2021 IL App (1st) 161219
FIRST DISTRICT
THIRD DIVISION
April 28, 2021
No. 1-16-1219
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County.
)
v. ) No. 08 CR 06600
)
REGINALD POTTS, ) Honorable
) Thomas V. Gainer, Jr.,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Howse and Justice Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 A jury convicted defendant Reginald Potts of the first degree murder of Nailah Franklin.
Defendant alleges a vast array of errors, including the failure to suppress evidence, defective jury
instructions, ineffective assistance of counsel, rampant prosecutorial misconduct, and the trial
court’s refusal to allow a witness who emerged after trial to testify on defendant’s behalf without
revealing his identity to the public. We affirm.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 I
¶4 Nailah Franklin was last seen alive on September 18, 2007, in the company of defendant.
Nailah, then 28 years old, worked as a pharmaceutical sales representative for Eli Lilly and part
time in an art gallery. By all accounts, Nailah was popular, vivacious, and attractive, with a busy
social calendar. She met defendant in May 2006. A self-described real-estate investor, defendant
presented as a wealthy man with a lavish lifestyle—a penthouse in the south loop, a Bentley and
other fancy cars, and money to frequent upscale restaurants and trendy clubs. Defendant and
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Nailah saw each other regularly, but not exclusively, until July 2007, when Nailah broke it off.
She recently met Andre Wright at the art gallery. Although Andre lived in Milwaukee, their
relationship grew “serious” quickly. Unlike defendant, whose arrogance had worn thin with
Nailah, Andre treated her with respect. But Nailah remained in touch with defendant for a time,
as revelations about his past—and present—began to surface.
¶5 On July 16, 2007, Nailah sent defendant an e-mail titled, “Adios.” As she explained, she
had tried several times to “remove [defendant] from [her] life,” but somehow he always managed
to “slip back in there.” The time had come to finally “put an end to any and all communications.”
Nailah was “very disappointed” that defendant treated their relationship as just one more of his
“games” and sexual exploits. He was deeply disrespectful. He constantly flirted with her friends.
He obsessed, to the point of being “pathological,” over seemingly insignificant things. He cared
only for himself and only about the money he was “so focused on making.”
¶6 Worse yet, she wrote, “[s]ince the first day we met, you and your life has been nothing
but lies.” There was defendant’s “ ‘omission’ of jail time and illegal history.” His “[c]onstant lies
and stories” about where he was and what he was doing. The fact that he “probably” had another
girlfriend the whole time. And most disturbing of all, his refusal to acknowledge the existence of
his own children. As it turned out, defendant had (at least) three daughters, two with his soon-to-
be ex-wife, Nathaly Figueroa, and one, an infant, with Ina Dorsey.
¶7 Nailah did not want to hear from defendant again. If her “impulsive side” ever led her to
call, she said, “do not answer. It doesn’t mean anything.” It was just “a slip of the brain.”
¶8 Two of Nailah’s friends—her best friend, Dana McClellan, and her coworker Tiffani
Miley—confirmed that Nailah was angry and felt disrespected by what she was learning about
defendant. But her communications with defendant did not end just yet. Neither did her interest
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in learning the truth about him. In the weeks to come, Nailah learned that he had been seeing Joy
Hawkins—and flirting with Tiffani, who rebuffed his advances—over the summer. And she
reached out to Ina. At home with defendant’s infant child, and in the midst of searching for a
house for the three of them, Ina was surprised to learn that her relationship with defendant was
not exclusive. Nailah and Ina would continue to speak at length and share information about
defendant, until Nailah disappeared.
¶9 On September 6, 2007, someone (it was not clear who) e-mailed Nailah an article about
defendant from the Chicago Sun-Times. Nailah forwarded the article to Dana and Tiffani, and
blind-copied defendant. That message has come to be known as the “FBI” e-mail. Nailah wrote,
“Girl, this s*** is hilarious. Old girl just sent this to me.” The text of the article followed. It said
that defendant had once been arrested on “drugs and weapons charges out of Chicago” and for
threatening a Highland Park police officer who was investigating him for stealing cars. While he
was left alone for just a moment at the Dirksen Federal Building, “the skinny Potts” slipped out
of his handcuffs and escaped. While on the lam, he called the FBI to boast that they would never
catch him. Agents found him hiding under a bush two weeks later and arrested him.
¶ 10 The “FBI” e-mail set off a barrage of heated communications over the next few days. The
first was a long voicemail that defendant left Nailah. He repeatedly bragged that he was “very,
very wealthy” and will always be surrounded by women and finery. He accused Nailah of being
“hung up” on him, “desperational,” and angry that he “won’t f*** with [her] anymore.” He
called Nailah “bitter” and “venomous,” said that she did not deserve the things that he has, and
told her to forget about him.
¶ 11 Defendant also responded in an e-mail. He copied Tiffani (among others), ignoring her
repeated requests not to be dragged into whatever “drama” was brewing with Nailah. The subject
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line read, in part, “B***, I’m rich! So that s*** doesn’t even matter.” Defendant commented on
how “sad” it was that Nailah was “so caught up” in him and so “MADD [sic]” that he wouldn’t
take her calls or come over and “f***” her anymore. But “aw don’t be upset,” he said, “you give
okay head and your a*** is kinda tight so you should be able to find a decent man in no time.
Just do yourself a favor and get a lift for those saggy a*** breast[s].” He warned, stop “testing
me” or “trying to figure out my moves or who I’m f***.” And he claimed that the article did not
embarrass him; it just made Nailah look “bitter and desperate.” But if she kept “talking s*** and
sending articles,” he would respond by “passing around copy’s [sic] of the tape that show my
d*** in your mouth.”
¶ 12 “A bit dramatic,” Nailah wrote back, adding that defendant was “[c]learly *** crazy.”
She wondered how defendant got her friends’ e-mail addresses and asked him not to contact
Dana or Tiffani—or her—ever again. They had enough of his “obsessive calling and behavior.”
¶ 13 Defendant left Nailah another voicemail. It appears the message was eventually deleted,
but Nailah played it for Dana and Tiffani. As Dana recalled, defendant said, “I could erase you,
and I should have somebody come over there and get you now.” According to Tiffani, he said, in
an “angry and very serious” tone, “if you do anything else, if I hear anything else, I will erase
your a***. You will disappear.” Nailah said she wanted Tiffani to hear the message “just in case
anything happened to her.”
¶ 14 Defendant called Nailah again, and she put Dana on hold to take his call. When she got
back on the line with Dana, she was scared. She gave Dana the access information for her e-mail
and voicemail, “in case anything happened to her.” Over the next few days, Nailah and Dana
would text and talk frequently about defendant, as Nailah became increasingly frightened.
¶ 15 Meanwhile, Ina confronted defendant about what she was learning from Nailah. He grew
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angry and insisted that Nailah was lying. He also became violent with Ina. (We will discuss this
violence in more detail infra ¶¶ 61-74.)
¶ 16 Nailah e-mailed defendant to say that she filed a police report and would seek an order of
protection. She told him, “If you come anywhere near me you will be back in jail, I promise. You
are crazy, you hit women, you are a bully, you are extremely dangerous, but you are not going to
bully me.”
¶ 17 Communications between Nailah and defendant petered out around September 11. Nailah
spent a few days with Andre in Wisconsin. When she came back, she told Tiffani that she was
afraid of defendant and wanted to get a restraining order against him. And she e-mailed Ina, who
was seeking a similar order, suggesting that they share information. That same day, she told her
friend Devin Carter that defendant threatened to kill her. Nailah said, ominously, “[i]f something
happened to her, that he did it.”
¶ 18 II
¶ 19 That was September 17, 2007. By the latter part of September 18, Nailah was missing.
¶ 20 Nailah traded e-mails with Andre throughout the morning, and she called in to work, not
long before noon, to take a personal day. But after that, calls, e-mails, and texts to Nailah started
to go unanswered. Neither Andre nor her supervisor at Eli Lilly could get a hold of her, which
was unusual; Nailah and Andre spoke constantly, and Nailah was always dependable at work.
