2016 IL 118123
IN THE
SUPREME COURT
OF
THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
(Docket No. 118123)
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee,
v. McCLAIN SANDERS, Appellant.
Opinion filed January 22, 2016.
CHIEF JUSTICE GARMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Freeman, Thomas, Kilbride, Karmeier, Burke, and Theis concurred in
the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Following a jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County, petitioner McClain
Sanders was convicted of first degree murder and aggravated kidnapping. He was
sentenced to concurrent prison terms of 60 years and 15 years, respectively. In
2010, petitioner filed a second successive postconviction petition, alleging actual
innocence. Despite the absence of any motion by petitioner for leave to file the
successive petition, the circuit court allowed it to be filed and advanced it to the
second stage of proceedings. The court then dismissed the petition on motion of the
State. The appellate court affirmed. 2014 IL App (1st) 111783. We granted
petitioner’s petition for leave to appeal. Ill. S. Ct. R. 315 (eff. Jan. 1, 2015).
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 Petitioner was charged with the April 1992 murder and aggravated kidnapping
of Jonas Cooks. Also charged were Gary Bingham, Aaron May, and Donald
Barfield. Separate trials were held, resulting in guilty verdicts. The witnesses
described the three men by their nicknames. Bingham was referred to as Pork
Chop, May as Little Red, and petitioner as Big Red.
¶4 At petitioner’s trial, the pathologist who performed an autopsy on Cooks
testified that Cooks was shot twice in the head, and that the cause of death was
multiple gunshot wounds.
¶5 Donald Barfield testified at the trial that petitioner was at his house on April 14
with Bingham and May in connection with buying cocaine from Cooks. Several
people were present for Barfield’s birthday party. Later in the evening, petitioner,
Bingham, and May returned to Barfield’s house and confronted Cooks about the
cocaine. Bingham and May each had a gun. Barfield did not see petitioner with a
gun, although there was a gun lying on a table. Bingham asked Barfield to tie Cooks
up. Barfield and his friend, Dee Dee, did so with rope, electrical cords, and duct
tape. Barfield then untied Cooks so he could make a phone call, but Bingham
grabbed the phone out of Cooks’ hand, fearing that Cooks might call for help.
Cooks was not tied up again. Barfield opened the back door and told the men to
leave. As he stood holding the back door open, Barfield could hear scuffling. On
direct examination, Barfield said that he saw petitioner, May, and Bingham holding
Cooks by the arms, trying to get him out of the house, while Cooks resisted their
efforts. On cross-examination, Barfield stated that petitioner did not have his hands
on Cooks, that he was trying to get everyone into the kitchen. Barfield made an
in-court identification of petitioner during his testimony.
¶6 William Ramseur, who was present at Barfield’s house on the evening of April
14 for Barfield’s birthday party, testified that three men he did not know arrived at
the house after midnight and spoke with Barfield and Cooks. The men were saying
they wanted their money back. Ramseur testified that each of the three men had a
gun and they also had a measuring scale. Barfield and Dee Dee tied Cooks to a
chair. After Barfield learned that Cooks had not given Barfield his share of the
cocaine money, he untied Cooks and the three men took Cooks out of the house.
¶7 Cheryl Lathan, Cooks’ girlfriend, testified at petitioner’s trial that she went on
two cocaine buys with Cooks on the evening of April 14. On the first one, Barfield
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and two females she did not know accompanied them. They went back to Barfield’s
house, where Cooks talked to Bingham and May. Lathan went with Cooks and
Bingham to buy more cocaine. Cooks purchased cocaine from some Latino men
and gave it to Bingham. They then drove to Homan Avenue where Cooks and
Bingham got out of the car and stood in front of a reddish-brown brick building.
Cooks asked her to drive back to Barfield’s house and tell May to come to Homan
Avenue. She did so; when she got to Barfield’s house, she did not go inside, as May
was sitting in his car with some women she did not know. When she returned to
Homan Avenue, she and Cooks left, leaving Bingham and May there. Lathan stated
that she identified Bingham and May in a lineup.
¶8 Bingham testified that he, petitioner, and May were in partnership selling
cocaine. On the day of the murder, he purchased cocaine from Jonas Cooks. While
cooking the cocaine, May discovered that the amount of the cocaine was six grams
short. May contacted Bingham and called petitioner, who went upstairs in his
mother’s house on Homan Avenue and retrieved three guns. They took the guns,
the cocaine, and a measuring scale to Barfield’s house, where they confronted
Cooks. Cooks asked to be given a chance to get Bingham’s money back. Barfield
tied Cooks to a chair. After further discussion, petitioner told May to drive his car to
the rear of the house. Petitioner and Bingham, who were both in possession of guns,
then dragged Cooks, who was no longer tied up, out the back door and put him in
the trunk of the car. At petitioner’s direction, May drove the car to an abandoned
building. Petitioner removed Cooks from the car trunk and took him into the
building, while Bingham and May waited outside. Bingham testified that petitioner
shot Cooks twice. Bingham, who had already been convicted of Cooks’ murder,
denied receiving any benefit from the State in exchange for his testimony against
petitioner.
