2020 IL App (1st) 181746
No. 1-18-1746
Opinion filed December 21, 2020
First Division
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County.
)
v. ) No. 18 CR 825
)
JODON COLLINS, )
) Honorable
Defendant-Appellant. ) Joan Charles P. Burns,
) Judge, presiding.
JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Walker and Justice Coghlan concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 A jury found Jodon Collins guilty of unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon and of
being an armed habitual criminal. Officers arrested Collins after a foot chase partially caught on
body camera video. The trial court admitted the video over repeated objections by Collins’s
counsel that the audio included inadmissible hearsay statements from Chicago police officer
Martin Hernandez. We agree with Collins. Officer Hernandez’s statements captured on the video
served no nonhearsay purpose and were inadmissible. The State’s evidence almost exclusively
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consisted of Hernandez’s testimony, further leading us to conclude the error was not harmless
beyond a reasonable doubt. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
¶2 Background
¶3 Chicago police officers Martin Hernandez and Joel Lopez were on patrol shortly after
1 a.m. on December 16, 2017. As they turned onto Walnut Street they saw a group of three
people standing near 3300 West Walnut. The group looked in the officers’ direction and started
walking away from them. As the officers got closer to 3300 West Walnut Street, Hernandez got
out of the car to “conduct an investigation.”
¶4 Hernandez saw one member of the group, who he identified as Jodon Collins, “turn
around, look at us and immediately start running west and then northbound.” Before Collins ran,
Hernandez did not observe anything illegal. Specifically, he did not see anyone in the group
engage in any hand-to-had transactions, did not see Collins holding a gun, and did not see a
bulge in Collins’s pants. Collins ran through a vacant lot, “holding his left side,” with Hernandez
five-to-eight feet behind. From that distance, Hernandez saw Collins “drop a black handgun” on
the ground.
¶5 Hernandez, after hesitating on seeing the gun, kept chase. To get to Fulton Street, Collins
had to jump two fences. Hernandez also cleared the fences, but lost ground in the process. From
about 40 feet away, Hernandez saw Collins jump a final fence into the yard of a house on Fulton
Street. Once Collins hopped the fence, Hernandez lost sight of him. Hernandez went into the
back yard and found Collins “crouched down” against the wall of the house. Hernandez arrested
Collins and handed him off to other officers before going back to the vacant lot where he
recovered a black handgun in the spot where he saw Collins drop it.
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¶6 Hernandez wore a body camera. To activate his body camera, he had to twice push a
button on the front of it. Once the camera activated, there was “a 15-second period that it goes
back and records.” Over an objection from Collins’s counsel, the court allowed the State to play
video footage from the camera with the audio. The video does not start until Hernandez was
“towards the third fence area” because, as Hernandez explained it, when the chase began, his
“focus was on the person that’s fleeing.” Hernandez agreed that a Chicago Police Department
special order required him to start the camera at the beginning of any incident and “leave it
recording till the scene is safe.”
¶7 During the video, Hernandez made the following statements on his radio, after putting
Collins in custody:
“Get to that lot, dude. Hurry up. He dropped it there.”
“Go back to the lot where he ran through, dude. It’s right in the middle of
the lot. It’s black.”
“It’s a pistol, squad. He dropped a pistol right there in the middle of the lot
over there where it started.”
Before trial, Collins’s counsel had moved in limine to bar the video, arguing that the statements it
contained were hearsay and improper prior consistent statements. The trial court denied the
motion, overruled counsel’s objection to the video at the time it was played, and overruled
counsel’s objection to the video when the court formally admitted it into evidence.
¶8 Chicago police evidence technician Robert Franks analyzed the gun for fingerprints but
found none. The State admitted certified copies of two previous convictions for possession of a
controlled substance with intent to deliver.
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¶9 Collins did not testify, but his counsel called Sergeant Joel Lopez, who laid the
foundation for the admission of his body camera video. He explained that his video starts after
Hernandez had already gotten out of the car. The video shows Lopez driving for a while and then
eventually getting out of his car and searching unsuccessfully for the gun. Collins’s counsel
played the video for the jury, without any objection by the State.
¶ 10 During closing argument, the State discussed Hernandez’s body camera video,
rhetorically asking the jury how Hernandez could have directed his fellow officers back to the lot
where they found the gun if he had not seen Collins drop it there. The State then played the entire
video for the jury. Collins’s counsel played Lopez’s body camera video for the jury, arguing that
Hernandez’s instructions to go back to the lot (audible in both officers’ body camera videos)
were confusing because it took Lopez so long to get to the right area.
