2020 IL App (4th) 190909
FILED
NO. 4-19-0909 September 1, 2020
Carla Bender
IN THE APPELLATE COURT 4th District Appellate
Court, IL
OF ILLINOIS
FOURTH DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of
v. ) Macon County
JAMES D. JONES, ) No. 17CF1758
Defendant-Appellant. )
) Honorable
) James R. Coryell,
) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Knecht and Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 In the Macon County circuit court, a jury found defendant, James D. Jones, guilty
of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance (720 ILCS 570/401(a)(1)(A) (West 2016)). The
court sentenced him to imprisonment for 30 years. Defendant appeals on four grounds.
¶2 First, defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. Looking at all the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, as we are required to do, we conclude that
a reasonable trier of fact could find the elements of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance to
be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
¶3 Second, defendant complains that, in the jury trial, the State presented an abundance
of evidence that he had committed offenses other than the offense with which he was charged,
thereby implicitly inviting the jury to find him guilty because he supposedly was a bad person and,
as such, just the sort of person who would commit the charged offense. We find no abuse of
discretion in the admission of the other-crimes evidence, which had relevance other than as proof
of defendant’s propensity to commit crime.
¶4 Third, defendant objects that, in her closing argument to the jury, the prosecutor
made inflammatory remarks that compromised the fairness of his trial. These untimely objections
are, we hold, procedurally forfeited, and because we find no clear or obvious error in the
complained-of remarks by the prosecutor, the doctrine of plain error provides no relief from the
forfeiture.
¶5 Fourth, defendant accuses his trial counsel of rendering ineffective assistance by
omitting to object to the prosecutor’s closing argument and thereby causing the procedural
forfeiture. From our finding of no clear or obvious error, it follows that omitting to object fell
within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.
¶6 Therefore, we affirm the judgment.
¶7 I. BACKGROUND
¶8 The information had one count: that, on December 13, 2016, in Macon County,
defendant unlawfully delivered heroin to Ebonie Dixon. See id.
¶9 The jury trial was in March 2019. The State’s evidence tended to show that, on
December 13, 2016, Dixon, who was under surveillance by the police, met defendant in the parking
lot of Best Buy in Forsyth, Illinois. Immediately after this meeting, the police pulled Dixon over
for failing to use a turn signal. After questioning Dixon about a suspicious bulge in the crotch of
her pants, a female police officer persuaded Dixon to pull out and hand over two bags of heroin.
One bag was 19.7 grams, and the other bag was 0.2 grams. Dixon agreed to further cooperate with
the police. She divulged to the police that she had just bought the heroin from defendant. The State
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presented extensive other-crimes evidence that defendant had an ongoing business of supplying
heroin to lower-level sellers such as Dixon.
¶ 10 That is a bird’s-eye view of the evidence in the jury trial. More specifically, the
witnesses testified substantially as follows.
¶ 11 A. Dixon’s Testimony
¶ 12 1. Her Criminal Record
¶ 13 Dixon, age 31, had prior convictions of drug-induced homicide, burglary,
possession of a stolen motor vehicle, and conspiracy to commit bank fraud. She also had two prior
convictions of forgery and six prior convictions of various types of theft, including identity theft
and retail theft.
¶ 14 2. Her Drug Transactions With Defendant—the Fifth and
Latest Transaction of Which Resulted in Her Arrest
¶ 15 The delivery charged in this case was the fifth time that Dixon bought heroin from
defendant, whom she knew as James Cooper. She had been buying heroin from him—and only
from him—since August or September 2016. He was a contact saved in her phone under the names
“Rocko Decatur,” “Rocko D,” and “D2.” They arranged their meetings by phone and drove to
whatever meeting place they agreed on. For the fifth and latest transaction—the one charged in
this case—Eric Turner and Amanda Oden rode along with Dixon from Springfield, Illinois, to
Forsyth. Originally, the transaction was supposed to take place in the Walmart parking lot, but
defendant decided there were too many police in that area. He told Dixon to meet him, instead, in
the Best Buy parking lot in Forsyth. Defendant was driving a white Chevrolet Camaro. He pulled
up next to Dixon in the Best Buy parking lot, where Dixon bought 22 or 23 grams of heroin from
him for $1800.
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¶ 16 After this fifth purchase from defendant, Dixon was on her way back to Springfield,
where she lived, when the police pulled her over for failing to use a turn signal. The heroin she
had just bought from defendant was in a cupholder in her car. Before the police officer walked
over to her car, Dixon hid the bags of heroin under her pants, in her vagina. At first, she denied to
the police that she possessed any drugs. Eventually, after being questioned about the bulge in her
pants, she pulled out the bags of heroin and handed them over to a female police officer. Dixon
was arrested and was taken to the police station, where, according to her testimony, she selected a
photograph of defendant from among multiple photographs.
¶ 17 Dixon had not been charged for the bags of heroin that the police seized from her
in the traffic stop.
¶ 18 3. Cooperation Agreements With State and Federal Authorities
¶ 19 In the traffic stop, after the police discovered the heroin on her, Dixon agreed to
cooperate with the police. That was why she had not been charged in Macon County for the heroin
the police seized from her in the traffic stop. She had signed a cooperation agreement with federal
authorities, too, giving her federal immunity from prosecution for all of the heroin she had bought
from defendant from August to December 2016.
¶ 20 But there already had been five cases pending against Dixon for other crimes,
including drug-induced homicide, and she had entered into plea agreements in four of those five
cases. When it came to those five cases, Dixon denied hoping to receive any benefit for her
cooperation in defendant’s case. She further denied telling two detectives on October 13, 2016,
that she hoped her cooperation would keep her out of jail or that the more she cooperated, the more
consideration she would receive on her sentences. She denied that Detective Russell Lehr had told
her that, if she gave him a lot of information, she would receive a lot of consideration. She denied
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having the understanding, or being told, that “there were individuals who cooperated who got
probation as a result of their cooperation.”
¶ 21 Referring to a transcript of the interview of October 13, 2016, defense counsel
asked Dixon if she had asked Lehr: “ [‘]So people that have been put in this situation as a woman
with kids have they ever not been to jail or got probation or anything?[’] ” Then, according to
defense counsel (apparently paraphrasing the transcript), Lehr answered that “he ha[d] seen people
in that situation and in similar situations who ha[d] done outstanding jobs who [were] superstars
and they walk[ed] away from things.” Defense counsel asked Dixon: “Was that your understanding
of the conversation?” Dixon answered: “No, ma’am. *** I’ve never brought my kids into any type
of situation dealing with my crime, no.”
¶ 22 4. Was Defendant Dixon’s Only Supplier?
¶ 23 Dixon bought heroin from defendant to resell to others. She claimed that, in the
period of August to December 2016, she never bought heroin from anyone other than defendant.
She admitted, however, that her phone contacts included not only defendant but also Amanda Jus
(otherwise known as Amanda Oden), Sherry, and Nick. But the latter three people, Dixon insisted,
were just people she knew, not suppliers of drugs.
¶ 24 Dixon, according to her testimony, also knew no fewer than three people by the
name of Tone. She had received many calls and texts from a man by that name. One of the texts
from him read: “8 grams equal 2 Gs.” Dixon explained:
“Yeah, but listen these text messages he was talking about something prior to way
before he just so happened to went to jail, came back, talking about some money,
needed help with bond money, and what I supposed to owe him months prior, and
months, months prior to this.
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Q. Okay. And so 8 grams equals 2 Gs isn’t about drug transactions?
A. I mean, that’s what he was texting me, yes.”
¶ 25 Defense counsel also asked Dixon:
“And do you see in that text message he says to you, [‘]Okay then you owe me a
band. You gave me 360. Okay. Then you owe me 635,[’] do you see that?
A. Yes.
Q. Is that about drug transactions?
A. No, it’s about money. Because also it says, [‘]Okay that’s 680. I let you
borrow 135 on top of the 50.[’] It’s all about money transaction.
Q. So in that particular text a band doesn’t mean—
A. Drugs.
Q.—heroine [sic]?
A. No, it means money.”
¶ 26 Dixon denied ever buying drugs from someone named Amenia Hernandez and
denied even knowing anyone by that name. Dixon admitted being acquainted with someone named
Menia (not to be confused, apparently, with Amenia), but Dixon did not know Menia’s last name.
Defense counsel asked if the following exchange occurred between Dixon and Lehr on December
13, 2016:
“Detective Lehr says to you, Amenia, and you say Amanda—Amenia Hernandez.
