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Appellate Court Date: 2017.06.28
10:05:11 -05'00'
People v. Montano, 2017 IL App (2d) 140326
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption AURELIO MONTANO, Defendant-Appellant.
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-14-0326
Filed March 30, 2017
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kane County, No. 08-CF-1707; the
Review Hon. Timothy Q. Sheldon, and the Hon. M. Karen Simpson, Judges,
presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Thomas A. Lilien and Ronald C. White, of State Appellate Defender’s
Appeal Office, of Elgin, for appellant.
Joseph H. McMahon, State’s Attorney, of St. Charles (Lawrence M.
Bauer and Barry W. Jacobs, of State’s Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
Panel JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justice Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice Hutchinson specially concurred, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 In July 1990, Guadalupe Montano, the wife of defendant, Aurelio Montano, went missing,
and her body was never found. The State’s theory was that defendant, motivated by jealousy,
strangled Guadalupe with a rope, wrapped her in a rug, buried her at a horse farm with the help
of his brother, told other family members about the killing, and moved the body before the
police could find it. In 2014, a jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder, and the trial
court imposed a sentence of natural life imprisonment.
¶2 On appeal, defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial because the court erred in
admitting evidence that, 17 years after Guadalupe’s disappearance, three detector dogs alerted
to the scent of human remains on the rug, which was found buried in an outdoor area of the
horse farm. Defendant argues that the evidence did not meet the standard of reliability set forth
in Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923), and that the error was compounded by
the State’s closing argument.
¶3 Defendant contends that the human-remains-detector-dog evidence is analogous to
bloodhound trailing evidence that has been deemed inadmissible to show any factual
proposition in a criminal case. See People v. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d 314, 369-73 (1994). The State
responds that the evidence is more like the narcotics-detector-dog evidence deemed admissible
in People v. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d 410 (1998), where the dog alerted to the defendant’s car
even though no drugs were subsequently found in it. This case presents the thorny issue of
whether a trial court should follow what is arguably Cruz’s bright-line prohibition against
odor-detector-dog evidence or reexamine the reliability of the underlying science as
contemplated by subsequent supreme court decisions. Here, the trial court reexamined the
underlying science, concluded that the State presented an adequate foundation for the
admission of the evidence, and found the evidence reliable. We need not decide whether the
trial court erred in admitting the human-remains-detector-dog evidence, because the
overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt rendered any potential error harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt.
¶4 I. BACKGROUND
¶5 A. Frye Hearing
¶6 The State filed a pretrial motion in limine seeking to introduce expert testimony regarding
human-remains-detector-dog “alerts” used during searches. The State proposed testimony that,
in this case, three dogs gave positive alerts on the rug and the area where it was found.
¶7 Dr. Susan Marie Stejskal testified that she had a Ph.D. in toxicology with a minor in
pathology. Dr. Stejskal’s credentials also included an undergraduate degree in animal science
and a veterinary technology program certificate of completion. Dr. Stejskal testified that she
was experienced in the field of veterinary medicine, both as a licensed veterinary technician
and with a substantial history of working with tracking dogs. Dr. Stejskal acknowledged on
cross-examination that, although she had participated in 80 to 100 trained canine searches for
human remains, she actually discovered human remains 7 or 8 times. She explained that the
infrequency was the result of her services being requested to rule out areas of interest, such as
in cold cases.
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¶8 The trial court found Dr. Stejskal to be an expert on the subjects of the anatomy and
physiology of canine olfaction systems, forensic taphonomy (the study of postmortem changes
and decomposition of humans), and the training and deployment of human-remains-detector
dogs.
¶9 Dr. Stejskal testified that a human-remains-detector dog serves as a tool to locate missing
persons through the science of canine olfaction and forensic taphonomy. Dr. Stejskal described
the olfactory system as the nostrils and turbinates, or coiled pathways in bone through which
air passes when inhaled.
¶ 10 Inside the pathways of the turbinates, the air is filtered by ciliated epithelial cells,
humidified, and warmed before it travels to the lungs. The odor that a human or dog detects
consists of volatile organic compounds in water vapor suspended in the air. The turbinates
contain olfactory sensory cells with chemoreceptors that detect these compounds and send
messages through nerves to the olfactory bulb, which processes scent. The chemoreceptors are
like taste buds in that distinct chemicals activate different cells to spark an electrical current to
the brain.
¶ 11 The olfactory systems of dogs and humans work in similar ways, but dogs’ sense of smell
is far superior. First, dogs and humans have differently designed nostrils. When a human
inhales and exhales, he or she will often breathe the same air and recirculate it. In contrast, a
dog’s nostrils shunt air to the side every time when exhaled, so different air is inhaled with
each breath.
¶ 12 Second, humans have 5 million olfactory sensory cells while Dachshunds have 125
million, German Shepherds have 225 million, and bloodhounds have 300 million. Also, a
German Shepherd inhales about five times as much air as a human, because the dog’s
turbinates are much more extensively coiled. The extensive coiling provides about 20 times
more surface area of olfactory sensory cells.
¶ 13 Third, the canine olfactory bulb, which processes the electrical signals sent by the
chemoreceptors, is about 40 times larger than a human’s. Using photography as an analogy,
Dr. Stejskal likened human smell to an “old fuzzy Polaroid” and canine smell to a high
definition photograph, with extraordinary detail. Dr. Stejskal explained that a human perceives
the world primarily through his or her eyes, but a dog perceives the world through its nose.
¶ 14 Dogs can be trained to locate human remains because their physiology gives them the
unique ability to distinguish particular scents. When a detector dog encounters something it
has been trained to detect, the dog will “become very, very interested in that odor” and exhibit
a change in behavior in that they breathe by sniffing. When a dog switches from normal
breathing to sniffing, more of the odor is sent through the turbinates. Each time they take a
breath, dogs experience a scent as if they are encountering it for the first time. They do not
experience “olfactory fatigue,” unlike humans who become desensitized to a scent after
continuous exposure.
¶ 15 Dr. Stejskal gave, without objection, a Power Point presentation to describe forensic
taphonomy, or the scientific processes of human decomposition and the postmortem changes
that occur in different environments. The four main stages of decomposition are the dying of
cells, early decomposition, putrefaction, and decay or postputrefaction.
¶ 16 After a person dies, cells begin to die from elevated acidity levels. The cells that die first
have the highest energy demand and blood supply, like in the heart and lungs.
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¶ 17 In early decomposition, the body goes through (1) algor mortis, or a decrease in body
temperature; (2) livor mortis, or the gravitational pooling of blood; and (3) rigor mortis, or
stiffening due to the contraction of muscle fibers. The duration of each mortis depends on
environmental conditions.
¶ 18 Putrefaction is “the stage of decomposition which we associate with bloating and gas and
smells” caused by microbes and bacteria that reproduce as they break down cells into
carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. The body becomes very fragile, and “skin slippage” occurs,
in which skin can pull away from the body and become attached to an object, such as a tarp,
that might have covered it. The cells begin to separate from one another, internal organs break
down, and liquefaction occurs, where parts of the body turn to liquid and spread to the
environment. The body goes from bloated to flattened. The carbohydrates, fats, and proteins
are broken down further into simpler building blocks. The final stage is decay, or
postputrefaction, where the rest of the tissues break down. Eventually, skeletal remains are all
that is left behind.
¶ 19 Many different chemicals are produced during the different stages of human
decomposition occurring in different conditions, and dogs can be trained to identify the odors.
For example, bloating causes methane and hydrogen sulfide gases. Also, when a body is in an
environment with low oxygen levels and high water levels, certain bacteria can produce
adipocere, or “grave wax.” Adipocere emits a strong pungent odor. If tissues are in an area
without the additive effect of soil microbes, the chemical composition will be slightly
different. Dr. Stejskal testified that the Oak Ridge National Laboratory at the University of
Tennessee, Florida International University, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
have researched the different chemicals and the odors they produce.
