SIXTH DIVISION
June 18, 2010
No. 1-07-2222
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County.
)
v. ) Nos. 99 CR 23858
)
MARCELINO MALDONADO, ) Honorable
) Dennis J. Porter,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.
USTICE ROBERT E. GORDON delivered the opinion1 of the court:
Defendant, Marcelino Maldonado, was convicted on M ay 1, 2007, by a jury
of the first-degree murder of Maribel Jiminez, his former lover, and the attempted
first-degree murder of William Saquimux, Jiminez’s then current lover. The State’s
theory of the case was that defendant became enraged when he learned that Jiminez,
1
Pursuant to our supreme court’s supervisory order of November 25, 2009,
the opinion filed on August 10, 2009, was vacated on December 8, 2009, and the
following opinion is now filed in its stead.
No. 1-07-2222
who had jilted him the day before, was with another lover, and he went to her
apartment, found the two lovers and stabbed them both, killing Jiminez and
wounding Saquimux. Defendant was sentenced on June 4, 2007, to consecutive
terms of 60 and 30 years’ imprisonment.
After the trial court denied his posttrial motion for a new trial, he filed this
direct appeal. On appeal, defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion:
(1) by overruling defense objections to the admission into evidence of gruesome
photographs of the victim’s body; (2) by overruling a defense objection to a remark
during the State’s closing that defendant’s brother “knew”; (3) by overruling an
objection to testimony by a forensic scientist that he had received defendant’s
fingerprint card from the Bureau of Identification; (4) by granting the State’s motion
to bar the defense from arguing during its closing that the father of the murder
victim’s children could have committed the charged crimes; and (5) by refusing to
answer a question from the jury during its deliberations. For the following reasons,
we affirm.
In addition, defendant claims that he is entitled to a $15 reduction in the costs
and fees that he was ordered to pay, and the State agrees. In an opinion filed on
August 10, 2009, and vacated on December 8, 2009, we had found that defendant
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No. 1-07-2222
was not entitled to the reduction. On August 20, 2009, defendant moved to
supplement the appellate record concerning this issue; and on August 31, 2009, the
appellate court denied defendant’s motion as untimely. In a supervisory order, the
Illinois Supreme Court directed this court on November 25, 2009, to permit
defendant to supplement the record and to reconsider our judgment concerning this
issue in light of the supplemented record. For the reasons discussed below, we now
order defendant’s fines and fees reduced by $15 from $895 to $880, and order that
his mittimus be corrected accordingly.
BACKGROUND
1. Procedural History
Defendant was arrested on October 1, 1999, in connection with the stabbing
deaths of Maribel Jiminez and William Sauimux, which occurred earlier that same
day. On October 22, 1999, defendant was indicted on 14 counts, but the State
proceeded to trial on only 3 counts: (1) first-degree murder for intentionally or
knowingly stabbing and killing Jiminez; (2) first-degree murder for stabbing and
killing Jiminez knowing that the stabbing created a strong probability of death or
great bodily harm; and (3) attempted first-degree murder for stabbing Saquimux
with the intent to kill him. After the jury returned verdicts of guilty, the trial court
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No. 1-07-2222
merged count II into count I, and entered the convictions.
A short note of explanation is needed about why a crime committed on
October 1, 1999, did not proceed to trial until eight years later on May 1, 2007.
Between December 15, 1999, and March 25, 2005, this case was continued 51
times. On April 4, 2005, the trial court held a hearing on defendant’s motion, filed
October 6, 2004, to declare defendant ineligible for the death penalty due to mental
retardation. On April 4, 2005, the motion was denied.
Between May 3, 2005, and August 8, 2006, there were 31 more
continuances. On August 28, 2006, the trial court held a hearing on defendant’s
motion to preclude the State from seeking a sentence in excess of 45 years and
denied the motion on the same day. Between October 16, 2006, and April 17, 2007,
there were 12 more continuances. On April 20, 2007, jury selection began, and the
trial concluded on May 1, 2007, with the jury’s verdicts of guilt.
2. Evidence at Trial
Since defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against
him, we do not need to describe it in detail. In addition, as explained below, we do
not find that the trial court committed any error. Thus, we do not need to analyze
whether overwhelming evidence rendered an error harmless.
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In sum, the State called 11 witnesses: (1) Romana Puente, who was Jiminez’s
sister and who identified Jiminez’s body; (2) Assistant State’s Attorney Joan Kuruc,
who took defendant’s statement; (3) Tiffany Blake, who lived in the same apartment
as Jiminez and who testified that Jiminez had broken up with defendant the day
before the murder; (4) William Saquimux, the surviving victim and the man with
whom Jiminez was sleeping at the time of her death; (5) Detective Jeong Park, who
responded to the initial call about a stabbing; (6) Detective Steven Kostecki, a
forensic investigator, who recovered a bent knife from behind Jiminez’s bedroom
door, a bloody knife from her backyard, a bloody T-shirt from defendant’s home,
defendant’s shoes from defendant’s person, and blood that was located on
defendant’s right shin and left ankle; (7) Detective Thomas Conley, who observed
the crime scene and participated in defendant’s arrest; (8) Amy Hart, a fingerprint
examiner, who testified that none of the prints submitted to her for examination
matched defendant’s prints; (9) Dr. Scott Denton, a forensic pathologist, who
testified that Jiminez’s death resulted from stab wounds; (10) Gregory DiDomenic,
a forensic scientist, who testified that blood removed from defendant’s ankle, T-shirt
and shoe revealed DNA that matched Jiminez’s DNA; and (11) Detective Randy
Troche, who witnessed the taking of defendant’s statement by the assistant State’s
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No. 1-07-2222
Attorney.
The State’s evidence included: DNA evidence that blood removed from
defendant’s person matched the victim; and a written confession from defendant
describing the crimes in detail. Saquimux, the surviving victim, testified at trial.
However, at trial, he claimed not to know the identity of his attacker. Before trial,
he had provided a statement to the police saying that the assault on him had
occurred at another location and was gang-related.
In defendant’s confession, which was written down by Assistant State’s
Attorney Joan Kuruc, defendant stated the following. He met Jiminez about a
month ago and they started dating “right away.” Defendant slept at Jiminez’s
apartment approximately two or three times a week. Defendant stated that
sometimes he felt confused and that Jiminez would make him angry “by playing
games with his heart.” On September 30, 1999, Jiminez told defendant that she was
“breaking up with him.” Shortly after midnight on the following day, October 1,
1999, defendant ran into Jiminez’s housemates, Tiffany and Orlando, on the street.
Orlando informed defendant that Jiminez was with another man. Defendant then
walked over to Jiminez’s apartment and approached by “the back way.”
Defendant further stated that, after knocking on the door and receiving no
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No. 1-07-2222
response, defendant climbed into the apartment through the pantry window. He
retrieved two knives from Jiminez’s kitchen and knocked on her closed bedroom
door. When he received no answer, he opened the door and, apparently in the dark,
felt in front of him with his hand until he felt Jiminez’s leg. Jiminez said, “what are
you doing here, get out.” Defendant stated that he then stabbed Jiminez in the chest
near her shoulder. He stabbed her a couple of more times, and then she fell off the
bed onto the floor. After Jiminez fell to the floor, defendant kicked her near her
face, and then stabbed her some more while she was on the floor.
Defendant then stated that he saw a man sit up in Jiminez’s bed. Defendant
stabbed the man approximately three or four times. W hen defendant was stabbing
the man, the knife broke, cutting defendant’s right hand in two places. Defendant
then threw the broken knife on the floor and walked out of the bedroom. Defendant
entered the room in which Tiffany and Orlando lived, and he took Orlando’s radio,
because defendant had never liked Orlando. Defendant threw the second knife into
the yard and washed the blood off his hands in the kitchen sink. On his way home,
defendant threw Orlando’s radio into an alley.