And one of the detectives asked you where she lives. She lives in Decatur, you say,
and then the detective says, What’s she doing? And you say, She sells her heroine
[sic]. She sells crack. I just bump with her some salt, is that the statement that you
made?
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A. No, ma’am.
Q. No, you didn’t say that to those officers?
A. They might have miscommunicated we might’ve because I don’t—salt
is not even my way of talking.”
¶ 27 To be clear on this point, defense counsel asked Dixon if she ever bought 100 grams
of heroin or any drugs at all from somebody named Amenia Hernandez. Dixon answered in the
negative. Defense counsel then asked her:
“And then we’ve already established December 13, 2016[,] you gave an interview,
correct?
A. Uh-huh.
Q. And did you say to detective Mansfield, [‘]I bought almost 100 grams,[’]
Mansfield says, [‘]From her, when was that?[’] And you tell Mansfield[,] [‘O]ver
the summer.[’]
A. Yes. But you’re saying—you keep saying [‘]from her.[’] If you’re
talking about a middle person[,] or are you talking about directly from her because
it’s a middle man.
Q. I’m not saying anything. I’m repeating what you said.
A. Because you keep saying Amanda Hernandez. I’m never—her name is
not Amanda Hernandez.
Q. It’s—It’s—okay. So, in fact, you—James Cooper wasn’t your only
supplier; isn’t that correct?
A. At the time he was my only supplier.
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Q. Okay. So not Amenia, Menia, Ms. Hernandez, she wasn’t a supplier of
your’s [sic]?
A. No, ma’am.
Q. And not Mr. Tone?
A. No, ma’am.”
¶ 28 5. How Long Had Dixon Known Defendant?
¶ 29 After questioning Dixon about her identification of defendant, defense counsel
asked her:
“You stated yesterday that you met Rocko in August or September; is that right?
A. Yes. I stated between end of September between August, yes.
Q. And on December 13, you actually had told the officers that you’d only
known James Cooper for a month; is that correct?
A. A few months.
Q. On December 13, 2016[,] you were interviewed by officers, your
truthfulness was important, correct?
A. Yes, ma’am.
Q. And you were asked by [D]etective Lehr, [‘]How much—how long have
you been messing with James Cooper for?[’] And you responded, [‘]I’ve been
dealing with him for almost a month now[’]?
A. Yes. We’ve been only known each other for a few months. We met,
conversated probably at the end of September beginning of August. We finally met
in October.
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Q. Okay. So you started—met Mr. James [sic] for the first time somewhere
between August and November?
A. Between August and December somewhere it would have been—
Q. You met Mr. Jones sometime between August and December?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. And that—
A. We went through initial phone conversations first before we ever even
met.”
¶ 30 6. What Contact Name Did Dixon Give Defendant in Her Phone?
¶ 31 Defense counsel asked Dixon about the contact name she had assigned to defendant
in her cell phone:
“On that day, October 16, 2017, did [D]etective Callaway ask you, [‘]Remember
what you had saved, what contact name you used for him?[’] And did you answer,
[‘]Probably be James or James Money. I know it’d be just James.[’] Did you say
that?
A. I don’t remember saying that.”
¶ 32 7. How Much Heroin Did Dixon Buy From Defendant in the First and
Second Transactions, and How Much Money Did She Still Owe Him?
¶ 33 Dixon testified that, the first time she bought heroin from defendant, in August or
September 2016, she bought 10 grams. She denied telling Callaway on December 13, 2016, that
she bought only two grams of heroin from defendant in the first transaction.
¶ 34 Dixon further testified that, the second time she bought heroin from defendant, she
bought 10 grams. She denied telling Callaway it was 20 grams.
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¶ 35 Dixon also denied telling the police on December 13, 2016, that she owed defendant
$1700 “for that recent transaction.” Instead, she told the police that she had “paid [defendant] for
that recent transaction” and that the “[o]nly money [she] ever owed him was the $250,” which she
had paid by MoneyGram.
¶ 36 B. The Testimony of Carnessa Jackson
¶ 37 Carnessa Jackson (Jackson) testified that she had been charged in Macon County
with possessing heroin with the intent to deliver it. She had made a deal with the State. Her part of
the deal was to plead guilty in her own case and to testify truthfully in defendant’s case. In return,
she would receive two years’ probation. Also, she had received immunity from the federal
government in exchange for testifying truthfully in this case.
¶ 38 Jackson testified that in August 2016, when she was living at 1345 East Wellington
Way, Apartment C, in Decatur, she met defendant and began dating him. He lived in an apartment
on East Fitzgerald Road but soon began overnighting with her every other weekend.
¶ 39 In November 2016, the same month when Jackson learned where defendant lived,
he bought her a Volkswagen Passat. Because the Passat had a defective wheel, it was seldom
driven. Instead, the Passat was shifted between various parking lots. Jackson began to suspect that
defendant was stashing drugs in the Passat, using it as a roving storage container, so to speak. He
had told her he was employed at Ds Auto Imports in Springfield, but eventually she figured out
that he had another source of income: he was a drug dealer.
¶ 40 Jackson began riding along with defendant in his black truck or his white Camaro
when he went to do drug deals. At first, she did not see any drugs. Apparently, he kept the drugs
hidden on his person and took them into the buyers’ houses. Soon, however, defendant became
less careful about keeping the drugs hidden from Jackson. She began seeing what he was selling
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when he was selling it. He even began allowing her to sell some of the heroin herself, half a gram
a time for $60. They pooled their earnings from the drug-trafficking business.
¶ 41 In November 2016, defendant told Jackson that someone named Ebonie Dixon had
sent her a MoneyGram in the amount of $150. (Documentation showed that the amount actually
was $250.) It was waiting to be picked up at Walmart. Jackson did not know what the $150 was
for or who Dixon was.
¶ 42 On December 20, 2016, Jackson drove the Passat to Walmart to get a tire fixed.
Defendant was supposed to meet her at Walmart, but he never showed up. Jackson drove back to
her apartment. Upon her arrival, the police were there with a search warrant. The police confiscated
her iPhone as well as the flip phone she had been using to receive orders for heroin. The police
searched the Passat and found drugs. Jackson did not know how the drugs had got in the Passat.
She had seen drugs as defendant made sales, but he had never revealed to her where his stashes
were. In their search of the apartment, the police found bottles of inositol and Dormin (agents for
“cutting” or diluting heroin and cocaine). And in the kitchen, they found a Dairy Queen bag.
¶ 43 Jackson testified that she had thrown the Dairy Queen bag into the trash. She denied
putting any drugs in the Dairy Queen bag. But, as she was informed, the Dairy Queen bag did
indeed contain drugs. Initially, on December 20, 2016, wanting to protect defendant because she
loved him, Jackson represented to the police that the drugs belonged to her. She told the police
that, “to the best of [her] memory[,] *** there was 40 grams of cocaine and 100 grams of heroin[ ]
at [her] apartment that [she] knew of.” Three days later, after further reflection, Jackson decided
that protecting defendant was not worth ruining her life. She then “talk[ed] to the police about this
defendant and his drug distribution.” All the drugs she had been selling belonged to him.
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¶ 44 Other than Jackson and defendant, Jackson’s best friend, Tatiana, had a key to
Jackson’s apartment. But Tatiana did not live there. In the apartment were “various men’s clothing
and shoes.” To whom they belonged Jackson did not know, nor how they got there. The clothes
were too big for defendant.
¶ 45 C. The Testimony of Scott Giovanelli
¶ 46 On December 20, 2016, Scott Giovanelli, a special agent with the United States
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), participated in the search of 1345 East Wellington Way,
Apartment C. In the kitchen cabinet, he found a Dairy Queen bag, inside of which were plastic
Baggies containing what he believed to be a controlled substance. Because the warrant was not a
DEA warrant, Giovanelli called a Decatur detective, James Callaway, to examine the bag and to
collect it as potential evidence. Giovanelli identified a photograph of the Dairy Queen bag sitting
in the kitchen cabinet and a photograph of the inside of the bag. He denied tampering with the
contents of the Dairy Queen bag. He merely had opened the bag and looked inside it.
¶ 47 D. The Testimony of Everett Nation
¶ 48 Everett Nation was a detective employed by the city of Taylorville, Illinois. He also
was an inspector with the Illinois State Police Central Illinois Enforcement Group. On December
20, 2016, he assisted with the search of 1345 East Wellington Way, Apartment C. His task was to
look for evidence and, if he found any, to call Callaway to collect it. In the kitchen cabinet, Nation
found a digital weighing scale and a bottle of inositol. He identified photographs of those items
where they sat in the kitchen cabinet.
