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Appellate Court Date: 2016.01.28 11:14:42
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People v. Blakey, 2015 IL App (3d) 130719
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption MORGAN D. BLAKEY, Defendant-Appellant.
District & No. Third District
Docket No. 3-13-0719
Filed November 25, 2015
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Henry County, No. 12-CF-78; the
Review Hon. Ted J. Hamer, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Michael J. Pelletier and Kerry J. Bryson (argued), both of State
Appeal Appellate Defender’s Office, of Ottawa, for appellant.
Matthew P. Schutte, State’s Attorney, of Cambridge (Laura E.
DeMichael-Bialon (argued), of State’s Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the
court, with opinion.
Justices Lytton and O’Brien concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 The defendant, Morgan D. Blakey, was convicted of aggravated driving under the
influence (DUI) (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(3), (d)(1)(F), (d)(2)(G) (West 2010)) and was
sentenced to 12 years of imprisonment. On appeal, the defendant argues that: (1) the circuit
court erred when it admitted the out-of-court statement Theodore Fritch made in the vehicle in
the moments before the crash and (2) the defendant’s sentence was excessive. We affirm.
¶2 FACTS
¶3 On November 29, 2011, the defendant was the 19-year-old driver of a vehicle carrying four
passengers that crashed at approximately 4:26 p.m. in Henry County after the defendant lost
consciousness while driving. The three passengers in the rear of the vehicle died as a result of
the crash.
¶4 On March 1, 2012, the State charged the defendant by indictment with reckless homicide
(720 ILCS 5/9-3(a) (West 2010)) and aggravated DUI (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(3), (d)(1)(F),
(d)(2)(G) (West 2010)). The indictment alleged that the defendant lost consciousness while
driving because he inhaled, or “huffed,” from a can of compressed air.
¶5 The circuit court held a bench trial over three days in June 2013, at which the court also
ruled on a motion to suppress the statement the defendant gave to the police while in the
hospital. Jon Hornback, a Henry County deputy sheriff, testified that he was dispatched to the
scene of the accident. When he arrived, medical personnel and Kewanee police officers were
already on the scene. There were five males involved in the crash; three of whom had not been
wearing seat belts and did not survive. Their names were Kelsey Clifford, Levi Berg, and
Bradley Wood. The defendant and Theodore Fritch survived the crash; they were conscious
and alert but injured. Hornback spoke with the defendant at the scene and asked him what had
happened. The defendant told him that they had just been at Wal-Mart and were going down
the road, but he could not remember anything after that. Hornback also spoke with Fritch, who
also said they had just come from Wal-Mart.
¶6 Hornback testified that he was also a state-certified accident reconstructionist. He did not
perform measurements on the scene until the following day because it had gotten dark. He
prepared a diagram of the crash, which was introduced into evidence. By Hornback’s
calculations, the vehicle had been traveling south down the road when it veered east off of the
roadway, hit a mailbox, and continued down the ditch approximately 342 feet. The vehicle
came to a driveway and launched into the air, traveling approximately 114 feet, and came
down nose-first. The vehicle then flipped and landed 40 feet away, then rolled for another
approximately 113 feet before it came to rest approximately 59 feet from the roadway.
Hornback calculated the vehicle’s speed at the time it launched into the air at 68.25 miles per
hour.
¶7 Hornback also spoke with a manager at Wal-Mart that day and was able to view
surveillance tapes. He saw all five males walk into Wal-Mart, he saw the defendant and Fritch
in the computer section, and he saw them purchase a can of compressed air.
¶8 Hornback testified that he performed an inventory search of the vehicle the day after the
crash. He found a can of compressed air on the back floorboard behind the driver’s seat. The
can’s safety tab had been removed, and Hornback did not find the safety tab in the vehicle. His
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attention was drawn to the can of compressed air because the surveillance tapes from
Wal-Mart showed “that’s what they had purchased.”
¶9 Henry County sheriff’s department Detective Jim Kessinger testified that he and
Lieutenant Kerry Loncka interviewed the defendant at the hospital on December 12, 2011. The
defendant’s father, Grant Blakey, was also present. The defendant agreed to allow the
recording of the interview. Kessinger stated that the defendant was not in custody, but he was
read his Miranda rights so he was “aware of what his rights were.” Grant signed the form for
the defendant, whose hands were sore.1 Kessinger stated that the defendant told him that the
five males had gone to Wal-Mart in his girlfriend’s vehicle after leaving Berg’s house. The
defendant and Fritch walked to the electronics department and purchased a can of compressed
air. All that the defendant stated he could remember before he passed out was that they had
driven away from Wal-Mart, that he told a joke, and that they were listening to the radio.