The defense case consisted of three stipulations, which concerned
defendant’s IQ and defendant’s lack of apparent injuries on October 2, 1999, the
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No. 1-07-2222
day after the crimes.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion: (1) by
admitting gruesome photographs of the victim’s body into evidence; (2) by
overruling a defense objection to a remark in the State’s closing argument that
defendant’s brother “knew”; (3) by admitting into evidence testimony by a forensic
scientist that he had received defendant’s fingerprint card from the Bureau of
Identification; (4) by granting the State’s motion to bar the defense from arguing in
its closing that the father of the murder victim’s children could have committed the
charged crimes; and (5) by refusing to answer a question from the jury during its
deliberations. For the following reasons, we affirm.
1. Gruesome Photographs
Defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted
into evidence photographs of the murder victim’s body taken both at the crime
scene and at the morgue. Defendant argues, first, that the only issue at trial was the
identity of the attacker and that these photographs had limited probative value on
this issue; and, second, that, even if the photographs had probative value, their
probative value was substantially outweighed by their unfair prejudice.
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a. Standard of Review
There is no dispute about the appropriate standard of review. Evidentiary
rulings, like the one at issue here, are within the sound discretion of the trial court;
and we will not reverse them on appeal unless the trial court abused its discretion.
People v. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d 52, 89 (2001). “An abuse of discretion will be found
only where the trial court’s ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable, or where no
reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court.” Caffey, 205 Ill.
2d at 89. Our supreme court has specifically held that whether or not a jury is
allowed to see the photographs of a stabbing victim, taken at both the crime scene
and at the morgue, is “a decision made be a trial judge in the exercise of his sound
discretion.” People v. Henderson, 142 Ill. 2d 258, 319-321 (1990) (finding no
abuse of discretion in the admission of 18 crime scene and morgue photographs of a
murder victim, who had been stabbed 40 times).
However, there is a dispute about whether plain error review applies and, if
so, to what issues. The State claims that our review is limited to a plain error
review with respect to (1) the morgue photographs; and (2) the admission of any of
the photographs into evidence. First, although defendant objected at trial,
defendant’s posttrial motion specified only the crime scene photographs, and did not
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No. 1-07-2222
refer to the morgue photographs. Second, the State observes that defendant’s
posttrial motion objected only to the publication of the photographs to the jury, and
not to their admission into evidence. Thus, the State claims that defendant waived
any issues with respect to the admission of any photographs into evidence.
The Illinois Supreme Court has held that a “defendant must both specifically
object at trial and raise the specific issue again in a posttrial motion to preserve any
alleged error for review.” People v. Woods, 214 Ill. 2d 455, 470 (2005); People v.
Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d 551, 564 (2007). When a defendant has failed to preserve an
error for review, we may still review for plain error. Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at 562-
63; 134 Ill. 2d R. 615(a) (“Plain errors or defects affecting substantial rights may be
noticed although they were not brought to the attention of the trial court”).
“[T]he plain-error doctrine allows a reviewing court to consider unpreserved
error when (1) a clear or obvious error occurs and the evidence is so closely
balanced that the error alone threaten[s] to tip the scales of justice against the
defendant, regardless of the seriousness of the error, or (2) a clear or obvious error
occurs and that error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial
and challenged the integrity of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the
evidence.” Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at 565; Woods, 214 Ill. 2d at 471. With a plain
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No. 1-07-2222
error analysis, “it is the defendant who bears the burden of persuasion with respect
to prejudice.” Woods, 214 Ill. 2d at 471.
The State is correct that the defendant’s posttrial motion failed either to
mention the morgue photographs or to contest the admission into evidence of any
photographs. In his posttrial motion, defendant claimed with respect to photographs
only that “[t]he Court erred in permitting publication of People’s Exhibits Numbers
28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 and 36.” The photographs specified in this list are
only the photographs taken of the murder victim at the crime scene. The exhibit
numbers of the photographs taken at the morgue are omitted from the list. Also, as
this quote indicates, the defendant contested “publication” rather than “admission.”
In response, defendant claims that our review is not limited to plain error
review because (1) defendant’s objection was, in part, to the cumulative impact of
all 23 photographs on the jury, and thus all the photographs come within the scope
of this court’s review; and (2) whether defendant used the word “publication” or
“admission” is irrelevant, because the issue is what the jury saw and its impact on
them.
However, in order to find plain error, we must first find that the trial court
committed some error. Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at 565 (“the first step is to determine
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No. 1-07-2222
whether error occurred”). As discussed in the section below, since we do not find
error, we do not reach the question of whether the claimed error rose to the level of
plain error.
b. Probative Value and Unfair Prejudice
The trial court did not err in admitting photographs of the victim, because
they were relevant, and their probative value was not outweighed by unfair
prejudice to defendant.
Generally, evidence must be relevant to be admitted. People v. W illiams, 384
Ill. App. 3d 327, 333 (2008). To establish the relevance of a piece of evidence, a
party must: (1) identify the “fact” that it is seeking to prove with the piece of
evidence; (2) explain how this fact is “of consequence” to the determination of the
action; and (3) show how the evidence “tends to make the existence” of this fact
“more or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” People v. Beaman,
229 Ill. 2d 56, 75-76 (2008). Even after a party establishes relevance, the trial court
may still exclude the evidence, if the evidence creates an unfair prejudice that
substantially outweighs its probative value. Williams, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 333.
The State claims that the photographs were relevant to show (1) the truth and
accuracy of defendant’s confession, and thus his identity as the perpetrator; and (2)
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No. 1-07-2222
the required mental state, specifically, defendant’s intent to kill. Our supreme court
has held:
“Among the valid reasons for admitting photographs of a
decedent is to prove the nature and extent of injuries and
the force needed to inflict them; the position, condition,
and location of the body; the manner and cause of death;
to corroborate a defendant’s confession; and to aid in
understanding the testimony of a pathologist or other
witness.” Henderson, 142 Ill. 2d at 319-20.
Thus, the reasons offered by the State fall within the list of valid reasons given by
our supreme court.
At trial, defense counsel made the following objection to publication of the
morgue photographs, specifically, People’s exhibit Nos. 2 and 62 through 71:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: Judge, the State’s next
witness, I believe is Dr. Denton, the interim chief medical
examiner [and forensic pathologist], and they’re going to
put the protocol in through him. They, also being the
State, are intending to publish the morgue photos. The
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No. 1-07-2222
morgue photos have been numbered already as 62 through
71.
Judge, [People’s exhibit No.] 2 has been identified
but not published, so none of these have been published.
Judge, our objection to publishing them would be that
they are close-up photographs of the deceased during the
autopsy showing gruesome injuries and also of course
she’s unclothes [sic] clothed [sic]. We have made this
objection to the photos of her at the scene and we
understand the Court’s ruling.
I would suggest based on the Court’s ruling, that
the jury has all the probative evidence they need. This
adds nothing in a probative manner that couldn’t be
testified to without resorting to gruesome photos.
The doctor certainly can describe injuries that were
documented or photographed without the jury having to
look at them. W e do believe that they are more
prejudicial than probative, and we would ask that you bar
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No. 1-07-2222
the State from publishing 2 and 61.”
In response, the trial court made the following ruling:
“THE COURT: Your objection is overruled. Most
of them are just photos of the cuts that are up close. He
can describe the cuts. They’re just pictures of the
wounds, they’re close-up of the wounds. We have one
where the cuts are on the face. There’s just a large
number of cuts on the face. I don’t think they’re
particularly gruesome, quite frankly. And they show the
cuts. As I indicated, the nature and number and manner of
infliction of these wounds is important to the case ***.”
To support its contention that the photographs were unfairly prejudicial,
defense counsel cites: (1) the 30-year-old case of People v. Garlick, 46 Ill. App. 3d
216 (1977); and (2) the more recent opinion in People v. Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d
112 (2007), which was reversed on other grounds by our supreme court in People v.
Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d 246 (2009).
In the appellate court opinion in Jackson, this court stated that the trial court
did not abuse its discretion in admitting autopsy photographs, even though we found
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No. 1-07-2222
the photographs to be “grisly.” Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d at 126-27. In Jackson, we
found no abuse of discretion, because the issue of guilt and the issue of whether the
crime was brutal or heinous were addressed in the same proceeding, and “the grisly
autopsy photographs shed light on whether the crime was brutal.” Jackson, 372 Ill.
App. 3d at 126-27. However, we “observe[d]” that if the trial had been bifurcated,
then certain photographs “may” have been unduly prejudicial if admitted during the
phase devoted solely to guilt. Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d at 126-27.
However, the ambiguous “may” statement in Jackson does little to aid
defendant’s argument. First, in Jackson, this court reached the opposite conclusion
that defendant is seeking; namely, in Jackson, we found no abuse of discretion.
Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d at 126-27. Second, in Jackson, we stressed that our
statements about the photographs were merely dicta, because they were “not
determinative of our ultimate decision in this case.” Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d at
124. Third, the photographs at issue in Jackson were taken during an autopsy and
“depict[ed] grisly autopsy details,” making them particularly “grisly,” and thus,
different in kind and degree than the photographs at issue here which were taken at
the crime scene and at the morgue. Jackson, 372 Ill. App. 3d at 118, 126.
In Garlick, as in Jackson, the appellate court’s comments about the
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No. 1-07-2222
photograph were mere dicta, since the appellate court had already decided that a
new trial was warranted on other grounds. Garlick, 46 Ill. App. 3d at 223. In
addition, in Garlick, there was no issue concerning the identity of the perpetrator,
since the defendant had admitted the murder. His sole defense, and the sole issue in
the case, was his claimed insanity. By contrast, in the case at bar, defendant claims
that he was not the perpetrator, and thus, the State needed the photographs to
corroborate defendant’s confession and confirm his identity.
After reviewing the photographs in question, we agree with the assessment of
the trial court that the probative value of the photographs outweighed any unfair
prejudice. First, we note that defendant on appeal poses no objection to People’s
exhibit No. 2, which depicted the victim’s face and shoulders. Defendant objects to
the remaining 23 photographs, namely 10 photographs of the body taken at the
morgue 2 and 13 photographs of the body taken at the crime scene.3
Second, the 10 morgue photographs are not particularly gruesome. They are
cropped to show only discrete parts of the body. M ost of the wounds appear to
2
The 10 morgue photographs at issue are People’s exhibit Nos. 62 through 71.
3
The 13 crime scene photographs at issue are People’s exhibit Nos. 11, 20,
22, 25 and 28 through 36.
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No. 1-07-2222
have been cleaned; and thus, though they are red, they are practically bloodless.
Third, the crime scene photographs aid in depicting the events. People’s
exhibit No. 11 depicts the hallway in the victim’s apartment, and a portion of the
victim’s body is barely discernible through an open doorway. People’s exhibit No.
20 depicts the bed with a bloody sheet and mattress, and only a portion of the
victim’s legs are visible next to the bed. People’s exhibit No. 22 shows the victim’s
entire body, as she was found lying on her bedroom floor. However, the number
and extent of the individual wounds are not discernible from this photograph.
People’s exhibit No. 25 shows the hallway, which is also depicted in exhibit No. 11,
but from a different angle. As with exhibit No. 11, a portion of the victim’s body is
shown in exhibit No. 25 through an open doorway, but there is almost no blood in
the photograph, except for a smudge on one wall of the hallway. Exhibit Nos. 28
and 29 are gruesome: they show stab wounds to the victim’s face. However, they
are no more gruesome than the crime itself, and they are probative in understanding
the motive and intent of the perpetrator. Exhibit Nos. 30 through 36 depict the
individual wounds. Although a number of the crime scene photographs are
gruesome, they were highly probative in portraying the event, and thus their
probative value outweighed any unfair prejudice.
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For these reasons, we find no abuse of discretion. People v. Henderson, 142
Ill. 2d 258, 319-21 (1990) (finding no abuse of discretion in the admission of 18
crime scene and morgue photographs of a murder victim, who had been stabbed 40
times).
2. State’s Closing Argument
Defendant claims that the trial court erred by overruling a defense objection
to a remark during the State’s closing. A detective had testified at trial that, after
the defendant’s brother provided detectives with a bloody shirt worn by defendant,
the brother started crying. The remark at issue is a comment during the state’s
rebuttal closing that defendant’s brother “knew.”
a. Standard of Review
It is not clear whether the appropriate standard of review for this issue is de
novo or abuse of discretion. This court has previously made this same observation
in both People v. Phillips, No. 1-07-0985 (June 15, 2009), and People v. Johnson,
385 Ill. App. 3d 585, 603 (2008). The Second District has agreed with our
observation that the standard of review for closing remarks is an unsettled issue.
People v. Robinson, 391 Ill. App. 3d 822 (2009).
The confusion stems from an apparent conflict between two supreme court
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No. 1-07-2222
cases: People v.Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d 92, 121 (2007), and People v. Blue, 189 Ill.
2d 99, 128, 132 (2000). In Wheeler, our supreme court held: “Whether statements
made by a prosecutor at closing argument were so egregious that they warrant a new
trial is a legal issue this court reviews de novo.” Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d at 121.
However, the supreme court in Wheeler cited with approval Blue, in which the
supreme court had previously applied an abuse of discretion standard. Wheeler,
226 Ill. 2d at 121. In Blue and numerous other cases, our supreme court had held
that the substance and style of closing argument are within the trial court’s
discretion, and will not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d
at 128, 132 (“we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion” by permitting
certain prosecutorial remarks in closing); People v. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d 52, 128
(2001); People v. Emerson, 189 Ill. 2d 436, 488 (2000); People v. W illiams, 192 Ill.
2d 548, 583 (2000); People v. Armstrong, 183 Ill. 2d 130, 145 (1998); People v.
Byron, 164 Ill. 2d 279, 295 (1995). Our supreme court had reasoned: “Because the
trial court is in a better position than a reviewing court to determine the prejudicial
effect of any remarks, the scope of closing argument is within the trial court’s
discretion.” People v. Hudson, 157 Ill. 2d 401, 441 (1993). Following Blue and
other supreme court cases like it, this court had consistently applied an abuse of
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discretion standard. People v. Tolliver, 347 Ill. App. 3d 203, 224 (2004); People v.
Abadia, 328 Ill. App. 3d 669, 678 (2001).
Since Wheeler, appellate courts have been divided regarding the appropriate
standard of review. The First District has applied an abuse of discretion standard,
while the Third and Fourth Districts have applied a de novo standard of review.
Compare People v. Love, 377 Ill. App. 3d 306, 313 (1st Dist. 2007), and People v.
Averett, 381 Ill. App. 3d 1001, 1007 (1st Dist. 2008), with People v. McCoy, 378
Ill. App. 3d 954, 964 (3d Dist. 2008), and People v. Palmer, 382 Ill. App. 3d 1151,
1160 (4th Dist 2008). However, we do not need to resolve the issue of the
appropriate standard of review at this time, because our holding in this case would
be the same under either standard. This is the same approach that we took in both
Phillips and Johnson, and the same approach taken by the Second District in its
Robinson opinion. Phillips, No. 1-07-0985; Johnson, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 585;
Robinson, 391 Ill. App. 3d at 840, (“In any event, like the Johnson court, we leave
the resolution of this issue to another day, as our conclusion would be the same
applying either standard.”).
b. Substantial Prejudice
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No. 1-07-2222
A State’s closing will lead to reversal only if the prosecutor’s remarks created
“substantial prejudice.” Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d at 123, People v. Johnson, 208 Ill. 2d
53, 64 (2003); People v. Easley, 148 Ill. 2d 281, 332 (1992) (“The remarks by the
prosecutor, while improper, do not amount to substantial prejudice”). Substantial
prejudice occurs “if the improper remarks constituted a material factor in a
defendant’s conviction.” Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d at 123.