¶ 49 E. The Testimony of Tyler Mansfield
¶ 50 1. Surveillance at Best Buy
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¶ 51 Tyler Mansfield was a special agent with the DEA. On December 13, 2016, he
assisted with the surveillance of the Best Buy parking lot in Forsyth. He was in a “take away
position.” That is, he was positioned at a nearby Circle K gas station so that, when Dixon left the
Best Buy parking lot, he could follow her and keep track of her until either a traffic stop was
effected or the surveillance was terminated. Mansfield saw Dixon leave the Best Buy parking lot
in her Buick Enclave. Then, according to a radio transmission, she stopped at Circle K. Mansfield
was not at a vantage point that enabled him to see Dixon’s car at the gas station. When Dixon left
Circle K, Mansfield followed her until the police pulled her over in the westbound lane of Interstate
72.
¶ 52 2. Preparatory Surveillance at 1345 East Wellington Way
¶ 53 Also, on December 20, 2016, Mansfield assisted with executing the search warrant
at 1345 East Wellington Way, Apartment C. Before executing the search warrant, Mansfield and
other police officers took up positions outside the apartment building and did some preparatory
surveillance. Mansfield was with Callaway. Around 10:38 a.m., they saw a black truck pull into
the parking lot of 1345 East Wellington Way.
¶ 54 Three people were in the black truck: defendant, Jackson, and a child. All three
exited the truck. Defendant went to another vehicle in the parking lot while Jackson and the child
went inside the apartment building. Defendant got into the other vehicle and remained in it for a
while. Then he got out and went into the apartment building.
¶ 55 Around 11:30 a.m., defendant, Jackson, and the child came out of the apartment
building. Defendant got into the black truck. Jackson and the child got into the second vehicle,
which defendant had entered minutes earlier. Both the truck and the second vehicle left the parking
lot.
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¶ 56 3. The Discovery of Drugs in the Volkswagen
¶ 57 At 11:35 a.m., as the police were searching Apartment C, Jackson and the child
returned in a Volkswagen. Jackson was arrested. Pursuant to the search warrant, the police
searched the Volkswagen. Mansfield learned that crack cocaine was found in the Volkswagen.
Callaway put the cocaine in a Decatur police evidence bag and gave it to Mansfield, who in turn
sealed it in a DEA evidence bag and shipped it to the DEA laboratory in Chicago “to determine if
there was a cocaine base or determine the difference between powder cocaine and crack cocaine.”
Mansfield identified People’s exhibit No. 20 as the sealed DEA evidence bag bearing his signature
and containing the cocaine found in the Volkswagen.
¶ 58 F. The Testimony of Chad Ramey
¶ 59 1. Surveillance at Best Buy
¶ 60 Chad Ramey was a Decatur detective. At 10:50 a.m. on December 13, 2016, he was
in the parking lot between Best Buy and Dollar Tree in Forsyth, keeping an eye out for a white
Buick Enclave. He saw the Enclave arrive and park in the middle of the parking lot, at some
distance from where most of the people were. At 11:40 a.m., a white Chevrolet Camaro pulled into
the parking lot and parked near the Enclave. Ramey recognized the Camaro as defendant’s car. A
black woman got out of the driver’s side of the Enclave and into the passenger side of the Camaro.
For about 25 minutes, no one got out of the Camaro. Then the black woman exited the Camaro
and returned to the driver’s seat of the Enclave. Both vehicles left the parking lot.
¶ 61 Ramey followed the Enclave while other unmarked units followed the Camaro. The
Enclave pulled into a gas station and sat there for about five minutes. Ramey did not recall that
anyone got into or out of the Enclave at the gas station. Nor did anyone approach the Enclave. At
about noon, the Enclave left the gas station, went south on United States Route 51, and then turned
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onto the entrance ramp of westbound Interstate 72. When turning onto the ramp, the Enclave failed
to use its turn signal. Ramey radioed other units, notifying them of the traffic violation.
¶ 62 2. The Search of 3435 East Fitzgerald Road, Apartment No. 2
¶ 63 At 8:30 a.m. on December 20, 2016, Ramey was surveilling the apartment building
at 3435 East Fitzgerald Road. A white Camaro was parked in the front, the same Camaro that
Ramey saw on December 13, 2016, at Best Buy. Upon being notified that defendant had been
taken into custody, Ramey assisted a Decatur detective, Jeff Hockaday, in executing a warrant to
search 3435 East Fitzgerald Road, Apartment No. 2. Hockaday brought some keys to the apartment
that he had obtained from Callaway. No one was in the apartment at the time of the search.
¶ 64 Ramey and Hockaday found a digital weighing scale on a shelf in the kitchen. On
the kitchen counter was a box of sandwich bags, some of which had their corners cut off. Also,
there was a bottle of inositol in the kitchen. In a bedroom, they found a small bag of cannabis. The
apartment had three mirrors: two hanging in the living room and one hanging in the bedroom.
United States currency was stuck into the upper corners of these mirrors, and—what struck Ramey
as “weird”—the currency appeared to have been soaked in blood (although, Ramey admitted on
cross-examination, the stains had not been tested to confirm that they were indeed blood).
¶ 65 Other than the small bag of cannabis, however, no narcotics were found in
Apartment No. 2. No contraband was found in the Camaro, either.
¶ 66 But the Camaro had an unusual feature that Ramey had never seen in a car before.
A video screen for a rearview camera was mounted in the dashboard, but this camera was not just
for backing up. The camera was on at all times when the car was in operation, not only when the
car was in reverse. That way, the driver could always see what was behind.
¶ 67 G. The Testimony of Jonathan Jones
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¶ 68 1. Surveillance at Best Buy
¶ 69 Jonathan Jones was a Decatur police officer assigned to the street crimes unit. The
morning of December 13, 2016, he participated in the surveillance of the Best Buy parking lot.
Jones was parked nearby, at Walmart, when he saw a white Camaro go east on Ash Street. Jones
followed. The Camaro turned south onto Martin Luther King Drive. Then it turned east onto
Mound Road. Then it turned south onto Portage Place. And that was the end of Jones’s part in the
surveillance.
¶ 70 2. Surveillance of Vehicles at the Wellington Way Apartment Building
¶ 71 On December 20, 2016, Jones assisted with the surveillance of 1345 East
Wellington Way. Specifically, his task was to surveil vehicles. During the surveillance, he was
notified that some vehicles were on the move. At North Portage Place and East Mound Road, Jones
saw a black Dodge Ram pickup truck and a black Volkswagen that he believed to be a Passat.
These two vehicles were travelling north together on Portage Place, heading toward Mound Road.
They turned west onto Mount Road and then north onto Martin Luther King Drive. Then both
vehicles turned west onto Ash Street. It was the same route that Jones had seen on December 13,
2016, only in reverse.
¶ 72 The Volkswagen pulled into the parking lot of Walmart and parked there and
waited. No one got out of the Volkswagen, and no one approached it. After a while, the
Volkswagen left the Walmart parking lot and returned to the Wellington Way apartment building,
using the same route as before.
¶ 73 H. The Testimony of Jeff Hockaday
¶ 74 Hockaday was a Decatur detective assigned to the street crimes unit. During the
search of 1345 East Wellington Way, Apartment C, Callaway gave Hockaday a set of keys.
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Hockaday took the keys to 3435 East Fitzgerald Road, Apartment No. 2, where another search
warrant was to be executed. Hockaday there turned the keys over to Ramey.
¶ 75 I. The Testimony of Steve Young
¶ 76 Steve Young was a Decatur police officer assigned to the street crimes unit. While
the search of the apartment at 1345 East Wellington Way was being performed, Young went to
the scene of a traffic stop. A black Dodge Ram was stopped in the northbound lane of United States
Route 51 and Interstate 72, near the overpass. The keys were in the Ram. Young drove the Ram
back to 1345 East Wellington Way. He did not search the Ram. Nor did he tamper with the contents
of the Ram or add to them.
¶ 77 J. The Testimony of Brian Hickey
¶ 78 Brian Hickey was a Macon County deputy sheriff, and on December 20, 2016, he
participated in the search of 3435 East Fitzgerald Road, Apartment No. 2. He found, on the kitchen
counter, an open box of sandwich bags. He notified Ramey of this discovery, and Ramey collected
the box of sandwich bags, which Hickey identified in court (People’s exhibit No. 33).
¶ 79 Later that same day, Hickey participated in the search of Apartment C, 1345 East
Wellington Way. In this search, he looked inside a box of tampons in the bathroom. In the box
was a clear Baggie containing a brown powdery substance that Hickey believed to be heroin. He
notified Callaway, who was the case agent.
