192 N.E. 856 | Ill. | 1934
Kenneth Smith, alias Ross King, and the plaintiff in error, John Bongiorno, were indicted and convicted in the criminal court of Cook county for the murder of Harry *172 Redlich, a police officer. King was sentenced to death and has been executed. Bongiorno was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of 199 years.
Neither defendant testified and there is no material controversy over the facts. About noon on July 8, 1933, the defendants entered the offices of John W. Compton. As we understand the evidence, the office suite was on the third floor of the building and consisted of a large room and two adjoining rooms. The entrance from the general hallway was into the large room. A passenger elevator was located some distance from the office entrance. Near the elevator was a stairway which led from the ground floor. When the defendants entered the office King had a gun in his hand and ordered all present to stick up their hands. Bongiorno closed the entrance door and stood with his back to it. King compelled everyone in the room to face the wall. He then rifled their pockets and took whatever money and valuables he found. He ordered the safe to be opened and took from it some money and stamps. The victims were tied with rope or cord. Charlotte Taylor, an employee of Compton, was attracted by the strange action of the men as they entered the office and in some manner got out of it. She went down-stairs and notified police officer Redlich. He proceeded up-stairs, where he found the entrance door to the office closed. He demanded admission, and Bongiorno asked, "Who's there?" Redlich replied, "Open up; this is a police officer." His words were evidently heard by both defendants. King smashed a screen in one of the windows and jumped to a roof not far below. He then dropped from the roof to the street. Bongiorno opened the door and in answer to the officer's question what he was doing there, said he was trying to sell a man some insurance. The officer compelled him, at the point of his revolver, to raise his hands and proceed down the hallway to a point near the elevator and stairway. When they stopped, Bongiorno had his back to the *173 wall and faced the stairway. The officer's back was toward the stairway. Bongiorno was endeavoring to obtain his release by means of false statements to the officer. While he was so engaged King came up the stairway. Redlich, having his back to it, did not know of King's approach. When the latter got within a very short distance of the officer he fired three shots with his revolver. One of the bullets struck Redlich in the back, near the spine, causing his death. Bongiorno was not armed.
It is the contention of the plaintiff in error that he was not a participant in the murder; that he was then under arrest and in the custody of an officer; that about five minutes had expired after the robbery was completed; that the evidence fails to show any previous design or plan to kill; that he neither aided nor abetted in the killing, and that under the circumstances shown by the record he was not guilty of murder.
It is the rule that to constitute one guilty of a crime as principal or as an accessory he must be present or participate or do some act at the time of the commission of the offense in furtherance of a common design, or if not present it must be shown that he by some affirmative act actually advised, encouraged, aided or abetted in the perpetration of the crime. (People v. Richie,
Counsel for plaintiff in error, in commenting on King's return to the third floor of the building, says: "For some curious reason, evidently he [King] decided to go up-stairs to see what had become of his co-defendant, John Bongiorno." This statement cannot have been made seriously. King knew that a police officer had demanded admission through the door which Bongiorno was guarding and that Bongiorno had not come down-stairs. He must have inferred that Bongiorno was in the custody of the officer. To us the conclusion is irresistible that he went back with *175 a murderous intent to extricate his co-conspirator from the toils of the law and to successfully effectuate their plan of robbery.
Plaintiff in error places much reliance upon White v. People,
It is complained that the trial court erred in refusing to give certain instructions tendered by the respective defendants. Refused instruction No. 1 was not given because it assumed that the crime of robbery and the crime of murder were so separate and distinct from each other in point of time that it became the duty of the State to establish by evidence a new combination and design to kill, formed in the interval between the commission of the crimes. The instruction was properly refused.
The second refused instruction stated that if the jury found Bongiorno was under arrest at the time of the shooting and did not resist the officer, then the burden is on the State to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant resisted the officer or that he conspired and confederated with the other party to escape from arrest. The instruction was properly refused. The fact that Bongiorno was attempting to escape from the custody of the officer by deceit is not denied. It is manifestly immaterial what means is attempted to effect an escape. It is not necessary that the endeavor be by force of arms. As we have already stated, the plan to escape from the scene of the crime of robbery is necessarily inferred from the facts.
The guilt of the accused was definitely proved. All the errors assigned have been disposed of. The record is clear of prejudicial error, and the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *177