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Appellate Court Date: 2021.04.09
10:37:50 -05'00'
Pitts v. Kolitwenzew, 2020 IL App (3d) 190267
Appellate Court JACOB P. PITTS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CHAD KOLITWENZEW,
Caption Director, Jerome Combs Detention Center, Defendant-Appellee.
District & No. Third District
No. 3-19-0267
Filed November 20, 2020
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kankakee County, No. 19-MR-88;
Review the Hon. Ronald J. Gerts, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Jacob P. Pitts, of Kankakee, appellant pro se.
Appeal
Jim Rowe, State’s Attorney, of Kankakee (Nancy Nicholson, Assistant
State’s Attorney, of counsel), for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE CARTER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Lytton and Justice Schmidt concurred in the
judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff, Jacob P. Pitts, a pretrial detainee in the Kankakee County jail (also known as the
Jerome Combs Detention Center), filed a mandamus complaint in the trial court seeking to
compel defendant, Chad Kolitwenzew, the director of the jail (Director), to provide Pitts with
barber services and access to a sufficient law library and to stop restricting Pitts’s access to
correspondence and legal materials as a disciplinary sanction. 1 After an evidentiary hearing,
the trial court denied Pitts’s complaint for mandamus relief. Pitts appeals. We affirm the trial
court’s judgment.
¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 In March 2019, while Pitts was a pretrial detainee in the county jail awaiting trial on certain
charges, he filed a pro se complaint for mandamus relief against the Director. In his complaint,
Pitts alleged, among other things, that on certain specified dates (1) his correspondence and
legal materials had been taken away from him (or he was denied access to those items) as
disciplinary punishment, (2) he was denied barber services at the jail, and (3) he had been
denied sufficient legal materials or resources at the jail. Pitts sought to have the trial court order
the Director to provide him with access to barber services and a sufficient law library that
complied with part 701 of the Title 20 of the Illinois Administrative Code (County Jail
Standards) (see 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701) and to prohibit correctional officers from denying Pitts
access to his correspondence and legal materials in the future. The Director filed an answer to
the mandamus complaint and denied Pitts’s main accusations.
¶4 Later that same month, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the mandamus
complaint. Pitts was present in court for the hearing, in the custody of the county sheriff, and
represented himself pro se. Pitts was allegedly in shackles, although there is no mention of that
in the record, except for one brief reference that Pitts made in passing during his testimony.
Pitts did not ask to have the shackles removed and did not object to being restrained.
¶5 The Director was also present in court for the hearing and was represented by one of the
county’s assistant state’s attorneys (referred to hereinafter as the Director’s attorney). At or
near the start of the hearing, the Director’s attorney asked the trial court whether the hearing
could be conducted “a little more informally” so that she could conduct her direct examination
of the Director immediately after Pitts had done so rather than having to wait until the
Director’s case-in-chief. The trial court allowed the Director’s attorney’s request.
¶6 During the evidence portion of the hearing, the trial court heard the testimony of both the
Director and Pitts. In addition, the trial court admitted two jail videos as exhibits for Pitts and
also admitted a copy of the County Jail Standards as an exhibit for the Director. The evidence
that was presented can be summarized as follows.
¶7 The Director testified that he had been the chief of corrections at the county jail for the past
six or seven years and, prior to that time, had been the assistant chief of corrections at the jail
for about four years. One of the Director’s responsibilities as the chief of corrections was to
1
Although Pitts labeled his pleading a petition for writ of mandamus, the pleading is more properly
referred to as a complaint for mandamus relief. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1501 (West 2018) (abolishing writs);
id. § 14-102 (referring to the filing of a complaint for mandamus); Turner-El v. West, 349 Ill. App. 3d
475, 477 (2004); People ex rel. Braver v. Washington, 311 Ill. App. 3d 179, 181 n.1 (1999).
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ensure that the jail was a safe environment for the jail’s employees and inmates. In keeping
with that responsibility, the Director enacted disciplinary consequences based on incidents that
happened in the jail and in line with the County Jail Standards.
¶8 Pitts was currently an inmate at the jail and was awaiting trial for pending Kankakee
County criminal charges. In 2012, Pitts was convicted of attempting to escape from the jail.
While Pitts was an inmate at the jail (presumably in relation to the current offenses), he was
involved in various incidents. According to the Director, Pitts had assaulted and battered other
inmates, had assaulted and battered corrections staff, had deployed a taser against one of the
correctional officers, and had smeared and used fecal matter within the facility. As a result of
those incidents, disciplinary action was taken against Pitts. In the Director’s opinion, Pitts was
a security risk to the safety of the jail employees and other inmates.
¶9 At the time of the hearing, Pitts was being housed in “Max C” as a disciplinary sanction
for when Pitts deployed a taser on a member of the corrections staff. Max C was a disciplinary
segregation/restrictive housing unit at the jail. While in Max C, Pitts was only allowed to be
out of his cell for one hour each day to use the phone, take a shower, clean his cell, and do
whatever else he needed to do. When the Director was asked during his testimony if there was
a reason why the corrections staff would take an inmate’s personal property if a disciplinary
action had occurred, the Director responded that if the conduct had occurred inside the cell, the
corrections staff would remove items to make sure the cell was clean and that everything was
in order before they gave the items back to the inmate. In addition, because Max C was
disciplinary housing, less property was permitted in the cell. An inmate in Max C was not
allowed to accumulate commissary and could not take with him into Max C any items that he
had bought from the store. Items that were needed as part of everyday life, however, such as
legal work, were allowed in the cells in Max C.
¶ 10 More specifically as to Pitts’s accusations, the Director testified that the jail did not have a
barber shop or an area where inmates went to get their hair cut. Instead, the jail provided
inmates with barbering tools—hair trimmers, clippers, shavers, and plastic guards that
controlled the length at which the hair was cut—so that the inmates could cut their own hair or
cut each other’s hair. Pitts had requested to be seen by a barber or to have barber services at
various times while he was in jail and had been provided with the barbering tools by the jail
staff. As for Pitts’s mail, the Director testified that Pitts was given his correspondence when it
was received at the jail, after it had been screened, and that the mail screening procedures were
enacted pursuant to the County Jail Standards. According to the Director, the jail did not
withhold mail from an inmate as a disciplinary sanction. With regard to Pitts’s access to legal
materials, the Director testified that the jail had wall kiosks located throughout the facility that
contained all of the different legal resources that were available to the inmates. The jail also
had law libraries that were located on carts or in attorney rooms in the different housing units
for the inmates to use. To the best of the Director’s knowledge, the different legal resources
available to the inmates were those that were required by the County Jail Standards. The
Director denied that he had withheld legal resources from Pitts for disciplinary reasons and
stated that legal resources were available to Pitts, even when he was being housed in Max C.
¶ 11 Pitts testified that he arrived at the jail in April 2018. In May 2018, it was alleged that Pitts
had been involved in an aggravated battery to some of the correctional officers. According to
Pitts, as a form of disciplinary punishment, his legal materials and all his other property items,
even hygiene items, were taken away from him. Pitts was left in a cell with nothing other than
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a blanket and a sheet for about six weeks. In November 2018, Pitts was charged with another
aggravated battery of a correctional officer, and his legal materials and other property items
were again taken away from him for a period of time. In June 2019, Pitts was alleged to have
committed a third aggravated battery of a correctional officer (the incident where Pitts
allegedly deployed a taser on the officer) and was again denied access to his property and legal
materials.
¶ 12 Pitts indicated during the hearing that he did not have an issue with the mail procedure at
the county jail. Rather, according to Pitts, his complaint was about his correspondence
materials—his pen and paper—being taken at times. As for barbering services, Pitts
acknowledged during his testimony that he had been provided with barbering tools when he
requested them but complained that other inmates had stolen all of the plastic trimmer guards
so that the only option available to him was to shave off all of his hair. In addition, although
Pitts had seen inmates cutting each other’s hair in the general population at the jail, that did
not occur in Max C because Max C was a segregation unit and the inmates in the unit were not
allowed to have contact with each other.