¶9 Gene Harris, a Chicago police detective, testified that Cheryl Lathan showed
him the reddish-brown brick building at 1645 South Homan Avenue and also the
house where Barfield lived. William Ramseur viewed a lineup after petitioner had
been arrested. Detective Harris testified that Ramseur identified petitioner.
Ramseur had previously identified Aaron May in a different lineup. Barfield
identified Bingham and May in a lineup that did not contain petitioner, who was
arrested sometime later. Detective Harris went to the home of petitioner’s mother at
1639 South Homan Avenue where Bingham told him petitioner lived. Petitioner
was not there at the time, and his mother told Detective Harris that she did not know
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where he was. When petitioner was later taken into custody, he told Detective
Harris that he lived at his mother’s house.
¶ 10 Petitioner presented an alibi defense. Felicia Hollivay, petitioner’s girlfriend,
testified that at the time of the shooting of Cooks, she, petitioner, their child,
Hollivay’s friend and the friend’s daughter were all living at 1412 Parnell Avenue
in Chicago Heights. They had lived there since August 1991. Hollivay testified that
on the morning of April 14, 1992, she took her daughter to preschool. Petitioner
was in bed and he was there when she returned. He did not leave the house until
about 3 p.m. that afternoon to go to the Oak Park health club. Petitioner arrived
home around midnight. They ate, watched television and went to bed around 3 a.m.
¶ 11 Charles Tobias testified that he worked as a personal trainer at the Chicago
Health Club in Oak Park in April 1992. He had known petitioner since college. On
April 14, he lifted weights with petitioner. They left the health club together when
his shift ended at 9 p.m. After they stopped for a few drinks, petitioner dropped
Tobias off at his house around 9:45 p.m.
¶ 12 Petitioner testified in his own defense. He stated that he had been twice
convicted of drug-related felonies and once for unlawful use of a weapon. He
denied having any business relationship with Bingham. In April 1992, he was
living in Chicago Heights. He denied that he sold cocaine. He was unemployed at
the time and he and Hollivay shared the rent with her friend. Petitioner denied being
at Barfield’s house at any time on April 14 or April 15. He also denied shooting
Jonas Cooks. He was at home between midnight on April 14 and 8 a.m. on April 15.
Petitioner denied having any guns or giving any guns to anyone else. On
cross-examination, petitioner stated that he had never been known as Big Red and
that he did not know who Little Red was. Petitioner also claimed that he merely
knew of Bingham but did not know him personally. Petitioner identified a photo of
May and acknowledged that May was his nephew.
¶ 13 Following the appellate court’s affirmance of his convictions for murder and
aggravated kidnapping, petitioner filed an initial postconviction petition in 1997.
That petition was summarily dismissed and the appellate court affirmed. Petitioner
filed a first successive postconviction petition in 1999, alleging that the State had
knowingly introduced perjured testimony at his trial when Bingham testified that
he had received no promises of leniency from the State in exchange for his
testimony. Petitioner alleged that Bingham had agreed to testify against him in
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exchange for help from Chicago police detective Hugh Conwell on a case
involving the shooting of Bingham’s brother. Petitioner also alleged that the State
had promised Bingham a reduced sentence. Aaron May had filed a section 2-1401
petition at about the same time, making similar allegations. The trial court held a
joint evidentiary hearing on both petitions. Both Conwell and Bingham testified.
The trial court denied relief, finding Conwell to be credible and Bingham to be
“very incredible.” The court found that though Bingham received the minimum
sentence in his own murder case, that sentence was not the result of any deal with
the State. The trial court concluded that the reason Bingham testified against
petitioner was that he realized that, as the only person to have confessed, he might
be the only one of the perpetrators to be convicted of the murder and go to prison.
¶ 14 In 2010, petitioner filed the instant second successive postconviction petition,
alleging newly discovered evidence of actual innocence, that Bingham’s trial
testimony was perjured, and that petitioner’s sentence was excessive given the
perjured testimony. The petition was supported by affidavits from Jovanna Liberty,
Aaron Johnson, and Patricia DeRamus. The petition also attached a transcript
containing excerpts of testimony that Bingham had given at a 2007 evidentiary
hearing on a postconviction petition filed by Aaron May. The affidavit from
Johnson stated that while he and Bingham were incarcerated together at the Cook
County jail, he heard Bingham admit to killing Cooks in retaliation for cheating
him on a drug sale. Liberty’s affidavit stated that in April 1992, she heard Bingham
say that he had killed someone for stealing drugs that Bingham had given him to
sell and he mentioned forcing the person into the trunk of his car, taking him to an
abandoned building, and shooting him twice in the head.