¶ 80 In a bedroom of Apartment C, Hickey found United States currency. In a closet in
the bedroom, he found some documents, several of which had defendant’s name on them but none
of which bore the address of 1345 East Wellington Way.
¶ 81 In a hall closet, Hickey found a bottle of Dormin. He notified Callaway of all these
discoveries.
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¶ 82 The items that Hickey had found were marked as exhibits, and Hickey identified
them in court.
¶ 83 K. The Testimony of Callaway
¶ 84 1. Surveillance at Best Buy and Return to the Police Station
¶ 85 Callaway, a Decatur detective, helped with the surveillance of the Best Buy parking
lot on December 13, 2016. Around 10:50 a.m., he followed defendant’s white Camaro from Best
Buy to 1345 East Wellington Way. When defendant arrived at the Wellington Way address,
defendant got out the Camaro and walked away.
¶ 86 Callaway then returned to the Decatur police station, where he participated in the
interviews of Dixon and her passengers, Turner and Oden. A Springfield detective, Lehr, gave
Callaway the heroin that had been seized from Dixon. Callaway identified the bags of heroin in
court (People’s exhibit Nos. 1 to 4).
¶ 87 2. Preparatory Surveillance at 1345 East Wellington Way and the Arrest of Jackson
¶ 88 At 10 a.m. on December 20, 2016, Callaway and Mansfield began surveillance at
1345 East Wellington Way while Ramey did surveillance at 3435 East Fitzgerald Road.
¶ 89 At 10:38 a.m., Callaway saw a black Dodge Ram pull into the parking lot of 1345
East Wellington Way and park there. Defendant, Jackson, and a child got out of the Ram. Jackson
and the child entered the apartment building. Defendant walked over to a black Volkswagen, which
already was parked on the lot and was unoccupied. He stood by the Volkswagen for a moment and
then got into it. He started the engine of the Volkswagen as if to warm the car up—Callaway
inferred that defendant started the engine because the headlights of the Volkswagen came on.
Defendant remained in the Volkswagen for about five minutes. Then he got out and walked into
the apartment building.
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¶ 90 At 11:22 a.m., defendant, Jackson, and the child came out of the apartment building.
Jackson and the child got into the Volkswagen, and defendant got into the Ram. Both vehicles left
the Wellington Way parking lot and headed west.
¶ 91 At 11:30 a.m., the police began searching 1345 East Wellington Way, Apartment
C, pursuant to the search warrant. At 11:35 a.m., during the search, Jackson and the child returned
in the black Volkswagen. The police took Jackson into custody.
¶ 92 3. Callaway as Evidence Custodian and Interviewer
¶ 93 Callaway’s responsibilities in the search of Apartment C were to interview any
individuals there and to collect evidence that other police officers found in the search. Using
photographs and exhibits, Callaway described the discovery and seizure of the cocaine and heroin
in the Dairy Queen bag, the digital weighing scale, the bottles of inositol and Dormin, the $165 in
cash from the backpack, the heroin in the tampon box, and the heroin and cocaine in the center
console of the Volkswagen. The purpose of his testimony, it seems, was to establish a chain of
custody for those items.
¶ 94 In addition, Callaway described the documents found in Apartment C. Several of
the documents had defendant’s name on them with the address of 3435 East Fitzgerald Road or
1349 Wellington Way, Apartment C (instead of 1345 East Wellington Way, Apartment C).
¶ 95 While Apartment C was being searched, defendant was brought there. He gave
Callaway his date of birth. He stated that he lived at 3435 East Fitzgerald Road and that he was
employed at Ds Auto Imports. He gave Callaway a set of keys, which Callaway gave to Hockaday
with instructions to pass them on to Ramey. Defendant had $1382 in his pants pocket and $1000
in his wallet. Clipped onto his belt was a Samsung smartphone.
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¶ 96 A search of the black Dodge Ram pickup truck revealed two more Samsung phones,
a lease agreement for a Chevrolet Camaro in defendant’s name, and other documents with his
name on them.
¶ 97 4. MoneyGram Records
¶ 98 People’s exhibit No. 39 was a receipt that Callaway had received from Walmart’s
loss prevention officer, Scott Gardner. It showed that on November 19, 2016, Dixon made a
MoneyGram transfer of $250 to Jackson.
¶ 99 L. The Testimony of Russell Lehr
¶ 100 Lehr was a Springfield detective. On December 13, 2016, at 3:30 a.m., he installed
a global positioning system (GPS) tracking device on Dixon’s Buick Enclave. At 10:27 a.m., he
received an alert that the car was moving. He saw on his computer that the car was heading east
on Interstate 72. He wanted to try to pick up physical surveillance of the car. Ramey agreed to
help. Lehr got in his car and met up with Ramey at the PetSmart parking lot on Koester Drive in
Forsyth, near Best Buy.
¶ 101 Lehr then got into Ramey’s car, and the two of them watched Dixon’s car, which
was parked in the parking lot. After a while, a white Camaro parked in front of the Enclave. Dixon
got out of her Enclave and into the passenger side of the Camaro. Soon afterward, Dixon got out
of the Camaro and back into her Enclave. Then the Enclave left and went to a gas station that was
next to PetSmart. The white Camaro then also left. Lehr kept surveillance on the Enclave with
Ramey. Turner got out of the Enclave and went into the gas station. About five minutes later,
Turner emerged from the gas station and got back into the Enclave. Lehr and Ramey followed the
Enclave back out onto Interstate 72 as it headed west toward Springfield.
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¶ 102 A deputy with the street crimes unit pulled the Enclave over. Lehr received word
over the phone that about 20 grams in heroin had been found on Dixon’s person. A Decatur K-9
police officer, Chad Larner, gave the suspected heroin to Lehr in an evidence bag. Lehr drove
Dixon’s Enclave back to the Decatur Police Department, taking the heroin with him. He then gave
the heroin to Callaway. Lehr denied changing the contents of this evidence bag in any way. The
heroin remained in the evidence bag untouched.
¶ 103 Because it was “common” for the police “to use street[-]level dealers to get a
higher[-]level drug supplier,” Lehr sought Dixon’s cooperation. She agreed to cooperate and,
consequently, was released.
¶ 104 On cross-examination by defense counsel, Lehr testified that Dixon had asked him
about the possibility of getting probation for her cooperation. She seemed very interested in that
idea and wanted some benefit for her cooperation. No photographic lineup was put together and
presented to her. Maybe just one photograph of one person was shown to her, not multiple
photographs. Lehr had asked Dixon how long she had been “messing with James Cooper.” She
answered that she had been messing with Cooper for about a month, something she twice told
Lehr. She told Lehr that she owed “Cooper” approximately $1750. Also, Dixon told Lehr about
somebody in Decatur named Amenia Hernandez from whom Dixon had purchased significant
amounts of drugs. Lehr could not remember if Dixon said it was 100 grams, but he remembered
that Dixon, according to her statement, had purchased a substantial amount of drugs from
Hernandez. Dixon told Lehr that, the first time she bought drugs from this person named James
Cooper, it was 2 grams and that, the second time she bought drugs from him, it was 10 grams.
¶ 105 M. The Testimony of Chad Larner
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¶ 106 On December 13, 2016, a Decatur police officer, Larner, responded to the scene of
a traffic stop. He ran his drug-sniffing dog around a white Buick Enclave and found a hypodermic
syringe inside. Detective Jonathan Roseman of the Macon County Sheriff’s Department gave
Larner the heroin found on Dixon, and Larner in turn gave the heroin to Lehr.
¶ 107 Larner also participated in the search of the Volkswagen Passat at 1345 East
Wellington Way. In the center armrest or console of the Passat, he found a plastic bag containing
a brown powdery substance as well as a plastic bag containing a white powdery substance. In the
courtroom, he identified photographs of these bags where they were stashed in the center console.
He also found a smartphone and a flip phone in the Passat.
¶ 108 In a subsequent search of the Dodge Ram, he found two flip phones and some
documents.
¶ 109 N. The Testimony of David Dailey
¶ 110 A Decatur police officer, David Dailey, testified as an expert in the field of narcotics
distribution.
¶ 111 The prosecutor began by asking Dailey how cocaine was imported into the United
States. Dailey answered:
“The majority of cocaine is being brought in from South America into the country,
United States, on the southwest border. Once those larger shipments are brought
into the United States across the southwest border, they are broken down into
smaller shipments and distributed to what we refer to as source cities.