¶ 13 With regard to legal resources, Pitts testified that other inmates in disciplinary segregation
had access to the wall kiosks, which had all of the legal resources on them that were required
by the County Jail Standards. Pitts, however, was not allowed in the area where the wall kiosks
were located. According to Pitts, when he was taken out of his segregation cell for his daily
hour of recreation, he was taken to the booking area. There was no wall kiosk in that area.
Instead, the booking area had a cart with a computer on it that contained certain Illinois legal
resources. Pitts did not believe, though, that the legal resources on the computer were up to
date and was unable to find jury instructions on the computer.
¶ 14 After the presentation of the evidence had concluded, the trial court took the case under
advisement. The following month, in April 2019, the trial court issued its written decision,
denying Pitts’s complaint for mandamus relief. In its ruling, the trial court found that (1) the
restrictions on barber services in the maximum-security unit were reasonable and within
necessary security measures allowed by the applicable regulations, (2) the problem with the
plastic trimmer guards was not of the Director’s making, and (3) the Director had provided
Pitts with access to sufficient legal resources in compliance with the requirements of the
County Jail Standards. In its ruling, the trial court noted that the videos that Pitts had submitted
showed Pitts fighting with correctional officers and using a taser to repeatedly shock a
correctional officer. The trial court found from those videos that Pitts was a violent person and
that the restrictions placed upon him in the jail were reasonable and necessary.
¶ 15 Upon being notified of the trial court’s ruling, Pitts appealed.
¶ 16 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 17 On appeal, Pitts argues that the trial court erred in denying his complaint for mandamus
relief. Pitts asserts that the trial court’s ruling was erroneous for several reasons. First, Pitts
contends, the trial court failed to conduct a proper hearing on the mandamus complaint in that
the trial court failed to hold a Boose hearing (see People v. Boose, 66 Ill. 2d 261, 265-67 (1977))
at the outset of the proceedings, failed to conduct the mandamus hearing in a formal manner,
failed to admit the parties’ exhibits into evidence, and failed to render a complete ruling as to
all of the issues raised by Pitts in the complaint. Second, Pitts contends, the trial court
incorrectly interpreted the various applicable sections of the County Jail Standards and also
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incorrectly determined that section 3-8-7(b)(1) of the Unified Code of Corrections (Unified
Code) (730 ILCS 5/3-8-7(b)(1) (West 2018)) did not apply to Pitts in this case. Third, Pitts
contends, the trial court incorrectly found, under the facts of this case, that Pitts had not been
denied access to barber services, a sufficient law library, or his legal and correspondence
materials. For all of the reasons stated, Pitts asks that we reverse the trial court’s judgment;
that we grant his complaint for mandamus relief; and that we remand this case, if necessary,
for further proceedings.
¶ 18 The Director argues that the trial court’s ruling was proper and should be upheld. In support
of that argument, the Director asserts that the trial court correctly conducted the hearing on the
mandamus complaint; correctly interpreted the various sections of the County Jail Standards;
correctly determined that section 3-8-7 of the Unified Code did not apply in this case; correctly
found that the Director had not denied Pitts access to barber services, a law library, or legal
and correspondence materials; and correctly denied Pitts’s complaint for mandamus relief. The
Director asks, therefore, that we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
¶ 19 Although there is some uncertainty in the law as to the standard of review that applies on
appeal when an appellate court reviews a trial court’s grant or denial of a complaint for
mandamus relief (Pate v. Wiseman, 2019 IL App (1st) 190449, ¶ 27 (recognizing that the
standard of review that applies on appeal to a trial court’s grant or denial of a mandamus
complaint is unclear)), in situations such as the present case, where the trial court’s denial of
the mandamus complaint was based primarily upon factual grounds, the appellate court will
not reverse the trial court’s ruling unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence (see
Duane v. Hardy, 2012 IL App (3d) 110845, ¶ 11). A ruling is against the manifest weight of
the evidence only if it is clearly evident from the record that the trial court should have reached
the opposite conclusion or if the ruling itself is unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on the
evidence presented. Best v. Best, 223 Ill. 2d 342, 350 (2006). However, to the extent that we
are called upon in this appeal to interpret the relevant provisions of the applicable statutes and
regulations, that task is a question of law to which we apply a de novo standard of review on
appeal. See Gaffney v. Board of Trustees of the Orland Fire Protection District, 2012 IL
110012, ¶ 50 (stating that statutory interpretation is a question of law that is subject to de novo
review on appeal); People v. Montalvo, 2016 IL App (2d) 140905, ¶ 18 (indicating that
interpretation of the Illinois Administrative Code is also reviewed de novo on appeal).