¶ 15 Patricia DeRamus stated in her affidavit that she was known as “DD.” She,
Cooks, and Barfield were present at Barfield’s house on April 14, 1992. She stated
that Bingham entered the house and told Barfield that he wanted to purchase $1000
of powder cocaine. Cooks told Bingham that he could get the cocaine and he and
Bingham left the house together. Cooks later returned alone. About 45 minutes
later, Bingham returned to the house with a gun and the cocaine. He confronted
Cooks, claiming that the cocaine was “garbage,” and he struck Cooks in the head
with the gun. Subsequently, DeRamus saw Bingham “march” Cooks out the back
door at gunpoint. She never saw Cooks again. At all times that she observed,
Bingham acted alone. DeRamus further stated that Bingham later returned to
Barfield’s house that evening, stating that he had killed Cooks. Bingham also
threatened to kill anyone who revealed what had taken place. DeRamus further
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stated in her affidavit that at the time of the events in question, she was pregnant
with her tenth child. She was afraid to come forward with what she had witnessed
because Bingham was from her community and knew how to find her. Since then,
she had undergone therapy and mentoring, and realized that she had to come
forward to clear her conscience and make amends for her years of silence.
¶ 16 During his 2007 testimony at May’s evidentiary hearing, Bingham recanted his
testimony identifying May and petitioner as participating in Cooks’ murder.
Bingham testified that after he purchased the cocaine from Cooks and Barfield, he
went to a friend’s house to cook the cocaine. May was not with him at any time.
There were several people at Barfield’s house, including DeRamus and Ramseur.
The cocaine Bingham purchased was no good. Bingham took the cocaine and a
measuring scale to Barfield’s house and told Barfield and Cooks that he wanted his
money back. Barfield and Cooks made phone calls to try to get the money back, to
no avail. After Barfield tied and duct taped Cooks, Bingham picked up Cooks by
himself, threw him over his shoulder and carried him outside. Bingham then put
Cooks in the trunk of Bingham’s car. Bingham drove to an abandoned building. He
was alone when he did this. Bingham testified that his prior testimony at May’s trial
implicating May was not true. He testified that he lied about May because he was
mad and frustrated. He thought that May would visit him in jail, but he did not.
Bingham stated that he just did what the State asked him to do. He claimed the State
indicated that if he placed May at the scene of the crime, he would receive a
sentence of 20 years. Bingham recalled testifying at the joint evidentiary hearing in
2000. When asked why he did not take sole responsibility for Cooks’ murder at that
time, Bingham testified that the State kept coming at him, saying that May and
petitioner were out on bond; take them down with you. Bingham testified that he
tried to tell the truth in the beginning but the State wanted them for some reason.
Bingham denied being in the drug business with May or petitioner. Bingham
testified that he shot Cooks one time.
¶ 17 We note that the same trial judge who presided over petitioner’s successive
proceedings in this case also presided at Aaron May’s 2007 postconviction
evidentiary hearing. In November 2010, private counsel appeared before the trial
court on petitioner’s behalf and informed the court that this was a first-stage
proceeding. The trial judge noted that “I already had a couple evidentiary hearings
when I had the co-Defendants about all this.” Petitioner’s counsel confirmed the
court’s recollection on that, but never advised the court that the petition he was
presenting to the court was a second successive postconviction petition. The court
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noted that “All I have to do is read it and decide if it goes to the second stage or
not.” The trial court set the matter over for December 3, 2010.
¶ 18 On that date, petitioner’s counsel and an assistant State’s Attorney appeared.
The trial court noted that it had “been through this story before, but I suppose there
is at least a gist of the claim—stage two.” The court docketed the petition. At no
time did petitioner’s counsel file a motion for leave to file the successive petition.
¶ 19 The State filed a motion to dismiss the petition, alleging that the purported
evidence of actual innocence was not newly discovered, that the affidavits and
Bingham’s recantation would not likely change the result of the trial, and that the
trial court had already found Bingham lacking in credibility based on his testimony
at two prior evidentiary hearings. At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the trial
court noted that it had heard Bingham testify twice before in postconviction
proceedings and that it had found Bingham “to be a complete liar. Totally
incredible and not worthy of belief.” The court noted that the affidavits petitioner
presented all depended on statements Bingham made to the affiants. The court
stated that it would incorporate by reference Bingham’s testimony from the prior
evidentiary hearings. The court allowed the State’s motion to dismiss. Petitioner
appealed.