¶ 20 Dr. Stejskal also testified to the training of dogs to detect human remains. Dr. Stejskal had
been involved in such training for 10 years, but she was not involved in the training of the dogs
used in this case. According to Dr. Stejskal, training a detector dog consists of repeatedly
exposing the dog to the source of a particular odor and then rewarding the dog each time it
demonstrates interest in that odor. The dog is then trained to perform an “alert” that connects
the discovery of the odor to a behavior that is rewarded. Specifically, human-remains-detector
dogs are trained by exposing them to the scent of human remains in different stages of
decomposition and in different environments, creating a “library” of recognizable scents.
Environmental conditions affect the chemicals and odors that are produced. The dogs also are
exposed to nonhuman remains to differentiate the chemical profiles of their odors.
¶ 21 Dr. Stejskal testified that many different organizations use human-remains-detector dogs,
sometimes referred to as Scientific Working Group Dogs (SWGDOGs). The FBI uses them as
“victim recovery dogs,” and the U.S. military uses “human remains recovery dogs” to find
mass graves and missing service members. The Netherlands and the United Kingdom also
have used dogs in their searches for human remains. The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) has mostly used rescue dogs but has also used human-remains-detector dogs,
such as after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks in New York City and Washington, D.C.,
and after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. Now FEMA certifies human-remains-detector
dogs throughout the country.
¶ 22 Dr. Stejskal testified that dogs can be trained to detect many types of substances, including
human remains, explosives, and narcotics, although actual human remains are not used in the
training. For example, the Department of Homeland Security uses dogs to detect agricultural
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products, such as meats, vegetables, and plants. Also, the Department of Customs and Border
Patrol uses dogs trained to detect narcotics and explosives.
¶ 23 On very limited cross-examination, the defense questioned Dr. Stejskal about the chemical
and nonchemical differences between the remains of humans and animals.
¶ 24 Dr. Stejskal opined that the field of training and deploying human remains detector dogs is
widely accepted in the scientific community. She did not testify about whether a dog could
alert on a location 17 years after it was alleged to have had contact with human remains.
¶ 25 Under Frye, the trial court deemed admissible the evidence of the three canine alerts on the
rug and the area where it was found. The court found that the human-remains-detector-dog
evidence constituted science that was not novel and was generally accepted within the
scientific community.
¶ 26 B. Trial
¶ 27 1. July 1990
¶ 28 The trial commenced on October 28, 2013. Maribel Montano, the daughter of defendant
and Guadalupe, testified that her mother disappeared in July 1990. At the time, Maribel was 10
years old and lived with her parents in Aurora. Maribel testified that her parents argued “very
often” and that defendant often started the arguments, accusing Guadalupe of wearing clothes
that were too revealing and riding to work with a male coworker. Maribel had a closer
relationship with defendant than with Guadalupe, who worked a lot and was “more distant.”
¶ 29 Maribel described the last time she saw her mother. One early afternoon in July 1990,
defendant and Maribel prepared to drive to the Aurora home of her aunt, Maria Montalvo, and
her husband. Maribel told Guadalupe goodbye and remembered seeing her light a cigarette.
Defendant dropped off Maribel at the Montalvo home and returned the next day, driving
Guadalupe’s gray Firebird, which defendant did not usually drive. When Maribel entered the
car, defendant said that Guadalupe had left with another man.
¶ 30 Upon returning home, Maribel noticed a mess in her mother’s room. The bed had not been
made, and clothes and Guadalupe’s open purse were on the floor. Maribel did not look inside
the purse, but she noticed that Guadalupe’s wallet was open with a driver’s license and social
security card inside. Maribel also saw Guadalupe’s jewelry on the vanity, including rings that
she never took off.
¶ 31 Maribel described an area rug in the living room of her home. The rug was woven with a
design consisting of squares on the border and palm trees. At some point after the
disappearance, Maribel noticed that the rug was missing, and she did not see it again until 2008
when a detective showed it to her. The State presented a rug as an exhibit, and Maribel
identified it as the rug from her living room, though she could not recall whether it was in the
house on the day that Guadalupe disappeared. Maribel moved out 9 or 10 months after
Guadalupe disappeared, and the rug was not in the home at that time.
¶ 32 Narcisa Montano, defendant’s older sister, testified to a visit from defendant in July 1990.
At the time, Narcisa had a good relationship with Guadalupe but defendant had not visited her
or her children for six years. One day, defendant came to her house. Defendant seemed
“nervous and strange, as if he were drunk or something.” Defendant told Narcisa to go to his
house with him. Narcisa agreed because she saw that defendant had a gun in his waistband or
pocket. Defendant displayed the gun, and Narcisa felt threatened. As defendant drove, he told
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Narcisa that “he had sent [Guadalupe] to another world” and that “he had already sent the
snake to another world, to hell.” Narcisa asked why, and defendant responded that he “sent her
to hell” for cheating on him.
¶ 33 When Narcisa and defendant arrived at defendant’s house, he said that she needed to go
with him to the horse farm on Hobson Road, where their brother, Juan Montano, and his son,
Roberto Montano, lived and worked. If she did not go, defendant threatened, she would “be in
the ground just like [Guadalupe].”
¶ 34 Narcisa walked into the house and saw Guadalupe’s body sitting against the wall at the
entry to the bathroom. Guadalupe, who was wearing a nightgown and socks, “was there sitting
down, leaning against the wall, and she had a piece of rope on her neck.” Defendant told
Narcisa that he had strangled Guadalupe.
¶ 35 Soon thereafter, Narcisa’s children arrived at the house but stayed outside, and defendant
directed Narcisa to tell them to leave. The children left and defendant “grabbed the body and he
put it in a little rug.” Narcisa was too scared at the time to remember any details about the rug,
other than that it had a design.
¶ 36 Narcisa acknowledged that her testimony before the grand jury was dissimilar in certain
respects. She previously testified that, when she went to defendant’s home and saw
Guadalupe’s body, it was already rolled up in a rug. Because she was nervous, she did not
mention during her grand jury testimony that she saw Guadalupe’s entire body. Narcisa now
testified that her trial testimony was the truth and that she saw defendant place Guadalupe’s
body in the rug.
¶ 37 Narcisa testified that, after defendant rolled Guadalupe’s body into the rug, he put the body
into the rear of his truck. Defendant and Narcisa rode to the horse farm, looking for Juan.
Roberto’s wife, Maria Summaria, answered the door and said that Juan was at work. Narcisa
went inside with Maria, and defendant left. Later that night, defendant returned and told
Narcisa that they could leave. Defendant told her not to tell anyone what she had seen or “he
would send me and my children to hell.” Narcisa identified two exhibits: one was the rug that
defendant used to transport Guadalupe’s body, and the other was a rope that looked like the
one on Guadalupe. The rug was the same one identified by Maribel.
¶ 38 On cross-examination, Narcisa acknowledged that she did not contact the police after
seeing Guadalupe’s body, even when she learned of their investigation. Narcisa was scared of
defendant’s threats. Narcisa told the police her story only after they said that other family
members had confessed their involvement in Guadalupe’s disappearance.
¶ 39 On November 14, 2007, Narcisa told Detective Guillermo Trujillo that she had seen a
bundle on the floor with feet sticking out and that she never saw a face, but at trial she testified
that that was a mistake she had made because she was nervous when speaking with the officer.
¶ 40 In her grand jury testimony on May 27, 2008, Narcisa testified that defendant had covered
Guadalupe’s body so her feet, but not her face, were visible. At trial, Narcisa did not recall her
grand jury testimony, because “it was so long ago,” but she explained that she had meant to say
that Guadalupe’s feet were visible when defendant placed her in the truck and that she saw
Guadalupe’s entire body.
¶ 41 Maria testified that in the summer of 1990 she and Roberto were living with their children
on the horse farm. Maria recalled a Sunday in July 1990 when defendant and Narcisa came to
their house. Maria was pregnant at the time, and Narcisa recently had given her a baby shower.
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Maria regarded Narcisa as a mother to her. Narcisa usually greeted Maria with a hug and kiss,
but that day Narcisa was quiet and cold. Maria asked Narcisa if she was feeling well or if she
wanted to go inside to watch television and have a glass of water. Narcisa agreed and went
inside with Maria. Defendant did not go inside, but otherwise, Maria did not know where he
went. Maria and Narcisa watched television for a few hours. Late at night, defendant returned,
and he left with Narcisa.