¶ 20 Mandamus relief is an extraordinary remedy that is used to compel a public officer to
perform a mandatory and nondiscretionary official duty. McFatridge v. Madigan, 2013 IL
113676, ¶ 17. In order to obtain mandamus relief, the plaintiff must establish the following
three elements: (1) that the plaintiff has a clear right to the relief requested, (2) that the public
officer has a clear duty to act, and (3) that the public officer has clear authority to comply with
an order granting mandamus relief. Id. As the elements indicate, mandamus may not be used
to compel a public officer to perform an act that involves the exercise of the officer’s discretion
or to direct the manner in which a discretionary act is performed, even if the officer’s discretion
has been exercised erroneously. See id.; Turner-El v. West, 349 Ill. App. 3d 475, 479-80
(2004).
¶ 21 In the mandamus complaint in the present case, Pitts sought to compel the Director to
comply with the County Jail Standards (see 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701), which, among other things,
require that county jail facilities provide detainees with access to barber services and legal
resources and prohibit county jail facilities from imposing mail restrictions on detainees as
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disciplinary sanctions. See 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.100(b)(4) (2014); 20 Ill. Adm. Code
701.230(a) (1997); 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.180(h) (2014). There are three sections of the
County Jail Standards that are involved in this case: section 701.100, section 701.230, and
section 701.180. Section 701.100 of the County Jail Standards, which addresses clothing,
personal hygiene, and grooming, requires that “[b]arber and beautician services shall be made
accessible [to detainees] but must not violate required security measures.” 20 Ill. Adm. Code
701.100(b)(4) (2014). Section 701.230, which addresses library services, requires that “up-to-
date informational, recreational, legal, and educational resources” be made available to
detainees. 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.230(a) (1997). The section goes on to specify the two legal
materials that must be provided: the Illinois Compiled Statutes and the current jail rules and
regulations. 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.230(a)(1), (2) (1997). Finally, section 701.180 of the
County Jail Standards, which addresses mail procedures, provides that “[n]o disciplinary
restrictions shall be placed on a detainee’s mail privileges.” 20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.180(h)
(2014). A somewhat similar provision is contained in section 3-8-7 of the Unified Code, which
Pitts also relies upon here. See 730 ILCS 5/3-8-7(b)(1) (West 2018) (providing that “[c]orporal
punishment and disciplinary restrictions on diet, medical or sanitary facilities, mail or access
to legal materials are prohibited”).
¶ 22 The County Jail Standards are part of the Illinois Administrative Code. When interpreting
such provisions, this court applies the rules of statutory construction. See Ress v. Office of the
State Comptroller, 329 Ill. App. 3d 136, 142 (2002) (stating that the rules of statutory
construction apply when a court is construing the provisions of the Illinois Administrative
Code). The fundamental rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the
intent of the legislature (or drafters, in the case of Administrative Code provisions). Gaffney,
2012 IL 110012, ¶ 56; Ress, 329 Ill. App. 3d at 142 (applying the rules of statutory construction
to Illinois Administrative Code provisions). The most reliable indicator of that intent is the
plain and ordinary meaning of the language of the statute itself. Gaffney, 2012 IL 110012, ¶ 56;
Ress, 329 Ill. App. 3d at 142. In determining the plain meaning of statutory terms, a court
should consider the statute in its entirety and keep in mind the subject the statute addresses and
the apparent intent of the legislature in enacting the statute and, when possible, should construe
the statute in such a manner as to give effect to every word, clause, and sentence, so that no
part of the statute is rendered superfluous or meaningless. See 5 ILCS 70/1.01 (West 2018) (in
construing a statute, “[a]ll general provisions, terms, phrases and expressions shall be liberally
construed in order that the true intent and meaning of the General Assembly may be fully
carried out”); Blum v. Koster, 235 Ill. 2d 21, 29 (2009); Palm v. Holocker, 2018 IL 123152,
¶ 21. If the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, it must be applied as written, without
resorting to further aids of statutory construction. Gaffney, 2012 IL 110012, ¶ 56. A court may
not depart from the plain language of the statute and read into it exceptions, limitations, or
conditions that are not consistent with the express legislative intent. Id. However, if the
language of a statute is ambiguous in that it is susceptible to more than one reasonable
interpretation, a court may consider extrinsic aids to determine the meaning of the statutory
language. See Williams v. Illinois State Scholarship Comm’n, 139 Ill. 2d 24, 51 (1990).