Those are cities that have a large population which in turn gives you a large
customer base, therefore, the smaller shipments would be broken down and sent
out to the individual source cities across the country. So source cities for Decatur
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currently for cocaine are Chicago and Indianapolis, Indiana. Once those shipments
arrive at the source city, they are then somehow either transported from the source
city to Decatur or people from Decatur would go over to the source cities and
transport the drugs back themselves.”
¶ 112 At this point, defense counsel objected on the ground of irrelevancy. She suggested:
“I don’t think we need to understand the entire history of drug distribution in order to understand
this case.” The circuit court agreed and asked the prosecutor “how long [he was] going to go on
with this.” “Not very long,” the prosecutor promised. The court urged the prosecutor to “move it
along.”
¶ 113 The prosecutor then asked Dailey where heroin came from. Dailey answered:
“Again, the majority of heroin is coming up through Mexico on the southwest border distributed
to source cities where it’s broken down into smaller shipments where it would eventually hit the
smaller communities such as Decatur.”
¶ 114 Next, the prosecutor asked Dailey: “How do people use cocaine?” Dailey answered:
“Powder cocaine is most commonly consumed by snorting it through the nasal
passages. It can also be diluted with water and then injected with a syringe.
Q. And what—what about crack cocaine, what is that?
A. Crack cocaine in order to have crack cocaine, you first have to have
powder cocaine. Powder cocaine is hydrochloride, salt. Powder cocaine cannot be
smoked. It can only be snorted or injected. In order to convert it to crack cocaine,
there is a process where an individual would add water and maybe some baking
soda to it to remove the acid from it at which time it goes back to its base form a
solid state which would be smokeable.”
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¶ 115 After hearing this answer, defense counsel again objected on the ground of
irrelevancy. The circuit court ruled: “Right. I mean, let’s get to the point.”
¶ 116 Next, the prosecutor asked Dailey: “How do people use heroin?” Dailey answered:
“Heroin is most commonly either injected with a syringe or it is snorted or it can be smoked where
an individual would place the substance on a piece of tinfoil, apply heat to it, and inhale the
smoke.”
¶ 117 The direct examination then shifted to more obviously relevant topics, such as the
dosage units of powder and crack cocaine and the street values of all the heroin and cocaine seized
in December 2016. Dailey opined that the drugs the police had seized in this case had been
possessed with the intent to deliver them. Dailey based this opinion on the weight of the drugs,
which he characterized as distribution amounts; the amount of money found on defendant and the
denominations of the currency; the cutting agents and the digital weighing scales found in the two
apartments; the multiple cell phones; defendant’s use of multiple addresses; the sandwich bags
with corners clipped off; the lack of evidence that either defendant or Jackson had been using the
drugs personally; and the evidence of changing phone numbers frequently. Dailey further
explained that it was common for drug transactions to take place in public parking lots or other
public places, where it was possible to blend in.
¶ 118 O. Stipulations
¶ 119 The parties entered into a stipulation that a chemist, if called, would testify that
People’s exhibit Nos. 1 and 2, which were recovered from Dixon, totaled 19.9 grams of heroin.
¶ 120 There was a further stipulation as to the testing and weights of the controlled
substances recovered from all the searches, including 19.7 grams of heroin, 54.1 grams of cocaine,
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19.8 grams of diphenhydramine, 1.1 grams of cocaine, 159.3 grams of heroin, 7.3 grams of heroin,
and 3.3 grams of heroin.
¶ 121 P. The Testimony of Cadrekia Jackson
¶ 122 The State rested, and the first witness for the defense was Cadrekia Jackson
(Cadrekia). Whereas Jackson (an unrelated neighbor) lived in Apartment C at 1345 East
Wellington Way, Cadrekia lived downstairs, in Apartment A. She had seen people spend the night
in Jackson’s apartment, including a woman named Tatiana and Tatiana’s boyfriend, a heavyset
man named Adam.
¶ 123 Cadrekia was familiar with the residents of the apartment complex where she lived,
Carriage Home Apartments. Tiffany Freeman, a next-door neighbor, was defendant’s sister.
Cadrekia knew defendant, too, and regarded him as a friend. She saw defendant five or six days
each week. They hung out together, watching TV in Cadrekia’s apartment. They were just friends,
not physically intimate. She had never seen defendant go into Jackson’s apartment.
¶ 124 Q. The Testimony of Amanda Oden
¶ 125 Oden testified that Dixon used to be her drug-dealer back when Oden was still using
drugs. On December 13, 2016, Oden telephoned Dixon, asking for more drugs. Dixon picked her
up in Springfield, and they drove to Decatur. On the way, Dixon made a deal with Oden: Dixon
would give Oden some drugs if Oden agreed to use a Best Buy credit card to buy some cell phones.
The Best Buy credit card had the name of Dixon’s mother on it, Heather Reid.
¶ 126 Upon their arrival in Forsyth, Oden went into Best Buy but could not bring herself
to fraudulently buy the cell phones as she had agreed to do. So, she returned to Dixon’s car without
the cell phones. Dixon was incensed and made Oden return the drugs that Dixon had given her on
the way to Decatur. The syringe that the police found during the traffic stop, on the rear passenger
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floorboard of Dixon’s car, belonged to Oden. Because it was hard to shoot up heroin in a moving
car, Oden never got a chance to use the heroin before having to give it back to Dixon.
¶ 127 It was Oden’s testimony that she never saw anything happen in the parking lot with
Dixon and another vehicle. Oden denied being in the Enclave when another vehicle pulled up and
Dixon got out of the Enclave and into the other vehicle. Oden was not there at the time.
¶ 128 Oden admitted that on December 13, 2016, when she was in the Decatur police
station, she was questioned by Mansfield, Lehr, and Callaway. If, indeed, Oden told those
detectives that Dixon had “picked up her drugs in the parking lot of Best Buy because [that was]
where the person came”—something Oden did not remember telling them—Oden would have
been lying, she explained, in an attempt to get herself out of trouble. Or, as Oden put it in her trial
testimony, she would have been “spinning a web.”
¶ 129 On cross-examination, Oden also was confronted with her statements to the
detectives that she knew a drug dealer who was a cousin of her paramour, Mike, and who worked
at Ds Auto World. Oden again testified that she would have been “spinning a web” and that she
really did not know who Mike’s cousin was. She denied being able to recognize defendant, sitting
at counsel’s table.
¶ 130 In its case in rebuttal, the prosecution played the impeaching portion of Oden’s
recorded statement to the police.
¶ 131 R. The Testimony of Breanne Hassinger
¶ 132 Breanne Hassinger testified that in December 2016 Jackson babysat her children
and that she knew Jackson’s friends, Tatiana and Adam.
¶ 133 According to Hassinger, defendant helped her sell a Buick Riviera in December
2016, and they split the sales proceeds evenly. Defendant’s share was $4500.
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¶ 134 Hassinger was presented with People’s exhibit No. 43, a certified copy of a title
history of the car. It showed that she was still the owner of the Riviera. Hassinger explained that
she had not sent in the stub from the title to the Secretary of State.
¶ 135 S. The Prosecutor’s Closing Argument
¶ 136 In the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury:
“And we also learned it’s very profitable, that’s why people like Ebonie Dixon sell
drugs. With very little effort, very little you put into it, you can make a lot of money
living off putting this poison out on the streets and everybody else’s misery, the
user’s misery. You don’t have to go to work 40 hours plus a week like most of the
rest of us do.”
¶ 137 Also, the prosecutor made the following argument to the jury:
¶ 138 “And, ladies and gentlemen, momentarily you’ll be asking yourself a very
important question. And that question is: Is [defendant] just the most unluckiest guy in the world
or is he just guilty? Is he a fly in the world of windshields or does he look guilty in this case because
he is guilty.”
¶ 139 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 140 A. Evidence of Other Crimes
¶ 141 The State charged defendant with delivering heroin to Dixon on December 13,
2016. The only charged offense was his unlawful delivery of a controlled substance to her on that
date. See 720 ILCS 570/401(a)(1)(A) (West 2016). Nevertheless, in the jury trial, not only did the
State present evidence of the charged offense (defendant’s delivery of heroin to Dixon on
December 13, 2016), but the State presented extensive evidence that defendant committed
additional drug offenses on other dates. For instance, Dixon testified that defendant had sold her
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heroin on four previous occasions. Also, Jackson testified that in November 2016 defendant began
supplying her with heroin and cocaine to sell. Apartment C, which defendant seems to have
frequented and in which his papers were found, had stashes of heroin, with inositol and Dormin
for cutting it. Apartment 2 had the clipped corners of Baggies, apparently packaging for drugs.