¶ 10 Kessinger asked the defendant if he knew what had caused him to pass out. The defendant
told him that the doctors said he may have had a seizure, and that they put him on anti-seizure
medication. When Kessinger asked if the defendant had suffered from seizures or blackouts
before, the defendant told him that he had blacked out the previous day while he was driving a
vehicle but stopped at a stop sign. No one was around, and the defendant did not make much of
the episode.
¶ 11 Kessinger asked the defendant if he knew what “huffing” was and whether he had ever
done it. The defendant initially responded that he did not know what huffing was and that he
had never done it before. After Loncka explained what huffing was, Kessinger informed the
defendant that Fritch had told him that the defendant had been huffing and that Fritch had
witnessed the defendant put the can of compressed air to his mouth in the vehicle before he
passed out. The defendant did not respond.
¶ 12 Kessinger then told the defendant he did not think the defendant intended to pass out or
hurt the males in the vehicle. Kessinger also told the defendant he thought the defendant had
been huffing, and Kessinger asked the defendant if that was what happened. The defendant
nodded his head affirmatively and said yes. Kessinger testified that based on his experience,
the defendant did not appear to be under the influence of any drugs at the time of the interview.
¶ 13 Loncka testified in accord with Kessinger’s testimony regarding the hospital interview of
the defendant.
¶ 14 Kessinger also testified that he purchased a nearly identical can of compressed air from the
Wal-Mart in Kewanee and he weighed that can and the can found in the vehicle. The new can
had its safety tab in place and weighed 455.1 grams, and the can found in the vehicle weighed
430.4 grams. On cross-examination, Kessinger stated that he did not know if some contents of
the can found in the vehicle had dispensed during the crash. Kessinger also stated that he did
not send the can found in the vehicle to a laboratory to determine if any deoxyribonucleic acid
(DNA) or fingerprints could be recovered from the can. On redirect, Kessinger stated that he
did not submit the can for fingerprinting because the defendant had told him that they
purchased the can from Wal-Mart.
¶ 15 Fritch testified that when he was in Wal-Mart with the other four males, the defendant
asked Fritch to hand him a can of compressed air that was on the shelf in front of Fritch. Fritch
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Loncka testified that the defendant said he was unable to sign the form. Grant Blakey testified that
he signed the form because the defendant could not raise his arms.
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did so, and the defendant purchased the can of compressed air at the checkout area. When they
left Wal-Mart and drove away, Fritch said:
“I was in the process of thinking of a way to convince my mom to let me out of
school the next day because we had a half a day, so I was busy on my phone, and a little
bit before, Levi had asked me what we were going to do when we got back, and I said I
thought we were going over–we were going to go over to one of my friend’s house, and
he said yeah, that’s fine, and we didn’t talk after that.
And then we just kept riding. The music was on. It was fine. And then they kept
saying his name over and over again, and I wasn’t sure what was happening, so I
looked back, and they were all–they–all their attentions were focused on him, trying to
wake him up. I’m not sure what had happened.”
¶ 16 Fritch testified that the three males in the back were screaming the defendant’s name and
that they said nothing else. The prosecutor then asked Fritch if he remembered giving a
statement to a detective from the Henry County sheriff’s department at the hospital. Fritch
stated that he did not recall the name of the detective, but he did recall giving an interview at
the hospital. Fritch said he did not recall what he told the detective the other males had yelled
from the backseat. Detective Joe Bedford of the Henry County sheriff’s department had
interviewed Fritch at the hospital on November 30, 2011, and Fritch was questioned in relation
to that interview.
¶ 17 When asked if he was truthful to Bedford, Fritch stated that “at that time and point, he had
just seen me after my friends died. I was just trying to get him out of the room.” Fritch also said
that “not all” of his statements to Bedford were untruthful. After the circuit court admonished
Fritch about the fifth amendment and self-incrimination, Fritch stated that he was not paying
attention to Bedford such that his answers may not have been accurate.