¶ 20 The appellate court rejected petitioner’s argument that the trial court made an
improper credibility determination when it relied on its finding at May’s 2007
postconviction hearing that Bingham was not a credible witness. The appellate
court found that petitioner should be estopped from relying on Bingham’s
recantation in the related proceeding, while simultaneously claiming that the trial
court could not also consider the conclusion it reached in the related proceeding
regarding the credibility of the recantation. The appellate court also found that
DeRamus’s affidavit was not of such conclusive character as to probably change
the result on retrial. The court noted that there was substantial credible evidence at
petitioner’s trial that Bingham did not act alone. 2014 IL App (1st) 111783, ¶¶ 22,
23.
¶ 21 ANALYSIS
¶ 22 The overriding question before us in this case is whether petitioner successfully
set forth a claim of actual innocence in his 2010 successive postconviction petition.
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¶ 23 I. Leave to File Successive Petition
¶ 24 The Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West
2014)) contemplates the filing of only one petition without leave of court (725
ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2014)), and any claim not presented in an original or
amended petition is waived. 725 ILCS 5/122-3 (West 2014). This court has
identified two bases upon which the bar against successive petitions will be
relaxed. The first is when the petitioner satisfies the cause and prejudice test. 725
ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2014); People v. Pitsonbarger, 205 Ill. 2d 444, 459 (2002).
The second exception is known as the fundamental miscarriage of justice
exception. That exception requires the petitioner to demonstrate actual innocence.
The evidence of actual innocence must be (1) newly discovered, (2) not
discoverable earlier through the exercise of due diligence, (3) material and not
merely cumulative, and (4) of such conclusive character that it would probably
change the result on retrial. People v. Edwards, 2012 IL 111711, ¶ 32; People v.
Morgan, 212 Ill. 2d 148, 154 (2004). This court held in Edwards that leave of court
to file a successive postconviction petition should be denied only where it is clear
from a review of the petition and attached documentation that, as a matter of law,
the petitioner cannot set forth a colorable claim of actual innocence. In other words,
leave of court should be granted where the petitioner’s supporting documentation
raises the probability that it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would
have convicted the petitioner in light of the new evidence. Edwards, 2012 IL
111711, ¶ 24.
¶ 25 In the instant case, petitioner’s counsel did not file a motion seeking leave to
file petitioner’s second successive postconviction petition. Nor did counsel orally
advise the trial court that this was a successive petition and make a request for leave
to file. Nonetheless, this court has held that the trial court may rule on a successive
postconviction petition where leave to file has not been sought when documents
submitted by a petitioner supply an adequate basis to determine whether the
petitioner has sufficiently alleged cause and prejudice (People v. Tidwell, 236 Ill.
2d 150, 152 (2010)) or actual innocence (Edwards, 2012 IL 111711, ¶ 24).
¶ 26 Here, it is unclear whether the trial court was aware that the petition before it
was a successive petition. The court recalled past evidentiary hearings concerning
Bingham, but noted they took place in petitioner’s codefendants’ cases.
Subsequently, the court found that the petition presented the gist of a claim and
docketed it for second-stage proceedings. The State suggests that the trial court
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may have applied the “gist” standard to the successive petition because it was not
until the instant case was pending on appeal that this court clarified the precise
showing necessary to qualify for successive postconviction proceedings. See id.;
People v. Smith, 2014 IL 115946, ¶ 35.
¶ 27 Whatever the trial court believed, however, it did in fact set the petition over to
the second stage, and we have held that even when no request for leave to file a
successive petition is made, the trial court may nonetheless rule on the petition, but
is not obliged to do so. Tidwell, 236 Ill. 2d at 152. In Tidwell, the postconviction
petitioner filed a successive petition, but did not file a motion or make a request for
leave to file. Regardless, the trial court considered the allegations of the petition as
they related to the threshold issue of cause and prejudice and issued a written order
detailing its reasons for concluding that the petitioner had failed to satisfy the cause
and prejudice test. The questions before this court were whether a motion or request
is required to obtain a ruling allowing or denying leave to file a successive
postconviction petition, and whether a ruling rendered in the absence of a motion or
request is subject to review in the appellate court. This court noted that section
122-1(f) of the Act does not impose a motion requirement, but merely says that a
petitioner must first obtain leave of court and that leave may only be granted where
the petitioner demonstrates cause and prejudice. By whatever means, this court
observed, it is incumbent upon the postconviction petitioner to prompt the trial
court to consider whether leave should be granted and to obtain a ruling on whether
the petitioner has demonstrated cause and prejudice. Id. at 156-57. However, even
in the absence of an articulated request, this court noted that the trial court could
sua sponte grant leave to file the successive petition, but was not required to do so.