¶ 21 Between roughly 4 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., suspicious messages starting coming from
Nailah’s phone. Andre, Devin, and her sister, Ashley, received cryptic texts that sounded nothing
like Nailah. Her coworkers received messages that made no sense; they purported to say that
Nailah was working in places where she demonstrably was not. A man called from Nailah’s
phone to make a dinner reservation under the name “Franklin” (the employee could not make out
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the first name due to background noise on the call) for later that evening but never showed up.
Brent Demar, an ex-boyfriend, got a string of messages, “completely out of left field,” that did
not sound like Nailah either. Around 7:30 that evening, he got a call from Nailah’s phone. The
caller said, “hello, can you hear me? Can you hear me?” It sounded like Nailah’s voice, he
thought, but there was too much “air” noise to be sure, and the call disconnected after a few
seconds. Another call came in and immediately disconnected. He called back, but the call went
to voicemail.
¶ 22 Around 10:15 p.m., several 911 calls were placed from Nailah’s phone. There were no
voices on the calls, but there was noise and music in the background. The caller was in the south
loop, close to 1111 S. Wabash Avenue—defendant’s condo building. The police looked for
Nailah’s car in that area but did not find it. Starting at 11:05 p.m., all incoming calls to Nailah’s
phone went directly to voicemail and no outgoing calls were placed.
¶ 23 At trial, the State argued that defendant sent these suspicious messages to make it seem as
if Nailah was still alive, right up until the time that he could make himself seen in public. Around
10:30 p.m., he met up with Joy, as she was leaving a bar in the Gold Coast.
¶ 24 On September 19, Dana (and others) went to Nailah’s condo to look for her. Her unit was
locked, which was unusual, but Dana had access to a spare key. The condo was in disarray, and
Nailah’s laptops and iPod were missing. Her car was not parked in her usual space in the garage.
¶ 25 Dana accessed Nailah’s voicemail. The threatening message Nailah played for her had
been deleted, but a different, innocuous sounding message left by defendant was still there. Dana
reported Nailah missing, and the media picked up the story.
¶ 26 III
¶ 27 That day, a pedestrian found a box of Eli Lilly Cymbalta in an alley near defendant’s
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condo building. (Nailah routinely carried samples of Cymbalta. Like all samples, it was highly
regulated and required a strict accounting.) It seemed “very out of place” since there were no
medical offices nearby. After hearing a news report about Nailah, the pedestrian called the
police, but the box had been moved by then.
¶ 28 And Officer Lucius found six boxes of Eli Lilly samples, addressed to Nailah at a storage
facility she used in Chicago, stacked in the River Oaks Golf Course parking lot, just off of River
Oaks Drive in Calumet City. Also on River Oaks Drive, close to the golf course, was a shuttered
Video Max store owned by defendant’s brother-in-law, Mahmoud El-Sheikh. Defendant had
taken Ina to the property shortly after Mahmoud bought it.
¶ 29 Two days later, the police obtained Nailah’s cellphone records, including historical cell-
site location information, pursuant to an “Exigent Situation” request. The records showed that
Nailah’s phone used towers in Hammond and Calumet City. Although Nailah’s sales territory
included points south in the Chicago area, her partner, Molly Zeigler, testified that Calumet City
was not part of Nailah’s route.
¶ 30 Later that day, the police found Nailah’s car in a residential neighborhood in Hammond,
a few blocks from the Calumet City border, and about three miles from where the pharmaceutical
boxes were found. Among other items in the trunk, which was in disarray, the police found two
Remy Martin advertisement cards. Kimberly Nash, another woman defendant was seeing at the
time, and who frequently spent the night at his condo, was a marketing manager for Remy
Cointreau USA, the American distributor of Remy Martin liquors.
¶ 31 The police found fibers in various locations, suggesting that the car had been wiped down
with a cloth or a piece of clothing, and there were unusually few latent prints in the cabin. There
were blood stains on some paperwork and one of the samples. No forensic evidence tied
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defendant, or anyone else, to Nailah’s murder.
¶ 32 The police searched for Nailah’s body in and around the golf course, including a nearby
pond and forest preserve. They found some jewelry and another Remy Martin card, like the ones
in Nailah’s trunk, between the pond and golf course parking lot, near an Outback Steakhouse.
¶ 33 Also adjacent to the preserve was the parking lot of the Video Max owned by defendant’s
brother-in-law. On September 27, Nailah’s body was found about 20 feet from the edge of that
lot, along a path connecting the lot and the preserve—and directly between the pharmaceutical
boxes (in the golf course parking lot) and Nailah’s car (in a residential area about a half mile
away). Nailah’s body was nude, partially buried, and decomposing. Her identity was confirmed
through dental records.
¶ 34 Dr. Crowns, the pathologist who performed Nailah’s autopsy, testified in detail about his
findings. Many areas of Nailah’s body were partially mummified and skeletonized and infested
with maggots. He estimated that she had died 8 to 12 days earlier, meaning sometime between
September 16 and 20. Based on the final disposition of her body—naked and buried in a shallow
grave—her death was ruled a homicide. And based on the lack of observable injury, Dr. Crowns
opined that the cause of death was asphyxiation, which can be caused in a variety of ways,
including strangulation, smothering, choking, and some methods—like covering the victim’s
nose and mouth with a plastic bag or placing the bag over the victim’s head—that typically do
not leave any observable evidence of injury.
¶ 35 IV
¶ 36 In the days leading up to Nailah’s disappearance, neighbors and security guards in her
building saw defendant lurking there in suspicious contexts. At trial, the State argued that he was
plotting Nailah’s murder.
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¶ 37 On the morning of September 16, Sterling Gunn saw defendant sitting in his Bentley in
the parking garage, with the garage door left open. That door was typically closed. Defendant
asked if he should move his car. Gunn said no and tended to his business. When he looked up
again, the Bentley was gone, the garage door was still open, and defendant was peering through
the door, “looking around at [him]” from the parking deck.
¶ 38 The next evening, Sheila Gregory saw defendant walking down the hallway. It did not
look like he was coming out of any unit or going anywhere in particular. Security footage
showed defendant walk out of the elevator and into the parking garage.
¶ 39 Lisa Hudson, a security guard, went to the parking garage after someone reported that the
door would not close. She saw defendant pacing and talking on his phone. Later, Hudson and
another guard returned, this time to investigate a report of a suspicious person. They found
defendant in a stairwell and asked what he was doing there. He said he was smoking, but he did
not have a cigarette, and the guards did not smell smoke. He also said his name was “Johnson”
from Unit 403. The guards were not fooled. They called the police, and defendant drove away in
his Bentley. Officers searched the garage and found that the locking mechanism for the door had
been tampered with.
¶ 40 Surveillance footage from the building showed Nailah entering the garage shortly before
noon on September 18 and returning with defendant. Shortly after 1 p.m., they went back to the
parking garage. Nailah was walking in front of him and appears to look back at him as they enter
the garage. That was the last time Nailah was confirmed to be alive.
¶ 41 Surveillance footage from defendant’s building showed him entering the lobby, shortly
before 5 p.m. on September 18, with a laptop. The doorman testified that it was not uncommon
for defendant to bring a laptop to the building’s business center, accessible from the lobby,
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where residents could get free Wi-Fi access. Within the next hour, defendant was seen leaving
the building twice, both times without a laptop. The doorman did not see him again until roughly
10:30 p.m., when he came into the building and went through the rear hallway, toward the
elevators to the parking garage. Surveillance footage showed him driving away from the building
two minutes later.
¶ 42 A few days after Nailah’s body was found, the police searched defendant’s apartment.
Among other items, they seized Nailah’s iPod. (The serial number confirmed that she was the
original purchaser.) Although the device was named “Reginald,” forensic analysis showed that it
was originally named “Nailah’s iPod.” Shortly after midnight on September 19, the device was
connected to iTunes, and the name was changed. A new iTunes file was created, and the old
database was deleted at that time. No files had previously been registered to “Reginald.”
¶ 43 V
¶ 44 Two days after Nailah went missing, defendant agreed to be interviewed by the police.