¶ 11 The jury found Collins guilty of unlawful use of a weapon by a felon and being an armed
habitual criminal. Collins filed a motion for a new trial, repeating the argument that the audio
from Hernandez’s body camera video was improperly admitted. The State responded that
Collins’s counsel had used the officers’ videos for her own benefit, to which Collins’s counsel
replied that she had only used the videos because “the court ruled that the audio portions ***
would be admissible.” The trial court reiterated its view that the videos were “obviously
admissible” and denied the motion for a new trial.
¶ 12 The trial court merged the unlawful use of a weapon by a felon into the armed habitual
criminal count and sentenced Collins to 7½ years in the Illinois Department of Corrections.
¶ 13 Analysis
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¶ 14 Collins argues the trial court erred in admitting the audio from Hernandez’s body camera
because it exposed the jury to “inadmissible hearsay.” Collins takes issue with several statements
Hernandez made throughout the audio, telling other officers that Collins dropped a “black pistol”
as he ran from Hernandez. The State responds that Collins has waived the issue by using the
body camera video to his advantage in closing arguments and by introducing Lopez’s body
camera video. On the merits, the State argues that Hernandez’s statements were not hearsay
because they were only offered to explain the officers’ course of conduct, not for the truth of the
matter asserted. See Ill. R. Evid. 802 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 15 Waiver Argument
¶ 16 We start by considering, and rejecting, the State’s waiver argument. The State contends
Collins either invited or acquiesced in the admission of Hernandez’s body camera video because
he later “used the ‘error’ ” by incorporating the video into his arguments about the unreliability
of Hernandez’s testimony. The doctrine of invited error prevents a defendant from raising a
claim on appeal where he or she “procures, invites, or acquiesces in the admission” of otherwise
improperly admitted evidence. People v. Bush, 214 Ill. 2d 318, 332 (2005). The doctrine is
grounded in “notions of fair play” (People v. Villarreal, 198 Ill. 2d 209, 227 (2001)), and we
apply it where a defendant “ ‘sit[s] by’ ” and deprives the State of the opportunity to cure any
alleged error (see Bush, 214 Ill. 2d at 332-33 (quoting People v. Trefonas, 9 Ill. 2d 92, 98
(1956))).
¶ 17 Both cases the State relies on, Bush and Villarreal, involved a defendant whose counsel
behaved far differently than Collins’s counsel. In Bush, the defendant’s counsel stipulated to
admission of evidence that the substance he was accused of possessing was cocaine. Id. at 333.
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In Villarreal, the defendant on appeal attempted to attack verdict forms that his own counsel
submitted at trial. Villarreal, 198 Ill. 2d at 227. On the other hand, Collins’s counsel (i) filed a
motion in limine objecting to the admission of Hernandez’s body camera video, (ii) objected at
the time the video was offered as a trial exhibit, (iii) objected again when the trial court formally
admitted the State’s exhibits at the close of evidence, and (iv) preserved her objection in a
motion for a new trial by expressly arguing that she only admitted Lopez’s video in response to
the admission of Hernandez’s video.
¶ 18 The record demonstrates that Collins’s counsel never acquiesced to the admission of
Hernandez’s body camera video. Instead, she used Lopez’s video and her argument only to make
the best of the jury viewing Hernandez’s video over her objection. Collins’s challenge to the
admissibility of Hernandez’s body camera video has not been waived.
¶ 19 Hearsay Issue
¶ 20 On the merits, Collins claims the video from Hernandez’s body camera—the audio in
particular—should not have been admitted because it exposed the jury to hearsay not falling
within any exception. In the trial court, the State argued both that the statements in the body
camera video were not hearsay and, in the alternative, were admissible as excited utterances. The
State abandons the latter argument on appeal and asserts only that the statements in the video
were not hearsay. We review the denial of Collins’s motion in limine and the admission of the
contested video evidence for an abuse of discretion. People v. Dunmore, 389 Ill. App. 3d 1095,
1105-06 (2009).