¶ 18 Fritch testified that the males in the backseat had said the defendant’s name “and once or
twice was, ‘Slow down the car,’ ‘Wake up,’ and that was it.” Fritch then denied telling Bedford
the following, which came from the transcript of the hospital interview that was introduced
into evidence:
“I was looking out the window listening to some music that was playing and then
Levi asked me a question so I started talking to him and that’s when I turned around
and you know looking at the backseat started talking to Levi and I can’t remember if it
was Brad or Kelsey that said hey Morgan you shouldn’t be doing that ***.”
After Fritch denied making that statement, the following exchange took place:
“[PROSECUTOR]: Is it that you don’t remember or you don’t want to say that
because you don’t want to see Morgan get in trouble, he’s your friend?
[FRITCH]: He’s my friend.”
¶ 19 Fritch then testified that after he had turned to see what the commotion coming from the
backseat was about, his attention turned to the defendant. Fritch yelled the defendant’s name
once and then proceeded to try to gain control of the vehicle. Fritch testified that the defendant
was unresponsive, his eyes were closed, and his head was down. Fritch last remembered trying
to reach for the brake pedal.
¶ 20 After arguments regarding the admissibility of Fritch’s hospital statement to police, the
circuit court ruled that the statements made by any of the deceased victims that “Morgan, you
shouldn’t be doing that” were excited utterances or spontaneous declarations and, therefore,
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were exceptions to the rule prohibiting hearsay. Also, the court ruled that the statements were
admissible as substantive evidence through Fritch’s testimony under section 115-10.1 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (725 ILCS 5/115-10.1 (West 2010)) because: (1) Fritch’s
hospital statement was inconsistent with his trial testimony; (2) Fritch was subject to
cross-examination; (3) Fritch had personal knowledge of what he described to Bedford; and (4)
Fritch’s statement was accurately recorded and transcribed.
¶ 21 Gregory Blume, a physician and neurologist, testified that he treated the defendant at the
hospital beginning the day after the defendant was admitted. The hospital performed tests to
determine what may have caused the defendant to lose consciousness, including an
electroencephalogram and magnetic resonance imaging. Blume was unable to definitively
prove that the loss of consciousness was caused by a seizure, but he could not absolutely rule
out a seizure, either. The defendant was placed on anti-seizure medication as a precaution. Two
to three days after the defendant was admitted to the hospital, he relayed to Blume that the day
before the crash, at one point during the day at home he found himself sitting in a chair and he
could not recall how he got there. He did not tell Blume any story about blacking out in the
driver’s seat of a vehicle while stopped at a stop sign. Additionally, Blume testified that he did
not believe the hospital tested for difluoroethane.
¶ 22 Brittany Blakey testified that she and the defendant were married on July 15, 2012. At the
time of the crash, she and the defendant were dating and were living with the defendant’s
mother. She stated that at the time of the crash, the defendant had never mentioned anything to
her about blackouts or seizures.
¶ 23 Dalton Miller testified that he had been the defendant’s long-time friend and schoolmate.
He stated that on the morning of the crash, while in school, he had talked to the defendant, who
told Dalton that he had passed out that morning at a stop sign. Dalton stated that the defendant
did not mention anything about passing out or blacking out the day before, either while in the
car or at home.
¶ 24 Dylan Miller testified that he and the defendant had been long-time best friends. Dylan
stated that the defendant never said anything to him about blackouts or seizures.
¶ 25 Grant Blakey testified that prior to the accident, the defendant never said anything to him
about blackouts or losing consciousness. The defendant did tell Grant at some point about
blacking out at a stop sign, but Grant could not recall when the defendant told him that.
¶ 26 Grant also testified that he did not see the defendant nod his head or hear him give a verbal
affirmative response in relation to the police officers’ questions and statements about what
Fritch had said and what happened on the day of the accident. He also stated that he did not
hear the officers say “huff” or “huffing.” In addition, Grant testified that the defendant was on
pain medication at the time of the hospital interview, which Grant believed made the defendant
sleepy and emotional.