¶ 42 Maria remembered the visit because, although Narcisa and defendant often visited her
separately, it was unusual for them to come to the house together. It was also unusual for
defendant to visit without calling or making plans in advance. While Narcisa was in the house,
Roberto came in a couple of times and spoke with them briefly before returning to work in the
barn. Narcisa told Maria that she was not feeling well, which was uncharacteristic of her.
¶ 43 Roberto testified that his father, Juan, died in 2009. In the first half of 1990, Roberto did
not see Guadalupe very often, though Maria would occasionally babysit Maribel. Roberto,
Juan, and Roberto’s brother, Arturo Montano, all worked on the horse farm.
¶ 44 Roberto recalled that, on a Sunday in July 1990, defendant and Narcisa visited the farm,
riding in defendant’s truck. Roberto remembered thinking that it was unusual to see Narcisa
and defendant together, because he believed that they did not have a good relationship.
¶ 45 Narcisa and Maria went inside the house, and defendant told Roberto that he needed to
speak to Juan. Defendant was very serious and “a little demanding.” Defendant and Roberto
rode in defendant’s truck to a health club where Juan was working. Roberto did not pay
attention to whether anything was in the rear of the truck. Defendant and Roberto picked up
Juan, but Roberto did not remember where Juan sat. Defendant was “talking a little trash”
about Guadalupe. The three men returned to the farm, and Roberto went back to work. He did
not know where Juan and defendant went, and he did not see defendant again that night.
¶ 46 About a week later, Juan and Roberto were speaking inside the barn on the horse farm.1
Juan appeared sad and said that he would show Roberto where he and defendant had buried
Guadalupe’s body. Juan showed Roberto an area west of the barn. A week or two later,
Roberto asked defendant about Guadalupe. Roberto remembered asking defendant “why did
you kill her?” Defendant told Roberto that Guadalupe had been cheating on him, and defendant
began crying. A few months later, defendant approached Roberto about renting a wood chipper
“to get rid of the body,” saying that if “there is no body, it’s no proof that [defendant] killed
her.”
¶ 47 Six to 10 months later, Roberto called defendant and told him to stay away from his family,
and defendant said that he would. A year or 15 months later, defendant told Roberto that he
needed his help to dig out the body. Roberto declined. Defendant was “kind of mad” and said
that Roberto was “already involved, your father is involved, everybody is involved.”
Defendant said that he would get Arturo to help him. Roberto told Arturo to leave the house
because defendant was looking for him.
¶ 48 Arturo testified that, in 1990, he lived and worked at the horse farm and also worked at
Unisys, where Guadalupe worked too. At some point, Arturo stopped seeing Guadalupe at
Unisys. In 1991 or 1992, Arturo went to defendant’s home because he heard that defendant
1
At this point in the trial, the court instructed the jury to consider anything said by Juan to Roberto
not for the truth of the matter asserted but only for the limited purpose of the effect it had on the acts of
Roberto.
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was looking for him. The two drank for a while before defendant led Arturo to the garage,
where defendant gave Arturo a plastic bag that defendant said contained a head and hands.
Defendant told Arturo to put the bag in Arturo’s car. Arturo noticed that the bag “was a little bit
heavy,” but he did not look inside. Arturo was very afraid, so he placed the bag in the car and
drove while defendant gave directions. They stopped in an area near the intersection of
Interstate 88 and Route 59, where defendant ordered Arturo to throw the bag toward the
highway. Arturo threw the bag “kind of hard,” before he and defendant returned to the car. On
the way back to defendant’s house, defendant told Arturo that he had killed Guadalupe because
she had been unfaithful to him and that Arturo would not get into trouble as long as he did not
say anything.
¶ 49 On cross-examination, Arturo could not recall in what year or what time of year the
incident occurred. He did not remember the color of the plastic bag or testifying in May 2008
that the bag was white and weighed only about five pounds. Arturo admitted that he was
interviewed by the police in 1994 and 2007 but did not disclose the bag-throwing incident until
January 2008, because he was afraid of going to jail. In 2008, Arturo led the police to the area
where he threw the bag, but they could not find it.
¶ 50 2. 1994 Investigation
¶ 51 Aurora police officer Gregory Anderson testified that, on April 7, 1994, he, Donald
Fehrenbacher, who was a scientist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and other
investigators went to the horse farm to search for Guadalupe’s body. The group dug in two
areas and recovered core samples from other areas to determine whether soil had been
disturbed.
¶ 52 At the site, they found a carpet or rug buried less than one foot underground. Officer
Anderson recalled that the rug had a “rough feel” and contained a very specific earth-tone
design. Because there was no indication that the rug had been part of a crime, Officer Anderson
returned it to where it was found. He thought that it was part of a burn pile. The investigators
did not recover anything else of evidentiary value during the dig.
¶ 53 Officer Anderson identified the rug in court as the one recovered from the horse farm in
1994. He acknowledged that no swabs or photographs were taken or tests done at the time.
Officer Anderson admitted that his report contained no specific details about the rug, such as
size, color, or other description.
¶ 54 Maribel testified on cross-examination that, on April 12, 1994, she went to the Aurora
police station and spoke with Paul Nelson, who told her that officers were investigating
Guadalupe’s death. Maribel told Nelson that, as far as she knew, Guadalupe had gone to
Mexico with her boyfriend. Maribel testified that she could not confirm whether Guadalupe
had a boyfriend, although when she went to dinner with her mother, a male friend would often
be there. Initially, Maribel could not recall whether she told Nelson anything about the state of
her mother’s room on the day she disappeared, but she later testified that she told him that
Guadalupe’s clothes were strewn on the floor and her jewelry was present.
¶ 55 3. 2007 Investigation
¶ 56 Maribel testified that, on March 4, 2007, she went to see defendant and asked him what had
happened to Guadalupe. Maribel told defendant that she did not believe that her mother left her
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because Maribel was her only daughter. Defendant said that she could not handle the truth, and
Maribel responded that she would not visit him or maintain a relationship if he did not say what
happened. Defendant told Maribel that “there could be a body.” Maribel told defendant that
she wanted a proper burial for Guadalupe, and he responded that, if Maribel would let him see
his grandchildren, he might tell her more. Their conversation was interrupted, and they never
finished discussing the issue.
¶ 57 On cross-examination, Maribel acknowledged that, when she asked defendant about
Guadalupe, he got upset. Maribel did not accept defendant’s initial claim that he did not know
what happened to Guadalupe, so she continued to ask him about the disappearance. Defendant
told Maribel that Guadalupe had gone to Mexico, and Maribel later found a copy of an airline
ticket in the house.
¶ 58 Roberto testified on cross-examination that, in November 2007, he met with Aurora police
detectives at the horse farm. The police were looking for Guadalupe’s body, and Roberto
showed them the area that Juan had disclosed. Roberto acknowledged that, on May 27, 2008,
he testified that the reason for picking up Juan at the health club was that Juan’s shift was over.
Roberto admitted that he did not tell the police about the conversation in which he asked
defendant why he killed Guadalupe.
¶ 59 Roberto first spoke with the police when they asked him to come to the station in
November 2007. Roberto did not remember whether the police asked him to return on
December 3, 2007, because they thought that he did not disclose his full involvement in the
disappearance. On that date, the Kane County State’s Attorney’s office offered and Roberto
accepted immunity from prosecution based on anything he told them. Roberto provided
information to the police only after signing the immunity agreement.
¶ 60 Aurora police officer Matthew Thomas testified that he was assigned to reopen the
investigation and that on November 14, 2007, he and Detective Trujillo met with Roberto at
the horse farm. As a result of the conversation, they coordinated a search of the farm with the
FBI on December 18, 2007. Officer Thomas identified the rug in court as the one they
recovered from the farm on that date. The investigators searched about six sections of the farm,
and Officer Thomas identified in court a bag of items they recovered, including a piece of red
twine that was excavated about 3½ feet below the rug. The officers returned the rug to the
property and placed it in an open area away from the excavation site. The next day, the
investigators brought human-remains-detector dogs and their handler, Ellen Ponall, to the farm
to ensure that they had not missed anything. Defendant renewed his objection to the testimony
regarding the dogs, and the objection was overruled.
