delivered the opinion of the court:
At аbout 11:30 p.m. on November 29, 1990, Joseph Dukes was robbed at gunpoint by several young men outside the French Quarters, a tavern at 3743 West Chicago Avenue in the City of Chicago. He was returning from a nearby restaurant where he had bought food for his wife, Dorothy Dukes, who owned the tavern. One of the young men hit
Immediately after the assault, Joseph Dukes flagged down a police car and told the officers that he had been robbed and that he would be able to recognize his assailants if he saw them again, although he did not provide them with a description of the robbers. The officers drove Dukes around the neighborhood for about 20 minutes searching for the robbers, but without success.
About four days after the robbery, Joseph Dukes’ 25-year-old daughter, Karen, provided him with the first names and addresses of three of the robbers, including defendant’s, and a general description of the fourth. Dukes phoned the police with the information, but they did not respond to his call. However, on December 9, 1990, Officers Roy Isakson and Judith Carr met with Dukes regarding an unrelated theft, and at that time, he gave them the information he had received from Karen. Without contacting Karen or inquiring how she came upon this information, Carr and Isakson returned to the police station and consulted the robbery case report, which stated that the robbers were four black males between 16 and 21 years old. Isakson testified that they did not obtain arrest warrants because of the late hour.
Between 3 and 4 a.m., the officers went to the addresses supplied by Dukes to arrest the individuals named by his daughter. They arrested Christopher Holmes and Marcus Terry and then proceeded to defendant’s home. There his father told the officers that defendant was "spending the night at James’ house.” One of the men in the car directed the officers to "James’ ” house, where they arrested defendant and James Burley, who matched the description of the fourth person that Karen had given her father. Defendant was 15 years old at the time of his arrest.
At about 8 a.m., Joseph and Dorothy Dukes and Reginald Mack viewed a showup of the four suspects, but, according to their testimony, none of them identified defendant. However, the arrest report on defendant and his pretrial motion indicate that defendant was "identified in a lineup.”
Assistant State’s Attorney Lauren Freeman testified that at about 2:30 p.m., she met with defendant and identified herself as an attorney working with the police, advised him of his Miranda rights, and told him that he could be charged as an adult in this case. A juvenile officer was present with Freeman when defendant gave a statement relating that he was walking with two girls when he saw his codefendants near the French Quarters. They told him to watch for the police. Defendant "had a hunch” that they planned to rob Joseph Dukes, who was walking across the street, and he watched for the police, аs directed. Defendant saw the robbery, and afterwards, he and his three codefendants ran away.
Defendant and his codefendants were charged by indictment with armed robbery and aggravated battery. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, pars. 18—2(a), 12—4(b)(8).) After the trial court simultaneously heard Terry’s, Burley’s, and defendant’s pretrial motions to quash arrest and to suppress evidence, the judge found that the officers had acted in good faith in making the arrests, although they had only "thin evidenсe of probable cause” when they arrested defendant and Terry. The judge added that "[tjhere wasn’t a tremendous amount of information linking the two to the crime, but there was sufficient probable cause for the officers to act.” He nonetheless found that when the officers arrested Terry and defendant at private dwellings, they violated Payton v. New York (1980),
The cases were severed for trial, but the four defendants were tried in the same proceedings — a jury triаl for defendant and simultaneous bench trials for his codefendants. The judge excused the jury when witnesses were cross-examined by defendant’s codefendants’ counsel.
At trial, Joseph Dukes identified defendant as one of the robbers, although he could not recall where defendant was standing during the robbery because, at that time, he was focusing on the gun. He stated that as the robbers fled, he saw defendant from about 75 feet away turn around to pick up his cap, and that he recognized defendant from seeing him 10 or 12 times in the neighborhood. He also identified Holmes, stating that he often visited his grandmother in the tavern. Dukes recalled that his daughter got the information regarding the robbery from defendant’s uncle.
Mack testified that he was looking out the tavern window when he saw the robbers surround Joseph Dukes; he then went to the back of the tavern and told Dorothy Dukes that her husband was being robbed. When he returned to the window, the bartender was shaking the burglary bars and the robbers ran away. He stated that defendant stood at Dukes’ right side during the robbery. Mack got a second look at the robbers as they doubled back and ran down the street. Mack identified each defendant in court, although at the showup, he identified only Terry and Burley; at trial, he claimed that defendant was not in the showup.