¶ 27 The evidence deposition of Dr. Jerrold Leikin was admitted into evidence. Dr. Leikin, a
medical toxicologist, reviewed the defendant’s records and came to the conclusion that the
defendant’s loss of consciousness was “compatible with use of huffing, use of a fluorinated
hydrocarbon, such as difluoroethane, which is used in various Dust-Off products; and that the
course and the medical nature of that is very consistent and compatible with that as a cause for
the traffic accident.” Dr. Leikin also testified regarding the medical effects of
hydrofluorocarbons, including that they were essentially anesthetics. Hydrofluorocarbons
enter the blood stream quickly and can have multiple direct effects on the brain and heart,
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including a loss of oxygen to those organs. Once a person inhales a hydrofluorocarbon, loss of
consciousness occurs “[w]ithin seconds; less than a minute.” Dr. Leikin also stated that the
amount of product missing from the can of compressed air found in the vehicle was consistent
with one use of that substance for huffing.
¶ 28 With regard to whether the records he reviewed indicated huffing rather than a seizure, Dr.
Leikin testified:
“As far as seizure, there is no mention of generalized what we call tonic clonic or
repetitive movement, movements in this sense, as far as a description. There is no
mention of neck extension. In fact, there is mention that his neck was flexed. It was
slumped over.
With a seizure, you see it just the opposite. You see your neck bent back, not front,
overall.”
¶ 29 Dr. Leikin stated that the hospital did not test the defendant to determine whether he had
any hydrofluorocarbons in his system. Dr. Leikin did not know if this hospital actually had
access to such a test; he stated that “virtually every hospital that I know of *** is not able to do
this test on site.” He stated that the test is not useful for several reasons, one of which is that
from a clinical standpoint, a person who becomes acutely intoxicated from hydrofluorcarbons
either recovers completely or is dead. In addition, Dr. Leikin testified that while there is no
precise data to indicate how quickly hydrofluorcarbons are eliminated from the body, he noted
that it is eliminated through the lungs, which means that it can be eliminated very rapidly.
Further, a 2006 rodent study indicated that the substance was eliminated within minutes. He
opined that the substance would be eliminated from the body certainly within an hour, but most
likely well before that.
¶ 30 When asked on cross-examination about seizures and seizure disorders, Dr. Leikin stated
that absence seizures–ones in which the individual can have a blank stare on their face but
actually lose consciousness–were not likely present in the defendant because they were usually
seen in children and would be “very, very rare” in individuals of the defendant’s age.
Generalized seizures are the ones that typically occur later in life, including around the
defendant’s age.
¶ 31 Neurologist Dr. Erhan Ergene testified that he treated the defendant when he was admitted
to the hospital and subsequent to that time. Dr. Ergene read the list of medications the
defendant was on at the hospital, and stated that one of those medications was a narcotic that
can cause sleepiness and possibly confusion. He discussed the difference between generalized
seizures and partial seizures, with the latter including potential symptoms such as confusion,
speech difficulty, and sensory or behavioral changes. He stated that a person can experience
both types of seizures simultaneously in that a seizure can start as partial and become
generalized. He also stated that seizures tend to appear in children and older people, with
uncommon appearances in between those two age groups. He clarified on cross-examination
that the former group can include late teenage years or twenties.
¶ 32 Dr. Ergene stated that it was not possible to identify with a reasonable degree of certainty
the cause of the defendant’s loss of consciousness while driving. He also stated that one’s head
can go backwards, forwards, or sideways during a seizure. He noted that while the defendant’s
electroencephalogram was normal, a normal result on that test does not rule out “underlying
structural disturbance or diagnosis of seizure disorder.” In addition, he stated that he had no
training or experience regarding huffing.
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¶ 33 The defendant’s mother, Cheryl Selburg, testified that in November 2011, the defendant
had two issues with severe headaches, which were uncommon for him and which kept him
from school twice. She stated that “[t]here were some times also when he–he was there but he
wasn’t there. You would ask him a question, and it was just a blank stare, and you’d have to say
his name loudly and look at him to get his attention and then re-ask the question to get him to
answer.”
¶ 34 Before closing arguments, the circuit court admitted a page of Fritch’s grand jury
testimony for the defense’s stated purpose of rehabilitating Fritch with a prior consistent
statement. Fritch’s testimony before the grand jury was that he did not remember telling the
police that he heard someone yell, “ ‘Morgan, you shouldn’t be doing that.’ ” The court also
ruled on the motion to suppress the statement the defendant gave to the police while in the
hospital. The court found that the defendant was not in custody and made a knowing and
intelligent waiver of his rights. Accordingly, the court denied the motion to suppress.