Defendant was aware that Nailah was missing, but he denied any involvement. He said that they
had a purely sexual relationship, which deteriorated after Nailah learned that Ina was pregnant
with his child and that he had been seeing other women. Defendant claimed that he had not
communicated with Nailah since September 7 or 8 and had not seen her since August.
¶ 45 On September 18, defendant said, he woke up around 11 a.m. and went to various places
in Chicago—Lawrence Fisheries; the county building, to file some paperwork; and Mr. Lee’s
Foreign Auto, to address an outstanding invoice. Around 4 p.m., he left to meet up with Remi
Ivanovas, a contractor he hired to renovate his condo, but Ivanovas never showed up.
¶ 46 Between 6 p.m. and 10:30 p.m., defendant claimed, he was shopping with his friends
Hugh and Castra Echols. They picked him up at his condo; went to Target on Roosevelt Road,
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where Hugh and Castra bought a gift from a baby registry; and drove him home. Defendant then
went out for the evening, first meeting up with Joy and then with another woman, Lindsey
Ashamalla, who spent the night at his condo.
¶ 47 When the detectives first questioned Hugh, in December 2007, he backed up defendant’s
initial statement, at least in its essentials. Hugh told the police that defendant went to Target with
him and Castra on the evening of September 18 and that he dropped defendant home afterwards.
¶ 48 But during that interview, the detectives confronted Hugh with surveillance photos from
Target that showed him and Castra walking into the store alone. And they brought Castra into the
interview room, who impressed upon Hugh that this was a murder investigation, that the police
were looking to implicate him, and that he needed to tell the truth. Based on cell-phone records
to be detailed shortly, the police were indeed suspicious that Hugh was implicated in Nailah’s
murder, along with defendant (whom they would arrest that same day).
¶ 49 Hugh changed his story. He would repeat his revised statement to the grand jury and later
at trial. He told the police that he went to Target with Castra, driving a Mercedes that belonged to
defendant. They printed out a registry for a baby shower and shopped for a gift. Between 7 and
7:45 p.m., defendant called several times, said he was stranded in Hammond, and asked Hugh to
come pick him up. He told Hugh to take the 159th Street exit off of I-94 and meet him at the first
gas station across the Indiana state line.
¶ 50 Hugh and Castra arrived at the gas station around 9:15 p.m. and called defendant, who
told Hugh that he went to the wrong station. Hugh drove to another gas station down the block.
Defendant appeared from behind the station and got into the car. Surveillance footage showed
Hugh pulling up to the gas station and driving away. Hugh drove through Calumet City and back
up I-94 to take defendant home. Hugh said that this was the first and only time he was with
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defendant on September 18.
¶ 51 Castra corroborated Hugh’s account. She added that defendant said he was stranded in
Hammond because he got into an argument with his uncle. Defendant did not appear dirty and
did not have any visible marks on him when they picked him up.
¶ 52 In the coming days, defendant told Hugh that he had been or would be questioned by the
police about Nailah’s disappearance. (Phone records showed that defendant called Hugh three
times shortly before he arrived at the station for the interview.) And Hugh admitted that he lied
to the police at first. But he denied that he did so at defendant’s behest; rather, he made up the
story about defendant coming with them to Target on his own. (Never mind that defendant, who
knew that Hugh and Castra were at Target from their phone conversations on September 18, had
already told the police the same story.) Hugh also denied that defendant said the registry would
be helpful as an alibi. A conversation between Hugh and defendant, recorded one day before
Hugh was questioned, captured them discussing Target and the registry. Defendant told Hugh,
“that baby registry does a lot.”
¶ 53 Ivanovas, the contractor defendant supposedly went to meet and pay on September 18,
testified that there was no such plan. Ivanovas started remodeling defendant’s condo in August,
but he stopped after defendant’s first installment check of $5000 bounced. Ivanovas tried to
collect the money, but defendant dodged his calls and never paid him.
¶ 54 VI
¶ 55 In addition to records that corroborated the various witnesses’ testimony about incoming
and outgoing calls and texts to and from Nailah, the State introduced historical cell-site location
information (CSLI) for Nailah’s, defendant’s, and Hugh’s phones. This evidence was introduced
through the testimony of FBI Special Agent Michael Easter, who was qualified as an expert in
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historical cell-site analysis. Agent Easter explained, in sum, that historical CSLI reveals the
general vicinity of a phone, based on call-detail records that show the tower and tower sector that
the phone accessed at that time. Unlike the Global Positioning System (GPS), CSLI does not
reveal the precise location of the phone but rather a pie-shaped coverage area corresponding to
the tower sector accessed by the phone. And because Nailah’s records were retrieved so soon
after her disappearance, they also included an “Access Distance Report,” which allowed for
more precise distance measurements from the cell towers. Agent Easter testified that his analysis
of the CSLI was “consistent with” the phones being in the following locations.
¶ 56 On September 16, defendant’s phone was at or near Nailah’s condo building just before
noon. (Sterling Gunn testified he saw defendant lurking in the parking lot “[l]ate morning, 11:00-
ish, something like that.”)
¶ 57 On September 17, defendant’s phone was in the area of Nailah’s condo from 7:40 until
10:39 p.m. (Sheila Gregory testified that she saw defendant in the hallway around 9:15 p.m.)
¶ 58 On September 18, the CSLI showed, in sum, that all three phones (defendant’s, Nailah’s,
and Hugh’s) were in the downtown Chicago area and then travelled to the areas in Calumet City
and Hammond where the pharmaceutical boxes, Nailah’s car, and Nailah’s body were found. In
Agent Easter’s opinion, the call activity on defendant’s and Nailah’s phones was consistent with
those phones being together from around 7 a.m. until shortly after 10 p.m.
¶ 59 In somewhat more detail, the September 18 data included the following:
(1) Nailah’s phone was at or near her condo between 7:39 a.m. and 2:09 p.m.
Defendant’s phone was in the same area between 8:24 a.m. and 2:03 p.m., and the phones
appeared to be in precisely the same location. Nailah’s voicemail was accessed at 1:21
p.m. and again at 1:28 p.m., for 4 ½ minutes and 6 ½ minutes, respectively.
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(2) Call activity from defendant’s phone, between 3:47 p.m. and 3:59 p.m., and
from Nailah’s phone, between 3:52 p.m. and 3:59 p.m., showed both phones moving
toward defendant’s condo.
(3) Nailah’s phone was at or near defendant’s condo between 5:57 p.m. and 6:07
p.m. Between 6:07 p.m. and 7:28 p.m., there was no call activity on Nailah’s phone.
(4) Defendant’s phone was in the area of Nailah’s condo between 6:24 p.m. and
6:49 p.m. It then started travelling very far south, tracking I-94/Dan Ryan Expressway.
(5) Defendant called Hugh at 7:10 p.m. Hugh’s phone accessed a tower adjacent
to the Target.
(6) At 7:44 p.m., defendant called Hugh again, using a tower sector facing the
area where the pharmaceutical boxes were found, in the parking lot of the River Oaks
Golf Course. Nailah’s phone was in that same area from 7:44 p.m. to 7:47 p.m. Between
8:15 p.m. and 8:19 p.m., defendant’s and Nailah’s phones were both in that area and then
in the area where Nailah’s body was found.
(7) Between 7:45 p.m. and 9:02 p.m., Hugh’s phone travelled south along I-94 to
the area where Nailah’s body and car were found.
(8) At 8:56 p.m., defendant’s phone was in the area southeast of the parking lot
where the boxes were found. At 8:57 p.m., defendant’s phone was in the area where
Nailah’s body was found. At 9:13 p.m., it was in the area near where Nailah’s car was
found. Nailah’s phone was in the same areas at these times. And Hugh’s phone was in the
same areas between 8:50 p.m. and 9:22 p.m.
(9) All three phones then headed north, along I-94, starting from the area where
Nailah’s car was found and then traveled west of I-94, near the 87th Street exit, which
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was the area where Hugh and Castra had dropped off their daughter with a babysitter
before heading out to Target and other destinations.