¶ 61 Detective Trujillo gave testimony similar to Officer Thomas’s testimony about the
excavation on December 18, 2007. Detective Trujillo testified that he contacted Maribel and
asked whether she remembered anything specific about the rug and that she described its
appearance. Officer Thomas and Detective Trujillo showed Maribel and Narcisa the rug. On
June 25, 2008, Officer Thomas and Detective Trujillo served defendant with an arrest warrant,
and he responded, “this does not interest me.”
¶ 62 At trial, Dr. Stejskal reiterated her testimony from the Frye hearing, including her
testimony about working with Ponall since 2002. She additionally stated that, hypothetically, if
a body were placed in a rolled carpet and buried in the ground within a couple of hours of
death, under certain environmental conditions, liquid could transfer from the body to the
carpet. Odors caused by decomposition are important for dogs and there has been considerable
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research to determine what dogs actually smell. She opined that the chemical profile of an odor
might change over time but that, under certain environmental conditions, residue from
liquefaction can be held for a long time and be available for a dog to detect, even if the item had
been buried underground.
¶ 63 On cross-examination, Dr. Stejskal testified that time and the environment are two factors
affecting decomposition odor. She acknowledged that, although it would be unusual, an odor
could disappear completely based on environmental factors. Dr. Stejskal also conceded that,
although there are multiple certifying bodies, no national standard exists for certifying
human-remains-detector dogs.
¶ 64 Ponall testified that she was the president and head trainer of Midwest K-9, an organization
established to assist law enforcement and fire fighting personnel in search and rescue. Ponall
testified at length about her qualifications and 40 years’ experience in training dogs to track
and trail humans and animals and search for human remains. Defendant renewed his objection
to the admission of the human-remains-detector-dog evidence. The court overruled the
objection and admitted her testimony as an expert in the field of human-remains-detector-dog
training and deployment.
¶ 65 Ponall testified that, on December 19, 2007, she and her team of three handlers and three
German Shepherds went to the farm. The team had been together for four years and had
undergone about 1600 hours of training during that time. The three handlers and their
corresponding dogs went over the area separately, so each was unaware of whether the others
alerted. Ponall explained that she prefers using multiple handlers and dogs to cross-check the
results. All three dogs gave a “trained alert” to the odor of human remains in the excavation
area where the rug was recovered. The rug was placed on the ground away from the excavation
site, and each alerted to the rug, independent of the others.
¶ 66 4. Defendant’s Case
¶ 67 Defendant presented the testimony of several police officers and investigators to establish
that no DNA or other testing was done on the rug and that no human remains or other evidence
of a crime was recovered from the horse farm. Guadalupe’s body was never found.
¶ 68 5. Judgment
¶ 69 On October 30, 2013, the jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder, and the trial
court sentenced him to natural life imprisonment on February 10, 2014. Defendant’s motion to
reconsider his sentence was denied, and this timely appeal followed.
¶ 70 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 71 A. Human-Remains-Detector Dogs
¶ 72 More than 17 years after Guadalupe’s disappearance, three human-remains-detector dogs
alerted on a rug found about one foot underground and on the area of the excavation site. Other
than each dog corroborating the others’ alerts, the evidence was not corroborated by scientific
confirmation of the presence of any human blood or remains on the rug or in that location.
Narcisa testified that she saw the victim wrapped in the rug and that she rode with defendant as
he transported the victim to the horse farm, but there was no eyewitness testimony that the
victim’s body was ever at the excavation site where the dogs alerted.
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¶ 73 Defendant’s sole contention on appeal is that he is entitled to a new trial because the trial
court erred in admitting evidence of the dogs’ alerts. Defendant argues that Dr. Stejskal’s
expert testimony about the scientific basis for using human-remains-detector dogs in general,
and Ponall’s testimony regarding the three dogs deployed in this case, lacked probative value
and were especially prejudicial because Guadalupe’s remains were never recovered.
¶ 74 “Relevant evidence” is defined under our rules of evidence as “evidence having any
tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the
action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Ill. R. Evid. 401
(eff. Jan. 1, 2011); see also People v. Harvey, 211 Ill. 2d 368, 392 (2004). The trial court has
discretion to determine whether evidence is relevant and admissible, and therefore an
evidentiary ruling will not be overturned unless it is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable.
People v. Hanson, 238 Ill. 2d 74, 101 (2010). A court may exercise its discretion and exclude
evidence, even if it is relevant, if the danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighs its
probative value. Hanson, 238 Ill. 2d at 102.
¶ 75 Under Frye, “scientific evidence is admissible at trial only if the methodology or scientific
principle upon which the opinion is based is ‘sufficiently established to have gained general
acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs.’ ” In re Commitment of Simons, 213 Ill.
2d 523, 529-30 (2004) (quoting Frye, 293 F. at 1014). An expert’s opinion must be based upon
a scientific methodology that is reasonably relied upon by experts in the relevant field, but the
methodology need not be accepted by all or even most experts in that particular field. Simons,
213 Ill. 2d at 530. A Frye hearing is necessary only “if the scientific principle, technique or test
offered by the expert to support his or her conclusion is ‘new’ or ‘novel.’ ” People v. McKown,
236 Ill. 2d 278, 282-83 (2010) (McKown II). A scientific methodology is considered “new” or
“novel” only if it is “original or striking” or fails to resemble something previously known or
used. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Simons, 213 Ill. 2d at 530. The Frye standard has
been codified by the Illinois Rules of Evidence: “Where an expert witness testifies to an
opinion based on a new or novel scientific methodology or principle, the proponent of the
opinion has the burden of showing the methodology or scientific principle on which the
opinion is based is sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular
field in which it belongs.” Ill. R. Evid. 702 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 76 A dual standard of review applies to the trial court’s admission of expert scientific
testimony. Simons, 213 Ill. 2d at 530. Whether an expert scientific witness is qualified to testify
in a subject area and whether the proffered testimony is relevant to the case are questions left to
the sound discretion of the trial court, but whether the proffered evidence is sound or novel is
subject to de novo review. Simons, 213 Ill. 2d at 530-31. An abuse of discretion occurs only
where the trial court’s decision is “arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable to the degree that no
reasonable person would agree with it.” People v. Rivera, 2013 IL 112467, ¶ 37.
¶ 77 1. Cruz
¶ 78 Defendant argues that the human-remains-detector-dog evidence was inadmissible per se
under Cruz, where our supreme court reiterated the bright-line rule that “bloodhound evidence
is inadmissible to establish any factual proposition in a criminal proceeding in Illinois.” Cruz,
162 Ill. 2d at 369-70; see also People v. Pfanschmidt, 262 Ill. 411, 461 (1914) (“testimony as to
the trailing of either a man or an animal by a blood-hound should never be admitted in
evidence in any case”).
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¶ 79 In Cruz, a lieutenant of the Lake County sheriff’s department, the trainer of the canine unit,
testified about the actions of two of his bloodhounds during the police investigation conducted
around the victim’s home. According to the officer, his dogs trailed two different paths when
directed to scent from the victim’s bedclothes, a footprint on the front door, and a shoe
impression in a tire mark in the grass. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 329.
¶ 80 The officer testified regarding his extensive background as well as the background,
training, and typical trailing behavior of two of his bloodhounds. According to the officer, his
two dogs possessed a success rate of “85 percent” based on the number of their “finds.” He
conceded that his dogs were “man-trailers,” which follow the “affluency of a scent,” as
opposed to “man-trackers,” which go from footprint to footprint locating the actual path taken
by an individual. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 367.
¶ 81 The officer testified that his dogs “scented” from the victim’s bedclothes and went from the
front stoop of her home to a location on the front lawn near the curb and sat down. He also
testified that one of his dogs then “scented” from the tire impression in the front lawn, near
where the dogs sat down, and went back to the front stoop by a slightly different path. He
further related that he allowed the same dog to “scent” from the footprint on the front door and
that the dog took the same path as that taken from the front stoop. Finally, he testified that
neither of the dogs indicated that a scent ended in the driveway. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 367.