When reviewing claims of prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument, a
reviewing court will consider the entire closing arguments of both the prosecutor
and the defense attorney, in order to place the remarks in context. Wheeler, 226 Ill.
2d at 122; People v. Johnson, 208 Ill. 2d 53, 113 (2003); People v. Tolliver, 347 Ill.
App. 3d 203, 224 (2004). A prosecutor has wide latitude during closing argument.
Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d at 123; Blue, 189 Ill. 2d at 127. “In closing, the prosecutor may
comment on the evidence and any fair, reasonable inferences it yields.” People v.
Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d 104, 121 (2005). Thus, this court will also consider the
evidence that led to the remarks at issue.
In the case at bar, the remark at issue was based on the testimony of
Detective Thomas Conley. Conley testified that when he and his partner went to
search defendant’s bedroom, they were accompanied by defendant’s brother, Donny
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No. 1-07-2222
Maldonado. Conley described the interaction between the brother and the police
officers, as follows:
“PROSECUTOR: When Donnie was in the
bedroom with you, did you say anything to Donnie?
DETECTIVE: Yes, I did.
PROSECUTOR: What was that?
DETECTIVE: I asked Donnie what Marcelino was
wearing when he came home in the early morning hours.
PROSECUTOR: Now, without telling us anything
Donnie said, what did Donnie do at that point?
DETECTIVE: Donnie immediately went to the closet and
picked up a shirt that was on top of the pile of clothes on the
floor. The shirt was inside out, he immediately turned it right
side out.
PROSECUTOR: What did he do with the shirt
then?
DETECTIVE: He then gave it to me and I held it
up to examine the shirt.
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PROSECUTOR: When you held this shirt up and
examined it, did you notice anything about it?
DETECTIVE: Yes, I did.
PROSECUTOR: What did you notice?
DETECTIVE: It was a beige shirt with a
Roadrunner Looney Tunes character on it. There was
what appeared to me to be blood on the left sleeve and
then down by the bottom of the shirt on the right side.
PROSECUTOR: What happened next?
DETECTIVE: We immediately called for the
crime lab to come and photograph and inventory the shirt.
PROSECUTOR: When you turned and looked and
examined the shirt, was Donnie still in the room?
DETECTIVE: Yes, he was.
PROSECUTOR: What happened?
DETECTIVE: Donnie started crying.”
Based on the above testimony, the prosecutor during rebuttal argued: “And
the defendant’s own brother started crying because he knew, ladies and gentlemen,
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No. 1-07-2222
at that moment that the defendant had done what he did.” Defense counsel
objected, and the trial court sustained the objection. The trial court specifically
instructed the jury “to disregard the last remark.”
After the trial court’s instruction, the prosecutor continued:
“PROSECUTOR: Donnie M aldonado was crying,
ladies and gentlemen, because as Detective Conley saw it,
there was blood on the shirt. Donnie Maldonado was at
4910 Spaulding [the home of defendant and his mother
and brother] when the police came to find out what it was
that the defendant was wearing. The defendant had
already been taken away by the police in that morning
hours, approximately 10 o’clock in the morning. Donnie
Maldonado knew, ladies and gentlemen.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Objection, your honor.
THE COURT: You may continue. Overruled.”
After closing arguments and jury instructions were completed, defense
counsel moved for a mistrial, in part, because the prosecutor’s remark “left it
hanging [about] what it was he knew.” Denying the motion, the trial court stated:
25
No. 1-07-2222
“THE COURT: W ith regard to Donnie
Maldonado, I sustained your objection. The one reference
to him that I did not because it was properly argued from
the facts that you could infer that he was aware of
something, although not exactly what he was aware of,
but it was argued in a proper manner so I did not sustain
the objection to that.”
We agree with the trial court that the prosecutor’s second remark argued that
the brother knew “something, although not exactly what.” The “something” is
ambiguous. It could be that the brother “knew,” as did the detectives, that the shirt
had blood on it. One highly ambiguous remark is not enough to warrant a mistrial
or to create substantial prejudice.
Thus, under either a de novo or an abuse of discretion standard of review, we
find that the trial court did not err by overruling defendant’s objection to the State’s
comment that the brother “knew.”
3. Defendant’s Fingerprint Card
Defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion by overruling an
objection to testimony by a fingerprint examiner that she obtained defendant’s
26
No. 1-07-2222
fingerprint card from the “Bureau of Identification in Joliet.” Defendant argues that
the jury was likely to infer from this testimony that defendant had a prior criminal
record, and thus, that is why the Bureau of Identification had a fingerprint card on
file for him.
Our standard of review for this issue is abuse of discretion. Our supreme
court has held that a trial court’s decision to allow a limited reference to a database,
such as the one in this case, is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard.
People v. Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d 246, 266-67 (2009).
Defendant’s claim concerns testimony by Amy Hart, a fingerprint examiner
employed by the Illinois State Police. Even though Hart was called as a State
witness, she provided testimony favorable to the defense, namely that none of the
exhibits submitted to her for examination revealed prints that matched defendant’s
prints. Hart testified that, in connection with defendant’s case, she received a
drinking glass, a cigarette package, a pair of sunglasses, two knives and “then at an
even later date I received some fingerprint cards.”
Hart’s testimony about the Bureau of Identification card occurred during her
testimony about the sunglasses:
“PROSECUTOR: And what did your examination
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No. 1-07-2222
reveal with respect to the sunglasses, People’s Exhibit
Number 81 B?
HART: I compared it to fingerprint cards, that one
was submitted by the Chicago Police Department and one
fingerprint card I requested from the Bureau of
Identification in Joliet.
PROSECUTOR: And the fingerprint card, was that
of a Marcelino Maldonado, is that correct?
HART: The one that I requested from the Bureau of
Identification was marked Marcelino Maldonado.
DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Objection.
THE COURT: Objection overruled. The answer
may stand.” (Emphasis added.)
After Hart finished her direct examination, defense counsel requested “a sidebar
based on the objection,” and the following discussion occurred outside the presence
of the jury:
“DEFENSE ATTORNEY: At the earliest possible
time we make a motion for a mistrial based on Bureau of
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No. 1-07-2222
Identification. W e have a DCFS 4 on there. They called
for fingerprints, Bureau of Identification. The Court
knows what it is, the Prosecutor knows what it is. She
repeated it. She brought it out of the witness. It could
have been handled a number of ways.
PROSECUTOR: Your Honor I believe counsel has
already brought out that the defendant has been arrested
and taken into custody. This is after the arrest. Any
fingerprinting that the defendant had after the arrest could
have this particular item. It’s an innocuous term. And
I’m not sure because I could not hear counsel, there was
no reference to BC.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Bureau of Identification is
different as counsel knows from the – after the arrest of
the defendant on this matter. It’s completely different.
4
This apparent reference to the Department of Children and Family Services
(DCFS) is puzzling. The presentence report does not indicate any juvenile offenses,
or prior contacts or involvement with DCFS
29
No. 1-07-2222
THE COURT: I grant you it could have been
handled differently. However, the testimony here is that
she’s doing –
DEFENSE ATTORNEY: No –
THE COURT: – the examination six months after
the arrest in this case, so it could be from the arrest in this
case for all they know.
DEFENSE ATTORNEY: The problem is DCFS. I
still say that it was done wrong, Judge.
THE COURT: Motion for mistrial is denied for that
reason.”
After the sidebar, the defense attorney cross-examined Ms. Hart and elicited
the following testimony about the fingerprint card received from the Bureau of
Identification:
“PROSECUTOR: Now, who submitted the first
cards from the Chicago Police Department? That was the
Chicago Police Department, correct?