Dorothy Dukes testified, identifying defendant, Holmes and Burley. She stated that she saw defendant gоing through her husband’s pockets during the robbery. She recognized the defendants because they lived in the neighborhood and she had seen them "all the time.” She testified that she saw defendant at the police station, but later admitted that she found it difficult to tell defendant and Burley apart. On cross-examination, she said that she did not remember whether defendant was in the showup. She recalled that her stepdaughter got the names of the robbers when "she was thеre when they was [szc] talking about it because she seen [szc] her father’s ring.”
Detective Robert Meyer testified that the defendant was in the showup, but that Joseph Dukes failed to identify him. Meyer also testified that his report on the showup contained no information regarding Joseph Dukes’ observation of the showup or his inability to identify defendant.
At the close of the State’s case, defendant moved for a "directed finding,” but the trial judge denied the motion. Hе granted Burley’s motion for a directed verdict (whatever that means in a bench trial), found Terry not guilty of both charges and found Holmes guilty only of armed robbery. The jury found defendant not guilty of aggravated battery and guilty of armed robbery. The trial judge sentenced him to six years in the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections. This appeal followed.
Defendant first argues that his warrantless arrest was made without probable cause, violating both the Fedеral and Illinois Constitutions (U.S. Const., amend. IV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6), and that his subsequent confession was the fruit of the illegal arrest. He argues that the tip from the victim’s daughter was "purely conclusory” and provided the police with no details susceptible of corroboration. According to defendant, the police made the arrest knowing nothing of the source of the information or Dukes’ daughter’s veracity and reliability.
It is axiomatic that a warrantless arrest must be based upon probable cause. (See Dunaway v. New York (1979),
A trial judge’s determination of probable cause must be based upon standards at least as stringent as those applied by a magistrate when deciding whether to issue a warrant. (Tisler,
Although probable cause may be established with less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the evidence must be supported by some indicia of reliability (Jones,
Viewing the totality of the circumstances in the case at bar, when the police arrested defendant, they knew only that an armed robbery had been committed by four black males between thе ages of 16 and 21 and that the victim’s daughter had supplied him with the first names and addresses of three young men and a description of a fourth. We hold that this is insufficient to support a finding of probable cause. Compare People v. Hollins (1988),
The State argues that the providers of the information were the victim and his wife, an eyewitness, and that, therefore, it was "properly
In our view, the present case closely parallels People v. Hollins (1988),
Likewise, in People v. Haymer (1987),
Similarly, in the present case, the police had no basis for arresting defendant beyond mere rumor or suspicion, sufficient bases for questioning him but not for arresting him. Here, the State having conceded at oral argument that the police were conducting an investigation when they made the arrests, we reiterate the admonition in Haymer cautioning against investigatory arrests made in the hope that some evidence will be discovered upon which to bootstrap probable cause. Moreover, the State does not argue that exigent circumstances justified an immediate arrest and no such circumstances appear on the record. (See People v. Foskey (1990),
The State asserts that the source of the information justifying the arrest was revealed through testimony adduced at trial indicating that the victim’s daughter saw proсeeds from the robbery, that she heard the robbers discussing the crime, and that her sister was the mother of defendant’s uncle’s child. However, these facts were not within the officers’ knowledge at the time of the arrest. As our supreme court has cautioned, a probable cause determination cannot be predicated upon "hindsight which may luckily seem to be supported by the fruit of some criminality; rather, the review must center on the informatiоn available to the officers preceding the search or arrest.” (Adams,
We further hold that defendant’s inculpatory statement should have been suppressed because it was a direct result of his illegal arrest. We have stated that in order for evidence obtained after an illegal arrest to be admissible, intervening circumstances must provide "a cause so unrelated to the initial illegality that the acquired evidence may not reasonably be said to have been directly derived from that illegal arrest.” (People v. Faulisi (1977),
In the present case, an analysis of the Brown factors weighs in favor of defendant’s argument that his confession should have been suppressed by the trial court. Defendant cоncedes that his statement was voluntary. The approximately 11 hours between defendant’s illegal arrest and his confession in our view do not dissipate the taint of the illegal arrest, especially in view of defendant’s youth. (See White,
Our holding reversing the trial court’s ruling on defendant’s motion to quash arrest
Under Illinоis law, the failure to convict one codefendant does not necessarily raise a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the other defendant. (See People v. Ranee (1979),
In the case at bar, the verdict against defendant was sufficiently supported by the evidence and the inconsistent verdicts of his codefendants have no bearing on his conviction. (Wehmeyer,
Based upon the foregoing, the trial court is reversed and this case is remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
HARTMAN and McCORMICK, JJ., concur.