¶ 82 Under cross-examination, the officer allowed that weather conditions such as wind, snow,
and dryness can affect a dog’s ability to trail. Significantly, he could not say that the first path
taken by the dogs was the path taken by the victim when she was abducted or was the exact
path that an individual had walked. He could not say that the trail had anything to do with her
disappearance or her abduction. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 367. He also acknowledged that there was
no relationship between the end of the dogs’ first path and the depression in the lawn. Cruz,
162 Ill. 2d at 367-68. The officer could say only that his dog sniffed the depression and then
took a slightly different path back to the front door. He offered no evidence about when the
depression was made. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 368.
¶ 83 The State relied on the bloodhound evidence to argue that Cruz’s codefendant did not act
alone and that more than one path was taken by the culprits to and from the home. The
prosecutor stated in closing that “ ‘[w]e have four different shoe prints found at the scene of the
house. We have the bloodhounds following different trails around the house.’ ” (Emphasis in
original.) Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 368.
¶ 84 On appeal, Cruz challenged the admission of the bloodhound evidence, arguing that it was
either inadmissible per se or inadmissible in his case and was also prejudicially distorted by the
State in closing argument. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 367. The Cruz court restated the concerns about
canine odor detection that were previously expressed in Pfanschmidt:
“ ‘Neither court nor jury can have any means of knowing why the dog does this thing or
another, in following in one direction instead of another; that must be left to his instinct
without knowing upon what it is based. The information obtainable on this subject,
scientific, legal or otherwise, is not of such a character as to furnish any satisfactory
basis or reason for the admission of this class of evidence. *** [T]he “conclusions of
the blood-hound are generally too unreliable to be accepted as evidence in either civil
or criminal cases.” ’ ” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 368-69 (quoting Pfanschmidt, 262 Ill. at 462,
quoting Brott v. State, 97 N.W. 593, 594 (Neb. 1903)).
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¶ 85 The Cruz court rejected the State’s distinction between the trailing of animals and the
trailing of humans. The court observed that, when presented with the opportunity to review the
admission of testimony referring to bloodhounds after Pfanschmidt, the court had “flatly
reiterated that ‘[t]he law is *** as laid down in [Pfanschmidt], that testimony of the trailing of
either man or animal by a bloodhound should never be admitted in evidence in any case.’ ”
Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 369 (quoting People v. Wolf, 334 Ill. 218, 229 (1929)). The court broadly
held that “we continue to adhere to the principle that bloodhound evidence is inadmissible to
establish any factual proposition in a criminal proceeding in Illinois” and that “we remain
unpersuaded that this class of evidence is reliable.” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 369-70.
¶ 86 In Cruz, the State used the man-trailing-bloodhound evidence for identification purposes to
establish that more than one culprit was at the victim’s home. In this case, the State introduced
the human-remains-detector-dog evidence to show the victim’s presence on the rug and at the
excavation site. The issue is whether the tracing of the path of a person on foot is different from
the detection of human remains at a specific location when much of the underlying science is
the same in that each involves the anatomy and physiology of canine olfaction systems and the
training and deployment of odor detector dogs. Perhaps there is a scientific distinction to be
drawn at a future Frye hearing, but no evidence of a difference has been presented in this case.
¶ 87 The Cruz court recognized that “the real danger posed by admitting bloodhound evidence
lies not simply in its fallibility, but in its potential to prejudice.” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 370. “ ‘ “It
is well known that the exercise of a mysterious power not possessed by human beings begets in
the minds of many people a superstitious awe ***. The very name by which the animal is
called has a direct tendency to enhance the impressiveness of the performance ***.” ’ ” Cruz,
162 Ill. 2d at 370 (quoting Pfanschmidt, 262 Ill. at 458, quoting Pedigo v. Commonwealth, 44
S.W. 143, 145-46 (Ky. 1898)). Likening bloodhound evidence to hypnotically refreshed
testimony and polygraph evidence, the court stated that “such evidence is generally lacking in
probative value when balanced against the dangers of unfair prejudice.” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at
370.
¶ 88 The Cruz court announced a per se prohibition of bloodhound evidence in criminal
proceedings and declined to adopt an individualized approach used in several foreign
jurisdictions, which the State advocates here. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 371. The court noted that an
overwhelming number of foreign cases where bloodhound evidence was admitted concern its
use for identification of the guilty party. Generally speaking, the proper foundational
requirements, according to those authorities, refer both to the qualifications of the dog and to
the circumstances of the trailing. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 371. “[A] dog might be a pure-bred,
experienced, reliable ‘man-trailer’ handled by a professional, thereby meeting certain of the
foundational requirements, but if the circumstances of the dog’s trailing failed to show that
what it did was connected to the case, the evidence would be irrelevant and therefore
inadmissible. In this manner, the individualized approach, by relying on foundational
requirements, assures exclusion of irrelevant evidence.” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 371-72.
¶ 89 The foreign jurisdictions employing the individualized approach require proof that the dog
was put on the trail at a place and time where, other evidence shows, the guilty party had been
and had made the trail. This requirement ensures that the dog’s subsequent identification of a
person has some corroborated basis, and without the corroboration the dog’s identification
does not establish that the person had any connection to the crime. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 371.
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¶ 90 The Cruz court observed that the circumstances of the bloodhound trailing in that case had
failed to show any connection with the victim’s abduction, and it stated, in dicta, that “aside
from any per se rule against admission of this evidence, most of the bloodhound evidence here
was lacking in relevancy and should not have been admitted.” Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 372-73.
¶ 91 In this case, Dr. Stejskal gave extensive scientific expert testimony to establish that dogs
have olfactory systems that are far superior to those of humans and that dogs can be trained and
deployed to detect odors that cannot be detected by humans. The rug was independently known
to be connected to the case through its identification by various witnesses and the location
where it was recovered. However, even in light of a “scent linkage” to items independently
known to be connected to the case, which the State arguably established here, the Cruz court
expressly rejected the individualized approach in favor of a per se rule against what arguably
could be classified as odor-detector-dog evidence.
¶ 92 2. Lerma
¶ 93 Six years after Cruz was decided, our supreme court observed that “[s]cience is not static,
and methods must exist for reexamining the validity of scientific tests when new information is
acquired.” People v. Basler, 193 Ill. 2d 545, 550 (2000). Recently, the court reinforced the
practice of reexamining the admissibility of scientific evidence in criminal prosecutions. On
appeal from a murder conviction, the court reviewed the exclusion of expert testimony that was
offered to show the unreliability of eyewitness identifications. People v. Lerma, 2016 IL
118496, ¶ 24. Noting that eyewitness testimony historically had been viewed as a matter of
common knowledge for which expert testimony was inappropriate, the court observed that 25
years of relevant research had resulted in “a dramatic shift in the legal landscape, as expert
testimony concerning the reliability of eyewitness testimony has moved from novel and
uncertain to settled and widely accepted.” Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶¶ 23-24. The court noted
that “we not only have seen that eyewitness identifications are not always as reliable as they
appear, but we also have learned, from a scientific standpoint, why this is often the case.
Accordingly, whereas [People v. Enis, 139 Ill. 2d 264 (1990),] allowed for but expressed
caution toward the developing research concerning eyewitness identifications, today we are
able to recognize that such research is well settled, well supported, and in appropriate cases a
perfectly proper subject for expert testimony.” Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶ 24. The court held
that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the defense request to allow expert
testimony, because “the State’s case against defendant hangs 100% on the reliability of its
eyewitness identifications.” Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶¶ 25-26.
¶ 94 Thus, after restating in Cruz its adherence to a per se prohibition against “bloodhound
evidence” in all criminal proceedings, the supreme court acknowledged in Lerma that science
is not static and endorsed the reexamination of scientific tests when new information is
acquired. Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶¶ 24-26. Lerma thus appears to endorse the trial court’s
reexamination of the science that underlies odor-detector-dog evidence. However, Lerma’s
endorsement of such reexamination was made in the context of Enis, which merely had
cautioned against admitting eyewitness identification expert testimony, without declaring a
per se rule against it.