This court also held that there is no impediment to appellate review of the trial
court’s ruling in such a case. Id. at 158, 162.
¶ 28 Thus, we hold that, although no request for leave to file was made in the instant
case, the trial court had the authority to sua sponte consider whether the successive
petition should be docketed for second-stage proceedings.
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¶ 29 II. Second-Stage Proceedings
¶ 30 Petitioner argues that his successive postconviction petition made a substantial
showing of actual innocence, relying upon Gary Bingham’s testimony at May’s
2007 postconviction hearing and the affidavit of Patricia DeRamus. 1
¶ 31 The trial court here granted the State’s motion to dismiss the successive petition
at the second stage. The dismissal of a postconviction petition without an
evidentiary hearing is reviewed de novo. The question raised in an appeal from an
order dismissing a postconviction petition at the second stage is whether the
allegations in the petition, liberally construed in favor of the petitioner and taken as
true, are sufficient to invoke relief under the Act. Since there are no factual issues at
the dismissal stage of the proceedings, the question is essentially a legal one, which
requires the reviewing court to make its own independent assessment of the
allegations of the petition and supporting documentation. People v. Coleman, 183
Ill. 2d 366, 388-89 (1998).
¶ 32 The State argues that the lower courts’ findings were fully compliant with this
court’s decision in Edwards. The State notes that Edwards, citing the United States
Supreme Court’s decision in Schlup v. Delo, 513 U.S. 298, 324 (1995), stated that
actual innocence claims must be supported with new reliable evidence, such as,
inter alia, “trustworthy” eyewitness accounts. Edwards, 2012 IL 111711, ¶ 32.
Accordingly, the State argues, a threshold finding of trustworthiness must be made
before a court may determine whether a postconviction petitioner has set forth a
colorable claim of actual innocence. Given this requirement, the State further
asserts, a court may not mechanically assume that statements in an affidavit or a
recantation of trial testimony are true. To do so would relieve a petitioner of his or
her duty to demonstrate a colorable claim of actual innocence, since only reliable
evidence will support such a claim. According to the State, Bingham’s recantation
testimony was not reliable because the trial court had previously found the
testimony to be lacking in credibility. In addition, the State argues, DeRamus’s
affidavit is similarly unreliable because it relies on Bingham’s unreliable
recantation testimony.
¶ 33 It is true that recantation testimony is regarded as inherently unreliable and that
a court will not grant a new trial on that basis absent extraordinary circumstances.
1
Petitioner has apparently abandoned any reliance on the affidavits of Aaron Johnson and
Jovanna Liberty.
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Morgan, 212 Ill. 2d at 155. However, that determination is not made at the motion
to dismiss stage of postconviction proceedings where well-pleaded facts must be
taken as true. The State made a similar argument in Coleman, which this court
rejected.
¶ 34 In Coleman, the postconviction petitioner had been sentenced to death. He filed
an amended postconviction petition alleging that the State had procured perjured
testimony and failed to disclose exculpatory evidence to the defense. He attached
an affidavit from Aldene Lockett, who testified at trial that she lived in the building
where the shooting took place. In her trial testimony, Lockett said she saw the
perpetrator and described him as a dark-complected young man. She viewed a
lineup in which the petitioner was one of the participants. When she told police the
man she saw was wearing sunglasses, an officer told the men in the lineup to put on
sunglasses. All complied except the petitioner. Lockett testified that the man who
did not put on the sunglasses was the same height and weight of the man she saw
leaving the building. She did not positively identify anyone from the lineup; she
merely told police the man without sunglasses could have been the same man she
saw leave the murder scene because he had the same height, build, and color.
Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d at 371.
¶ 35 In her affidavit attached to the petitioner’s postconviction petition, Lockett
stated that she recognized the gunman as someone from the neighborhood. While
viewing the lineup, she felt that the police were trying to encourage her to identify
the man who refused to put on sunglasses because they “went back to him” and told
her that this was the man they had picked up for the murders. Lockett stated in her
affidavit that she told police the man in the lineup without sunglasses was not dark
enough to be the man she saw. She also stated that she did not recall seeing the man
without sunglasses in the neighborhood. Lockett stated that the assistant State’s
Attorney and his investigators called her repeatedly to go over her testimony to
make sure it did not change. In exchange for her testimony, the investigators
promised to move her to Alabama or to another place in Chicago, but they failed to
do so. Id. at 377.
