This post deals with a civil case, not a criminal one. More precisely, it deals with the custody
litigation between Lori and Frank Perry.
In re Marriage of Perry, __
N.E.2d __, 2012 WL 1622619 (Illinois Court of Appeals 2012).
Frank and Lori were married on April 17, 2000, and at the
time this case arose had “three minor children, Frank Jr., Michael and
Christopher.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra. Frank
is a fire inspector for the city of
Chicago and works 10–hour shifts, starting at 7 a.m. and ending at 5 p.m.,
Mondays through Thursdays. Frank also works as an exam proctor for the college
of the city of Chicago every Friday from between 2 and 5 p.m. and ending at 10
p.m., and on Saturdays beginning at 7 a.m. working all day. Lori has been a
stay-at-home mother since the parties' marriage. . . .
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
“On or about February 15, 2011, Frank left the house because
Lori threatened him, stating, `If I could kill you and get away with it I
would.’” In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
This apparently was not an unprecedented event in their
marriage:
Lori had been physically violent with
Frank in the past, and Frank felt it was in his best interest to leave. Frank
spent two nights at his mother's house and then stayed in a hotel for two
nights. Even though Frank left the house, he sent texts to Lori to try to
resolve their problems.
While Frank was out of the house, Lori changed the
locks. According to Frank, he repeatedly asked for the opportunity to see the
boys but his requests were denied. Lori prevented Frank from seeing the
children for six weeks.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
On March 3, 2011, Lori filed a petition for to dissolve the
marriage. In re Marriage of Perry, supra. On March 17, Frank filed his response. In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. On March
15, Lori filed a motion for interim relief seeking: “(1) temporary custody of
the children; (2) temporary child support; and (3) temporary exclusive use and
possession of Frank's nonmarital home.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra. The court held a hearing on her petition that
began on “July 27, 2011 and concluded on October 11.” In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. The judge
heard “testimony from three witnesses over four days of contentious hearings.” In re
Marriage of Perry, supra.
Frank testified, among other things, that “ he believed
Lori was working as an escort and maintained that her work negatively affected
the children, including their schoolwork and relationship with Lori.” In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. He also
offered into evidence
a flash drive containing photographs of
Lori which . . . he downloaded from a Web site called `Chix Escorts’ on the
Internet offering escort services. Frank downloaded the pictures and the
information offered on the Web site, which included an e-mail and Lori's cell
phone number, onto the flash drive. Counsel for Lori objected to the flash
drive based on relevance [and] foundation. . . .
Frank testified that he ran Lori's
escort name, `April,’ in the . . . Google, found pictures of Lori on the Web
site `Chix Escorts,’ and downloaded copies of the pictures onto his flash
drive. . . . The court found the photographs were relevant and admitted them
into evidence. There was no further ruling on the remaining objections. . . .
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
Lori testified in rebuttal that she did not
set up the Web site `Chix Escorts.’
Lori testified that one of the photographs was an old picture on Frank's cell
phone, and she further maintained that all of the photos on the `Chix Escorts’ Web
site were photos she had previously sent to Frank. Lori had had Frank's cell
phone since Frank left the house, but she did not have it with her in court
when she gave her rebuttal testimony.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
On October 11, after hearing closing arguments from both
sides, the judge denied Lori
the relief she sought in her motion and
granted Frank temporary custody of the minor children and temporary exclusive
possession of the house and allowed Lori 14 days to vacate the home. The court
found both parties lied on the stand, but it held that on the issue of
credibility, the court had to weight the testimony in a light most favorable to
Frank.
The court . . . found it could explain Frank's lies but not Lori's, `other
than to attempt to gain an advantage in this litigation.’ The court
specifically took issue with Lori's numerous trips and unexplained income
during 2010, which the court inferred was due to her working as an
escort.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
On October 21, Lori filed an emergency motion to stay enforcement
of the judge’s order pending her appeal. In
re Marriage of Perry, supra. That
same day, the judge granted her motion and entered an order staying the order
of October 11, 2011. In re Marriage of Perry, supra. On December 7, the Court of Appeals entered
an order granting Lori “temporary possession and custody of the minor children
and temporary exclusive possession of the property”. In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. It also
ordered Frank to "pay $300 per week in
temporary child support”. In re Marriage
of Perry, supra.