¶ 95 The Cruz court unambiguously announced a broad and clear prohibition of “bloodhound
evidence” presented to prove any factual proposition in a criminal proceeding, and the doctrine
of stare decisis weighs in favor of adhering to that prohibition in this case if Cruz is read as
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prohibiting all odor-detector-dog evidence. See Gillen v. State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co., 215 Ill. 2d 381, 392 n.2 (2005) (stare decisis requires courts to follow the
decisions of higher courts but does not bind courts to follow decisions of equal or inferior
courts). However, the bloodhound evidence in Cruz was not subjected to a Frye hearing, unlike
here, where the State sought admission of the human-remains-detector-dog evidence and
submitted evidence supporting the underlying science, as contemplated by Rule 702. Despite
Cruz, the trial court was persuaded by the State’s evidence and deemed it admissible. Hence,
this case presents the situation where the trial court reexamined the validity of detector dog
evidence under the procedure authorized by the supreme court and reached a conclusion
arguably contrary to Cruz.
¶ 96 As illustrated by the evidence presented at the Frye hearing, which we summarize below,
one could argue that the scientific understanding and reliability of odor detection and
identification by canines and their deployment by human handlers have improved since Cruz
was decided. At the very least, the record in this case contains substantial evidence concerning
the scientific understanding and reliability, which was not present in Cruz. These
circumstances potentially provide “good cause” or “compelling reasons” for the supreme court
to revisit Cruz in a way that this court cannot. See People v. Sharpe, 216 Ill. 2d 481, 519 (2005)
(departure from stare decisis must be justified by “good cause” or “compelling reasons”).
¶ 97 3. Frye
¶ 98 The trial court concluded that the State presented sufficient new information regarding
human-remains-detector-dog evidence to warrant a reexamination of the methodology and
ultimately the admission of the expert testimony. The Frye hearing allowed the State to make
an offer of proof to facilitate appellate review.
¶ 99 Dr. Stejskal offered exhaustive testimony about how dogs serve as a tool to locate missing
persons through the science of canine olfaction and forensic taphonomy. Olfaction research
has revealed that chemoreceptors of the olfactory sensory cells in the turbinates detect the
volatile organic compounds that make up odors in the air. The cells send messages to the
olfactory bulb, which relays the information to the brain, where the compounds are recognized
as particular odors.
¶ 100 Dr. Stejskal explained that dogs’ physiology confers a superior sense of smell. For
instance, German Shepherds, like the ones used in this case, have 45 times as many olfactory
sensory cells and inhale five times as much air as humans. In general, a dog’s olfactory bulb is
40 times larger than a human’s.
¶ 101 Further, dogs can be trained to locate human remains because their physiology gives them
the unique ability to distinguish particular scents. Behavioral changes signal the handler that
the dog has encountered something it has been trained to detect, and the dog breathes
differently to concentrate the odor. Also, dogs do not experience olfactory fatigue, unlike
humans.
¶ 102 Dr. Stejskal also gave extensive testimony regarding the stages of human decomposition,
the odor-producing compounds that result, and the training of dogs to detect those odors. Dr.
Stejskal testified about research by different scientific organizations and the use of odor
detector dogs by various government agencies. Dr. Stejskal had been involved in the training
of human-remains-detector dogs for 10 years. The training consists of repeatedly exposing the
dog to the source of a particular odor and then rewarding the dog each time it demonstrates
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interest in that odor. The dog is then trained to perform an “alert” that connects the discovery of
the odor to a behavior that is rewarded. Specifically, human-remains-detector dogs are trained
by exposing them to the scent of human remains in different stages of decomposition and in
different environments, creating a “library” of recognizable scents.
¶ 103 At trial, defendant did not meaningfully challenge Dr. Stejskal’s qualifications, arguing
only that the State had not “sufficiently established through her testimony her expertise in the
olfactory system and forensic taphonomy.” On appeal, defendant abandons any claim that Dr.
Stejskal was unqualified. Rather, he cites certain literature providing that a
human-remains-detector-dog alert can be a helpful investigative tool but should not be
considered admissible as evidence at a criminal trial when it has not been corroborated by
scientific verification of the presence of human remains. Lars Oesterhelweg et al., Cadaver
Dogs—A Study on Detection of Contaminated Carpet Squares, 174 Forensic Sci. Int’l 35, 38
(2008).
¶ 104 In contrast, courts in other jurisdictions have credited testimony and scientific literature to
conclude that human-remains-detector-dog evidence is reliable and admissible under their
versions of Rule 702. In People v. Lane, 862 N.W.2d 446, 457 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004), the court
concluded that “cadaver dog evidence is sufficiently reliable under Daubert [v. Merrell Dow
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993),] and Gilbert [v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., 685
N.W.2d 391 (Mich. 2004),] if the proponent of the evidence establishes the foundation that (1)
the handler was qualified to use the dog, (2) the dog was trained and accurate in identifying
human remains, (3) circumstantial evidence corroborates the dog’s identification, and (4) the
evidence was not so stale or contaminated as to make it beyond the dog’s competency to
identify it.” In Clark v. State, 781 A.2d 913, 936 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2001), the court affirmed
the admission of such evidence under Frye based on an expert’s testimony that “the use of
cadaver dogs in trying to determine the existence, or the one-time existence, of human remains
at a particular location is a widely accepted practice in the fields of forensic anthropology and
pathology.” In Trejos v. State, 243 S.W.3d 30, 48-56 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007), the court affirmed
the admission of the evidence because its probative value outweighed its prejudicial effect,
citing the qualifications of the trainers and the dogs and the methodology of the deployment.
See also People v. Lifrieri, 646 N.Y.S.2d 172 (App. Div. 1996) (certified dog handler testified
to the dog’s training, reliability, and certification as a so-called “cadaver dog”).
¶ 105 Emphasizing the long investigative history of this case, defendant argues that Dr.
Stejskal’s opinions were incomplete because she did not testify about whether a dog could alert
on a location 17 years after it was alleged to have had contact with human remains. However,
this criticism goes only to the weight to be given to Dr. Stejskal’s testimony, where she
testified to how time and environmental conditions could affect decomposition odor, not
whether the science of the anatomy and physiology of canine olfaction systems, forensic
taphonomy, and the training and deployment of human-remains-detector dogs have gained
general acceptance.
¶ 106 While not rejecting the general reliability of human-remains-detector-dog evidence, the
First Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v. Burgos-Montes, 786 F.3d 92, 116 (1st Cir.
2015), held that the State had failed to lay a sufficient foundation for the evidence in that case:
“The prosecution witnesses offered virtually no evidence that the scientific reliability
of such a use had been established, or that their investigation protocols were generally
accepted for such a use. Burgos’ experts, in turn, provided easy-to-follow testimony
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explaining numerous basic defects in the use of the dogs for the purpose for which they
were used here. They also offered much common sense, noting, for example, that the
officer using the dog on a leash that alerted was the officer who had previously
identified the suspected spot.” Burgos-Montes, 786 F.3d at 116.
This case is distinguishable, where Dr. Stejskal testified at length regarding the underlying
science, and Ponall gave testimony that the deployment yielded reliable results. One could
argue that the evidence presented at the Frye hearing showed that the science was sufficiently
established to have gained general acceptance in the field and that the evidence sufficiently
linked the victim’s body to the rug and the excavation site.
¶ 107 4. Moore and Holmes
¶ 108 The State argues that the human-remains-detector-dog evidence in this case is similar to
the narcotics-detector-dog evidence deemed admissible in People v. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d
410 (1998). In that case, we held that the trial court did not err in admitting evidence that a drug
sniffing dog alerted police to Moore’s car even though no drugs were subsequently found in
the car. Through various witnesses, the State presented testimony that Moore operated a “crack
house,” which he barricaded to bar entry by his customers and the police. Moore, 294 Ill. App.
3d at 413. Moore hired a 16-year-old, drove him to the residence in his red Camaro, and gave
him a “500 pack” of crack cocaine with basic instructions on how to sell the drugs. Moore, 294
Ill. App. 3d at 413. On that day, two informants gave the police detailed information about the
operation and said that the operator drove a red Camaro or Firebird with a black bra. A
controlled buy at the apartment led to a search warrant. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 413.