HART: The Chicago Police Department actually
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No. 1-07-2222
submitted only a card. I believe marked Maribel Jiminez
[the victim]. And then I spoke with a state’s attorney who
indicated that there might be a suspect and gave me a
state ID number so I could request a card from the Bureau
of Identification.”
The law with respect to database references, such as the one at issue in this
case, is well-established. Generally, evidence of other crimes is not admissible
unless it is relevant to connect the defendant with the specific crime charged at trial.
Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 268-69. However, a witness’ isolated reference to obtaining
defendant’s DNA profile or fingerprint card from a database is not reversible error,
if (1) necessary to explain the course of the investigation (Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 265
(reference to the DNA database was “necessary to explain” defendant’s
identification years after the offense)); or (2) ambiguous, concerning whether the
source of the entry was a prior criminal offense. Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 271 (“any
inference of past criminal wrongdoing” from testimony that defendant’s profile was
in a DNA database was purely “speculative”); People v. Jackson, 304 Ill. App. 3d
883, 895 (1999) (same, with respect to fingerprints); People v. Hopkins, 229 Ill.
App. 3d 665, 676 (1992) (same, with respect to fingerprints).
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No. 1-07-2222
The reference is considered isolated if “neither direct evidence nor argument
at trial” concerns defendant’s prior criminal offenses. Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 269,
discussing with approval People v. Hayes, 139 Ill. 2d 89, 146 (1990), 5 and People v.
Lewis, 165 Ill. 2d 305 (1995). For example, in Hayes, our supreme court held that
an “isolated statement” was not “so prejudicial” as to require a new trial, where “no
direct evidence” of prior criminal conduct was presented at trial. Hayes, 139 Ill. 2d
at 146. The Hayes court found no prejudice, although it acknowledged that the
witness’ prior identification of defendant from a photograph book at a “Violent
Crimes” unit “may have raised an inference in the jurors’ minds that the defendant
had a criminal history.” Hayes, 139 Ill. 2d at 146. Similarly, in Lewis, our supreme
court found that defendant was not unduly prejudiced by evidence showing that “an
FBI fingerprint check” revealed that he was in custody in California. Lewis, 165 Ill.
2d at 345, 347. Defendant was not unduly prejudiced because “the jury heard
neither direct evidence nor argument” concerning defendant’s other convictions.
Lewis, 165 Ill. 2d at 347. See also People v. Jackson, 304 Ill. App. 3d 883, 895
5
Hayes was overruled, but on completely different grounds, by People v.
Tisdel, 201 Ill. 2d 210, 219 (2002) (finding that “the Hayes court erred in limiting
‘statements of identification’ to a witness’ actual identification of a defendant”).
32
No. 1-07-2222
(1999) (witness’ testimony that he obtained defendant’s fingerprints from a database
was not unduly prejudicial, where the prosecution made no reference to prior
arrests, convictions or relations with law enforcement).
In addition to the isolated nature of the statement, an appellate court will
consider whether the defense requested a limiting instruction or asked that the jury
be informed about sources, besides arrests, for the database in question. Jackson,
232 Ill. 2d at 273-74. For example, in another case, the jury was informed that the
fingerprint database included not only arrested individuals, but also police officers
and government employees. Jackson, 304 Ill. App. 3d at 895.
In the case at bar, the State does not claim that the reference was necessary to
explain the course of the investigation, but rather only that it was ambiguous. W ith
fingerprints, in particular, any connection to a prior crime is speculative at best,
since jurors are well aware that fingerprints are required for reasons besides an
arrest, such as to obtain a government job. Jackson, 304 Ill. App. 3d at 894-95;
Hopkins, 229 Ill. App. 3d at 676 (fingerprinting for employment is “one of the
‘common experiences’ in life that many jurors have had or know about”). Thus, this
court has previously held that “[a] law enforcement officer’s isolated and ambiguous
statement that he obtained defendant’s fingerprints from a state agency’s database
33
No. 1-07-2222
does not by itself indicate that a defendant has a criminal background.” Jackson,
304 Ill. App. 3d at 894, quoted with approval in Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 270;
Hopkins, 229 Ill. App. 3d at 676.
In the case at bar, any leap in logic from the fingerprint card to a prior offense
was even more speculative, since the evidence at trial indicated that the scientist
obtained the card, only after defendant was already in custody for this offense.
During the sidebar, the trial court ruled that the reference was innocuous, because
the scientist received the card after defendant was already in custody, and thus the
jury could infer that his custody, in connection with this case, led to the creation of
the fingerprint card, rather than some prior case. Instead of requesting a limiting
instruction, defense counsel elicited from the scientist a clarification that she
received the card from the Bureau of Identification, only after the prosecution
already had a suspect, thus further supporting an inference that the card was
obtained after defendant’s arrest. As a result, the jury was much more likely to
conclude that the source of the fingerprint card was defendant’s arrest in this case,
rather than a prior arrest.
We affirm the trial court’s ruling that a mistrial was not required because,
first, the remarks were isolated. Defendant does not claim that either direct
34
No. 1-07-2222
evidence or argument at trial concerned his prior offenses. Second, the defense did
not seek a limiting instruction or ask that the jury be informed about other sources
for the database, but instead chose to elicit clarifying information on cross-
examination. Third and most importantly, the connection between a fingerprint card
and a prior offense is often tenuous, but it is particularly so where, as in the case at
bar, the evidence indicates that the card was obtained after defendant’s arrest.
Thus, we find no error occurred.
4. Defense Argument of Another Perpetrator
Defendant claims on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion by
granting the State’s motion in limine to bar the defense from arguing in its closing
that Michael Lewis, the father of the murder victim’s children, could have
committed the charged crimes. The motion was made immediately before closing
statements.
On appeal, defendant cites cases for the general proposition that a trial court
may exclude a defendant’s proposed evidence that another person committed the
crime, if the defendant’s proposed evidence is remote or speculative. People v.
Simmons, 372 Ill. App. 3d 735, 749 (2007); People v. Sykes, 341 Ill. App. 3d 950,
978-79 (2003). However, that is not the issue on appeal. In the case at bar,
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No. 1-07-2222
defendant did not seek to introduce evidence that the trial court then barred. Instead
the issue in this case is what arguments could the defense counsel make from the
evidence that had already been admitted.
It is well established that a prosecutor has wide latitude during closing
argument. Wheeler, 226 Ill. 2d at 123; Blue, 189 Ill. 2d at 127. Certainly, the
latitude afforded the defense counsel cannot be any less. Like the prosecutor, a
defense counsel may comment on the evidence and draw any reasonable inferences
that the evidence will support. Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d at 121(discussing what a
prosecutor may do). However, a trial court has the discretion to bar a defense
counsel from making comments during closing argument that are speculative.
People v. Harris, 132 Ill. 2d 366, 391 (1989). Thus, for example, our supreme court
upheld a trial court that precluded the defense from making a “speculative”
argument during closing. Harris, 132 Ill. 2d at 391. When a trial court places limits
on the scope of a defendant’s closing, a reviewing court will reverse only if the trial
court abused its discretion. Harris, 132 Ill. 2d at 391
In its written motion, the State moved to bar the defense from arguing that the
charged crimes could have been committed by either Michael Lewis, who was the
father of the murder victim’s children, or Orlando Santana, who had been sexually
36
No. 1-07-2222
involved with the murder victim. Ruling in defendant’s favor in part, the trial court
held that the defense could argue both (1) that Santana could have committed the
murder of Jiminez and the attempted murder of Saquimux; and (2) that Saquimux
could have committed the murder of Jiminez. The trial court prohibited the defense
from arguing only that Lewis could have committed the charged crimes.