¶ 35 The circuit court announced its decision on June 13, 2013. Among others, the court’s
findings included that Fritch was not entirely truthful on the stand, as he was trying to protect
his friend; that the defendant gave inconsistent statements about when and where he allegedly
passed out the day before or the day of the crash; that no one could say with absolute certainty
that the defendant did or did not have a seizure; and that the defendant admitted in his
statement to police at the hospital that he huffed while driving. The court further found that any
small doubt about what transpired in the moments leading up to the crash did not rise to the
level of reasonable doubt. Accordingly, the court found the defendant guilty of reckless
homicide and aggravated DUI.
¶ 36 The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, alleging, inter alia, that the State failed to
prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The motion alleged that the evidence was
insufficient to show that the defendant lost consciousness because he inhaled from the can of
compressed air. The motion also challenged the admissibility of Fritch’s statement that
someone in the back of the vehicle said, “Morgan, you shouldn’t be doing that.”
¶ 37 On September 9, 2013, the circuit court held a sentencing hearing. At the outset of the
hearing, the court denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and the case proceeded to
sentencing on the aggravated DUI conviction, as the court vacated the reckless homicide
conviction under one act, one crime principles.
¶ 38 With regard to aggravation and mitigation, the prosecutor argued that deterrence was the
“one enormous aggravating factor.” The prosecutor emphasized that “[b]y sending a clear,
consistent message that [DUI] crimes like this will be severely punished, the Court will save
lives.” The prosecutor acknowledged that mitigating factors existed, but he claimed that there
was nothing extraordinary about those mitigating factors. The prosecutor recommended a
20-year prison sentence. Defense counsel discussed several mitigating factors, including: (1)
the defendant did not contemplate that his actions would cause serious harm to someone else;
(2) the ability to order restitution; (3) the defendant did not have a criminal history; (4) the
circumstances were unlikely to recur; (5) the defendant was likely to comply with the terms of
probation; (6) excessive medical hardships would result from a prison sentence; (7) excessive
hardships would result in relation to the defendant’s children; (8) the defendant was likely to be
rehabilitated; and (9) the defendant’s youth.
¶ 39 After arguments concluded, the court stated that it had considered the facts of the case, the
presentence report, the letters submitted on behalf of the defendant, and the factors in
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aggravation and mitigation. With regard to mitigation, the court noted that the defendant was
young, that he did not have a criminal history, that the circumstances were not likely to recur,
and that hardships would result on his family. However, the court noted that the defendant
made the choice to inhale from the can of compressed air and did so while behind the wheel
with passengers in the vehicle. The court stated that a sentence of probation would deprecate
the seriousness of the crime and stated that deterrence was an important aggravating factor in
this case. The court then sentenced the defendant to 12 years of imprisonment.
¶ 40 The defendant did not file a motion to reconsider his sentence, but he did file a timely
notice of appeal.
¶ 41 ANALYSIS
¶ 42 The defendant’s first argument on appeal is that the circuit court erred when it admitted
Fritch’s out-of-court statement that he heard someone in the backseat yell, “Morgan, you
shouldn’t be doing that.” The defendant contends that it was erroneous to admit the statement
for impeachment purposes, as Fritch’s testimony was not affirmatively damaging to the State’s
case, and that it was erroneous to admit the statement as substantive evidence, as Fritch did not
have personal knowledge of the event to which the comment from the backseat was referring.
¶ 43 We review a circuit court’s ruling on the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of
discretion. People v. Santos, 211 Ill. 2d 395, 401 (2004). “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.” People v. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d 52, 89
(2001).
¶ 44 Initially, we address the State’s claim that Fritch admitted on the stand that he made the
out-of-court statement to the police. The State claims that Fritch’s response of “[h]e’s my
friend” to the question from the prosecutor, “[i]s it that you don’t remember [making the
statement to the police in the hospital] or you don’t want to say that because you don’t want to
see Morgan get in trouble, he’s your friend?” constituted an admission that he made the
out-of-court statement. We disagree with the State. Fritch’s answer appears to indicate only
that he was trying to protect his friend, rather than an explicit admission that he made the
statement to the police while in the hospital. At best, Fritch’s answer was ambiguous, and the
prosecutor did not ask any follow-up questions to clarify Fritch’s response. Under these
circumstances, we do not find Fritch’s answer to constitute an admission that he made the
statement to the police in the hospital.