¶ 109 On several occasions, the officers watching the apartment noticed a red Camaro, registered
to Moore, in front of the building. The officers saw Moore drive up, honk the horn, and hand a
brown paper bag to the young seller. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 413-14.
¶ 110 The police raided the apartment and detained Moore when he tried to drive away. Moore
turned off the car, threw the keys to the floorboard, and exited the car. Meanwhile, the other
officers used a battering ram to execute the search warrant on the apartment, where they found
the young seller alone inside with crack cocaine and cash. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 414.
¶ 111 A narcotics dog was deployed on Moore’s car. The dog alerted to the driver’s door seam
and behind the front passenger seat, but no drugs were found in the car. The handler testified
that the dog might have detected residual odors from narcotics. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 414.
¶ 112 Appealing from his drug conviction, Moore argued that Cruz barred admission of the dog
alert on his car. We drew a distinction between the narcotics dog and the “man-trailer” in Cruz.
Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 416. We observed that the use of trained dogs as a follow-up
investigative technique to partially corroborate information received was “ ‘a useful, entirely
reasonable and permissible procedure.’ ” Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 416 (quoting People v.
Campbell, 67 Ill. 2d 308, 317 (1977)). Holding that the police officers acted reasonably in
using the odor detector dog, we emphasized that the alert was sufficiently corroborated by
witnesses who said that Moore used his car to transport cocaine and by police officers who
observed Moore handing the young seller a paper bag in the car. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at
416.
¶ 113 The State argues that, as in Moore, the dog alerts in this case were corroborated by
defendant’s sister, his nephew, and his daughter. Defendant maintains that such corroboration
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must be scientific evidence of human remains at the scene, not testimony about the events
surrounding the victim’s disappearance.
¶ 114 The dog alert in Moore was corroborated by, inter alia, the seizure of a substance that was
scientifically confirmed to be cocaine. The cocaine in the apartment, not its residual odor in the
car, was the corpus delicti. See People v. Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d 166, 183 (2010) (when proving
each element of a criminal offense beyond a reasonable doubt, the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that (1) a crime occurred, known as the corpus delicti, and (2) the crime was
committed by the defendant).
¶ 115 Here, the victim was never found, and no forensic evidence was collected or tested. Had
the investigation resulted in the discovery of Guadalupe’s remains or even unidentified human
remains, the grounds for admitting the detector-dog evidence might have fit within Moore’s
holding in that the use of the dog was “ ‘a useful, entirely reasonable and permissible
procedure’ ” and follow-up investigative technique to partially corroborate the other
information received. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 416 (quoting Campbell, 67 Ill. 2d at 317).
¶ 116 Similar to Moore, in People v. Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d 737 (2010), the State introduced
evidence that a police dog trainer deployed a dog that alerted to drugs at a point on the path
taken by Holmes, who was running from an officer. The pursuing officer testified that, when
he encountered Holmes, Holmes fled in the opposite direction, falling three times as he was
chased. Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at 739. The second time he fell, Holmes tossed several “shiny
objects” toward an apartment building, but the officer did not see them fall to the ground.
Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at 739. After Holmes was caught, the officer found a clear plastic
baggie containing a green, plant-like material, near the spot where Holmes fell the second time.
Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at 739. After the dog alerted to an area near where Holmes had run,
the trainer saw a second bag of green plant material on top of a grill on a porch, about three feet
from a railing. The officers continued searching the area without the dog and found more
suspected narcotics, and Holmes was charged with possession. Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at
740.
¶ 117 The defense argued that the dog-alert evidence was inadmissible under Cruz, but the trial
court disagreed. The court explained that the evidence was corroborated by the testimony of
the two officers, the drugs were in plain sight, and there was no testimony that the dog alerted
to the scent of Holmes. Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at 740.
¶ 118 On appeal from the conviction, we rejected Holmes’s claim that trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to file a motion in limine to suppress the dog-alert evidence, because
such a motion would have been meritless. We found no error in the trial court’s reasoning that
“(unlike in Cruz) there was ‘no testimony that [the dog] *** picked up the scent specifically of
the defendant.’ Further, there was testimony that the dog was trained in narcotics. This
indicates that the trial court believed that the dog was used to detect drugs rather than a human
scent (the subject of both [People v. Lefler, 294 Ill. App. 3d 305 (1998),] and Cruz).” Holmes,
397 Ill. App. 3d at 745. Thus, Holmes inferred, without any scientific evidence, that drug dogs
are reliable and man-trailing dogs are not.
¶ 119 Moore and Holmes are similar in that each features witnesses who corroborated the
detector-dog evidence, and they are distinguishable from Cruz for a reason not emphasized in
either case: that evidence of the target of the canine sniff was found. In Cruz, the target of the
dog deployment, a live person accused of committing the offense at the scene, was,
understandably, not present. In Moore and Holmes, the dogs alerted to substances that were
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recovered by police and subsequently were scientifically confirmed to be narcotics. No one
suggests that, without the actual drugs, the dog alerts and corroborating eyewitness testimony
would have been sufficient to prove the corpus delicti of the drug offenses.
¶ 120 All odor-detector-dog cases involve the olfactory system, the training of the dogs, and the
interpretation of the alerts. Thus far, the parties have not cited evidence that the science of odor
detection by canines differs depending on the odor. See Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 370 (“we remain
unpersuaded that this class of evidence is reliable” (emphasis added)). In fact, Dr. Stejskal
testified that similar training is used for dogs regardless of whether they are deployed to find
human remains, agricultural products, narcotics, or explosives.
¶ 121 The scientific testimony in this case suggests that the fact that some investigations involve
narcotics and others involve humans or their remains is less relevant than whether the target of
the deployment is discovered. The dog-alert evidence was admissible in Moore and Holmes
without a Frye hearing because it was corroborated by the scientific confirmation of narcotics
at the scene not because the dogs were looking for drugs and not people. The dog-alert
evidence was inadmissible in Cruz because it was not corroborated by physical evidence. The
dog deployment was subjected to a Frye hearing here, and the State attempted to use the odor
of human remains, not the remains themselves, to help prove the corpus delicti of first-degree
murder. People v. Acri, 277 Ill. App. 3d 1030, 1033 (1998) (“Illinois has been very cautious in
its approach to the admission of evidence derived from the use of dogs,” and “[i]n Cruz, the
Illinois Supreme Court stated that this caution is based both on the fallibility of dogs and the
‘superstitious awe’ with which people view dog-sniff evidence”).
¶ 122 B. Harmless Error
¶ 123 The prosecutor did not argue to the jury that the evidence that the human-remains-detector
dogs alerted on the rug and the excavation site was evidence of Guadalupe’s death, but the
admission of the evidence permitted the jury to make the inference. Without deciding whether
the ruling was error, we agree with the State that any potential error was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt because defendant’s guilt was proven by overwhelming evidence.
¶ 124 To establish that any error was harmless, the “State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that the jury verdict would have been the same absent the error.” People v. Thurow, 203 Ill. 2d
352, 363 (2003). When deciding whether an error was harmless, a reviewing court may (1)
focus on the error to determine whether it might have contributed to the conviction, (2)
examine the properly admitted evidence to determine whether it overwhelmingly supports the
conviction, or (3) determine whether the improperly admitted evidence is merely cumulative
or duplicates properly admitted evidence. In re Rolandis G., 232 Ill. 2d 13, 43 (2008).
¶ 125 Defendant contends that the court admitted the evidence of the dogs’ alerts as substantive
evidence that a death occurred and that the decedent was Guadalupe. However, the record
shows that the prosecutor did not mention the human-remains-detector-dog evidence in his
initial closing argument and mentioned it only briefly in rebuttal, in response to defense
counsel’s argument.
¶ 126 In contrast, defense counsel drew attention to it repeatedly. Counsel summarized Dr.
Stejskal’s testimony and argued that it was not probative of how a body’s odor could be
detected after being wrapped in a rug for a short period. Counsel also asserted that Dr. Stejskal
did not explain how environmental factors would affect the residual chemicals over a 17-year
period so the dogs could detect them. Counsel argued that Ponall was biased in favor of her
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dogs, conceded the risk of false positives, and failed to identify exactly how the dogs’ behavior
changed when they alerted.