During argument on the motion, the trial court asked defense counsel “[w]hat
evidence are you relying on that Michael Lewis did this, could have done this?” In
response, defense counsel stated only “[t]he initial testimony of the first witness
from the State’s case,” who was Romana Puente, the murder victim’s sister.
Defense counsel argued that Puente “said in fact on the cross examination that she
believed in fact he [Lewis] had slashed the tires [of Jiminez’s car], she believed he
had hostile acts towards in fact her [Jiminez].”
Despite defense counsel’s representation, Puente did not testify that she
believed that Lewis had slashed Jiminez’s vehicle tires. She testified only that she
had “suspicions.” Jiminez’s testimony that she had her “suspicions” occurred after
defense counsel, in a compound question, asked whether Jiminez had problems with
Lewis such as “[s]lashing tires, beating [Jiminez] up, [or] hurting her when she’s
with other men.” As a result of the compound question, the record is not clear about
37
No. 1-07-2222
exactly what “problems” Puente had her “suspicions.”
Specifically, on cross examination, defense counsel asked Puente if she
recalled whether Jiminez had problems with her vehicle. Puente responded that she
remembered “somebody busting out her window or slashing her tires and busting
her windows, but I don’t remember when that was.” Then defense counsel tried,
unsuccessfully, to elicit testimony that Lewis had behaved violently towards
Jiminez:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: And your sister, in fact,
had a conversation with you concerning the slashing of
those tires, did she?
PUENTE: No, all she told us was that, in fact, her
tires were slashed.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, didn’t she, in fact,
say that she was having problems with the father of her
children?
PUENTE: She’s always had problems with the
father of her children.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: And those problems were
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No. 1-07-2222
always of a violent nature, correct? Slashing tires, beating
her up, hurting her when she’s with other men?
PUENTE: I had suspicions but I didn’t know for
sure.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: When you say you had
suspicions, that’s because she would always make
excuses for the father of her children and never called the
police, correct?
PUENTE: I don’t know.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, when you say
suspicious, your suspicions was [sic], in fact, that the
father of her children had threatened to harm her and, in
fact, harmed her property, correct?
PUENTE: But I didn’t know for sure.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Right, you didn’t know
beyond a reasonable doubt?
PROSECUTOR: Objection.
THE COURT: Objection sustained.
39
No. 1-07-2222
DEFENSE COUNSEL: You didn’t know for sure,
correct, but you had your suspicions?
PUENTE: Um-hum.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I’m sorry, we’re going to
have –
PUENTE: I’m sorry. Yes.”
Responding to the defense’s argument which was based on the above
testimony, the trial court ruled:
“THE COURT: There is nothing in the record that
is the basis of her belief. There is nothing in the record
that Michael Lewis is even [within] a thousand miles of
Cook County at the time of this. No. There is no evidence
that Michael Lewis did anything.”
On appeal, the defense cites additional evidence in support of its argument
that it did not cite to the trial court, namely: (1) testimony by Tiffany Blake,
Jiminez’s apartment mate, that Jiminez had tried to reconcile with Lewis and had
“recently” slept with him; (2) testimony by Detective Troche corroborating that
Blake had told him that Lewis had been at Jiminez’s apartment “recently”; and (3)
40
No. 1-07-2222
items of debris recovered from the back porch of Jiminez’s apartment on the
morning after her murder (People’s exhibit No. 74) that included pieces of paper
which stated “M ichael Lewis and M aribel Jiminez, Best Friends” and “Love you,
miss you, want you. Love, Mike.”
None of this evidence counters the trial court’s concern that the record
contains no evidence that Lewis was within “even a thousand miles of Cook
County” on the day of the murder. Blake’s testimony that Lewis was present
“recently” failed to establish any time frame. “Recently” could be one day, one
week, one month or more. Similarly, the scraps of paper found on the porch bear no
dates. Thus, we cannot find that the trial court abused its discretion when it
foreclosed this speculative line of argument. Harris, 132 Ill. 2d at 391 (no abuse of
discretion when the trial court foreclosed a “speculative” line of argument from a
defense closing).
5. Jury’s Question
Defendant claims on appeal that the trial court erred by allegedly failing to
answer a question from the jury during its deliberations.
“The general rule when a trial court is faced with a question from the jury is
that the court has a duty to provide instruction to the jury when the jury has posed
41
No. 1-07-2222
an explicit question or requested clarification on a point of law arising from the facts
about which there is doubt or confusion.” People v. Millsap, 189 Ill. 2d 155, 160
(2000); People v. Brooks, 187 Ill. 2d 91, 138 (1999). Despite this general rule, a
trial court has the discretion not to answer the jury’s question “under appropriate
circumstances.” Millsap, 189 Ill. 2d at 161. To illustrate what constitutes
“appropriate circumstances,” our supreme court has provided the following
examples: (1) “when the instructions are readily understandable and sufficiently
explain the relevant law”; (2) “where further instructions would serve no useful
purpose or would potentially mislead the jury”; (3) “when the jury’s inquiry
involves a question of fact”; (4) “where the giving of an answer would cause the
court to express an opinion that would likely direct a verdict one way or the other”;
or (5) where the court’s answer would “submit new charges or new theories to the
jury after the jury commence[d] its deliberations.” Millsap, 189 Ill. 2d at 161.
An appellate court may find an abuse of discretion either where the trial court
refused to answer an appropriate question; or where the trial court chose to answer,
in the face of “appropriate circumstances” that warranted restraint. Millsap, 189 Ill.
2d at 163 (trial court’s answer was an abuse of discretion).
In the case at bar, the jury sent out two notes on the second day of jury
42
No. 1-07-2222
deliberations. The first note stated: “We’d like to request Tiffany’s and Detective
Conley’s testimony, also Detective Troche.” Both parties agreed that the jury
should receive all three transcripts when all three became available.
The second note stated:
“W e’d like to request Joan Kuruc’s testimony.
Legal question: In 1999 was it possible for the suspect to
write out their own statement instead of
having it taken down for them.
In 1999, was it possible for a detective to
take a signed confession instead of
waiting for a district attorney.”
(Emphasis in original.)
In response to the request for transcripts, the trial court stated that it would
instruct the jury: “The transcripts you have requested will be available in
approximately one hour. At that time they will all be provided to you.” The defense
objected to naming a precise time, but the trial court overruled this objection.
However, this objection is not at issue on appeal.
In response to the “legal question[s]” in the second note, the trial court wrote
43
No. 1-07-2222
by hand on the bottom of the note:
“You have heard the evidence and have been
instructed as to the law. Please continue your
deliberations.”
Defense counsel objected, arguing that the trial court should answer both questions
in the affirmative. Defense counsel stated: “by not answering it, the Court is
directing the verdict in the State’s favor.” The trial court overruled the objection. It
is the trial court’s ruling on this objection that defendant appeals.
The “evidence” referred to by the trial court in its above response was, in
part, the testimony of the assistant State’s Attorney who reduced defendant’s
statement to writing. On direct examination, she testified that she offered defendant
three options to memorialize his statement: (1) that the assistant State’s Attorney
could write down the substance of what defendant told her, and then defendant
would have an opportunity to review what she had written and to make changes; (2)
a court reporter could transcribe, word for word, the assistant State’s Attorney’s
questions and defendant’s answers; and (3) a videographer could film her questions
and his answers. The assistant State’s Attorney testified that defendant chose the
first option.
44
No. 1-07-2222
During cross-examination, defense counsel questioned the assistant State’s
Attorney about why defendant was not offered a fourth option, namely the option of
writing his own statement:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: Have you ever let a
defendant write out their own statement?
WITNESS: Absolutely not.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: When you say absolutely
not, that is, in fact the – Well, let me ask you. Why do
you say absolutely not?
PROSECUTOR: Objection.
THE COURT: Overruled. You may answer.
WITNESS: W hy did I not let a defendant write his
own statement out?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: In his own words.