¶ 23 Upon reviewing the record in the present case, we find that Pitts failed to establish that he
was entitled to mandamus relief. See McFatridge, 2013 IL 113676, ¶ 17. An evidentiary
hearing was held in this case, and the trial court heard the testimony of the Director and Pitts.
After listening to that testimony and viewing the two jail video recordings that Pitts had
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submitted, the trial court found that the Director had provided Pitts with access to barber
services and legal resources and that Pitts had not been denied access to correspondence and
legal materials. Those findings were well supported by the evidence.
¶ 24 First, with regard to Pitts’s claim of denial of access to barber services, the Director testified
that barbering tools—such as trimmers and plastic trimmer guards—were provided to the
detainees at the jail, including Pitts, so that they could cut their own hair or cut each other’s
hair. Pitts agreed in his testimony that barbering tools had been provided. That other inmates
had stolen the plastic trimmer guards, as Pitts had testified, was not a failure or refusal to act
on the Director’s part and could not, therefore, be remedied through a mandamus proceeding.
See id. (indicating that a mandamus proceeding is used to compel a public officer to perform
a mandatory and nondiscretionary official duty). Nor can we find as a matter of interpretation
that section 701.100(b)(4) of the County Jail Standards requires the county jail to provide Pitts
and the other detainees with access to a barber, as Pitts suggests. If that were the case, the
regulation would have plainly stated as much—that detainees must be given access to a
“barber”—rather than requiring that detainees be given access to “[b]arber *** services.” See
20 Ill. Adm. Code 701.100(b)(4) (2014). The additional word, “services,” must be given
meaning, if possible, and when considered with the rest of the language of that part of the
regulation—that the services must not violate required security measures—is an indication that
the Director has discretion to determine the most appropriate and secure manner in which to
satisfy that requirement under the circumstances. See Palm, 2018 IL 123152, ¶ 21 (indicating
that when a court construes a statute, it should, when possible, construe the statute in such a
manner as to give effect to every word, clause, and sentence, so that no part of the statute is
rendered superfluous or meaningless); Blum, 235 Ill. 2d at 29 (stating that in determining the
plain meaning of statutory terms, a court should consider the statute in its entirety and keep in
mind the subject the statute addresses and the apparent intent of the legislature in enacting the
statute). At the very least, the term, “barber *** services” is ambiguous, which would mean
that Pitts cannot establish that he has a clear right to the relief requested. See McFatridge, 2013
IL 113676, ¶ 17 (indicating that to obtain mandamus relief, the plaintiff must prove, among
other things, that he or she has a clear right to the relief requested).
¶ 25 Second, as for Pitts’s claim of denial of access to legal resources, the Director testified that
legal materials, including the Illinois Compiled Statutes and the jail rules and regulations, were
made available to detainees through wall kiosks located throughout the facility and through
computers located on carts in various areas of the facility. Pitts’s own testimony on the matter
corroborated that of the Director in most respects as Pitts testified that he could access the legal
materials specified, even while he was in disciplinary segregation, on a computer in the
booking area. The concerns that Pitts raised in his testimony about the legal resources—that
he did not believe they were up to date and that he could not find jury instructions on the
computer—were for the trial court, as the trier of fact, to consider and weigh in determining
whether the Director had complied with the requirements of the County Jail Standards. See
Best, 223 Ill. 2d at 350-51 (indicating in a different context where the manifest weight standard
of review was applied that the appellate court would not substitute its judgment for that of the
trial court regarding the credibility of witnesses, the weight to be given to the evidence, or the
inferences to be drawn). Furthermore, to the extent that Pitts relies upon section 3-8-7(b)(1) of
the Unified Code to support his claim of denial of access to legal resources, that statutory
section does not apply here because Pitts is a detainee in the county jail and not an inmate in
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the Illinois Department of Corrections. See People v. Lindsey, 199 Ill. 2d 460, 478-79 (2002)
(finding that a Unified Code provision did not apply to a defendant who was confined to a
county facility and was not an inmate in the Department of Corrections).
