Digitally signed
by Reporter of
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Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and
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document
Appellate Court Date: 2020.07.09
11:54:49 -05'00'
People v. Hoffman, 2020 IL App (2d) 180853
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Petitioner-Appellee,
Caption v. DAVID JOHN HOFFMAN, Respondent-Appellant.
District & No. Second District
No. 2-18-0853
Rule 23 order filed February 10, 2020
Motion to
publish allowed March 17, 2020
Opinion filed March 17, 2020
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 16-CC-23; the
Review Hon. John J. Kinsella, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on James E. Chadd, Thomas A. Lilien, and Kerry Goettsch, of State
Appeal Appellate Defender’s Office, of Elgin, for appellant.
Robert B. Berlin, State’s Attorney, of Wheaton (Lisa Anne Hoffman,
Assistant State’s Attorney, of counsel), for the People.
Panel JUSTICE HUDSON delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Justices Schostok and Bridges concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Respondent, David John Hoffman, was found guilty in a domestic battery case and, in a
separate proceeding, admitted to indirect criminal contempt of court. On appeal, he contends
that the trial court abused its discretion by making the contempt sentence and the domestic
battery sentence consecutive. We conclude that no abuse of discretion occurred, and we
therefore affirm.
¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 A. Domestic Battery
¶4 On March 24, 2016, a grand jury indicted Hoffman on two counts of domestic battery,
which were charged as Class 3 felonies because Hoffman had three prior convictions of the
offense (720 ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1), (a)(2), (b) (West 2016)). Each count alleged that, on March
5, 2016, Hoffman struck J.B., a “household or family member,” “in the face.” On March 6,
2016, the trial court entered an order requiring, as a condition of his possible release on bond,
that he have no contact with J.B. Hoffman did not post bond and was not released.
¶5 At Hoffman’s trial, J.B. testified that she had been dating Hoffman since September 2010.
She loved Hoffman and had been trying to help him beat the charges, so she was unhappy that
she had to testify against him. She also described feeling pressure from him to help with his
defense, but she did not testify that he explicitly pressured her. J.B. testified that Hoffman
struck her in the face with his hand, causing a visible lump to form on the left side of her jaw.
However, on cross-examination, she agreed that, in interviews with an investigator for the
public defender and with two assistant state’s attorneys, she had claimed that she had hit herself
in the face with a car door. She confirmed that Hoffman, after his arrest, had been in constant
contact with her and had called her cell phone about 100 times.
¶6 The State introduced recordings of some of Hoffman’s calls from jail, which are not part
of the record on appeal. J.B. identified the voices of Hoffman and his friend, Steve Whitney,
in several calls in which Hoffman was asking Whitney to convey messages to J.B. J.B. also
confirmed that Hoffman had called her by other names in some calls, to conceal her identity.
¶7 The trial court permitted the State to introduce evidence of prior acts of domestic violence
by Hoffman, as substantive evidence. On January 22, 2011, Hoffman beat J.B. and threw her
clothing into the backyard of his house. He punched her in the mouth because she was using
her phone to talk to her ex-husband.
¶8 On April 27, 2011, J.B. was awakened by Hoffman’s holding her by her hair and punching
her. He told her that “he was going to kill [her], punch [her] lights out.” Photographs taken
after that incident showed bruising on her face, upper body, and legs.
¶9 On December 4, 2011, J.B. was making dinner for herself and Hoffman. Hoffman threw
the food away. J.B. started cooking again, and Hoffman “sucker punched” her, knocking her
to the floor. The two scuffled; J.B. defended herself by throwing eggs, but Hoffman punched
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her again. When she retreated to a corner, he pulled her hair, struck her repeatedly in the face,
kicked her, and “stomped on” her. She fled to the basement. He followed and continued to
strike her. He locked her in the basement. When she knocked on the door, he opened it and
kicked her down the stairs. He later pushed her down the stairs again.
¶ 10 On December 6, 2011, Hoffman attacked J.B. while she was at his house. He smashed her
phone and began chasing her. As she left by the back door, he punched her, bloodying her
nose. She went back to the door to retrieve her phone. He threw the phone out the door, exited
the house, and punched her again. J.B. then went to her home and sought treatment for her
injuries. Among other things, she was experiencing severe back pain as a result of “falling
down the stairs.” J.B.’s daughter called the police, but J.B. told the investigating officer that
she “got jumped,” thus falsely implying an unknown assailant.