PROSECUTOR: Objection.
THE COURT: Overruled. You may answer.
WITNESS: The statement I reported is in his own
words. Anytime a handwritten statement is taken —
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No. 1-07-2222
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Motion to strike as
unresponsive.
THE COURT: She hasn’t finished her answer yet.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I’m sorry. Finish your
answer.
WITNESS: The statement itself is going to become
evidence. The assistant state’s attorney writes it in the
presence of the person speaking, whether it’s a witness or
a defendant or a suspect. I’ve never, never asked a
defendant to write his own statement.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Motion to strike as
unresponsive. The question was why.
THE COURT: Well, overruled. That answer may
stand. You may continue, if you wish.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, now do you
understand I asked you why don’t you let them write it in
their own words?
WITNESS: This statement is in his own words, the
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No. 1-07-2222
statement that I took.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: So he referred to himself in the
third person?
WITNESS: No, he did not.”
In the above colloquy, defense counsel did not ask the assistant State’s
Attorney if there was a law that prevented her from asking defendant to write down
his own statement or if there was a law that prevented the detective, who first heard
defendant’s statement, from writing it down. In essence, the jury note was asking
the trial court to fill in the blanks left open by the defense’s cross-examination.
Simply put, the jury was asking for additional evidence.
The defense had two opportunities to fill in these blanks, first when the
assistant State’s Attorney testified, and later during the testimony of the detective
who initially received defendant’s statement. However, the defense also chose not
to ask the detective if any law or protocol prevented him from writing it down.
During the cross-examination of the detective, the defense elicited the following
information:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: But the things that he was
telling you and [your partner] which you say he said, you
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No. 1-07-2222
did not write those down and have him sign off on those,
correct?
DETECTIVE: No, I write that stuff in my G.P.R.’s
and notes, he doesn’t sign my notes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Did you show him your
notes?
DETECTIVE: No.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: You didn’t say I want to
make sure I have this right, read this over, correct?
DETECTIVE: That’s correct.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: You didn’t say Mr.
Maldonado, I want to put this in your own words, here is
a pencil, here is a paper, write this down?
DETECTIVE: No, we don’t do that.”
Later during the cross-examination of the detective, defense counsel elicited
that the standard protocol of the Chicago Police Department with respect to
statements had changed. However, defense counsel chose not to ask what it had
changed from:
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No. 1-07-2222
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: And this in fact is before
the continuous video taping of interrogations took place
re[:] the Chicago Police Department?
DETECTIVE: What is now their standard operating
procedure, yes.”
By noting that defense counsel chose not to ask what the law or protocol was
in 1999, we intend no criticism of counsel. Counsel may have had valid strategic
reasons for not asking. In fact, in the defense closing, defense counsel exploited this
ambiguity by arguing:
“First of all, if you’re going to take a true statement, do
you want me interpreting your words, do I want you
interpreting your words. No. I want to put down in my
own words what I want to say. Ask the State’s Attorney,
was he allowed to do that. No. Why? I don’t know.
That’s their procedure. That’s why they’re called the
prosecution. They had him and wanted to prosecute him.”
In Brooks, our supreme court held that a trial court’s answer was not an
abuse of discretion, where “the trial judge accurately repeated [a witness’]
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No. 1-07-2222
testimony, which the jury heard earlier that day.” Brooks, 187 Ill. 2d at 138. By
contrast, in the case at bar, there was no testimony that the trial court could have
repeated to answer the jury’s question. Defendant has not cited us a case, nor can
we find one, that permits a trial court, after the close of evidence and closing
arguments, to fill in evidentiary blanks left by a party. Thus, we find that the trial
court’s answer was not an abuse of discretion.
6. Fines and Fees
Defendant claims that he is entitled to a $15 reduction in the costs and fees
that he was ordered to pay; and the State agrees. For the reasons discussed below,
we order defendant’s fines and fees reduced by $15 from $895 to $880, and order
that his mittimus be corrected accordingly. E.g. People v. Cleveland, 393 Ill. App.
3d 700, 715 (2009) (ordering that defendant’s fines and fees be reduced by a certain
amount and that “his mittimus be corrected accordingly”).
Specifically, defendant claims that he is entitled to a monetary credit that
should be offset against certain fees ordered by the trial court. In an order dated
June 4, 2007, the trial court directed defendant to pay $895 in various court costs
and fees. On appeal, defendant does not dispute the assessment of these costs and
fees. Instead, defendant claims that, pursuant to section 110-14 of the Code of
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No. 1-07-2222
Criminal Procedure of 1963 (725 ILCS 5/110-14 (West 2006)), he is entitled to a
credit of $5 per day for the 2,804 days that he spent in custody, between his arrest
and sentencing. People v. Caballero, 228 Ill. 2d 79, 88-89 (2008) (credit pursuant
to section 110-14 applies anytime a person is incarcerated between arrest and
sentencing); People v. Rivera, 378 Ill. App. 3d 896, 898-900 (2008).
a. Amount of Available Credit
Section 110-14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is entitled “Credit
for Incarceration on Bailable Offense” and it provides in full:
“(a) Any person incarcerated on a bailable offense
who does not supply bail and against whom a fine is
levied on conviction of such offense shall be allowed a
credit of $5 for each day so incarcerated on application of
defendant. However, in no case, shall the amount so
allowed or credited exceed the amount of the fine.
(b) Subsection (a) does not apply to a person
incarcerated for sexual assault as defined in paragraph (1)
of subsection (a) of Section 5-9-1.7 of the Unified Code
of Corrections.” 725 ILCS 5/110-14 (W est 2006).
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No. 1-07-2222
According to section 110-14, the amount of the available credit is calculated
by multiplying $5 by the number of days of incarceration. 725 ILCS 5/110-14 (a)
(West 2006). During sentencing, the trial court calculated that defendant was
entitled to a credit against his term of imprisonment of 2804 days. Multiplying $5
by this number of days yields a total of $14,020.
b. Fine
Section 110-14 specifies that this credit is available only against a “fine.” On
appeal, defendant argues that the mental health vourt fee (55 ILCS 5/5-1101 (d-5)
(West 2006) and the youth diversion/peer court fee (55 ILCS 5/5-1101(e) (West
2006)) qualify as fines, and that they should be offset against the $14,020 credit. In
People v. Price, 375 Ill. App. 3d 684 (2007), this court held that these particular
fees were appropriately characterized as “fines” where there was “no relevant
connection between the offense committed by defendant and mental health or
juvenile justice.” Price, 375 Ill. App. 3d at 700; People v. Jones, 223 Ill. 2d 569,
600 (2006) (a charge is a fine, despite the legislature’s label of it as a fee, if it “does
not seek to compensate the state for any costs incurred as the result of prosecuting
the defendant”). In Price, we found no relevant connection between the weapons
charge at issue in that case on the one hand, and mental health and juvenile justice
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No. 1-07-2222
on the other. Price, 375 Ill. App. 3d at 700. We therefore held that, in that particular
case, the charges were actually fines, despite being labeled as “ ‘fee[s]’ ” by the
legislature. Price, 375 Ill. App. 3d at 700. Similarly, in the case at bar, these
charges, although labeled as “fees” on the trial court’s order, are also fines, for the
same reason: there is no relevant connection between the murder and attempted
murder offenses committed by defendant on the one hand, and mental health and
juvenile justice on the other. Thus, they are the type of fees that are eligible for an
offset against the credit.