¶ 21 The parties focus almost entirely on the disputed hearsay character of Hernandez’s body
camera video. Neither party, however, starts at the beginning—the Law Enforcement Officer-
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Worn Body Camera Act (Act) (50 ILCS 706/10-1 et seq. (West 2016)). The Act provides that
“recordings may be used as evidence in any administrative, judicial, legislative, or disciplinary
proceeding.” Id. § 10-30. The Act allows the recordings to be admitted without any expressed
limitation. The Illinois Rules of Evidence, in turn, prohibit the introduction of hearsay testimony
“except as provided *** by statute as provided in Rule 101.” Ill. R. Evid. 802 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
So, at least theoretically, the Act’s grant of the limitless use of body camera recordings would
mean that there is no need for the contents of those recordings to comply with the rule against
admitting hearsay.
¶ 22 But a statutory evidentiary rule governs “unless in conflict with a rule or a decision of the
Illinois Supreme Court.” Ill. R. Evid. 101 (eff. Jan. 6, 2015). This means that “where an
irreconcilable conflict exists between a legislative enactment and a rule of this court on a matter
within the court’s authority, the rule will prevail.” People v. Peterson, 2017 IL 120331, ¶ 31.
Neither party has suggested that the Act provides admission of body camera recordings without
limitation, and so we will assume—without deciding—that the Act allows the trial court to admit
body camera recordings subject to the rules of evidence, including the hearsay rule.
¶ 23 Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial
or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Ill. R. Evid. 801(c) (eff.
Oct. 15, 2015). Neither party disputes that the recording contains “statements” Hernandez made.
Neither party disputes that Hernandez made the relevant statements “other than *** while
testifying at the trial.” See id. The only dispute involves admitting the statements to prove the
truth of the matter they assert—that Collins “dropped a pistol right there in the middle of the lot
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where we started”—or whether the statements were admitted for some other purpose, namely to
chronicle the course of the police investigation.
¶ 24 Collins relies heavily on People v. Jura, 352 Ill. App. 3d 1080 (2004), to argue that
Hernandez’s statements were offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted, not to show the
course of the investigation. We find Jura persuasive.
¶ 25 The court in Jura analyzed the testimony of three officers. All of them testified that they
received a radio call of “ ‘a person with a gun’ ” at “ ‘2845 West 38th Street in the alley.’ ” Id. at
1082-84. The radio call also described the suspect as a “ ‘male White’ ” and included
information about height and a face tattoo. Id. The court’s analysis began by acknowledging that
officers may testify to statements made out of court where the statements are used to show the
officers’ investigative steps and not for the truth of the matter asserted. Id. at 1085. The court
cautioned, however, that the statements must be “ ‘necessary and important’ ” to a full
explanation of the State’s case. Id. The court rejected the State’s argument of a nonhearsay
purpose because “[t]here was no issue regarding the reason why the officers proceeded to the
alley behind 38th Street.” Id. at 1086. Here, similarly, there is no issue about why officer
Hernandez returned to the lot Collins ran through. Hernandez’s nonhearsay testimony sufficed to
explain that the officers went back to search for the gun Hernandez claimed to have seen Collins
drop.
¶ 26 We conclude, as the court did in Jura, that the hearsay statements in Hernandez’s body
camera video were not “necessary and important” to explain the State’s case. The State implies
that the jury may have been confused because Hernandez arrested Collins and then went back
“several blocks removed from where the incident eventually came to an end” to recover the gun.
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See People v. Cameron, 189 Ill. App. 3d 998, 1004 (1989) (“ ‘arresting or investigating officer
should not be put in the false position of seeming just to have happened upon the scene’ ”). Here,
there was no risk of the jury believing that Hernandez just “happened upon the scene” where the
gun was found because Hernandez was both the arresting officer and the pursuing officer who
saw Collins toss the gun.
¶ 27 After finding no nonhearsay purpose, the court in Jura allowed that the State’s argument
would have been reasonable had it not been for multiple witnesses testifying to the hearsay
statements and the State emphasizing the statements in opening and closing arguments. Jura, 352
Ill. App. 3d at 1088-89. Here, we do not have multiple witnesses repeating the hearsay, but do
have Hernandez repeating the relevant hearsay statements in some form at least three times
throughout the video. And, as in Jura, the State not only relied on the hearsay statements during
its closing argument, it replayed the video in full. Like the court in Jura, we cannot accept that
Hernandez’s statements in the body camera video were admitted for anything but the truth of the
matter it asserted—namely, that the black gun was in the lot through which Collins ran and that
Collins was the one who dropped it there.
