A judge dismissed a felony charge against a convicted murderer after ruling the Wonder Lake man’s prior conviction for killing his wife does not count as a previous domestic battery conviction.
Charles C. Gozzola, 49, of Wonder Lake, was initially charged in January with one count of domestic battery, a Class A misdemeanor.
He was later charged in February with domestic battery enhanced, a Class 4 felony, and aggravated battery in a public place, a Class 3 felony.
The charges stem from a domestic incident that occurred around 12:30 p.m. on January 31 near Planet Fitness, 5320 Northwest Highway in Crystal Lake.
Witnesses advised that a man battered a woman several times before entering a vehicle and fleeing the area, according to the Wonder Lake Police Department.
The alert provided officers with a suspect description and vehicle description and officers identified the suspect as Gozzola.
McHenry County Assistant State’s Attorney Brian Miller said that the victim was Gozzola’s wife.
The woman was struck in the head with a water bottle and pulled into a vehicle against her will, Miller said.
Wonder Lake officers located the vehicle at their residence in the 8700 block of Pebble Creek Court in Wonder Lake around 12:50 p.m. that day.
Officers obtained probable cause that Gozzola and the victim were located inside a residence, police officials said.
The McHenry County Sheriff’s Police, McCullom Lake Police Department and the Wonder Lake Fire Protection District responded to the incident.
Officers attempted to make contact with the occupants but were unsuccessful.
“Exigent circumstances” existed due to imminent concerns for the safety and well-being of the victim, police officials said.
Officers forced entry to the residence and located the victim and Gozzolaย around 1:45 p.m.
Officers arrested Gozzola pursuant to criminal charges from the Crystal Lake Police Department and provided medical treatment for the victim.
The incident in the Crystal Lake parking lot was observed by three independent witnesses, Miller said. The victim was not cooperating with law enforcement.
In 2002, Gozzola was convicted of second-degree murder in Cook County for fatally shooting his then-wife.
The Chicago Tribune reported in 2000 that Gozzola tried staging the murder as a suicide and then tried framing his two young children in the shooting.
Court records show Gozzola’s attorney, Clay Mitchell, filed a motion in early March to have one of his two charges, enhanced domestic battery, dismissed.
The domestic battery charge is a Class 4 felony instead of the typical Class A misdemeanor because prosecutors said Gozzola has a previous conviction for the second-degree murder of his prior wife, which they argued qualifies as a previous domestic-related conviction.
Illinois statute defines numerous convictions that qualify for the enhanced domestic battery charge, including domestic battery and first-degree murder, among many other offenses.
It does not specifically state that a prior second-degree murder conviction qualifies for the enhanced charge but the statute includes a catch-all “for any offense that is substantially similar to the offenses listed in this Section, when any of these offenses have been committed against a family or household member.”
Mitchell argued the indictment did not state the necessary prior conviction to have the charge enhanced from a misdemeanor to a felony.
McHenry County Assistant State’s Attorney Ashur Youash said that although Gozzola was not specifically convicted of domestic battery, there is case law establishing that the second-degree murder conviction of his prior wife qualifies as a crime of domestic battery, the Northwest Herald reported.
McHenry County Judge Mark Gerhardt granted the motion and dismissed the felony domestic battery charge during a hearing Friday.
Gerhardt said prosecutors “misinformed” the grand jury regarding the law. He called that “substantial” and a “miscarriage of justice” that could have led to longer sentencing for Gozzola, the Herald reported.
Gozzola remains held in the McHenry County Jail pending trial. He still faces one count of aggravated battery.
Gozzola was initially released at the time of his arrest after McHenry County Judge Jennifer Johnson denied prosecutors’ detention petition.
Prosecutors asked for several conditions of pre-trial release but Johnson did not impose a firearm surrender for Gozzola and also did not issue a no-contact order between him and the victim.
Miller argued in a motion that the court should have imposed those two conditions pursuant to state law.
On the same day Gozzola was released in early February, the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office responded to two 911 calls made by neighbors who were concerned about fighting coming from the couple’s home.
Deputies met with Gozzola and his wife and the victim was again uncooperative and said nothing happened, Miller said.
Miller said Gozzola was not arrested because there was no prior court order in place restricting him from being around his wife.
McHenry County Judge Michael Feetterer granted prosecutors’ request to have Gozzola detained pending trial during a subsequent court hearing.
Feetterer found that Gozzola posed a real and present threat to the community or victim and that there were no conditions of release that could mitigate the risk.
“Three different witnesses saw the defendant batter his wife in a public location. There is little motive for three strangers to fabricate seeing the battery,” Feetterer said.
The judge said Gozzola is a danger to his wife based on the domestic battery incident and because of his conviction for killing his previous wife.
Feetterer acknowledged the victim in the case has been unwilling to cooperate with law enforcement but said there is no reason to believe that any conditions of Gozzola’s release will keep her safe.
Gozzola is scheduled to appear in court again on April 19 for another motion hearing. A jury trial is tentatively scheduled for April 29.