¶ 36 The State filed a motion to dismiss the petition in Coleman, which the trial court
granted. On appeal to this court, the State argued that the real issue was whether
Lockett’s recantation was reliable, noting that recantations have historically been
regarded as unreliable. This court concluded that the State’s reliability argument
was premature, given the case’s procedural posture. The petitioner’s allegations,
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supported by Lockett’s affidavit, had not been refuted or denied. The court noted
that the original trial record did not controvert the charges that perjured evidence
was used and that favorable evidence was knowingly suppressed by the State.
There had been no determination of the veracity of the allegations. By seeking to
dismiss the petition, the State assumed the truth of the factual allegations of the
petition, at least for purposes of its motion to dismiss. Thus, the court noted, the
State had eliminated all factual issues from the inquiry. Accordingly, this court
concluded that the State could not on appeal seek affirmance of the dismissal order
by arguing that Lockett’s recantation was lacking in credibility or was
untrustworthy. Had the State wished to test Lockett’s credibility, it should have
answered the postconviction petition rather than seeking to have it dismissed. Id. at
390.
¶ 37 Although Coleman involved an initial petition, the standards at the second stage
of postconviction proceedings are the same for successive petitions. A petitioner
must make a substantial showing of actual innocence such that an evidentiary
hearing is warranted. People v. Lofton, 2011 IL App (1st) 100118, ¶ 34. All
well-pleaded factual allegations must be taken as true for purposes of the State’s
motion to dismiss. People v. Harris, 206 Ill. 2d 293, 299 (2002). The State’s
reliance on Edwards’ mention of “reliability” is contrary to this standard. We
emphasize that this court merely cited the Schlup case. We did not hold that the trial
court could effectively assess the credibility of witnesses and affiants by judging
the reliability of their statements.
¶ 38 The parties also dispute whether the trial court could rely on its credibility
finding regarding Bingham’s testimony at May’s 2007 postconviction evidentiary
hearing.
¶ 39 Petitioner cites two appellate court cases in support of his argument that the trial
court was required to accept Bingham’s testimony as true and that it made an
impermissible credibility determination when it looked to Aaron May’s
postconviction hearing to reject the testimony. In People v. Knight, 405 Ill. App. 3d
461 (2010), the postconviction petitioner had pleaded guilty to murder for the
stabbing death of a fellow inmate. Other inmates were charged in separate
proceedings. Affidavits were attached to the petition in support of its allegations.
One of the affidavits was that of Eddie Collier, who had pleaded guilty to a lesser
charge in connection with the inmate’s murder. Collier stated in his guilty plea
proceeding that the petitioner had stabbed the inmate while Collier participated.
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The petitioner’s initial postconviction petition was dismissed on the State’s motion
as untimely. He filed a second petition that claimed actual innocence. The trial
court dismissed that petition as untimely. The appellate court reversed for
second-stage proceedings. On remand, the trial court granted the State’s motion to
dismiss. Because the postconviction proceedings had been pending for several
years, the appellate court declined to remand the cause to the trial court again and
instead reversed its judgment outright. The appellate court found that the petitioner
had satisfied his burden to reach the third stage of postconviction proceedings and
that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing on his claim of actual innocence. Id. at
465.
¶ 40 The State argued that the petitioner was not entitled to an evidentiary hearing
because Collier’s affidavit was rebutted by the record of proceedings in Collier’s
own prosecution. The appellate court rejected this argument, noting that the State
cited no authority for its reliance on the report of proceedings in Collier’s
prosecution. The court held that the State may not raise any argument that the
proceedings of Collier’s guilty plea positively rebutted the petitioner’s
well-pleaded allegations. The court noted that the standard at the second stage of
postconviction proceedings is that all well-pleaded allegations of the petition and
accompanying affidavits are taken as true unless positively rebutted by the record
of the proceedings. The court further declared that the standard refers only to the
record of the proceedings from which the petitioner seeks postconviction relief and
not any other related proceedings. Since there was nothing in the record of
petitioner’s proceedings to positively rebut Collier’s affidavit or the allegations of
the petition, the appellate court found that the petitioner was entitled to an
evidentiary hearing. Id. at 470. The appellate court further noted that the
petitioner’s claim of actual innocence depended primarily on the credibility of the
witnesses in support of his claim. Credibility of witnesses is a matter that can only
be resolved by an evidentiary hearing. Id. at 471.
¶ 41 Petitioner cites a second appellate court case in the same vein, People v.