¶ 11 On July 2, 2012, Hoffman again “beat [her] up.” On July 3, 2012, he “[s]tarted beating her
up.” He kicked her, threw her on a bed, and tried to smother her with a pillow.
¶ 12 On May 15, 2012, while an order of protection requiring that Hoffman have no contact
with J.B. was in effect, the police recorded an emergency call in which Hoffman could be heard
repeatedly saying, “I’m going to kill you,” and J.B. could be heard screaming at him to “stop
it.” When the police responded to the call, they found J.B. hiding in an attic that was accessible
only by a ladder. She had hidden because she wanted to protect Hoffman. The police observed
that J.B.’s hair was falling out in clumps. She claimed at the time that the hair loss was the
result of an illness but testified at trial that Hoffman’s pulling her hair was the actual cause.
¶ 13 The State presented additional evidence of injuries that Hoffman inflicted on J.B. The
defense rested without presenting evidence. A jury found Hoffman guilty of both charges.
¶ 14 B. Indirect Criminal Contempt
¶ 15 On March 12, 2016, while Hoffman was awaiting trial on the domestic battery charges, the
State represented to the trial court that Hoffman, while in custody, had initiated more than 50
phone conversations with J.B. Hoffman had been in repeated contact with Whitney and had
directed him to deliver messages to J.B. Among other things, Hoffman had told Whitney to
remind J.B. of “their favorite” Three Stooges movie featuring “Duck, Dodge, and Hide.”
Further, Hoffman, apparently trying to hide his contacts with J.B., had started referring to her
as “Susan” or “Cindy.” The State contended that these communications were a violation of the
March 6, 2016, order setting out additional conditions of bond. It asked the court to restate the
prohibition, and the court did so:
“THE COURT: *** *** Do you understand that I’m ordering you not to have any
contact with [J.B.] at all, through yourself or anyone else? And if you do and it’s proven
to me, I’ll find you in contempt, and you’ll be punished for that act.
Do you understand that?
[HOFFMAN]: Yes.”
¶ 16 On May 18, 2016, the State filed a petition for indirect criminal contempt of court against
Hoffman. It alleged that, “[o]n May 14, 2016, [Hoffman] knowingly defied [the] Court’s order
by making contact with [J.B.] by calling [his own home phone number] and speaking to her
from a recorded jail phone.”
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“During the phone call, [Hoffman] pleaded with [J.B.], saying ‘help, help’ when
[J.B.] interrupted and said ‘[n]o, you need to help me.’ [Hoffman] one more time stated
‘help’ and the call was then terminated.”
¶ 17 On June 21, 2016, after the trial, the State filed four more counts of indirect criminal
contempt of court based on Hoffman’s continued attempts to contact J.B. from jail. The State
agreed to drop the new counts in exchange for Hoffman’s admission to the May 18, 2016,
petition.
¶ 18 The court accepted the agreement and admonished Hoffman that he “could be sentenced
for a term in the penitentiary *** to be determined by this Court without regard to any
particular minimum or maximum.”
¶ 19 C. Sentencing
¶ 20 At the combined sentencing hearing for the domestic battery case and the contempt case,
the State introduced evidence of Hoffman’s violence toward C.R., a woman he dated before
his relationship with J.B. C.R. told a Villa Park police officer that Hoffman had pushed her out
the back door of his house, causing her to fall and injure her wrist. The State filed domestic
violence charges against Hoffman but later dismissed them.
¶ 21 Sergeant William Lyons, a detective with the Villa Park Police Department, testified that
he had interviewed witnesses in several of the cases against Hoffman. C.R. reported that
Hoffman had threatened to kill her; “[C.R.] was scared *** of him at that time and currently
still is.” Further, Hoffman had implied that he wanted C.R. to decline to cooperate with the
prosecution so that the State would drop the charges. Lyons spoke to J.B. about a letter dated
October 3, 2012, that she had dictated, signed, caused to be notarized, and sent to her employer.
According to the letter, J.B. had missed work for two weeks because Hoffman had confined
her to his house without a phone. J.B. told Lyons that the letter was accurate.
¶ 22 Whitney told Lyons and another officer that he had functioned as a messenger between
Hoffman and J.B. He knew that the court had ordered Hoffman not to communicate with J.B.