(10) Between 9:59 p.m. and 10:16 p.m., Nailah’s phone travelled along I-94, just
north of her condo and west of defendant’s condo. Several 911 calls were placed from her
phone between 10:14 and 10:16 p.m. After that, there was no further activity on Nailah’s
phone, indicating that it was either turned off or outside of the coverage area.
(11) Defendant’s phone made and received several calls between 10:38 p.m. and
11:56 p.m. The phone was in the north Loop and points just north of downtown
(consistent with Joy’s testimony about meeting up with defendant) before heading toward
defendant’s condo shortly before midnight, where surveillance footage showed him
pulling into the parking garage and then walking into the lobby.
(12) Hugh’s phone made and received calls from 10:31 p.m. and onward, but
none were to or from defendant’s phone. Hugh’s phone traveled toward Richton Park,
where he lived.
¶ 60 VII
¶ 61 At trial, Nathaly and Ina testified to defendant’s history of domestic violence. The trial
court admitted this testimony as evidence of defendant’s propensity to murder Nailah.
¶ 62 Nathaly and defendant were married in 2005. They already had one daughter and would
soon have another. They lived in an apartment in Naperville. Nathaly recounted several instances
of physical abuse that she suffered at defendant’s hands.
¶ 63 Soon after they were married, they got into an argument while Nathaly was driving on the
freeway. Their four-year-old daughter was in the backseat. Defendant hit Nathaly in the face,
near her right eye. She pulled over, screaming and crying. Defendant apologized, and Nathaly
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drove home. Her eye was badly swollen; she missed some work and school and had to wear
sunglasses for a time. But she kept the incident to herself because she was afraid of defendant
and because he was on parole at the time.
¶ 64 In the summer of 2005, defendant pushed Nathaly onto a bed, climbed on top of her, and
tried to suffocate her with a pillow. He pushed down hard enough that she could not breathe. She
finally broke free and called out to their daughter, who came into the bedroom. Nathaly was
going to call the police—until defendant said that he “can do a lot of damage to [her]” before
they arrive.
¶ 65 Later in 2005, defendant attacked Nathaly and choked her with both hands until she could
not breathe. He stopped only when their daughter came into the room.
¶ 66 By December 2005, the month their second daughter was born, defendant had moved out
of the Naperville apartment and was living in Chicago. Sometime that month, he grabbed
Nathaly by the arm and threw her to the floor. Nathaly was still too afraid to file a police report,
but by January of 2006, she resolved to divorce defendant. And she told him so.
¶ 67 Defendant was enraged. He pushed Nathaly and hit her in the head, causing her to bleed
from her left ear. He refused Nathaly’s request to take her to a local emergency room, fearing
that he would be arrested. Instead, he drove her to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago,
dropped her off, and left.
¶ 68 Nathaly and the kids moved out of the apartment. At first, they moved into a townhouse
in Aurora, owned by defendant and his father. Defendant’s half-brother, Mark Rush, lived there,
too. Defendant did not. Nathaly moved out later in 2006, and after a brief return to the apartment
she used to share with defendant, she settled down in a different townhouse in Naperville.
¶ 69 Defendant maintained contact with the kids. On Mother’s Day in 2007, while dropping
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them off with Nathaly at her sister’s house, an argument erupted. Nathaly tried to call 911, but
defendant grabbed her phone and drove off.
¶ 70 A couple weeks later, in May, defendant showed up, unannounced and unwelcome, and
got in Nathaly’s face. She threatened to call the police; defendant screamed and taunted her to do
so, boasting that he had the money to bail himself out on a domestic violence charge. As she
dialed, defendant grabbed her hand and drove off with her phone, after a struggle that left
Nathaly’s arm bruised.
¶ 71 Nathaly called the police from a neighbor’s phone. She filed for an order of protection the
next day and, soon after that, for divorce. She did not allege physical abuse in the petition. The
divorce was finalized in October 2007, shortly after Nailah’s death.
¶ 72 Defendant started dating Ina in March 2006. They had a daughter in June 2007, and Ina
thought their relationship was exclusive. She lived with her parents in Maywood, but she was
looking for a house with defendant. Ina worked for a real estate company, and defendant was
interested in developing some of their properties, including a townhouse in University Village—
the same complex where Nailah lived.
¶ 73 On September 8, 2007, amidst the heated communications with Nailah, defendant went to
Ina’s parents’ house and asked for money, which Ina gave him. They started to argue. Defendant,
who was holding their daughter, then less than three months old, put her face down on a pile of
covers on the bed and started choking Ina with both hands. He stopped when Ina’s mother’s tried
to break the glass in the door, which defendant had locked, to get into the room. Defendant
opened the door, grabbed the baby, and left the house. Ina followed defendant, but he pushed her
down the stairs and drove off with the baby, who was not secured in a car seat. Ina called the
police, and defendant came back to the house after they left. He was angry and started arguing
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with Ina’s mother. Ina locked herself in an upstairs bathroom with the baby until the police
arrived again.
¶ 74 Defendant came back the next day. He kicked the backdoor violently and screamed, “I’m
losing my patience.” The police removed him from the property. Three days later, Ina tried to
file for an order of protection, but she went to the wrong courthouse. She eventually got the order
on September 18, the day Nailah disappeared, and the day that Ina and Nathaly first got in touch.
It took her almost a week because she was afraid to leave the house.
¶ 75 VIII
¶ 76 Defendant did not testify, but he did present an alibi defense. On September 16 and 17,
counsel told the jury, defendant went to Nailah’s condo, but she was out of town. This was all
part of their on-again-off-again sexual relationship. He went to see her again on September 18,
while he happened to be looking at an investment property in the same complex. They parted
ways around 1 p.m. and went about their respective business. Later that evening, defendant
coincidentally went to Hammond for an entirely unrelated purpose. The defense presented three
witnesses to substantiate this alibi.
¶ 77 The first was Mark Rush, defendant’s half-brother. He testified that in early 2006, he
moved into a townhouse owned by defendant and defendant’s father—the same townhouse
where Nathaly and the kids lived for a time. (He also said that the townhouse was in Aurora, as
Nathaly testified, but it had a Naperville zip code. At trial and on appeal, the parties have
referred to it as a Naperville townhouse, so we will do the same.)
¶ 78 Unlike Nathaly, Mark testified that defendant lived there, too, until June 2006. While the
couple had their squabbles, Mark never saw any hint that defendant was abusing Nathaly, and he
thought that defendant had an “ideal” relationship with the kids. After defendant moved out,
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Nathaly and the kids stayed in the townhouse until June 2007.
¶ 79 In September 2007, defendant still had some property in the townhouse—appliances, a
bedroom set, and office equipment—and he made plans to remove those items. Their mother had
a first cousin named Tyrone Stevenson, who lived somewhere in Indiana.
¶ 80 Nancy Moreno owned a townhouse in University Village. She testified that it was up for
sale in the fall of 2007, and that defendant was a prospective buyer. In September, he visited the
property twice, at least once with a woman. On cross-examination, she admitted that she was not
so sure of these dates and other particulars.
¶ 81 The lynchpin of defendant’s alibi was Aaron Allen. Aaron was an old friend with whom
defendant had recently reconnected and was “mentoring” in the real-estate investment business.
Aaron testified that he spent much of September 18, 2007, chauffeuring defendant around town
in his own car, a 1997 Oldsmobile Cutlass.
¶ 82 Aaron and defendant met up for breakfast. Defendant went back home. Aaron picked him
up there around 10 a.m., drove him to the Daley Center, and waited in the car while defendant
tended to his business. Around noon, they went to University Village to see the Moreno property.
Defendant got out of Aaron’s car and said he would be right back. He left Aaron waiting for 45
minutes. Aaron was annoyed that he did not get to see the property.
¶ 83 Around 1 p.m., they left the area and drove to Gold Coast Auto Body shop and then to a
Bentley dealership. Around 4 p.m., Aaron drove defendant to Mr. Lee’s, another body shop, to
check on some repair work for his Mercedes. Defendant left with Aaron, leaving the Mercedes in
the shop. Aaron drove him home around 6 p.m.
