People v. Tompkins
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Tompkins, convicted of unlawful use or possession of a weapon by a felon, argued that the circuit court erred in declining to give a jury instruction under the Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera Act, 50 ILCS 706/10-30, and by admitting body camera footage showing marijuana belonging to Tompkins’s co-arrestee. Tompkins argued that he was not charged with possession of the marijuana, there was no allegation he had anything to do with the marijuana, and that he would be prejudiced by playing that part of the video for the jury because it could cause an inference that the marijuana belonged to him. The footage at issue was part of a continuous video and, immediately after depicting marijuana, it depicts the gun that is the subject of Tomkins’s charge on the ground where it was located.
The Illinois Supreme Court affirmed. Because Tompkins’s tendered jury instruction did not instruct the jury to consider whether an officer’s failure to activate his body camera was reasonably justified, it was not an accurate statement of the law. Any error in not giving the tendered instruction was harmless. The admission of the challenged portion of the video was error, as it was irrelevant and unduly prejudicial but the admission of such evidence was harmless, given testimony that the marijuana did not belong to Tompkins and the other overwhelming evidence of Tompkins’s guilt.
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