Harper, 2013 IL App (1st) 102181. There, the postconviction petitioner was
convicted of murder and arson. He filed a successive petition claiming actual
innocence. He attached to his petition the affidavit of James Bell, who admitted
setting the fire. The petitioner also attached a copy of the transcript of Bell’s
testimony at the postconviction proceeding of the petitioner’s codefendant. The
transcript revealed that Bell testified that he was responsible for setting the fire. The
State filed a motion to dismiss the petition. The trial court granted the motion. On
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appeal, the State argued that Bell’s testimony and affidavit were unreliable because
they were positively rebutted by the trial evidence. In addition, the State relied on
the appellate court’s Rule 23 order in the codefendant’s case in which the appellate
court rejected Bell’s testimony in the codefendant’s appeal. The appellate court
rejected the State’s implication that the rejection of Bell’s testimony in the related
proceeding should dictate a similar result in the petitioner’s case. The court noted
that this was clearly improper and that the findings of the appellate court in the
codefendant’s appeal could not be substituted for a third-stage evidentiary hearing
in the petitioner’s case. The court noted that at the second stage of postconviction
proceedings, it must take all well-pleaded facts as true. Id. ¶ 44.
¶ 42 We hold that the trial court here erred in considering the credibility
determination it made after hearing Bingham’s recantation testimony at May’s
2007 postconviction evidentiary hearing. We have already noted that credibility is
not an issue at the second stage of postconviction proceedings. All well-pleaded
factual allegations not positively rebutted by the trial record must be taken as true
for purposes of the State’s motion to dismiss. People v. Pendleton, 223 Ill. 2d 458,
473 (2006); People v. Childress, 191 Ill. 2d 168, 174 (2000). Thus, the trial court
erred in considering its credibility finding at May’s postconviction hearing.
Credibility determinations may be made only at a third-stage evidentiary hearing.
See Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d at 390. Like the appellate court in Harper, we find that the
trial court’s rejection of Bingham’s testimony in the related proceeding cannot be
substituted for a third-stage evidentiary hearing in petitioner’s case. Harper, 2013
IL App (1st) 102181, ¶ 44.
¶ 43 We also hold that the trial court erred in considering matters outside the record
of petitioner’s case. While the appellate court here criticized the Knight court for
failing to cite authority in support of its holding that related proceedings may not be
considered, we note the appellate court cited no authority in support of its own
determination that the trial court could consider the record in May’s postconviction
evidentiary hearing. The Act itself contemplates that the trial court will look only to
the record of the subject petitioner’s case. Section 122-2.1(c) of the Act (725 ILCS
5/122-2.1(c) (West 2014)) states:
“(c) In considering a petition pursuant to this Section, the court may
examine the court file of the proceeding in which the petitioner was convicted,
any action taken by an appellate court in such proceeding and any transcripts of
such proceeding.”
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¶ 44 While section 122-2.1 of the Act governs trial court actions on an initial
petition, there is no indication in the Act that the trial court has authority to look
beyond the record at later stages in the proceedings. We therefore reject the
argument that the trial court may consider the record of proceedings not involving
the petitioner whose case is before the court.
¶ 45 The State argues that petitioner is estopped from relying on selected excerpts of
Bingham’s recantation testimony from May’s hearing rather than the totality of the
testimony. The Act specifically authorizes the trial court to receive proof by
affidavits, depositions, or oral testimony. See 725 ILCS 5/122-6 (West 2014). In
addition, a postconviction petitioner is required to attach to his petition affidavits,
records, or other evidence supporting the petition’s allegations or state why the
same are not attached. 725 ILCS 5/122-2 (West 2014). Petitioner’s actual
innocence claim relies in part on Bingham’s recantation; therefore, he was required
to attach an affidavit from Bingham or other evidence of the recantation. While
petitioner attached only the excerpts from Bingham’s testimony that he apparently
believed supported his claim, the State is always free to provide the trial court with
the complete transcript. The State also argues that petitioner was estopped from
relying on Bingham’s recantation testimony while claiming that the trial court
could not consider the conclusion it reached regarding Bingham’s lack of
credibility. We reject this argument for the reasons explained above; credibility
findings may not be relied upon at the second stage of postconviction proceedings.
¶ 46 As we have noted above, to advance to the third stage of postconviction
proceedings based upon a claim of actual innocence, a petitioner must show that the
evidence is newly discovered, material and not merely cumulative, and of such
conclusive character that it would probably change the result on retrial. People v.
Ortiz, 235 Ill. 2d 319, 333 (2009).
¶ 47 The State argues that Bingham’s recantation and DeRamus’s affidavit are not
newly discovered. It does not argue that the new evidence was not material or was
merely cumulative. We need not address whether petitioner’s new evidence could
have been discovered earlier in the exercise of due diligence and whether it is
material and not merely cumulative because we conclude that, even assuming these
conditions have been satisfied, the evidence is not of such conclusive character that
it would probably change the result on retrial. We must be able to find that
petitioner’s new evidence is so conclusive that it is more likely than not that no
reasonable juror would find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See Edwards,
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2012 IL 111711, ¶ 40. We note that the conclusiveness of the new evidence is the
most important element of an actual innocence claim. People v. Washington, 171
Ill. 2d 475, 489 (1996).