¶ 23 A supervisor from the jail testified that she had investigated an inmate’s anonymous
complaint about Hoffman: Hoffman had been trying to borrow other inmates’ telephone
personal identification numbers (PINs) to disguise the source of his calls. The supervisor
learned that calls had been made to J.B.’s phone number using at least one other inmate’s PIN,
but none of the calls reached anyone.
¶ 24 Valerie Phrysokos, J.B.’s sister, testified that J.B. had obtained a firearm owner’s
identification card because Hoffman wanted her to buy a gun for him. However, because
Hoffman was a felon, she was afraid that she would face criminal charges if she bought a gun
for him, so she never bought one. J.B. also told Phrysokos about an incident in February 2016
in which Hoffman stomped on her legs. Finally, Phrysokos had also learned that, not long
before the July 2011 incident, Hoffman had persuaded J.B. to commit suicide with him.
Hoffman left a car running in his garage. He and J.B. went into the garage together, but he
exited and locked her inside. J.B. escaped by breaking a window, but Hoffman confronted her
and struck her.
¶ 25 Hoffman’s presentencing report showed that he had six convictions related to domestic
violence, including domestic battery, violation of domestic battery bail bonds, and a violation
of an order of protection. He had been imprisoned for one domestic battery conviction. He had
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10 more related arrests without convictions for domestic batteries, violations of orders of
protection, and violations of domestic battery bail bonds. According to the State, Hoffman had
victimized four women in these incidents: J.B., C.R., and, in earlier incidents, Hoffman’s ex-
fiancée, D.S., and Hoffman’s ex-wife, E.H, who had obtained an order of protection in 1998.
¶ 26 The trial court noted that it considered Hoffman’s contacts before its March 12, 2016, no-
contact order and his effort to persuade J.B. not to testify to be “very grave aggravation.”
Hoffman objected to the suggestion that a violation of the conditions of bond could be treated
as aggravating, arguing that, although no contact with J.B. was a condition of his bond, nothing
indicated that the court had apprised him of that condition.
¶ 27 In his statement in allocution, Hoffman said that he loved J.B. “dearly” and that their
problems were the product of their alcoholism. He entreated the court, “[P]lease, give me and
J.B. a chance to straighten this thing out, get our feet back on the ground, and be productive
citizens again.”
¶ 28 The trial court found the case “bizarre.” Because neither Hoffman nor J.B. were capable of
change, the court found imprisonment was the only way to protect J.B. and the public generally
from Hoffman’s impulse to beat people unable to fight back:
“Well, this is an astonishing case. The facts are just astonishing and mind boggling,
frankly, the fact that this relationship is as both [J.B.] and [Hoffman] describe is—each
of them say they love each other.
***
From *** my calculations, you have been arrested a total of *** 27 times.
You have been convicted in 12 of those cases, and 8 of those were domestic battery
or battery related, and you had another 15 arrests that did not result in a prosecution,
11 of which involved battery, domestic battery, or domestic violence or violations of
orders of protection.
The Villa Park Police Department, according to my calculations, in the matter of
just a few years, has had to arrest you 21 times.
*** [T]he fact that you have generated that much time, attention, and energy, which
cannot be spent doing something else more productive to keep you from killing this
woman, who refuses to break off a relationship with you, it’s *** just mind boggling.
As far as the *** the contempt, *** when the State advised me that you had been
in contact with her, in violation of the earlier court order, and I made it very clear to
you that it would not be tolerated, and there would be severe and definite consequences,
if you chose to violate the Court’s order, and you did.
***
You called there, knowing she was going to answer the phone ***; and that is also
gravely aggravating because you attempted to *** keep her from appearing in this
courtroom and testifying against you.
***
It’s insanity. You are going to get out, and you are going to probably go back to
[J.B.] ***
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I don’t know what that says about her or about you, but I have the interests of the
community, and no police officer in Villa Park should have to constantly go to your
house to save her from being beaten by you, over and over and over again.
***
So I have nothing but grave concerns about any potential for rehabilitation by you,
and it seems unlikely because this is a pattern you have engaged in for 30 years of
getting drunk and beating people—at least people that are small enough for you to be
able to beat.”
The trial court imposed consecutive sentences of six years’ imprisonment for the first count of
domestic battery and two years’ imprisonment for the criminal contempt finding.