The written order of costs and fees entered against defendant on June 4,
2007, indicates a $10 charge for “M ental Health Court” and a $5 charge for “Youth
Diversion/Peer Court.” Thus, even though defendant has a much larger credit,
defendant’s appeal asks for only a $15 reduction in the costs and fees that he was
ordered to pay.
c. Bailable Offense
Section 110-14 provides that the credit is available only when a person is
incarcerated “on a bailable offense.” 725 ILCS 5/110-14 (West 2006). Since the
statute is limited to bailable offenses, there must also be nonbailable offenses for
purposes of this statute. Otherwise, this limiting language would be superfluous;
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and a statute must be interpreted so that no part of it is rendered meaningless or
superfluous. Jones, 223 Ill. 2d at 581 (“W e construe statutes as a whole, so that no
part is rendered meaningless or superfluous”).
What is, and what is not, “a bailable offense” is defined in section 110-4 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure. 725 ILCS 5/110-4 (West 2006); Ill. Const. 1970,
art. I, §9 (amended in 1986 to expand the list of nonbailable offenses); Rivera, 378
Ill. App. 3d at 900 (to define the term “bailable offense” for purposes of section
110-14, a court must look to section 110-4). Section 110-4 is entitled “Bailable
Offenses,” and it provides that “[a]ll persons shall be bailable before conviction”
with the exception of certain categories of offenses. 725 ILCS 5/110-4 (West
2006); Rivera, 378 Ill. App. 3d at 900 (noting “the exception of five categories of
offenses”).
The listed categories of offenses include: (1) capital offenses; (2) offenses
eligible for life imprisonment; (3) felony offenses requiring imprisonment without
conditional and revocable release; (4) stalking offenses; and (5) weapons offenses at
or near a school or on a school conveyance. 725 ILCS 5/110-4 (West 2006). In
2008, the section was amended to add a sixth category: (6) terrorism offenses. Pub.
Act 95-052, eff. August 29, 2008.
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Of these listed categories, the two which pertain to the case at bar are: (1)
capital offenses; and (3) felonies without conditional release. The case at bar was a
capital case from October 1, 1999, when defendant was arrested, until April 29,
2007, when the State declared it would not seek the death penalty. On October 6,
2004, defendant filed a motion to declare defendant ineligible for the death penalty
due to mental retardation; and on April 4, 2005, the motion was denied. On April
29, 2007, the State filed a notice of intent not to seek the death penalty.
After April 29, 2007, this case switched from the first category of capital
offenses to the third category of felonies without conditional release.6 The crimes
with which defendant was charged, first-degree murder and attempted first-degree
6
Defendant’s offenses did not qualify for the second category, offenses
eligible for natural life imprisonment. For defendant’s first-degree murder
conviction to be eligible for natural life imprisonment, the State would have had to
allege and prove “wanton cruelty” or an aggravating circumstance, which it did not.
730 ILCS 5/5-8-1 (a) (1) (b) (West 2006). As a result, for the first-degree murder
conviction, defendant had to receive “a determinate sentence set by the court” that
was “not less than 20 years and not more than 60 years.” 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1 (a) (1)
(a) (West 2006).
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murder, are both felony offenses requiring imprisonment, which are not eligible for
conditional discharge. 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3(c)(2) (A) (West 2006) (“First degree
murder where the death penalty is not imposed”), (B) (“Attempted first degree
murder”).
With respect to these two categories, section 110-4 states in relevant part:
“All persons shall be bailable before conviction,
except the following offenses where the proof is evident
or the presumption great that the defendant is guilty of the
offense: [1] capital offenses; *** [3] felony offenses for
which a sentence of imprisonment, without conditional
and revocable release, shall be imposed by law as a
consequence of conviction, where the court after a
hearing, determines that the release of the defendant
would pose a real and present threat to the physical safety
of any person or persons [.]” 725 ILCS 5/110-4 (a) (West
2006).
For offenses to be nonbailable, they must fall into one of the listed categories,
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and the proof must be “evident or the presumption great” that defendant was guilty.7
725 ILCS 5/110-4 (a) (West 2006). For the third category, there is an additional
requirement, that “the court, after a hearing, determine that the release of the
defendant would pose a real and present threat to the physical safety of any person
or persons.” 725 ILCS 5/110-4(a) (West 2006).
In People v. Purcell, 201 Ill. 2d 542 (2002), our supreme court upheld the
validity of subsections (a) and (c), while placing the burden of proof under these two
sections squarely on the State. Purcell, 201 Ill. 2d at 549-52.8 In the case at bar,
defendant was granted bail, which means that the state either failed or did not
attempt to satisfy its burden. For this reason, we find that defendant’s offenses
7
However, courts have held that an offense can still qualify as a bailable
offense even after a defendant is found guilty. E.g., Rivera, 378 Ill. App. 3d at 899-
900, citing People v. M cNair, 325 Ill. App. 3d 725, 726 (2001), People v. Smith,
258 Ill. App. 3d 261, 268-69 (1994), People v. Bennett, 246 Ill. App. 3d 550, 551-
52 (1993), and People v. Raya, 250 Ill. App. 3d 795, 802-03 (1993),
8
The version of the statute discussed in Purcell (725 ILCS 5/110-4 (West
2000)) is identical to the version of the statute discussed in our opinion (725 ILCS
5/110-4 (West 2006)).
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qualified as bailable offenses, and thus defendant was entitled to the credit
described in section 110-14 (725 ILCS 5/110-14 (a) (West 2006)).
CONCLUSION
In sum, we find, first, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
overruling defense objections to the admission of 23 crime scene and morgue
photographs that depicted the victim’s body. A careful review of each photograph
convinced us that their probative value outweighed any unfair prejudice. The 10
morgue photographs were not particularly gruesome, since they had been cropped to
show only discrete parts of the body, and most of the wounds had been cleaned,
making them appear practically bloodless. Several of the crime scene photographs
showed the victim’s apartment from different angles and perspectives, with only
portions of the victim’s body visible. Although a number of the crime scene
photographs were gruesome, they were highly probative in portraying the event.
Second, under either an abuse of discretion or a de novo standard of review,
we find that the trial court did not err by overruling a defense objection to a remark
during the State’s closing that defendant’s brother “knew.” One highly ambiguous
remark in the State’s closing is not enough to warrant a mistrial or to create
substantial prejudice to a defendant.
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No. 1-07-2222
Third, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by overruling a defense
objection to testimony by a forensic scientist that he had received defendant’s
fingerprint card from the Bureau of Identification. No direct evidence or argument
at trial concerned his prior offenses. In addition, the defense did not seek a limiting
instruction or ask that the jury be informed about other sources for the database, but
instead chose to elicit clarifying information on cross-examination. Last and most
importantly, the connection between a fingerprint card and a prior offense is often
tenuous, but it is particularly so where , as in the case at bar the evidence indicates
that the card was obtained after defendant’s arrest.
Fourth, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by granting the State’s
motion to bar the defense from arguing during its closing that the father of the
murder victim’s children could have committed the charged crimes. Although
defendant cited evidence to support its theory, none of it countered the trial court’s
concern that the record contained no evidence that the father was within “even a
thousand miles of Cook County” on the day of the murder.
Fifth, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by telling the jury that they
had “heard the evidence” in response to a jury question. The jury question had
asked whether it was possible for either a police detective or the defendant himself
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No. 1-07-2222
to write out the defendant’s confession. While defense counsel had cross-examined
the assistant State’s Attorney about why defendant had not written out his own
statement, counsel had chosen not to elicit the particular information requested by
the jury. In essence, the jury note was asking the trial court to fill in the blanks left
open by the defense’s cross-examination. Defendant did not cite us a case, nor
could we find one, that permits a trial court, after the close of evidence and closing
arguments, to fill in evidentiary blanks left by a party.
Sixth, defendant was entitled to the monetary credit described in section 110-
14 (725 ILCS 5/110-14 (a) (West 2006)), since his offenses were bailable
offenses. We order defendant’s fines and fees reduced by $15 from $895 to $880,
and order that his mittimus be corrected accordingly.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the conviction and order a $15 reduction
in defendant’s fines and fees.
Affirmed with instructions.
McBRIDE and GARCIA, JJ., concur.
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