¶ 84 Aaron came back later to drive defendant to Hammond. They drove south on I-94 for a
while but decided there was too much traffic. They got off at 87th Street and drove to a grocery
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store parking lot. Aaron waited in the car while defendant spoke to someone in the lot for 15
minutes. They got back on I-94, drove to I-57, and then took 159th Street to Hammond. Their
destination was 6534 Forest Avenue, the home of defendant’s cousin Tyrone. (Some witnesses
referred to Tyrone as a cousin; others called him an uncle. We do not know which is correct, but
the parties, both at trial and on appeal, have referred to him as an uncle, and we will follow that
practice.) There were “quite a few vehicles, vans and such” on Tyrone’s driveway.
¶ 85 This location was two to three blocks from where Nailah’s car was found and mere
blocks from the gas station(s) where defendant later rendezvoused with Hugh and Castra.
¶ 86 IX
¶ 87 The jury specifically found that defendant murdered Nailah in a cold, calculated, and
premeditated manner. The trial court sentenced defendant to life in prison. This appeal followed.
¶ 88 ANALYSIS
¶ 89 I
¶ 90 The State’s case against defendant was based, in no small measure, on the historical CSLI
generated by his cell phone. In Carpenter v. United States, 585 U.S. ___, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018),
the United States Supreme Court held that a person has a legitimate expectation of privacy in the
record of his or her physical movements as captured through this data. Thus, law enforcement’s
collection of CSLI is a search, and a warrant is generally required. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2220-
21.
¶ 91 In 2007—some 11 years before Carpenter was decided—the police collected defendant’s
CSLI without a warrant. Defendant now argues that, in the wake of Carpenter, the CSLI should
be suppressed.
¶ 92 A
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¶ 93 CSLI is location information generated by cellular carriers that indicates which cell tower
a phone used during a particular communication. At its most precise—typically, in dense urban
areas (like Chicago), where high call volumes necessitate a concentrated network of cell towers,
each with a relatively compact service area—CSLI can “pinpoint” a phone’s location to within
50 meters. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2219. Because cell phones are in constant communication
with the nearest cell site, even when the subscriber is not actively employing any of the phone’s
ever-increasing functions, CSLI may be collected as frequently as several times a minute. Id. at
___, 138 S. Ct. at 2211-12. Quite apart from criminal investigations, cellular carriers collect and
retain this data as a matter of course, for their own business purposes, such as network
maintenance and billing. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2212. And in case it was possible not to notice,
nearly everyone uses a cell phone nowadays.
¶ 94 This confluence of features means that CSLI effectively compiles an “all-encompassing
record” of nearly everyone’s movements through public and private places alike. Id. at ___, 138
S. Ct. at 2217-18. It thus promises law enforcement an unprecedented tool for conducting “near
perfect surveillance” of just about anyone, free from the vagaries of memory, the spottiness of
record-keeping, and the other limitations of conventional surveillance techniques. Id. at ___, 138
S. Ct. at 2218. What’s more, it allows the police to conduct this surveillance retrospectively,
without having to know in advance who they will want to surveil, or where or when, in any given
investigation: “Whoever the suspect turns out to be, he has effectively been tailed every moment
of every day ***.” Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2218.
¶ 95 CSLI’s implications for individual privacy are profound and no doubt unsettling. These
implications were not entirely lost on the lower courts that had to decide, before Carpenter,
whether the fourth amendment requires law enforcement to get a warrant before collecting such
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comprehensive and potentially revealing data from cellular carriers. See, e.g., United States v.
Thompson, 866 F.3d 1149, 1155 (10th Cir. 2017) vacated, 585 U.S. ____, 138 S. Ct. 2706
(2018); United States v. Carpenter, 819 F.3d 880, 893 (6th Cir. 2016) (Stranch, J., concurring),
rev’d, 585 U.S. ___, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018).
¶ 96 But whatever qualms they may have had, lower courts “do not write on a blank slate;”
they are bound to follow existing Supreme Court precedents and doctrines until instructed
otherwise by the Supreme Court itself. Thompson, 866 F.3d at 1154. And before Carpenter,
every federal court of appeals (and as far as we know, every state reviewing court) held that the
warrantless collection of CSLI was consistent with existing fourth amendment doctrine. Id. at
1155-57; United States v. Graham, 824 F.3d 421, 426 (4th Cir. 2016) (en banc); Carpenter, 819
F.3d at 889 (majority opinion); United States v. Davis, 785 F.3d 498, 511 (11th Cir. 2015)
(en banc); In re Application of the United States for Historical Cell Site Data, 724 F.3d 600,
611-13 (5th Cir. 2013). Specifically, the consensus view was that the Supreme Court’s “third-
party doctrine” permitted this practice.
¶ 97 The third-party doctrine holds that a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy, or at
least a significantly reduced expectation of privacy, in information that he or she voluntary turns
over to third parties, even when the disclosure is made for a limited purpose. Carpenter, 585
U.S. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2219; United States v. Miller, 425 U.S. 435, 443 (1976). Because the
information is no longer protected by the fourth amendment once it is turned over, law
enforcement is generally permitted to obtain it from the recipient (in the case of CSLI, the
cellular carrier) without first getting a warrant.
¶ 98 The third-party doctrine largely originated in Miller, 425 U.S. 435, where the Supreme
Court held that the government could subpoena the defendant’s bank records—deposit slips,
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canceled checks, and the like—because he had voluntarily turned over this information to the
bank in the ordinary course of business. In Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735 (1979), the Court
extended the doctrine to the information conveyed to a telephone carrier when a landline
subscriber places a call. In the context of CSLI, Smith provides the more illuminating point of
comparison—the landline being the precursor to the cell phone—so we will focus on that case.
¶ 99 Smith held that the government’s use of a pen register, which records the outbound
numbers dialed on a landline, was not a search. The Court doubted that the subscriber had an
actual expectation of privacy, and it held that the subscriber has no legitimate expectation of
privacy, in the dialed numbers. Id. at 742-44. After all, the average telephone user surely
understands that a dialed number is, necessarily, conveyed to the telephone company and used
for legitimate business purposes—to route the call and tally up the charges, if nothing else. Id. at
743. When placing a call, the subscriber thus “voluntarily convey[s]” the dialed number to the
carrier by exposing the carrier’s equipment to that information “in the ordinary course of
business.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.at 744. In so doing, the subscriber “assume[s]
the risk” that this information may be turned over to law enforcement without the safeguards
afforded by the fourth amendment. Id. at 745.
¶ 100 Before Carpenter, the prevailing view in the lower courts was that Smith, by extension,
permitted law enforcement to acquire CSLI without a warrant. Briefly, think of CSLI as a
souped-up pen register: it compiles information that is turned over to the carrier when the
subscriber places a call (or uses other functions of modern smart phones). And the information is
collected, in the first instance, by the carriers, not the government, to be used for the carrier’s
own business purposes and stored in their own routine business records. Granted, CSLI divulges
vastly more sensitive, personal information than a pen register ever could, but this difference in
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degree does not remove CSLI from the scope of the third-party doctrine. Like the numbers dialed
on a landline, CSLI is information disclosed to the telephone company in the ordinary course of
business, and whoever discloses information in this manner cannot claim the protections of the
fourth amendment. Or so Smith and Miller were thought to hold.
¶ 101 But in Carpenter, 585 U.S. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2217, the Supreme Court “decline[d] to
extend Smith and Miller” to the “novel” and “unique” circumstances presented by CSLI. For one,
the Court held that a pen register and CSLI are different in kind, not just in degree: Unlike a list
of dialed numbers, a subscriber’s CSLI can reveal an all-encompassing, around-the-clock record
of one’s movements through private and public places alike. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2216-19.
The Court held that an individual has a legitimate claim of privacy in the whole of his or her
physical movements. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2217. The collection of CSLI invaded that interest.
¶ 102 And while some of a cell-phone subscriber’s CSLI is generated by the subscriber’s own
affirmative acts, like placing a call or texting, much of it is not. Modern smart phones generate a
significant amount of CSLI just by being connected to the network. Short of disconnecting the
phone from the network altogether—hardly a realistic alternative for most people nowadays—
there is no way to avoid leaving behind a detailed record of one’s movements. Id. at ___, 138 S.