Heroin and cocaine were found in the Volkswagen soon after defendant entered the Volkswagen
and started it up. Then there was the MoneyGram from Dixon to Jackson. Through all this
additional evidence, the State suggested to the jury that defendant was, by occupation, a drug dealer
and that, as such, he committed drug offenses on many occasions, not just on the occasion that the
charging instrument alleged.
¶ 142 Thus, in the jury trial, the State adduced evidence of drug offenses by defendant in
addition to the drug offense with which he was charged. Was it legally permissible for the State to
do so? It depends on what the State’s purpose was in proving the uncharged offenses. Except as
allowed by various sections of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (see 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3,
115-7.4, 115-20 (West 2016)), none of which apply to this case, “[e]vidence of other crimes,
wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in
conformity therewith.” Ill. R. Evid. 404(b) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). In other words, evidence of other
crimes, wrongs, or acts by someone is inadmissible if the purpose of such evidence is to prove that
the person has a bad character and to suggest that the person must have behaved badly because the
person has a bad character. Propensity evidence generally is inadmissible.
¶ 143 Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is admissible, however, for purposes
other than proving a propensity to commit crime. Rule 404(b) provides: “Such evidence may ***
be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan,
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knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” Id. As the phrase “such as” signals, that
list is not exhaustive. See id.
¶ 144 But the purpose other than propensity, whatever it is, must move the truth-seeking
enterprise forward because only relevant evidence is admissible. Ill. R. Evid. 402 (eff. Jan. 1,
2011). Evidence is relevant if it has “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). To put it differently, evidence is relevant
if it tends to move the needle of probability on any factual proposition that logically matters, given
the issues in the case.
¶ 145 The circuit court concluded that evidence of defendant’s commission of drug
offenses on dates other than December 13, 2016, was relevant to prove his “intent” and “system
of operation.” If only one of those purposes survives scrutiny, that is enough for us to uphold the
court’s ruling. See People v. Spyres, 359 Ill. App. 3d 1108, 1113-14 (2005). We see no significant
difference between this case and Spyres, in which the appellate court upheld the admission of
other-crimes evidence to prove a common design, or “system of operation,” to distribute cannabis.
¶ 146 In Spyres, the charge of which the jury found the defendant guilty was cannabis
trafficking (720 ILCS 550/5.1(b) (West 2002)). Spyres, 359 Ill. App. 3d at 1109. The date of the
charged offense, it appears, was June 22, 2001. That was when a shipment of cannabis from Red
Bluff, California, arrived at the defendant’s residence in Decatur, Illinois, with the understanding
that the defendant was to pass the cannabis along to a drug trafficker named Pelaiz. Id. at 1110-
11. In the trial, in addition to presenting evidence of this charged offense of June 22, 2001, the
State presented evidence of other, uncharged drug offenses by the defendant, offenses he
committed on previous occasions. For example, Staples employees identified store documents
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showing that, on at least 10 occasions before the June 22, 2001, arrest, packages from Red Bluff
were shipped to the defendant’s Decatur address. Id. at 1111. Also, an Illinois state trooper testified
that in May 2001 he pulled the defendant over for a traffic violation and found, in the defendant’s
car, a half-pound of cannabis, hand scales, $278 in cash, and photographs of the defendant posing
with weapons and large amounts of cannabis. Id.
¶ 147 On direct appeal, the defendant in Spyres challenged the admission of the other-
crimes evidence. Id. at 1113. The appellate court agreed with the circuit court, however, that the
other-crimes evidence was relevant and admissible to prove a common design (id.), “an ongoing
effort [by the defendant] to bring cannabis into Illinois for distribution” (id. at 1114). The previous
shipments from Red Bluff to the defendant’s Decatur residence—his previous commissions of the
charged crime—“were relevant to whether [he] was engaged in the crime charged.” Id. The
previous shipments “demonstrated how [the] defendant went about the business of cannabis
trafficking.” Id. Even the evidence that the Illinois state trooper found in his May 2001 traffic stop
of the defendant—the half-pound of cannabis, the hand scales, and the large amount of cash—
“supported the State’s theory that in June 2001, [the] defendant was engaged in cannabis
trafficking, the charged offense.” Id. The June 2001 shipment was one element, one part, of the
defendant’s common design to bring cannabis into Illinois for distribution.
¶ 148 Instead of “common design,” the circuit court in the present case used the phrase
“system of operation” in its limiting instructions to the jury. Although “common design” is the
more accurate term, the appellate court in Spyres found no reversible error in the use of the phrase
“system of operation.” See id. at 1112. Defendant in the present case had an ongoing “system,” so
to speak. He had a feeder operation, a wholesale business, in which he supplied heroin to lower-
level sellers. That defendant was “in the business” (People v. Rucheinski, 224 Ill. App. 3d 118,
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124 (1991))—that he was an established supplier of heroin and cocaine—arguably had some
tendency to make it more probable than it otherwise might have been that the heroin the police
seized from Dixon on December 13, 2016, had come from her immediately preceding meeting
with defendant in the Best Buy parking lot. See Ill. R. Evid. 401 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 149 Even if the other-crimes evidence was relevant to a purpose other than proving a
propensity by defendant to commit crime—such as a common design—he complains that the
other-crimes evidence was “unduly cumulative,” resulting in a mini-trial on uncharged offenses.
Though relevant, “evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed ***
by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”
Ill. R. Evid. 403 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). Defendant calculates that, “[o]f the 220 pages of direct
testimony, 120 pages, or 54%, concerned the other-crimes evidence.” Also, “[o]f the 35 admitted
exhibits, two[-]thirds were related to the uncharged crimes,” defendant informs us, whereas “only
one[-]third [was related] to the charged crime.”
¶ 150 But those statistics, in themselves, fail to demonstrate that any of the other-crimes
evidence was cumulative. The appellate court has warned: “Cumulative evidence of other conduct
can overpersuade the jury to convict the defendant as a bad person, rather than because he was
guilty of the crime charged.” (Emphasis added.) People v. Brown, 319 Ill. App. 3d 89, 96 (2001).
Cumulative evidence and extensive evidence are not the same thing. Rather, “[e]vidence is
considered cumulative when it adds nothing to what was already before the jury.” People v. Ortiz,
235 Ill. 2d 319, 335 (2009). To show, then, the cumulativeness of the other-crimes evidence,
defendant would have to explain how the testimony of B on a particular subject added nothing to
the preceding testimony of A. Or defendant would have to explain how a specified exhibit added
nothing to another specified exhibit. Raw numbers showing the proportional quantity of other-
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crimes evidence say nothing about whether any of the evidence was cumulative or redundant. One
hundred twenty pages of testimony might have been “necessary to illuminate the issue for which
the other crime was introduced.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Bedoya, 325 Ill.
App. 3d 926, 938 (2001).
¶ 151 Much of the other-crimes evidence tended to show defendant’s constructive
possession of narcotics. See People v. Jackson, 2019 IL App (1st) 161745, ¶ 27. Because a theory
of constructive possession relies on inferences drawn from circumstantial evidence (id.), a more
extensive presentation might be required for that theory than for a theory provable by direct
evidence. If there was, proportionally, a lot of other-crimes evidence, it does not necessarily follow
that the State was wasting time. See Ill. R. Evid. 403 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). A competent, convincing
presentation on the theories of constructive possession and defendant’s being in the heroin
wholesale business might have required a lot of testimony.
¶ 152 Granted, when reading the statement of facts in defendant’s brief, we see that
testimonies overlapped in their subject matter. For example, Giovanelli testified that, in the search
of Apartment C on December 20, 2016, he found a Dairy Queen bag in the kitchen cabinet and in
the Dairy Queen bag were Baggies containing what looked like controlled substances. Likewise,
using photographs and exhibits, Callaway testified to the discovery and seizure of the cocaine and
heroin in the Dairy Queen bag. But Giovanelli was the police officer who discovered the Dairy
Queen bag, whereas Callaway was the police officer tasked with documenting and collecting this
and other evidence discovered by other police officers in the search of the apartment. Callaway’s
testimony added to Giovanelli’s by establishing a chain of custody, which is important in drug
cases.
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¶ 153 Or, to take another example, Callaway and Mansfield sat side by side on December
20, 2016, and did a preparatory surveillance at 1345 East Wellington Way. Both testified to what
they had seen. Arguably, though, Callaway’s testimony was not cumulative over Mansfield’s
testimony. Callaway recalled an important detail that Mansfield missed: after defendant entered
the Volkswagen, its headlights came on, as if defendant had started the engine so as to warm up
the car for Jackson and her child. From that incidental detail, one might infer that defendant had
keys to the Volkswagen and shared control of it with Jackson—the same Volkswagen in which,
minutes later, heroin and cocaine were found. See People v. Hester, 87 Ill. App. 3d 50, 52 (1980)
(explaining the doctrine of constructive possession). Our point is, it is not self-evident, from the
statement of facts in defendant’s brief, that the other-crimes evidence was cumulative as he
contends. In the argument of his brief, he should explain how the other-crimes evidence was
cumulative.