¶ 26 Third, with regard to Pitts’s claim of restriction of access to correspondence materials, the
Director testified that Pitts’s access to such materials was not denied. At most, according to
the Director, items may have been removed from Pitts’s cell temporarily, following a
disciplinary infraction, so that correctional staff could make sure that Pitts’s cell was clean.
Upon the correctional staff doing so, those items would have been promptly returned to Pitts.
Pitts disagreed with that testimony. However, as noted above, it was for the trial court, as the
trier of fact in this case, to determine whether to believe the Director’s or Pitts’s version of
events, and we cannot find that the trial court’s determination on that matter here was against
the manifest weight of the evidence. See Best, 223 Ill. 2d at 350-51.
¶ 27 Fourth and finally, although Pitts claims that the trial court failed in this case to hold a
proper hearing on the mandamus complaint, the record does not support that contention. To
the contrary, the record shows that the trial court conducted a relatively standard evidentiary
hearing on the mandamus complaint with both Pitts and the Director present; that both sides
were allowed to present witness testimony and physical evidence in support of their positions;
that after all of the evidence had been presented, the trial court took the case under advisement
so that it could review the law on mandamus relief; and that after the trial court considered the
evidence presented and the law in this area, it ultimately concluded in a thorough and complete
written order that Pitts’s request for mandamus relief should be denied. Under those
circumstances, we find that there was nothing improper about the manner in which the trial
court proceeded with, and ruled upon, Pitts’s mandamus complaint in the present case.
¶ 28 In reaching that conclusion, we note that Pitts did not at any time object in the trial court
to the manner in which the hearing was conducted and arguably may, therefore, have
acquiesced in the procedure used by the trial court. See Steiner v. Eckert, 2013 IL App (2d)
121290, ¶ 15 (recognizing that a party may not acquiesce in procedure followed in the trial
court and then complain about that procedure on appeal). In addition, although Pitts points to
the trial court’s alleged use of an “informal” procedure as an indication that the hearing was
conducted improperly, the record shows that the informality to which the trial court referred in
its comments during the hearing was merely the trial court’s decision to allow the Director’s
attorney to proceed with her direct examination of the Director immediately after Pitts’s direct
examination had concluded, rather than having the Director’s attorney wait until the Director’s
case-in-chief to proceed with her direct examination of the Director. Such a decision was well
within the trial court’s discretion to make in conducting the hearing in this case. See In re T.R.,
2019 IL App (4th) 190529, ¶ 87 (recognizing in a different context that the trial court generally
has broad discretion over the manner in which it conducts hearings). Furthermore, although
Pitts claims that the trial court’s ruling was incomplete because the trial court did not rule upon
Pitts’s request to have the trial court order the Director to prohibit his staff from taking away
Pitts’s access to correspondence or legal materials in the future, such a ruling was unnecessary
once the trial court determined, as a factual matter, that Pitts’s access to correspondence and
legal materials had not been taken away. As a final matter, while Pitts complains that the trial
court failed to hold a Boose hearing to determine whether Pitts should have remained in
shackles during the mandamus complaint proceeding, any error that possibly occurred in that
regard was harmless as the record in this case clearly shows that Pitts was not entitled to
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mandamus relief. See In re A.H., 359 Ill. App. 3d 173, 184 (2005) (finding that the trial court’s
failure to conduct a Boose hearing to determine whether a respondent-father should remain
shackled during a parental rights termination proceeding was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt because the father’s depravity, the alleged basis of parental unfitness, was supported by
overwhelming evidence).
¶ 29 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 30 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Kankakee County.
¶ 31 Affirmed.
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