Ct. at 2220.
¶ 103 It may be obvious to the average telephone user that the numbers one dials are disclosed
to the carrier, but it is unlikely that the average cell-phone user is aware that simply turning on a
phone automatically begins to generate a nearly complete dossier of his or her movements. Id. at
___, 138 S. Ct. at 2220. It is simply too much to charge the average person with having assumed
the risk that the cell-phone company might turn over anything like that to the police for
investigative purposes—as if we have all voluntarily submitted to a “tireless and absolute
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surveillance” by government authorities, just by dint of having a working cell phone. Id. at ___,
138 S. Ct. at 2218, 2220.
¶ 104 On balance, the mere fact that a cell-phone user’s CSLI is obtained from a third party that
collected the data in the ordinary course of business—with the limited element of voluntary
disclosure that entails—is outweighed by the novel and extraordinary privacy interests at stake.
The fourth amendment does not allow law enforcement unfettered access to information of this
“depth, breadth, and comprehensive reach” without judicial oversight; a warrant supported by
probable cause generally is required. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2220-21, 2223.
¶ 105 The qualifier “generally” marks two caveats to this holding. First, the usual exceptions to
the warrant requirement, including the exigent circumstances exception, still apply. Id. at ___,
138 S. Ct. at 2222-23. Second, the Court declined to decide whether there might be a limited
period for which law enforcement could collect a person’s CSLI without triggering the warrant
requirement. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2217 n.3. But wherever that line may be drawn, if
anywhere, the seven days’ worth of CSLI collected in Carpenter stepped over it.
¶ 106 So, too, did the 23 days’ worth of CSLI collected from defendant. There is no doubt that
under Carpenter, police would have required a warrant to obtain defendant’s CSLI.
¶ 107 B
¶ 108 Carpenter settles the underlying fourth amendment question, but because that decision
post-dates the police conduct here by over a decade, it does not speak directly to any remedy to
which defendant may be (retroactively) entitled. That question is controlled by a separate
doctrine—the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule. See, e.g., Illinois v. Krull, 480 U.S.
340, 368-69 (1987) (O’Connor, J., dissenting) (exclusionary rule renders new fourth amendment
decisions purely prospective, in that they do not even apply to the parties before the Court);
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United States v. Carpenter, 926 F.3d 313, 317-18 (6th Cir. 2019) (denying Carpenter relief, on
remand, based on good-faith exception); United States v. Chavez, 894 F.3d 593, 608 (4th Cir.
2018) (Carpenter is “controlling going forward” but does not afford relief to defendant whose
CSLI was collected beforehand).
¶ 109 Once the defendant has shown a fourth amendment violation, as he has here, it is the
State’s burden to prove that the good-faith exception applies. People v. Turnage, 162 Ill. 2d 299,
313 (1994); see also People v. Manzo, 2018 IL 122761, ¶ 65. We review this question of law
de novo. Manzo, 2018 IL 122761, ¶ 67.
¶ 110 Because there is no constitutional right to the suppression of illegally obtained evidence,
the judicially created exclusionary rule is to be applied only where its benefits outweigh its social
costs. Davis v. United States, 564 U.S. 229, 236-37 (2011). The sole objective of exclusion is to
deter future fourth amendment violations. Id. Thus, the exclusionary rule applies only when the
conduct of the police, in violating the defendant’s fourth amendment rights, was “ ‘sufficiently
deliberate’ ” that deterrence may be effective and “ ‘sufficiently culpable’ ” that deterrence will
outweigh the substantial social costs of excluding reliable, probative evidence of guilt. People v.
LeFlore, 2015 IL 116799, ¶ 24 (quoting Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135, 144 (2009)).
¶ 111 When the police act with an “objectively reasonable good-faith belief” that their conduct
was lawful, the exclusionary rule’s deterrence rationale “loses much of its force and exclusion
cannot pay its way.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. Because the “ ‘pertinent analysis of
deterrence and culpability is objective,’ ” it is “ ‘not an inquiry into the subjective awareness of
[the] officers.’ ” Id. ¶ 25 (quoting Herring, 555 U.S. at 145). Rather, we ask “the objectively
ascertainable question whether a reasonably well trained officer would have known that the
search was illegal in light of all of the circumstances.’ ” Id. (quoting Herring, 555 U.S. at 145).
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¶ 112 Thus, the reasoning behind the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule. This
exception has been recognized in various contexts. One is when law enforcement acts in
reasonable reliance on a statute authorizing a warrantless search, though that statute is later
determined to be unconstitutional. See Krull, 480 U.S. at 351-52 (majority opinion). Another—
the original one—is when the police reasonably rely on the issuance of a warrant that is later
deemed defective because it was based on an unconstitutional statute. See United States v. Leon,
468 U.S. 897, 919-22 (1984).
¶ 113 And a third employment of the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule occurs when
the police conduct a warrantless search under an objectively reasonable belief that their actions
were sanctioned by “binding appellate precedent” in existence at the time, even though that
precedent is later overruled or limited. LeFlore, 2015 IL 116799, ¶ 27; Davis, 564 U.S. at 232.
We will begin with a focus on this version of the good-faith exception.
¶ 114 The rule announced in Davis, and adopted by our supreme court in LeFlore, holds that an
officer’s belief that a warrantless search is permissible is objectively reasonable if, among other
reasons, it was supported at the time by “binding appellate precedent” that was later overruled or
limited. LeFlore, 2015 IL 116799, ¶ 27; Davis, 564 U.S. at 232. Here, then, the question is
whether it was objectively reasonable for the police to believe, based on then-existing “binding
appellate precedent,” that they did not need a warrant to obtain defendant’s CSLI.
¶ 115 “Binding appellate precedent” is a term of art in this context. For a state law enforcement
officer, it obviously includes cases directly on point from the state’s reviewing courts and the
United States Supreme Court. But when there are no such cases, it also includes cases directly on
point from the officer’s local federal circuit. See Davis, 564 U.S. at 239-40 (Eleventh Circuit
precedent binding for Alabama police); LeFlore, 2015 IL 116799, ¶ 56 (Seventh Circuit
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precedent binding for Illinois police).
¶ 116 As of 2007, however, when defendant’s CSLI was collected without a warrant, there was
no such precedent, either from an Illinois reviewing court or from the Seventh Circuit. People v.
Strickland, 2019 IL App (1st) 161098, ¶ 65 (as of 2013, the court “found no Illinois case law that
expressly allowed or prohibited the acquisition of CSLI without a search warrant” and “similarly
failed to find any binding appellate precedent in the Seventh Circuit”).
¶ 117 The United States Supreme Court has not yet said whether an officer may reasonably rely
on precedents from other federal circuits for purposes of the good-faith exception, and the
question remains a point of debate among the federal courts of appeals. See United States v.
Brown, 744 F.3d 474, 478 (7th Cir. 2014). Our own supreme court, however, has said that the
answer is yes. In LeFlore, 2015 IL 116799, ¶ 54, our supreme court doubted that there was any
deterrent value to be gained by telling officers that they cannot rely on the decisions of other
federal circuit courts when there is no local precedent to provide the guidance they need. And
relying on other circuits’ precedents would seem especially reasonable when those circuits had
reached a consensus view. See id. ¶ 41.
¶ 118 As noted above, every federal circuit to decide the question before Carpenter held that a
defendant’s CSLI may be collected from a third-party carrier without a warrant. But those cases
are not “binding appellate precedents” for our purposes here, because they were all decided after
the police collected defendant’s CSLI in 2007. You can’t rely on case law that doesn’t yet exist.
¶ 119 Indeed, in 2007, this issue was first making its way through the trial courts. Appellate
resolution was still a ways off, and there were no precedents directly on point for the officers to
go on. The State’s claims to the contrary are anachronistic.