¶ 28 As this court has cautioned, “[t]he ‘police procedure’ shibboleth has not proved
persuasive” in many cases. People v. Warlick, 302 Ill. App. 3d 595, 600 (1998) (collecting
cases). Where it is enough for an officer to explain that an event happened (observation, radio
message, witness description) and he or she responded to it, the substance of an out-of-court
statement memorializing that event is inadmissible. Id.
¶ 29 We also find that the admission of Hernandez’s statements through the body camera
video was even more prejudicial than the testimony in Jura or many of the cases described in
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Warlick, where the officers merely testified about the radio dispatch they heard. Jura, 352 Ill.
App. 3d at 1082-84; Warlick, 302 Ill. App. 3d at 600 (citing, e.g., People v. Hazen, 104 Ill. App.
2d 398, 402-03 (1969) (error to admit account of radio message)). Rather than testimony about
the video, we are dealing with the video itself. As a justice of this court explained, and we agree,
“a video is a most powerful piece of evidence, *** an observation requiring no citation.” Hudson
v. City of Chicago, 378 Ill. App. 3d 373, 434 (2007) (O’Malley, J., dissenting).
¶ 30 We have reviewed the video and find that it is of the type to easily overpersuade. The
video depicts a chase at night, with frenetic movements caused by the camera’s attachment to
Hernandez’s body. Hernandez calls over the radio in an urgent tone of voice, while he is
breathing deeply from the chase. The video shows at least two police SUVs had responded to the
scene with searchlights. Four officers, at minimum, take Collins into custody. Because there was
no nonhearsay purpose to admitting the video with Hernandez’s out-of-court statements, the
nature of the video was more prejudicial than probative.
¶ 31 Having found error, we must determine whether it was harmless. The State, whose
burden it is to establish harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt, cites no authority discussing
harmless error. Instead, the State cites People v. McNeal, 2019 IL App (1st) 180015, ¶ 83, for the
proposition that Collins’s flight was evidence of consciousness of guilt. Whatever the merits of
that proposition, the State reads McNeal out of context. There, our discussion of flight as
evidence of guilt occurred during an examination of whether the evidence was closely balanced
for the purposes of the plain error rule. Id. When a defendant raises plain error based on forfeited
arguments, it is his or her burden to show the evidence as closely balanced; here, it is the State’s
burden to show admitting hearsay as harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Magallanes,
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409 Ill. App. 3d 720, 746 (2011) (explaining different standards). We do not know what the court
in McNeal would have held had the relevant issues been preserved and been subject to harmless
error review, especially because we also have held that “[w]hile flight provides some evidence of
consciousness of guilt, it is far from overwhelming” (People v. Melchor, 376 Ill. App. 3d 444,
457 (2007)).
¶ 32 The only other case the State cites, People v. Gray, 2017 IL 120958, was not a harmless
error case and stands for the unremarkable proposition that testimony of a single eyewitness can
suffice to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. ¶ 36. But on harmless error review, the
question is not what the jury could have done, but what “the jury would have done.” (Emphasis
in original.) People v. Parmly, 117 Ill. 2d 386, 396 (1987). We must determine whether the
erroneous admission of hearsay evidence was “the weight that tipped the scales against the
defendant.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. Even if the evidence is “minimally
sufficient,” evidentiary error constitutes reversible error if “we cannot say that retrial without this
evidence would produce the same result.” People v. Manning, 182 Ill. 2d 193, 215 (1998) (citing
Parmly, 117 Ill. 2d at 396).
¶ 33 We do not quarrel with the idea that Hernandez’s testimony was “minimally sufficient”
to sustain Collins’s conviction. We cannot conclude, however, that admitting the hearsay
statements in the body camera video was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Collins’s theory
at trial centered on the officers’ “tunnel vision” about his guilt and their not finding the gun until
after Collins’s arrest. In short, Collins attacked the officers’ (especially Hernandez’s) credibility.
During the State’s closing argument, not only did the prosecutor play and walk the jury through
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the entire video, but he told the jury that Hernandez was credible because the video corroborated
his story:
“And what do you see when he goes back to that location? Do you see an
officer who is confused about where he is? Do you see an officer looking around
with his flashlight, oh, maybe it’s over here, maybe it’s over here, I’m not sure?
No. He walks directly to where he saw that gun at. You see it on this video. *** It
makes you ask a question in this situation. If Officer Hernandez didn’t see the
defendant drop that gun in that lot then how is he able to describe it so accurately
to his partners? *** If he didn’t see the defendant drop it at that location how is he
able to tell his fellow officers exactly where it was dropped?”