¶ 154 Without being cumulative, other-crimes evidence can take up a big chunk of the
trial, and to be sure, it did in this trial. Case law predating the Illinois Rules of Evidence warns
against “permit[ting] a ‘mini-trial’ of the other, uncharged offense.” Bedoya, 325 Ill. App. 3d at
938. Illinois Rule of Evidence 403, however, does not use the expression “mini-trial” but, instead,
warns against “confusion of the issues, *** misleading the jury, *** undue delay, waste of time,
or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Ill. R. Evid. 403 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 155 It is hard to see how the jury could have been confused or misled by the other-
crimes evidence, abundant as it was. Nine times in the trial, the circuit court instructed the jury:
“Evidence will be received that the defendant has been involved in offenses other than that charged
in the [i]nformation. The evidence will be received on the issue of defendant’s intent and system
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of operation and may be considered by you only for that limited purpose.” In his closing argument,
defense counsel emphasized to the jury that there was only one issue to decide:
“You’re going to get a jury instruction about one issue. The one issue I told you
about in the beginning of the case. The one issue wish I hope you have been
thinking about for the last four days, and the one issue you’ll have to decide when
you go back to the jury room.
And that is: What happened on December 13, 2016[,] between [defendant]
and Ebonie Dixon? That’s the only issue in this case.”
In the State’s rebuttal argument to the jury, the prosecutor took up that thread, explaining in detail
“how we know that what Ebonie Dixon said happened on the 13th of December of 2016 actually
did happen.” At the conclusion of the rebuttal argument, the prosecutor told the jury:
“And I submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, based on all of this evidence,
everything that has been corroborated in this case, this defendant is guilty of the
delivery of heroin[ ] to Ebonie Dixon on December 13, 2016. And I ask that you
find him guilty at the end of this case and sign the guilty verdict in this case.”
Then the circuit court instructed the jury: “The charge against the defendant in this case is
contained in a document called the Information,” which accused defendant of delivering heroin to
Dixon on December 13, 2016. So, it appears that, throughout the proceedings, the jury’s attention
was repeatedly directed to the charging instrument.
¶ 156 Granted, a lot of evidence was presented about defendant’s possession and
distribution of drugs on dates other than December 13, 2016. That defendant, however, was in the
business of drug-trafficking, with an apparent emphasis on heroin, was highly germane to the
allegation in the charging instrument. And the relevance was not propensity. The suggestion, in
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other words, was not that defendant was a bad person and that he was guilty because he must have
acted in conformity to his bad nature (although there might have been a whiff of propensity in the
fleeting reference to blood-soaked currency). The more obvious suggestion was that, quite apart
from his character, delivering heroin to Dixon fit in with, or was in conformity to, defendant’s
ongoing lucrative occupation: supplying heroin to heroin-sellers. Proving defendant’s line of
business, as distinct from proving his character, could reasonably be regarded as worthwhile.
Achieving evidentiary depth in this regard was, arguably, a rational use of time. See id.
¶ 157 This is not to deny that time was wasted, for instance, at the beginning of Dailey’s
testimony. We agree with the circuit court that his disquisition on how drugs entered the United
States and were divvied up among American cities was irrelevant to the issues in this case. It is
hard to understand why a prosecutor would be willing to imperil the prosecution with irrelevant
matter like this. Defense counsel, however, could have prevented this waste of time by objecting
as soon as the prosecutor asked Dailey: “Can you explain for us how cocaine is imported into the
U.S., where it comes from?” instead of waiting until after Dailey gave his answer to object.
¶ 158 But defendant did make a timely objection to the other-crimes evidence. It might
be argued that allowing most of the trial to be consumed by this other-crimes evidence was worse
than merely wasting time—it was more pernicious—because all of this other-crimes evidence
served an illegitimate purpose: propping up the ramshackle credibility of Dixon. Did not the
supreme court plainly hold, in People v. Thingvold, 145 Ill. 2d 441, 459 (1991), that “evidence of
other crimes is not admissible to bolster the credibility of a prosecution witness”? The other-crimes
evidence served the sole purpose of making Dixon believable in her testimony that it was defendant
who had delivered to her the heroin.
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¶ 159 It is all right, however, for other-crimes evidence to bolster the credibility of a
prosecution witness on “any material question.” (Emphasis in original and internal quotations
marks omitted.) Id. By contrast, using other-crimes evidence to bolster the credibility of a witness
on an immaterial question so that the witness will be believed on a material question is an
illegitimate use of other-crimes evidence. See id. But using other-crimes evidence to corroborate
the witness’s testimony on a material question is a legitimate use (see id. at 459-60), for then the
other-crimes evidence supplements the witness’s testimony on a “fact that is of consequence to the
determination of the action” (Ill. R. Evid. 401 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011)). Dixon testified that defendant
delivered heroin to her in the Best Buy parking lot on December 13, 2016. Whether he did so was
a material question. The other-crimes evidence may well have made Dixon more believable on
that material question. It was perfectly all right for the other-crimes evidence to serve that function.
¶ 160 The intended function of the other-crimes evidence, let us be clear, was to prejudice
defendant. The prosecutor should be expected to present evidence prejudicial to the defendant.
Defendant argues that “the other[-]crimes evidence was more prejudicial than probative.” But that
is a false dichotomy. Prosecution evidence can be probative precisely to the degree that it is
prejudicial against the defendant, that is, to the degree it incriminates the defendant. The question
is not whether other-crimes evidence is prejudicial to the defense. If it were not, the State surely
would not bother presenting it. Rather, the question is whether “its probative value is substantially
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.” (Emphasis added.) Ill. R. Evid. 403 (eff. Jan. 1,
2011). The qualifier is crucial. Not every reasonable mind would perceive unfairness in proving
that a defendant accused of distributing heroin was in the business of distributing heroin.
¶ 161 B. The Sufficiency of the Evidence
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¶ 162 The police watched Dixon in the late morning of December 13, 2016, as she waited
in her Buick Enclave, in the Best Buy parking lot. Defendant’s white Chevrolet Camaro pulled
into the parking lot and parked close to Dixon’s car. Dixon got out of her car and into the front
passenger seat of defendant’s car and remained in his car for 25 minutes. Then she got out of his
car and back into her car, and both cars left the parking lot. Defendant drove to the apartment
building at 1345 East Wellington Way and got out of his Camaro. Dixon drove onto Interstate
Highway 72, where the police pulled her over. From Dixon’s person, the police seized a total of
19.9 grams of heroin. Dixon represented to the police and, subsequently, to the jury that she had
obtained these 19.9 grams of heroin from defendant, during their rendezvous in the Best Buy
parking lot.
¶ 163 For four reasons, defendant maintains that Dixon was not a credible witness. First,
Dixon admitted she had entered into cooperation agreements that saved her from being charged
with drug offenses. So, she was far from a disinterested reporter of the truth. Second, Dixon was
impeached with numerous felony convictions, some of which were for crimes of dishonesty, such
as forgery, identity theft, and bank fraud. Her convictions reflected, as defendant puts it, a “dismal
character for truthfulness.” Third, Dixon was impeached with prior recorded statements she had
made to the police, “many of which she brazenly denied when testifying under oath before the
jury.” Fourth, Dixon’s testimony on several material points was irreconcilable with the testimony
of other witnesses and with the physical evidence. In sum, defendant argues, “Ebonie Dixon’s
testimony did not carry with it an absolute conviction of its truth.”
¶ 164 The absolute-conviction-of-truth language comes ultimately from a 100-year-old
case, People v. Grove, 284 Ill. 429, 435 (1918). As late as 1998, the supreme court was still using
that language with reference to accomplice testimony. See People v. McLaurin, 184 Ill. 2d 58, 79
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(1998). “Because accomplice testimony is attended with serious infirmities,” the supreme court
said in McLaurin, “it should be accepted only with utmost caution and suspicion and have the
absolute conviction of its truth.” Id. It was as if accomplice testimony occupied a special category.