¶ 120 Defendant takes this lack of precedent as a point in his favor. And it is, to some extent,
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although he makes too much of it. An officer’s claim that his or her conduct was reasonable,
despite being declared unconstitutional later, is at its strongest when existing appellate authority
specifically authorized that very conduct. But the absence of any directly applicable local
precedent surely cannot automatically mean the opposite—that the officer’s conduct was per se
unreasonable. That would ignore the realities of law enforcement’s response to crime. Officers
on the beat often and necessarily confront the emerging fourth amendment issues wrought by
technological change before any reviewing court can weigh in. It cannot be the case that these
officers have nowhere they can reasonably turn to in the case law for guidance, or that their
actions cannot be reasonable unless they have already been specifically blessed by appellate
precedent. See id. ¶¶ 19-20 (rejecting this “narrow” reading of Davis good-faith exception).
¶ 121 For reasons like this, and with a vast body of federal circuit precedent on its side, our
supreme court held in LeFlore that officers may reasonably rely on a well-established doctrine
that is “ ‘not exactly on point’ ” if its underlying rationale is nonetheless “ ‘sufficiently clear and
apposite’ ” and thus “ ‘ “widely and reasonably understood,” ’ ” to apply to the novel
circumstance in question. Id. ¶¶ 20, 44 (quoting United States v. Stephens, 764 F.3d 327, 337-38
(4th Cir. 2014), and quoting United States v. Sparks, 711 F.3d 58, 65 (1st Cir. 2013)). And this
may be so even if the United States Supreme Court later found that novel circumstance to be
distinguishable in a way that was significant—or even dispositive—under the fourth amendment.
¶ 122 LeFlore is, itself, an example. Three years before the Supreme Court in United States v.
Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012), held the practice unconstitutional, the police in LeFlore, 2015 IL
116799, ¶¶ 3-4, installed a GPS tracking device on the defendant’s car (or more precisely, a car
in which the defendant had a possessory, and thus a privacy, interest). But our supreme court
held that the good-faith exception applied—among other reasons, because existing appellate
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precedent, in the form of two previous Supreme Court decisions, would have suggested to
officers that installation of the GPS tracking device did not require a warrant. See United States
v. Knotts, 460 U.S. 276, 285 (1983) (police act of monitoring location-tracking signal from
beeper in car was not search); United States v. Karo, 468 U.S. 705, 707, 713 (1984) (installing
beeper not “search” if owner consents, though property is later transferred to third party
subjected to surveillance).
¶ 123 Even though Jones, 565 U.S. at 404-11, later distinguished those cases and emphasized
the physical trespass associated with the GPS device installation, Knotts and Karo were the most
applicable Supreme Court decisions at the time, and neither case gave the police in LeFlore any
clear reason to think that they needed a warrant to install and monitor a GPS tracking device.
¶ 124 Just as Knotts and Karo were binding appellate precedent before Jones, here, the third-
party doctrine, and the holding in particular of Smith, 442 U.S. at 742-45, that a warrant was not
required to obtain a landline user’s pen register, was binding appellate precedent before
Carpenter. Even in declining to apply the doctrine to CSLI, the Court never doubted that the
collection of CSLI “implicates” the third-party doctrine and its underlying principles. Carpenter,
585 U.S. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2216. After all, whatever else may be true of CSLI, it is data that
the defendant turned over to a third party in the ordinary course of business.
¶ 125 The analysis of CSLI, for fourth amendment purposes, therefore had to begin with the
third-party doctrine. If the analysis did not end with the doctrine, as the Court in Carpenter
ultimately held, that was only because CSLI, and the technological advances of the digital age
more generally, had opened up new possibilities for sweeping government surveillance and
therefore posed new and unprecedented threats to individual privacy. These developments had
pushed the Court toward recognizing a protected privacy interest in the sum-total of one’s
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physical movements. See id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2217. Because a “mechanical[ ]” application of
the third-party doctrine to CSLI posed too grave a threat to this newly recognized privacy
interest, the doctrine could not be extended into this novel context. Id. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2219.
¶ 126 But in 2007, when defendant’s CSLI was collected, this privacy interest had not yet been
recognized. In fact, the courts had only just begun to grapple with CSLI’s privacy implications.
With no appellate precedents directly on point, much less a case calling into question the third-
party doctrine’s application in this context, the existing case law offered the police no reason to
think that they were about to tread on a forthcoming constitutional right. At the time, it was
objectively reasonable to rely on the closest, albeit not perfectly apposite, scenario addressed in
well-settled case law—the pen register cases applying the third-party doctrine to landline
records.
¶ 127 The case for a good-faith exception here is stronger than it was even in LeFlore. There,
the case that ultimately ruled warrantless GPS surveillance unconstitutional, Jones, did not mark
a drastic departure from existing law at the time police installed the GPS device—a departure,
but not a radical one. The Court in Jones, 565 U.S. at 404-11, emphasized that it was merely
restoring to prominence the traditional, property-based conception of privacy that had
historically been part of the fourth amendment doctrine.
¶ 128 Here, in contrast, Carpenter ushered in a far more sweeping change, enshrining into law
a new conception of privacy, after finding the traditional third-party doctrine an ill fit for the new
privacy concerns of the digital age. Thus, if the police in LeFlore could not be faulted for failing
to abide by the modest holding that would emerge from Jones, even less can they be faulted here
for failing to abide by the watershed holding that would emerge from Carpenter.
¶ 129 This conclusion was borne out by the circuit-level precedent to emerge in the coming
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years. As noted above, every federal circuit to consider the issue pre-Carpenter held that the
third-party doctrine, established in the pen-register context, extended to CSLI. In the Tenth
Circuit’s phrase, the third-party doctrine, in its pre-Carpenter form, “bound” the lower courts to
reach that result until such time as the Supreme Court itself said otherwise. Thompson, 866 F.3d
at 1159; see also United States v. Ulbricht, 858 F.3d 71, 97 (2d Cir. 2017) (appellate court
similarly “bound” to apply third-party doctrine to collection of internet user’s Internet Protocol
addresses.)
¶ 130 While those circuit-level cases were not themselves binding appellate precedents at the
time—they came down after the police conduct in question here—they are still relevant to the
good-faith analysis, to this extent: They are compelling evidence that the actions taken here by
the police in 2007 were supported by an objectively reasonable interpretation of existing
Supreme Court authority. If every circuit court to consider the question, pre-Carpenter,
determined that a warrant was not required to obtain a user’s CSLI, we certainly cannot say that
it was objectively unreasonable for the police in this case to have reached the same conclusion.
¶ 131 Because a reasonable officer would have viewed the warrantless collection of CSLI as
constitutionally permissible, under the third-party doctrine and Smith, the Davis/LeFlore good-
faith exception applies.
¶ 132 C
¶ 133 We are by no means the first reviewing court to apply the good-faith exception to the
warrantless collection of CSLI before Carpenter. To the contrary, the good-faith exception, in
one form or another, has been routinely applied in these circumstances. But we may be the first,
or among the first, to base the exception squarely on the third-party doctrine. Cf. United States v.
Zodhiates, 901 F.3d 137, 144 (2d Cir. 2018), aff’g 166 F. Supp. 3d 328, 334 n.8, 336 n.9
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(W.D.N.Y. 2016) (appellate court applied good-faith exception based on third-party doctrine to
general cell-phone location information acquired from subpoenaed billing records that, as federal
district court noted, was not CSLI and thus raised similar but attenuated privacy concerns).
¶ 134 We have chosen this exception because we may affirm the trial court’s judgment on any
basis in the record, regardless of the trial court’s reasoning. People v. Lee, 2016 IL App (2d)
150359, ¶ 14. And defendant has called into question a path that, in most jurisdictions, would be
a much simpler and direct one to upholding the police officer’s conduct here.
¶ 135 As noted above, Krull, 480 U.S. at 351-52, holds that when law enforcement reasonably
acts pursuant to a statute authorizing a warrantless search, it acts in good faith, even if that
statute is later deemed unconstitutional. And law enforcement routinely collected CSLI pursuant
to section 2703(d) of Title 18 of the United States Code, commonly referred to as the Stored
Communications Act (SCA), albeit under a standard falling well short of probable cause. See 18
U.S.C. § 2703(d); Carpenter, 585 U.S. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2221.