¶ 29 Hoffman moved for reconsideration of the aggregate sentence, asserting generally that it
was excessive. He argued that the court gave undue weight to factors in aggravation and “failed
to recognize and fairly apply the rule of lenity and construction of the sentence factors in [his]
favor.” The court denied the motion, and Hoffman timely appealed.
¶ 30 On initial direct appeal, Hoffman argued that his extended-term domestic battery sentence
was the product of double enhancement. The State confessed error and asked us to reduce
Hoffman’s sentence to the Class 3 felony maximum of five years’ imprisonment. We did so.
Our mandate on summary remand required defense counsel to file a certificate under Illinois
Supreme Court Rule 604(d) (eff. July 1, 2017).
¶ 31 On remand, defense counsel filed his Rule 604(d) certificate and refiled the motion to
reconsider the sentence. The court denied the motion, and this second direct appeal followed.
¶ 32 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 33 Section 5-8-4(a) of the Unified Code of Corrections (Code) (730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(a) (West
2016)) establishes a presumption that sentences are to be concurrent unless the court makes an
adequately grounded finding that consecutive sentences are necessary. Hoffman argues that
consecutive sentencing was error because (1) the trial court mistakenly believed that it was
mandatory, (2) discretionary consecutive sentencing is not supported by the evidence, (3) the
court failed to articulate an adequate basis, and (4) People v. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d)
170966, compels reversal. We disagree with Hoffman on all points.
¶ 34 A sentence imposed for criminal contempt, like any other sentence, is subject to review for
an abuse of discretion. People v. Geiger, 2012 IL 113181, ¶ 27. “A sentence will be deemed
an abuse of discretion where the sentence is greatly at variance with the spirit and purpose of
the law, or manifestly disproportionate to the nature of the offense.” (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) Geiger, 2012 IL 113181, ¶ 27. However, because there are no statutory provisions to
set the range of sentences available for criminal contempt of court, courts have a “ ‘special
responsibility for determining that the [contempt] power is not abused.’ ” Geiger, 2012 IL
113181, ¶ 27 (quoting Green v. United States, 356 U.S. 165, 188 (1958)). “[W]hen imposing
a sentence for contempt, a court should keep in mind that the contempt power is extraordinary
and thus should be used sparingly and with the utmost sensitivity.” McPherson, 2018 IL App
(2d) 170966, ¶ 19; see also Geiger, 2012 IL 113181, ¶ 25.
¶ 35 In Geiger, our supreme court adopted the United States Supreme Court’s four factors for
setting a sentence for criminal contempt: “(1) the extent of the willful and deliberate defiance
of the court’s order, (2) the seriousness of the consequences of the contumacious behavior,
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(3) the necessity of effectively terminating the defendant’s defiance as required by the public
interest, and (4) the importance of deterring such acts in the future.” Geiger, 2012 IL 113181,
¶ 28 (citing United States v. United Mine Workers of America, 330 U.S. 258, 303 (1947)).
¶ 36 The Geiger standard is harmonious with section 5-8-4(c)(1) of the Code, which provides
that the court may impose consecutive sentences if,
“having regard to the nature and circumstances of the offense and the history and
character of the defendant, it is the opinion of the court that consecutive sentences are
required to protect the public from further criminal conduct by the defendant, the basis
for which the court shall set forth in the record.” 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(c)(1) (West 2016).
“[A] trial court’s imposition of consecutive sentences [is] not in and of itself sufficient to imply
that the court was of the opinion that the consecutive term was necessary for the protection of
the public ***.” People v. Hicks, 101 Ill. 2d 366, 374-75 (1984). That said, a trial court “need
not recite the language of the statute in reaching its determination: ‘What is required is that the
record show that the sentencing court is of the opinion that a consecutive term is necessary for
the protection of the public.’ ” (Emphasis added.) Hicks, 101 Ill. 2d at 375 (quoting People v.
Pittman, 93 Ill. 2d 169, 178 (1982)).
¶ 37 A. Mandatory Consecutive Sentencing
¶ 38 Hoffman claims that the trial court was under the misapprehension that consecutive
sentences were mandatory under section 5-8-4(d)(8) of the Code (730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(d)(8)
(West 2016)). Section 5-8-4(d)(8) provides:
“If a person charged with a felony commits a separate felony while on pretrial release
or in pretrial detention in a county jail facility or county detention facility, then the
sentences imposed upon conviction of these felonies shall be served consecutively
regardless of the order in which the judgments of conviction are entered.” 730 ILCS
5/5-8-4(d)(8) (West 2016).