¶ 127 In rebuttal, the prosecutor responded that Dr. Stejskal’s testimony was valuable because it
educated the jury on the science. The prosecutor argued, “I know that six times I heard Ellen
Ponall say, three times for the excavation site, three times for the rug, the dogs positively
alerted for the smell or odor of human decomposition.”
¶ 128 At no point did the prosecutor argue that the dogs’ alerts were proof that the human
remains they detected were from Guadalupe. The prosecutor’s restraint diminished any
prejudicial effect of the evidence, which the defense drew attention to.
¶ 129 Moreover, the jury heard overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt. On a Sunday in July
1990, defendant strangled Guadalupe in their home with a rope because he believed that she
was having an extramarital affair. Defendant brought his sister, Narcisa, with whom he rarely
associated, to his house, where she watched defendant wrap the victim in a rug and place her in
the back of his truck. The victim had a rope around her neck.
¶ 130 After defendant threatened her not to tell anyone about the murder, Narcisa went with him
to the horse farm, where defendant’s brother and nephew lived and worked. While Narcisa was
inside the house, defendant and Juan buried the victim near a small barn on the property.
Defendant again threatened Narcisa. Maria corroborated defendant and Narcisa’s visit to her
home, noting that it was memorable because defendant and Narcisa did not usually spend time
together and Narcisa appeared ill. Roberto also gave corroborating testimony about the visit,
describing how he rode with defendant to pick up Juan from his job at the health club, while
defendant was “talking trash” about Guadalupe.
¶ 131 About a week after Juan and defendant buried the victim, Juan told Roberto about the
murder and showed him where Guadalupe was buried. After receiving this information,
Roberto confronted defendant about killing Guadalupe, and defendant responded that she had
been cheating on him. Roberto testified that, soon thereafter, defendant asked him about
renting a wood chipper to “get rid of the body.” Months later, defendant asked Roberto to help
dig up the body, but Roberto refused.
¶ 132 In 1991 or 1992, defendant gave Arturo a plastic bag and said that it contained a head and
hands. Defendant and Arturo drove to an area near the intersection of Interstate 88 and Route
59, where Arturo threw the bag toward the highway. On the ride home, defendant confessed to
Arturo that he had killed Guadalupe because she had been unfaithful.
¶ 133 In 1994, while investigating Guadalupe’s disappearance, the police recovered the rug near
the barn, but returned it to the area because they believed that it was part of a junk pile and had
no evidentiary value.
¶ 134 In 2007, Maribel confronted defendant about her mother’s disappearance. Defendant said
that she could not handle the truth and that “there could be a body.” Maribel told defendant that
she wanted a proper burial for Guadalupe, and he responded that, if Maribel let him see his
grandchildren, he might tell her more. The investigation was reopened, and Roberto showed
the police where he was told the victim was buried. The police rediscovered the rug about one
foot underground and found what was described as a rope or piece of twine. Maribel identified
the rug as having been in her living room before the disappearance but not after. Narcisa also
identified the rug as the one defendant used to transport the victim and the twine as being
similar to the one around the victim’s neck. At the time of his arrest, defendant said, “this does
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not interest me.” Furthermore, there was no evidence of any motive for four of defendant’s
family members to fabricate their testimony implicating him in Guadalupe’s murder.
¶ 135 In light of this evidence, we conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury verdict
would have been the same absent the detector dog evidence. See Thurow, 203 Ill. 2d at 363.
The properly admitted evidence overwhelmingly supports the conviction. See Rolandis G.,
232 Ill. 2d at 43.
¶ 136 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 137 The human-remains-detector-dog evidence, without corroborating scientific evidence of
the victim’s presence on the rug or at the excavation site, could be viewed as analogous to
bloodhound trailing evidence, which has been deemed inadmissible per se to show any factual
proposition in a criminal case in Illinois. See Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d at 369-70. However, the trial
court followed the procedure outlined by Rule 702, Lerma, and Frye to reexamine the
scientific reliability of the evidence. The court admitted the evidence upon finding the State’s
expert to be qualified and credible and the science to be generally accepted in its related field.
¶ 138 We need not resolve this conflict, as any potential error in this case was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt. We affirm defendant’s conviction of first-degree murder. As part of our
judgment, we grant the State’s request that defendant be assessed the State’s attorney fee of
$50 under section 4-2002(a) of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/4-2002(a) (West 2014)) for the
cost of this appeal. See People v. Nicholls, 71 Ill. 2d 166, 178 (1978).
¶ 139 Affirmed.
¶ 140 JUSTICE HUTCHINSON, specially concurring.
¶ 141 While I agree with the ultimate outcome in this case, I disagree with the majority’s
criticism of our decisions in People v. Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d 410 (1998), and People v.
Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d 737 (2010). The criticism (see supra ¶¶ 107-21) is entirely
unnecessary. All of us today agree that advances in science, in technology, and in popular
understanding can, over time, render evidence once excluded as inadmissible now admissible
as reliable. See, e.g., People v. Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶¶ 22-28 (eyewitness identification). A
Frye hearing is one such way to ask a court to reexamine prior determinations on the general
acceptance and, ultimately, the admissibility of a particular class of evidence. See, e.g., People
v. McKown, 236 Ill. 2d 278, 303 (2010) (horizontal gaze nystagmus); In re Commitment of
Simons, 213 Ill. 2d 523, 535 (2004) (actuarial risk assessments for sex offenders).
¶ 142 It appears that the majority today is willing to distinguish Cruz on the basis that, unlike in
Cruz, here the State presented extensive evidence at a Frye hearing and at trial concerning
canine olfaction and forensic taphonomy. See supra ¶ 106. But I have to ask: Could not Moore
and Holmes be distinguished in the same way?
¶ 143 “It is well settled that the precedential scope of a decision is limited to the facts before the
court.” People v. Flatt, 82 Ill. 2d 250, 261 (1980). As I see it, Moore and Holmes stand for the
proposition that the prohibition in Cruz was limited to the scenario presented by the facts of
that case—the use of canine tracking or trailing to establish the defendant’s identity—and
could, therefore, be distinguished from dog alerts that did not involve tracking or trailing for
that purpose. See Moore, 294 Ill. App. 3d at 416-17; see also Holmes, 397 Ill. App. 3d at
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744-46. I note that, until today’s decision, every Illinois appellate district has understood Cruz
and has distinguished it in precisely that same way. See People v. Lacy, 407 Ill. App. 3d 442,
465-66 (1st Dist. 2011); People v. Reeves, 314 Ill. App. 3d 482, 489 (1st Dist. 2000); People v.
Tyler, 2012 IL App (3d) 100970, ¶ 42; People v. Burney, 2011 IL App (4th) 100343, ¶¶ 57-62;
People v. Lefler, 294 Ill. App. 3d 305, 309 (5th Dist. 1998).
¶ 144 I would distinguish Moore and Holmes (and all of the cases I cited in the previous
paragraph) the same way the majority has distinguished Cruz. Like Cruz, those cases did not
involve evidence concerning the general acceptance of canine olfaction and the reliability of
forensic taphonomy; this case did. That other cases have distinguished Cruz on different
grounds adds little to (and arguably draws attention from) the majority’s strongest point: that
trial courts should keep an open mind and, in appropriate cases, allow the parties to present
new evidence even if it challenges old evidentiary assumptions. Supra ¶¶ 120-21; see also
Lerma, 2016 IL 118496, ¶¶ 22-28. As our supreme court has stated, “relying exclusively upon
prior judicial decisions to establish general scientific acceptance” is “a hollow ritual if the
underlying issue *** has not been adequately litigated.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
In re Commitment of Simons, 213 Ill. 2d at 537. In my view, the same observation holds for the
nonacceptance of a class of evidence as well.
¶ 145 Consequently, I find the majority’s attempt to posit a more limited, corroboration-only
rationale for Moore and Holmes (supra ¶ 119) unnecessary and unpersuasive. Again, since
these reliability issues were not presented in Moore and Holmes, there is no need to try to
square those decisions with today’s opinion. With that said, I specially concur.
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