¶ 45 Next, we address the defendant’s claim that the circuit court erred when it admitted Fritch’s
out-of-court statement as substantive evidence.
¶ 46 In relevant part, section 115-10.1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 provides that
a prior inconsistent statement is admissible as substantive evidence if: (1) the statement is
inconsistent with the witness’s testimony at the hearing; (2) the witness is subject to
cross-examination regarding the statement; (3) the statement “narrates, describes, or explains
an event or condition of which the witness had personal knowledge”; and (4) the statement was
proven to have been accurately recorded by, inter alia, a tape recorder. 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1
(West 2010); see also People v. Simpson, 2015 IL 116512, ¶ 27.
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¶ 47 The defendant focuses his argument on the third requirement of section 115-10.1, claiming
that the defendant did not have personal knowledge of the event to which the statement from
the backseat was referring.
¶ 48 Our review of the record reveals that Fritch’s hospital statement did not meet the
requirements for admissibility as substantive evidence. In ruling that the statement was
admissible as substantive evidence, the circuit court ruled that Fritch had personal knowledge
of what he described to Bedford in the hospital. The court also stated that Fritch had personal
knowledge of the statement made by one of the backseat passengers. However, there was no
testimony presented that Fritch knew of the event to which the comment from the backseat was
referring. In fact, Fritch testified that he was busy with his phone and was not paying attention
to the defendant. Under these circumstances, the witness did not have personal knowledge of
the event to which the comment was referring, and the admission of this statement as
substantive evidence was therefore erroneous. See Simpson, 2015 IL 116512, ¶ 34; see also
People v. Sangster, 2014 IL App (1st) 113457, ¶¶ 60-61.
¶ 49 Even if a prior inconsistent statement cannot be admitted as substantive evidence, it may be
used for purposes of impeachment if the witness’s testimony affirmatively damages the party’s
case. Sangster, 2014 IL App (1st) 113457, ¶ 62; see also Ill. R. Evid. 607 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
Testimony is affirmatively damaging when the party’s case is worse off than it would have
been had the witness not testified at all (Sangster, 2014 IL App (1st) 113457, ¶ 62), and it must
positively aid the defendant’s case (People v. Wilson, 2012 IL App (1st) 101038, ¶ 44).
¶ 50 In support of its argument that the circuit court properly admitted the statement for
impeachment, the State cites to People v. Leonard, 391 Ill. App. 3d 926, 933 (2009), for the
proposition that a witness’s lack of memory regarding a prior statement may be considered
damaging. However, we decline to adopt that alleged holding from Leonard. First, we are not
bound by that decision, as it was decided by a different panel of this court. See O’Casek v.
Children’s Home & Aid Society of Illinois, 229 Ill. 2d 421, 440 (2008) (holding that “the
opinion of one district, division, or panel of the appellate court is not binding on other districts,
divisions, or panels”). Second, to the extent that Leonard stands for the proposition claimed by
the State, Leonard was incorrect. Our supreme court has made clear that affirmative damage
“does not occur where a party interrogates a witness about a fact which would be favorable to
the examiner if true, but then receives a reply which is merely negative in its effect on the
examiner’s case.” People v. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d 314, 360 (1994); see also Wilson, 2012 IL App
(1st) 101038, ¶ 45 (holding that “a witness’s professed lack of memory, standing alone, does
not ‘affirmatively damage’ a party’s case for the purpose of impeaching one’s own witness”
(quoting Michael H. Graham, Graham’s Handbook of Illinois Evidence § 607.4 (10th ed.
2010)).
¶ 51 Our review of the record in this case reveals that Fritch’s hospital statement was
improperly admitted for purposes of impeachment. Pursuant to the above-cited case law, we
cannot say that the State’s case was affirmatively damaged by Fritch’s professed lack of
memory with regard to his hospital statement. We are not persuaded by the State’s claim that
“Fritch’s professed lack of recall was damaging because it would allow a trier of fact to believe
that Fritch heard passengers yelling, but the passengers had not said anything about defendant
doing anything inappropriate.” Nor is there anything in the record to indicate that affirmative
damage in fact occurred from Fritch’s professed lack of memory. Under these circumstances,
we hold that the circuit court erred when it admitted the statement for impeachment purposes.