Criminal contempt is not a felony, as it lacks a specific sentencing range. See People v. Perez-
Gonzalez, 2014 IL App (2d) 120946, ¶ 33 (because criminal contempt lacks a sentencing range,
it cannot be a Class X felony).
¶ 39 We first conclude that the record does not establish that the trial court believed that
consecutive sentences were mandatory. We must presume that the court “knows and follows
the law unless the record affirmatively indicates otherwise.” In re Jonathon C.B., 2011 IL
107750, ¶ 72. Here, when the court admonished Hoffman before he admitted to the contempt
petition, it told him, “[Y]ou could be sentenced for a term in the penitentiary *** to be
determined by this Court without regard to any particular minimum or maximum.” The court
did not mention that the sentencing would be mandatorily consecutive to the domestic battery
sentence. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that the court was aware that
consecutive sentences were discretionary.
¶ 40 B. Discretionary Consecutive Sentencing
¶ 41 Hoffman argues second that his act of contempt is not such that he could properly be given
discretionary consecutive sentences under section 5-8-4(c)(1) of the Code (730 ILCS 5/5-8-
4(c)(1) (West 2016)). That section provides that the court may impose consecutive sentences
if,
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“having regard to the nature and circumstances of the offense and the history and
character of the defendant, it is the opinion of the court that consecutive sentences are
required to protect the public from further criminal conduct by the defendant, the basis
for which the court shall set forth in the record.” 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(c)(1) (West 2016).
He contends that “ ‘protecting the public’ was not really at issue *** where the contemptuous
act was a seconds-long phone call to [his] own home phone.”
¶ 42 We reject Hoffman’s assertion that for consecutive sentences to be proper the court needed
to find that his specific act of contempt posed an immediate danger to the general public.
Section 5-8-4(c)(1) requires a showing that “consecutive sentences are required to protect the
public from further criminal conduct,” not that the conduct itself posed an immediate danger.
(Emphasis added.) 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(c)(1) (West 2016).
¶ 43 We hold that the record supports the conclusion that consecutive sentences are required to
protect the public from further criminal conduct by Hoffman. 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(c)(1) (West
2016). At the sentencing hearing, the State presented evidence that Hoffman victimized four
women as part of a pattern of abuse that started as early as 1998. Moreover, Hoffman’s pattern
of contacting J.B. showed a complete disregard of the court’s no-contact order. Even if
Hoffman were not bound by the no-contact requirement in the bail bond order because he had
not been released from custody, he completely disregarded the court’s May 12, 2016, order
that he not contact J.B. He tried to evade the order by calling his house, knowing that J.B. was
the only one likely to answer. He also tried to conceal his attempts to contact J.B. by using
Whitney as a messenger and by using other inmates’ PINs to call her. We thus conclude that
the court did not abuse its discretion in determining that incarceration was the only reliable
way to stop Hoffman from engaging in his pattern of abuse.
¶ 44 Furthermore, the consecutive sentences were consistent with the factors for a contempt
sentence set out in United Mine Workers and adopted by Geiger. Those four factors are “(1) the
extent of the willful and deliberate defiance of the court’s order, (2) the seriousness of the
consequences of the contumacious behavior, (3) the necessity of effectively terminating the
defendant’s defiance as required by the public interest, and (4) the importance of deterring
such acts in the future.” Geiger, 2012 IL 113181, ¶ 28. All factors weigh in favor of a sentence
that would not be subsumed into the felony sentence, the first, third, and fourth factors strongly
so.
¶ 45 Concerning the first factor, the record supports the court’s conclusion that the violation
was entirely willful. Hoffman’s choice to call his house to reach J.B. was consistent with his
other ruses to evade detection of his contact attempts.
¶ 46 Concerning the second factor, the effects of Hoffman’s contumacious behavior were
harmful to J.B. and potentially very serious. We note that J.B. appeared to cooperate fully with
the State at trial. Still, Hoffman tried to hinder that cooperation and might have influenced her
to lie to two assistant state’s attorneys about the cause of an injury that Hoffman inflicted.
Moreover, his contacts could easily have led her to try to sabotage the prosecution, potentially
leading to his acquittal.
