the State failed to establish even the probability that the VHS tape had not been tampered with. We disagree with the appellate court’s analysis and find that the State laid a sufficient foundation for admission of the VHS tape. Annen testified that he had recently purchased the surveillance system which consisted
of the motion-activated wireless digital camera, a wireless transmitter and the DVR. Although Annen had not used the equipment before placing it in Marsh’s office, an individual from the store instructed him on how to use it. In addition, he read the instructions which came with the equipment. On December 1, Annen set up the system in Marsh’s office. He returned to Marsh’s
office on December 4. At this time, the camera had been triggered and a recording had been made, but the images could not be seen because of insufficient light. On December 9, Annen took measures to correct the situation and then tested the system by having Marsh walk in front of the camera. It was triggered and recording began. When Annen returned on December 12, the camera had again been triggered. He, along with Marsh and Mocogni, viewed the recording from the DVR via a monitor and observed that two segments had been recorded. The appellate court found that the State failed to demonstrate the camera was functioning
properly, focusing on the fact one segment recorded for only 6 seconds yet, according to
testimony at trial, the camera was set to record for at least 15 seconds after it was activated.
give an explanation of the process of copying the recording from the DVR to the VHS tape.
failed to preserve the original DVR recording.
definitions. The VHS tape was made by copying the data stored on the hard drive of the DVR and, therefore, satisfies the definition of “original.” See Commonwealth v. Leneski , 846 N.E.2d 1195, 1198-99 (Mass. App. Ct. 2006) (videotapes, like photographs, are not subject to the best evidence rule and the same is true for digital images placed and stored on a hard drive and transferred to a CD; thus, a CD would be an original). The State was not required to bring the DVR system into court to show the surveillance video. Lastly, the appellate court concluded that the State failed to establish that no alterations,
deletions or changes had been made when the original DVR recording was copied to the
videotape. 398 Ill. App. 3d at 86. Such a requirement is overly restrictive. Given the
particular cirсumstances of any case, alterations, deletions, or editing may be necessary. As
has been stated, “[o]f course, some editing may be necessary to make the evidence
admissible in the first place.” Jordan S. Gruber,
Foundation for Contemporaneous Videotape
Evidence
,
in
16 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 493, § 17, at 528 (1992). For example,
unimportant, irrelevant, prejudicial, privileged and/or confidential material should be
removed. See Jordan S. Gruber,
Videotape Evidence
,
in
44 Am. Jur. Trials 171, § 17, at 221
(1992) (“Where irrelevant or prejudicial material is deleted, editing may make an otherwise
inadmissable videotape admissible. Where technical difficulties or distortions are addressed,
editing may make the videotape evidence more understandable and thus more useful to the
trier of fact.”). See also Jordan S. Gruber,
Foundation for Contemporaneous Videotape
Evidence
,
in
16 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 493, § 26, at 538 (1992) (“If a videotape contains
irrelevant, prejudicial, or incompetent segments, the opponent of the evidence should request
that the trial judge order the videotape edited or played back so that the jury is exposed to
only fully admissible material.”). In general, most editing will not render evidence
inadmissable but rather will go to the weight of that evidence. Jordan S. Gruber,
Foundation
for Contemporaneous Videotape Evidence
,
in
16 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 493, § 17, at 527
(1992); Jordan S. Gruber,
Videotape Evidence
,
in
44 Am. Jur. Trials 171, § 31, at 242
(1992). The more important criteria is that the edits cannot affect the reliability or
trustworthiness of the recording. In other words, the edits cannot show that the recording was
*13
tampered with or fabricated. There is no evidence here that the VHS tape was the result of
tampering or fabrication. Indeed, as the appellate court itself noted, Annen’s testimony
established the “recording in court was the same as the one he watched with Marsh and
Mocogni.”
proper foundation for admission of the VHS tape. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the VHS tape and, thus, there was no plain error. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the appellate court and affirm the judgment of the circuit court. Appellate court judgment reversed; circuit court judgment affirmed.