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¶ 52 Despite the fact that the admissions of Fritch’s hospital statement were erroneous, we find
those errors to be harmless. Harmless error occurs when there exists no reasonable probability
that the finder of fact would have acquitted the defendant had the error not occurred. Sangster,
2014 IL App (1st) 113457, ¶ 68. While the admission of Fritch’s hospital statement did in fact
help the State’s case, the rest of the evidence presented against the defendant was more than
sufficient to prove him guilty. The remaining evidence included, inter alia, that the defendant
went to Wal-Mart minutes before the crash and purchased a can of compressed air. A single
can of compressed air was found in the vehicle after the crash. The can’s safety tab was
missing and an amount of product was missing from the can that was consistent with one use
for huffing purposes. The can contained difluoroethane, a chemical that can cause almost
instantaneous unconsciousness when inhaled. The defendant lost consciousness while driving
moments before the crash. The defendant gave inconsistent stories to multiple people
regarding him blacking out and whether it occurred the day of or the day prior to the crash.
Most significantly, the defendant admitted to police that he was huffing in the vehicle while
driving. Under these circumstances, we hold that the admission of Fritch’s statement into
evidence was harmless. See id. ¶¶ 68-69.
¶ 53 The defendant’s second argument on appeal is that his sentence was excessive. The
defendant contends that he should have received a lesser sentence due to mitigating factors in
his youth, lack of a criminal history, support of family and friends, and the impulsivity of the
act leading to the crash.
¶ 54 As charged in this case, aggravated DUI is a Class 2 felony with a sentencing range of 6 to
28 years. 625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(3), (d)(1)(F), (d)(2)(G) (West 2010). In this case, the
defendant received a 12-year prison sentence, which fell within and near the lower end of the
statutory range.
¶ 55 We will not disturb a sentence that falls within the statutory limits unless it was an abuse of
discretion. People v. Coleman, 166 Ill. 2d 247, 258 (1995). “[A] sentence within statutory
limits will be deemed excessive and the result of an abuse of discretion by the trial court where
the sentence is greatly at variance with the spirit and purpose of the law, or manifestly
disproportionate to the nature of the offense.” People v. Stacey, 193 Ill. 2d 203, 210 (2000).
¶ 56 Our review of the record reveals that the defendant’s sentence was not excessive. In
considering an appropriate sentence for the defendant, the circuit court thoroughly discussed
the circumstances of the crime and the factors in aggravation and mitigation. The court noted
that the defendant was young, that he did not have a criminal history, that the circumstances of
the crash were not likely to recur, and that hardships would result on his family from prison
time. Nevertheless, the circumstances of the crash were such that deterrence–in terms of
deterring others, not the defendant–was a significant factor in aggravation. The court noted that
the defendant chose to huff while driving four of his friends. Three of those friends died as a
result of the ensuing crash. The defendant’s argument on this issue is little more than a request
for this court to reweigh the factors considered by the circuit court at the sentencing hearing,
which is not the function of a court of review. Coleman, 166 Ill. 2d at 262 (holding that it is
improper for a reviewing court to reweigh the factors involved in a circuit court’s sentencing
decision); People v. Streit, 142 Ill. 2d 13, 19 (1991) (holding that a reviewing court may not
substitute its judgment for that of the sentencing court).
¶ 57 The circumstances of this case are undoubtedly tragic, and there are clearly no winners.
The defendant’s wife is left to raise their two children, who will spend the majority of their
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most formative years without the presence of their father in the home. The parents of the three
young men who died as the result of the defendant’s heedless and reckless act have lost their
sons. Despite the unlikelihood of the defendant repeating this behavior, a sentence signaling
that the courts take such cases very seriously may make other young people consider the
potentially disastrous consequences before engaging in similar reckless behavior. The
defendant faced a sentencing range of 6 to 28 years, and he received a lower mid-range
sentence of 12 years. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the court erred when it
found that sentence to be appropriate. Under these circumstances, we hold that the circuit court
did not abuse its discretion when it sentenced the defendant to 12 years of imprisonment.
¶ 58 CONCLUSION
¶ 59 The judgment of the circuit court of Henry County is affirmed.
¶ 60 Affirmed.
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