Lori’s appeal made its way through the system, with this
opinion issuing on May 7, 2012. In re Marriage of Perry, supra. She raised several issues, but we’re only
concerned with her argument that the lower court “erred in admitting the flash
drive into evidence because Frank did not sufficiently authenticate and
establish a foundation for the photographs”.
In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
As Wikipedia explains, in law a foundation is
sufficient
preliminary evidence of the authenticity and relevance for
the admission of material evidence in the form of exhibits or
testimony of witnesses. Material evidence is important evidence that may
serve to determine the outcome of a case. . . . The type of preliminary
evidence necessary to lay the proper foundation depends on the form and type of
material evidence offered.
The lack of foundation is a
valid objection that an adverse party may raise during trial.
The Court of Appeals began its analysis of this issue by
noting that the standard of review it uses for issues like this is that “the
admissibility of evidence rests in the sound discretion of the trial court, and
that determination will not be reversed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.” In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. After
reviewing the proceedings below, the court held that Lori had waived her
objection to the lack of foundation for the photographs. In re
Marriage of Perry, supra.
At the hearing, Lori’s lawyer objected to the admission of
the photographs “based on (1) relevance [and] (2) foundation”. In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. The judge ruled
they were relevant, allowed them into evidence and gave “Lori's counsel an
opportunity to examine Frank regarding [them].”
In re Marriage of Perry, supra. Her lawyer never
obtained a ruling from the court on her
objection based on foundation. . . . `[A] party waives an objection where a
ruling is not requested after the trial court fails to make one.’ Shields
Pork Plus, Inc. v. Swiss Valley Ag Service, 329 Ill. App. 3d 305
(2002). . . .
The long-standing rule is that `. . . to preserve an issue for review, an appellant must obtain either a ruling on the issue or a refusal to rule thereon from the trial court.’ In re Appointment of Special State's Attorney, 305 Ill. App. 3d 749 (1999).
The long-standing rule is that `. . . to preserve an issue for review, an appellant must obtain either a ruling on the issue or a refusal to rule thereon from the trial court.’ In re Appointment of Special State's Attorney, 305 Ill. App. 3d 749 (1999).
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
The Court of Appeals also found that “any error in the court
viewing and admitting the photos was invited by Lori's counsel”. In re Marriage of Perry, supra. While her lawyer was cross-examining Frank on
how he found and downloaded the photographs,
the court apparently inserted the flash
drive and the following exchange between Lori's counsel and the court took
place:
THE COURT: Right now I'm looking and it's
bothering me. Are you suggesting that I open one of these, Mr. Mirabelli?
MR. MIRABELLI: Yes. Let's see what it is he says
he downloaded.’
The court then proceeded to open the
files identified as photos of Lori. The second photograph opened as `Chix Escorts’
and was a photo of a woman seminude in a tub, captioned `Sweet Little April.’