The State’s theory of the case focused on Hernandez’s statements in the body camera video as
essential corroboration to his testimony that he saw Collins drop the gun in the lot during the
chase.
¶ 34 The State enforces its heavy reliance on the video in its brief before us, emphasizing that
“Officer Hernandez’s in-court testimony was bolstered by video footage which showed his return
to *** the specific area where moments before, he had personally observed defendant discard a
weapon.” The State unintentionally raises the harm in admitting Hernandez’s statements
captured on video—they “bolstered” Hernandez’s in-court testimony, making it more likely the
jury would find him credible.
¶ 35 The State considers the evidence overwhelming, relying solely on Hernandez’s testimony
about seeing Collins toss the gun. As we already explained, Hernandez’s testimony may have
been “minimally sufficient” to support a conviction, but that is all it is. An evidence technician
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recovered the gun and found “no latent prints on the firearm, firearm magazine, nor the rounds of
ammunition.” Nothing else corroborated Hernandez’s testimony. We acknowledge, as the State
points out, that Collins introduced Sergeant Lopez’s body camera video during his case-in-chief.
But as we read the record, counsel used Lopez’s body camera video to rebut the State’s
introduction of Hernandez’s body camera video. The record suggests Collins would not have
introduced Lopez’s body camera video had the statements in Hernandez’s video been properly
excluded. Indeed, during the hearing on Collins’s motion for a new trial, counsel explicitly
argued that she would not have introduced Lopez’s body camera video had Hernandez’s been
excluded.
¶ 36 At the end of the day, the State relies on the uncorroborated testimony of a single witness
to argue harmless error in admitting the hearsay statements in Hernandez’s body camera video.
We find these facts insufficient to meet the State’s burden to show harmlessness beyond a
reasonable doubt. By admitting the hearsay statements in Hernandez’s body camera video, the
trial court committed reversible error.
¶ 37 Remaining Arguments
¶ 38 Collins makes two more arguments. He says the prosecutor made improper statements
during closing and rebuttal arguments by holding against Collins his invocating of two
constitutional rights. The prosecutor, contends Collins, implied that Collins was “running away”
from responsibility by exercising his right to a trial and commented on Collins’s post-arrest
silence. Collins also argues trial counsel was ineffective for failing to seek a jury instruction
allowing jurors to draw a negative inference from Hernandez’s failure to immediately turn on his
body camera.
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¶ 39 We have found error in admitting the hearsay statements in Hernandez’s body camera
video and need address his remaining arguments only if we find them likely to recur on remand.
See People v. Fuller, 205 Ill. 2d 308, 346 (2002) (addressing “only those additional contentions
*** likely to be a factor on remand”).
¶ 40 Without deciding the propriety of the specific arguments Collins challenges, we reiterate
the impropriety of disparaging a defendant’s exercise of his or her constitutional rights during
closing argument. See People v. Herrero, 324 Ill. App. 3d 876, 887 (2001) (describing
prosecutor’s comment on defendant’s exercise of his right to trial as “outrageous”); People v.
Herrett, 137 Ill. 2d 195, 212-13 (1990) (describing prosecutor’s comment on post-arrest silence
as “exceed[ing] the bounds of fair comment”).
¶ 41 We also decline to address Collins’s ineffectiveness claim directed at counsel’s alleged
failure to request a negative inference instruction based on Hernandez’s delay in turning on his
body camera. Because we have found the hearsay statements in the body camera video
inadmissible, it is unclear whether and to what extent the State will use the video on remand, and
whether counsel’s strategic decisions will depend entirely on the use (or not) of the video.
¶ 42 Finally, as we said, Hernandez’s testimony without the hearsay statements in the video
was at least “minimally sufficient” to support a conviction if believed by the factfinder, so there
is no double jeopardy impediment to Collins’s retrial. See People v. Taylor, 76 Ill. 2d 289, 309-
10 (1979).
¶ 43 Reversed and remanded.
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No. 1-18-1746
Cite as: People v. Collins, 2020 IL App (1st) 181746
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CR-825;
the Hon. Charles P. Burns, Judge, presiding.
Attorneys James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Samuel B. Steinberg, of
for State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
Appellant:
Attorneys Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J.
for Spellberg, Annette Collins, Joseph Alexander, and Mikah
Appellee: Soliunas, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.
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