¶ 47 Concerning the third factor, it was in the public interest to terminate Hoffman’s defiance
of the no-contact order. To be sure, the specific act of defiance for which the court punished
Hoffman was over in a few seconds. But his violation of the court’s no-contact order continued.
As part of the plea agreement, the State dismissed four additional contempt counts relating to
such conduct. Moreover, Hoffman tried to deceive jail authorities in his contact attempts,
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suggesting that, absent significant punishment, he would seek to continue contacting J.B. from
jail.
¶ 48 Concerning the fourth factor, the evidence showed that Hoffman pressed his victims to
protect him from the legal consequences of his crimes. No-contact orders are a court’s primary
tool to prevent such pressure. As Hoffman is a repeat offender, the threat he poses to public
safety warrants a sentence that deters him from trying to dissuade J.B. and those in her position
from cooperating in further prosecutions. Were his contempt sentence to be subsumed into his
felony sentence, Hoffman might think he has nothing to lose by pressuring witnesses.
Deterrence is more likely if his sentences are consecutive.
¶ 49 C. Articulated Basis
¶ 50 Third, Hoffman asserts that the court failed to properly set out a basis for making the
sentences consecutive. The court’s explanation for the sentences made clear that their purpose
was to protect the public by keeping Hoffman away from J.B. and other women with whom he
might become involved, for as long as reasonably possible. The court indicated that it did not
believe that Hoffman had any capacity to change and that he and J.B. would likely resume an
abusive relationship when Hoffman was out of prison. It found that Hoffman had demonstrated
complete unwillingness to comply with an order not to contact J.B. Finally, it expressed
concern for the burden on the Villa Park police.
¶ 51 D. McPherson
¶ 52 Fourth and finally, Hoffman argues that McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, a case in
which we found a consecutive sentence for contempt to be an abuse of discretion, requires us
to make his contempt sentence concurrent with his domestic battery sentence.
¶ 53 We deem McPherson to be readily distinguishable. In that case, the defendant was
originally charged with a felony drug offense but was granted use immunity to testify at his
brother’s murder trial. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶ 3. When he refused to testify,
the State charged him with direct criminal contempt of court. He pled guilty both to contempt
and to the drug offense. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶¶ 3-4. In imposing the
consecutive sentence for contempt, the trial court emphasized the importance of society’s right
to compel testimony and the importance of deterring others from refusing to testify.
McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶ 12. “The trial court stated that, because [the]
defendant was in jail on the drug offense when he committed the contempt, it believed that the
sentence must be consecutive,” but the court added that it would have imposed one
discretionarily “ ‘based upon the facts and circumstances of [the] case.’ ” McPherson, 2018 IL
App (2d) 170966, ¶ 13. The court imposed consecutive prison terms of six years for the
contempt and three years for the drug offense. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶¶ 11,
13.
¶ 54 On appeal, we held that the consecutive sentencing was an abuse of discretion. The trial
court incorrectly treated contempt as a felony, improperly concluding that a consecutive
sentence was mandated based on the defendant committing the contempt while on pretrial
release or in jail for a prior felony. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶¶ 30-31. Moreover,
the basis that the trial court gave for imposing consecutive sentences discretionarily was
inadequate. The court did not find that a consecutive sentence was necessary to protect the
public from the defendant’s further criminal conduct. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966,
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¶ 33. Furthermore, “even had the trial court enunciated its basis on the record, a consecutive
sentence was not proper under the circumstances.” McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966,
¶ 34. The “unique circumstance” that led to the defendant’s refusal to testify was not likely to
recur, and the defendant’s minor criminal history did not suggest a high propensity to commit
further criminal acts. McPherson, 2018 IL App (2d) 170966, ¶ 34. We therefore made the
defendant’s contempt sentence concurrent with the other sentence. McPherson, 2018 IL App
(2d) 170966, ¶ 36.
¶ 55 None of the bases for modifying the sentence in McPherson is present here. The record is
such that we presume that the trial court knew that consecutive sentences were discretionary.
The trial court clearly explained why it thought that the public needed to be protected against
future offenses by Hoffman. Hoffman’s history of similar offenses supported the conclusion
that the consecutive sentences were necessary to protect the public.
¶ 56 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 57 For the reasons stated, we affirm Hoffman’s sentence.
¶ 58 Affirmed.
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