Frank identified `Sweet Little April’ as Lori.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra. The court explained
that Lori could not object to the court’s viewing the photographs “when her
counsel specifically requested the court to view them.” In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. It also
reiterated that Lori had waived her foundation objection by not obtaining a
ruling on it. In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
But the Court of Appeals also noted that it could “decline
to apply the rule of waiver and consider the issue on the merits where the case
is a matter affecting child custody and the issue is an issue of first
impression.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
It declined to apply waiver to the foundation issue because this was a
custody case and because “the issue involving foundation for the admission of
electronic duplicates of photographs from a Web site which were saved onto a
flash drive is a novel issue which has not yet been addressed by Illinois
courts.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
The court found that Frank “laid a sufficient foundation and
sufficiently authenticated the photographs as photographs of Lori to allow
their admission into evidence.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra. It then addressed “whether Frank laid a
sufficient foundation to establish that the photographs were copies of
photographs from the `Chix Escorts’ site. In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
It noted that “[c]ontrary to Lori's assertions that Frank did not
authenticate the relevant time of the photographs,” Frank testified that the
photographs were a “fair and accurate representation of Lori” at the time he
downloaded them because of her hair: “Frank
testified that at one time it was shorter and then she had added extensions to
her hair, and the photographs were an accurate representation of the current
length of Lori's hair.” In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
The court explained that under Illinois Rule of Evidence
901, “the testimony of a witness that a matter is what it is claimed to be is
sufficient to satisfy the requirement of authentication.” In
re Marriage of Perry, supra. It
noted that expert testimony is not necessary; “all that is needed is testimony”
of a person “with personal knowledge of the photographed object, at the time
relevant to the issues” and that “the photograph is a fair and accurate
representation at that time.” In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
The Court of Appeals found it was a “closer question”
whether “Frank laid a sufficient foundation to establish that the photographs
were copies of photographs from the `Chix Escorts’” site. In re
Marriage of Perry, supra. It noted
that “only one of the photographs on
Frank's flash drive bore the logo for the `Chix Escorts’ Web site” and that
Lori claimed “the pictures were old photos she had sent . . . Frank that were
on his cell phone.” In re Marriage
of Perry, supra. It found that “at the
hearing Lori raised a genuine question as to the authenticity of the original
photographs” because none of them were screenshots of the
Web site, nor did they include
the Internet address on the photos. Given the ability to manipulate such
digital images, and given Lori's concerns regarding the ability of others to
post pictures online, we cannot conclude there was a sufficient foundation that
the photographs of Lori were from the `Chix Escorts’ Web site, and we cannot
conclude that the admission of the photographs to prove Lori was specifically
part of the online `Chix Escorts’ service was not an abuse of discretion.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
But the Court of Appeals also found that any error in
admitting the photographs for the purpose of establishing that Lori was
part of the `Chix Escorts’ online
escort service was harmless. The court had other evidence before it that Lori
was working as an escort and did not base its decision on the fact she was
working for this particular escort agency. The court also had other evidence
before it that granting temporary custody to Lori was not in the children's
best interest.
In re Marriage of
Perry, supra.
For this and other reasons, it affirmed the order entered by
the lower court. In re Marriage of Perry, supra.
Addendum - August 17, 2012:
The attorney for one of the parties informed me today that this opinion has been withdrawn, as you can see from this entry:
Addendum - August 17, 2012:
The attorney for one of the parties informed me today that this opinion has been withdrawn, as you can see from this entry:
Posting
Date
05/08/12
|
Filing
Date
05/07/12
|
Docket
Number
1-11-3054 NRel
|
Public Domain
Citation
2012
IL App (1st) 113054
|
Case name
In re Marriage of Perry - Withdrawn 7/10/12
|
I cannot find a link to the order in question, but the court was ruling on Lori Perry's Motion to Advise Court of Voluntary Dismissal and Request for Alternative Relief. The court granted that motion and also granted the "alternative relief requesting to vacate this Court's Opinion filed on May 7, 2012". The lawyer "vehemently objected to the rationale of the opinion" examined in this post and therefore sought to, and succeeded in, having it vacated.
Is this your Mother's Day post?
ReplyDeleteSo many of your posts deal with situations where people come to court unprepared. Frank should have prepared his internet evidence with the aid of a paralegal or private investigator who would have understood the importance of screen captures, etc. Or maybe Frank really was faking it...
I actually hadn't thought about the Mother's Day aspect . . . .
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, many cases, at least many of the unreported cases, tend to involve people who could have prepared a little better . . . .
Nope Lori really was an escort. She went by the name "Sweet little April". Was quite popular here in the chicago area, until this all happened and she retired.
ReplyDelete