¶ 165 More recently, though, in People v. Cunningham, 212 Ill. 2d 274, 279-80 (2004),
the supreme court held that all eyewitness testimony was subject to the same deferential standard
of review set forth in Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). Jackson “applies in all
criminal cases,” the supreme court declared, “regardless of the nature of the evidence.” (Emphasis
added.) Cunningham, 212 Ill. 2d at 279. Specifically, when the believability of eyewitness
testimony was at issue on appeal, Jackson called for the following analysis:
“Jackson requires reviewing courts to determine whether the record evidence could
reasonably support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. *** [Citation.] It
follows that where the finding of guilt depends on eyewitness testimony, a
reviewing court must decide whether, in light of the record, a fact finder could
reasonably accept the testimony as true beyond a reasonable doubt. In conducting
this inquiry, the reviewing court must not retry the defendant. [Citation.] The
reviewing court must carefully examine the record evidence while bearing in mind
that it was the fact finder who saw and heard the witness. [Citation.] Testimony
may be found insufficient under the Jackson standard, but only where the record
evidence compels the conclusion that no reasonable person could accept it beyond
a reasonable doubt.” (Emphasis in original and internal quotation marks omitted.)
Id. at 279-80.
¶ 166 Evaluating testimony “in light of the record,” as Cunningham puts it, entails
looking for circumstantial evidence that arguably tends to corroborate the testimony or make it
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more believable than the testimony otherwise might have been. See id. In this case, the
circumstantial evidence was other-crimes evidence. In a footnote of his brief, defendant admits
that his assessment of Dixon’s testimony “does not include the extensive ‘other crimes’ evidence
which was introduced at trial”—evidence which, he contends, “was not relevant” and “should not
be considered in determining whether [defendant] was proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
For the reasons we have explained, however, we find no abuse of discretion in the admission of
the other-crimes evidence.
¶ 167 In the light of the other-crimes evidence, a reasonable trier of fact could believe
Dixon, despite her flaws, when she testified that she obtained the 19.9 grams of heroin from
defendant. Defendant, after all, was in the business of supplying heroin to heroin-sellers just like
her. Why else would he have met her in the Best Buy parking lot? What other business could
Dixon have had with him? There was no indication in defendant’s apartment and vehicles that he
himself was a user of heroin—with which, anyway, he already was abundantly supplied. Dailey
testified that distributors of narcotics commonly met their clients in public places where they could
“blend in.” A Best Buy parking lot would be ideally suited to that purpose. And, as documentary
evidence showed, Dixon had made a MoneyGram transfer of $250 to Jackson, defendant’s partner
in his drug-trafficking business. Thus, there already had been commerce between Dixon and
defendant’s associate in the heroin trade. Such circumstantial evidence, in the mind of a reasonable
trier of fact, could lend credence to Dixon’s testimony that it was defendant who, in the meeting
in the Best Buy parking lot, delivered the heroin to her that the police seized from her minutes
afterward.
¶ 168 C. Remarks by the Prosecutor in His Closing Argument
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¶ 169 Defendant complains that two remarks by the prosecutor in the State’s closing
argument deprived defendant of a fair trial.
¶ 170 First, the prosecutor told the jury:
“And we also learned it’s very profitable, that’s why people like Ebonie Dixon sell
drugs. With very little effort, very little you put into it, you can make a lot of money
living off putting this poison out on the streets and everybody else’s misery, the
user’s misery. You don’t have to go to work 40 hours plus a week like most of the
rest of us do.”
¶ 171 Second, the prosecutor made the following argument to the jury:
“And, ladies and gentlemen, momentarily you’ll be asking yourself a very
important question. And that question is: Is [defendant] just the most unluckiest
guy in the world or is he just guilty? Is he a fly in the world of windshields or does
he look guilty in this case because he is guilty[?]”
¶ 172 Defendant acknowledges that he never made a contemporaneous objection to either
of those remarks by the prosecutor. Generally, “to preserve a question for appellate review, both a
trial objection and a written posttrial motion raising the issue are required.” People v. Griffin, 368
Ill. App. 3d 369, 375-76 (2006). Defendant seeks to avert the forfeiture by invoking the first prong
of the plain-error doctrine. That is, he argues that (1) the evidence was closely balanced and
(2) these erroneous remarks by the prosecutor could have unfairly tilted the trembling scales
against him. See People v. Walker, 232 Ill. 2d 113, 124 (2009).
¶ 173 In plain-error review, the threshold question is whether a clear or obvious error was
committed. People v. Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d 539, 545 (2010). Defendant contends that the first remark
by the prosecutor was erroneous because it “invited the jury to ‘send a message’ that crime in
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general will not be tolerated.” This remark, in his view, “serve[d] no purpose but to inflame the
jury.” See People v. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d 99, 127-28 (2000); People v. Johnson, 208 Ill. 2d 53, 76
(2003). But the prosecutor never invited the jury to send a message, nor did the prosecutor urge
the jury to help solve society’s drug problem. Instead, the prosecutor merely explained defendant’s
incentive to commit the offense with which he was charged: drug-dealing was lucrative and
required little work. The prosecutor’s legitimate aim, in his closing argument, was to persuade the
jury that defendant had committed the charged offense. To that end, the prosecutor pointed out a
motive for defendant to commit the charged offense: prosperity with minimal effort.
¶ 174 The prosecutor further argued that, in making this easy money, defendant had been
poisoning people. The appellate court already has decided that such an argument is within bounds.
A prosecutor may legitimately assert that an accused drug-dealer has been poisoning the
community if evidence has been presented to support that assertion. People v. Deramus, 2014 IL
App (1st) 130995, ¶ 56. In Deramus, the prosecutor argued to the jury “that [the] defendant sold
‘poison’ and was ‘ruining that neighborhood for the people that live there.’ ” Id. ¶ 54. In rejecting
the defendant’s criticism of that argument, the appellate court held: “It was not improper for the
prosecution in this case to comment upon the negative effects of defendant’s conduct in its closing
argument.” Id. ¶ 56. Therefore, we find no clear or obvious error in the first remark of which
defendant complains. See Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d at 545.
¶ 175 The prosecutor’s second remark—about “ ‘the unluckiest man in the world’ ” and
a “ ‘fly on the windshield’ ”—likewise “served no useful purpose,” defendant argues. Worse yet,
defendant claims, this remark “tended to shift and to minimize the burden of proof.” We disagree.
This remark said nothing about the burden of proof nor did it require defendant to prove anything.
Instead, the prosecutor posed the fair question of whether the evidence unfavorable to defendant
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could reasonably be attributed to coincidence. “In closing, the prosecutor may comment on the
evidence and any fair, reasonable inferences it yields [citation], even if such inferences reflect
negatively on the defendant.” People v. Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d 104, 121 (2005). That is all the
prosecutor did in the second remark of which defendant complains—commented on the evidence,
as prosecutors are expected to do in a closing argument. Therefore, we find no clear or obvious
error in the second remark, either, and the procedural forfeiture of defendant’s criticisms of the
prosecutor’s closing argument will be honored. See Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d at 545.
¶ 176 D. The Claim That Trial Counsel Rendered Ineffective Assistance by Omitting
to Object to the Prosecutor’s Closing Argument
¶ 177 Defendant accuses his trial counsel of rendering ineffective assistance by omitting
to object to the prosecutor’s closing argument. Because the prosecutor’s remarks of which
defendant complains were not clearly or obviously erroneous, we are unconvinced that refraining
from objecting to them fell outside “the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.”
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 689 (1984). Consequently, the claim of ineffective
assistance fails.
¶ 178 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 179 To recap, we find no abuse of discretion in the admission of the other-crimes
evidence, which, for reasons other than propensity, arguably lent support to Dixon’s testimony that
the meeting the police observed in the Best Buy parking lot was a drug transaction with defendant.
After all, he pulled up alongside Dixon in his Camaro, and she got into his Camaro. He was, one
could reasonably infer, in the business of selling heroin—and, sure enough, heroin was found on
Dixon immediately after the meeting. We know it was defendant driving the Camaro because the
police followed him from Best Buy and watched him get out of the Camaro. The other issue that
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defendant raises, the supposedly impermissible remarks by the prosecutor in her closing argument,
is procedurally forfeited. Absent a clear or obvious error in those remarks, neither the doctrine of
plain error nor a theory of ineffective assistance affords any relief from the forfeiture. Therefore,
we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
¶ 180 Affirmed.
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No. 4-19-0909
Cite as: People v. Jones, 2020 IL App (4th) 190909
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Macon County, No. 17-CF-1758;
the Hon. James R. Coryell, Judge, presiding.
Attorneys Stephen L. Richards, of Chicago, for appellant.
for
Appellant:
Attorneys Jay Scott, State’s Attorney, of Decatur (Patrick Delfino, David J.
for Robinson, and Allison Paige Brooks, of State’s Attorneys
Appellee: Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
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