¶ 48 Well-pleaded factual allegations of a postconviction petition and its supporting
evidence must be taken as true unless they are positively rebutted by the record of
the original trial proceedings. Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d at 382. Here, Bingham testified
at petitioner’s trial, implicating petitioner in the kidnapping and murder of Cooks.
Now, he has recanted that testimony and claims that petitioner was not involved.
This recantation conflicts with much of the evidence at petitioner’s trial. For
instance, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on Cooks testified that Cooks
was shot twice in the back of the head, and that the cause of death was multiple
gunshot wounds. Bingham testified in his recantation that he shot Cooks only once.
Thus, this part of Bingham’s recantation is positively rebutted by the trial record.
Witnesses at trial testified to petitioner’s presence at Barfield’s house and his
involvement in kidnapping Cooks. William Ramseur testified that three men he did
not know arrived at Barfield’s house after midnight and spoke with Barfield and
Cooks. The men were saying they wanted their money back. Each of the three men
had a gun. Barfield and Dee Dee tied Cooks to a chair. After Barfield learned that
Cooks had not given Barfield his share of the money received for the cocaine, he
untied Cooks and the three men took Cooks out of Barfield’s house.
¶ 49 Donald Barfield’s testimony also placed petitioner at his house during the
incident with Cooks, both to buy the cocaine and later to confront Cooks with a
demand for a refund. Cooks was tied up by Barfield and Dee Dee. Bingham,
petitioner, and May were involved in getting Cooks out of the house. Barfield
identified petitioner at the trial.
¶ 50 Cheryl Lathan, although she did not see petitioner, testified that she and Cooks
dropped Bingham off on Homan Avenue and that she went back to Barfield’s
house, saw May sitting in his car, and told him that Bingham wanted him to go to
Homan Avenue. Bingham testified that after May told him the cocaine was short,
petitioner went inside his mother’s house on Homan Avenue and retrieved three
guns. They then went to Barfield’s house.
¶ 51 Chicago police detective Gene Harris testified that Ramseur identified
petitioner in a lineup. Detective Harris also testified that petitioner told him when
he was taken into custody that he lived at his mother’s house on Homan Avenue.
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¶ 52 Petitioner presented two alibi witnesses and testified in his own defense.
Charles Tobias’s testimony did not provide an alibi for the time during which the
other witnesses testified that Bingham, petitioner, and May were at Barfield’s
house and left with Cooks. Tobias was with petitioner only until about 9:45 p.m. on
April 14, the night of the murder. The kidnapping of Cooks and his subsequent
murder took place around or after midnight on April 14. This leaves the testimony
of petitioner denying all involvement and that of his girlfriend, Felicia Hollivay,
who provided an alibi for petitioner starting at midnight on the night of the murder.
Thus, Bingham’s recantation is contrary not only to his own testimony at
petitioner’s trial, but also to the testimony of Ramseur and Barfield, who positively
identified petitioner as being with Bingham and May at Barfield’s house the night
of the murder and as having participated in the events leading up to Cooks’ murder.
It is also contradicted by the pathologist’s testimony that Cooks was shot twice in
the head, not once, as Bingham claimed in his recantation. Bingham’s recantation
testimony merely adds conflicting evidence to the evidence adduced at the trial.
Even taking the well-pleaded facts as true, we conclude that the recantation is not of
such conclusive character as would probably change the result on retrial.
¶ 53 The same must be said of the factual statements in DeRamus’s affidavit. Her
statements merely contradict the testimony of other occurrence witnesses. Further,
we note that DeRamus’s statement that Bingham “marched” Cooks out the back
door of Barfield’s house directly contradicts Bingham’s recantation testimony
when he said that he picked up Cooks, threw him over his shoulder, and took him
out the back door. Like Bingham’s recantation, DeRamus’s proposed testimony
would merely add to the evidence the jury heard at petitioner’s trial. It is not so
conclusive in character as would probably change the result on retrial, either by
itself or in conjunction with Bingham’s recantation.
¶ 54 CONCLUSION
¶ 55 We note that we may affirm the appellate court’s judgment on any basis
supported by the record. City of Champaign v. Torres, 214 Ill. 2d 234, 241 (2005).
Although the appellate court erred in relying on the trial judge’s credibility finding
at May’s 2007 postconviction hearing, the result is the same. We hold that
petitioner failed to carry his burden to make a substantial showing of a claim of
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actual innocence. Thus, his successive postconviction petition was properly
dismissed at the second stage. We therefore affirm the judgments below.
¶ 56 Appellate court judgment affirmed.
¶ 57 Circuit court judgment affirmed.
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