¶ 136 But it was a valid statute no less, pre-Carpenter, and governmental reliance on that law
was deemed sufficient under Krull to fit within the good-faith exception. See United States v.
Beverly, 943 F.3d 225, 235 (5th Cir. 2019); Carpenter, 926 F.3d at 317; United States v. Korte,
918 F.3d 750, 757-59 (9th Cir. 2019); United States v. Goldstein, 914 F.3d 200, 204 (3d Cir.
2019); United States v. Curtis, 901 F.3d 846, 848-49 (7th Cir. 2018); Chavez, 894 F.3d at 608.
¶ 137 Defendant says that direct route is not available to us, because our supreme court has
rejected the Krull doctrine as applied to the Illinois Constitution. See People v. Kreuger, 175 Ill.
2d 60, 70-74 (1996) (statute held unconstitutional is void ab initio and cannot be used to validate
governmental actions, even those undertaken before it was found unconstitutional); People v.
Wright, 183 Ill. 2d 16, 25 (1998) (reaffirming Krueger).
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¶ 138 The State and defendant grapple extensively over whether Krueger applies to our
situation or whether Krull would apply here. We need not take up those arguments. We have
held above that the Davis/LeFlore exception applies—that the applicable case law, at the time
the police here gathered the CSLI, would have led officers to reasonably believe that a warrant
was not required to collect it. So the validity of the federal CSLI-collection statute is irrelevant.
¶ 139 We would say the same of yet a third version of the good-faith exception—the original
one established in Leon, 468 U.S. at 919-21, which holds that the exclusionary rule does not
apply when the police reasonably relied on a warrant issued by a judge that later turned out to be
defective because it relied on an unconstitutional statute. At least one federal circuit has applied
Leon (rather than Krull) when the CSLI was collected pursuant to a court order issued under
section 2703(d) of the SCA. United States v. Joyner, 899 F.3d 1199, 1204-05 (11th Cir. 2018)
(per curiam).
¶ 140 The State would have us do something of a like nature here, reasoning that even if the
police may not rely on an unconstitutional statute per Krueger, all is forgiven if a judge does so
in issuing a court order authorizing the collection of the CSLI. We are skeptical of that reading of
Krueger, 175 Ill. 2d at 62, given that a judge there issued a warrant under the unconstitutional
statute in that case, which did not stop our supreme court from invalidating that conduct.
¶ 141 But we need not delve into those details, either. We have found the Davis/LeFlore good-
faith exception applicable, and that is enough to validate the police conduct here in obtaining
CSLI records without a warrant based on the third-party doctrine.
¶ 142 D
¶ 143 Defendant also argues that, even if this good-faith exception applied based on the
controlling, applicable appellate precedent at the time, there is another reason it should not be
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employed here: because the police twice obtained his CSLI “by improper means” and therefore
did not act in “objective good faith.”
¶ 144 First, on October 5, 2007, while the State was before the grand jury, Detective Jacobson
applied for a court order authorizing the collection of defendant’s CSLI for the period of
September 13 through October 5, 2007. On that same day, the grand jury also issued a subpoena
for this same information. Defendant says nothing about the grand jury subpoena in his opening
brief, and we can, for the most part, leave it aside. But we will say this much in passing: The
State’s belt-and-suspenders approach, if legally flawed, still strikes us as evidence of a concerted
effort to ensure that defendant’s CSLI was being lawfully collected.
¶ 145 In any event, Detective Jacobson applied for an order, and the presiding judge of the
circuit court issued an order, pursuant to section 3123 of the Electronic Communications Privacy
Act of 1986 (ECPA) (18 U.S.C. § 3123 (2012)). Section 3123 appears in Title III of the ECPA,
which governs pen registers. CSLI is governed by Title II of the ECPA, which is also commonly
known as the SCA.
¶ 146 The standard in section 3123 for a pen-register order is less demanding than the standard
in section 2703(d) for a CSLI order. Section 2703(d) requires a showing of “specific and
articulable facts,” which allows a neutral magistrate to decide whether “there are reasonable
grounds to believe” that the requested CSLI is “relevant and material to an ongoing criminal
investigation.” Id.§ 2703(d). In contrast, section 3123 only requires a judge to ensure that a law
enforcement officer “has certified to the court that the information likely to be obtained by [the
pen register] is relevant to an ongoing criminal investigation.” (Emphasis added.) Id.
§ 3123(a)(2).
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¶ 147 Section 3123 does not require a showing of specific and articulable facts because it does
not require a neutral magistrate to independently determine whether a substantive standard has
been met. See United States v. Hallmark, 911 F.2d 399, 402 (10th Cir. 1990); United States v.
Ellis, 270 F. Supp. 3d 1134, 1146 (N.D. Cal. 2017) (statute does not “requir[e] a factual basis for
the certification”); In re Application of the United States of America, 846 F. Supp. 1555, 1559
(M.D. Fla. 1994) (“No provision appears for independent judicial inquiry ***”).
¶ 148 Rather, the “extremely limited judicial review” required by the pen-register statute is
“intended merely to safeguard against purely random use of this device.” Hallmark, 911 F.2d at
402. To this minimal end, it requires a law enforcement officer (1) to certify to a judge that, in
the officer’s own assessment, the pen register is likely to yield information that is relevant to an
ongoing criminal investigation and (2) to provide certain information, like the identity of the
officer(s) involved, in case the statute’s remedial scheme (which provides for fining and even
imprisoning officers who violate the statute, but not for excluding evidence) is later invoked. 18
U.S.C. § 3123(a)(2)-(3) (2012).
¶ 149 The State conflates these standards. So did the trial judge below, in ruling on defendant’s
motion to suppress the CSLI. The trial judge found that in entering a pen-register order pursuant
to section 3123, the presiding judge implicitly found that the requirements for a CSLI order
under section 2703(d) were satisfied. For this reason, the State argues, the reference to section
3123 was nothing more than a harmless citation error.
¶ 150 Not so. The presiding judge merely found “that the applicant has certified that the
information likely to be obtained by [sic] and used is relevant to an ongoing criminal
investigation into the death of Nailah Franklin.” (Emphasis added.) That finding, which tracks
section 3123, does not imply that the presiding judge independently determined, on the basis of
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No. 1-16-1219
specific and articulable facts presented to the court, that the standard for a CSLI order was
satisfied. There is no basis in the order, or anywhere else in the record, for that claim. The order
did not comply with section 2703(d).
¶ 151 The upshot of this conclusion, as defendant would have it, is that the police cannot claim
reasonable reliance, for purposes of the good-faith exception, on section 2703(d) or the presiding
judge’s order. To put the same point differently: If defendant is right, neither the good-faith
exception in Krull (for reliance on a statute) nor in Leon (for reliance on a warrant) applies here.
¶ 152 But as we have said, we are not relying on the Krull or Leon versions of the good-faith
exception. We are relying on the Davis/LefloreLeFlore good-faith exception. At the time, a
reasonable officer could have concluded that the fourth amendment did not require a warrant
because the third-party doctrine, per Smith, applied to the collection of CSLI. And nothing in
defendant’s argument speaks to, much less changes, that conclusion. Our good-faith analysis
under Davis and LeFlore does not require a finding that the police reasonably relied on either the
statute or the presiding judge’s order—only on prevailing appellate precedent at the time.
¶ 153 Defendant’s own citation, Ferrari v. State, 260 So. 3d 295 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2018),
illustrates our point. In that case, the Florida appellate court held that an officer who collected
CSLI by means of a subpoena was not “acting in reasonable reliance” on a state statute because
the statute required (at least) a court order, and the officer made no attempt to get one. Id. at 305-
06. The consequence? Because law enforcement could not claim reasonable reliance on a statute
that it failed to comply with, the Krull good-faith exception did not apply. See id. (citing Krull,
480 U.S. 340). But that speaks only to the Krull exception. Nothing in that decision lays a glove
on the Davis good-faith exception, applied in Illinois under LeFlore, focusing not on a statute but
on the prevailing, controlling case law.
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¶ 154 Defendant takes the argument one step further. He contends that the statutory infirmity in
the presiding judge’s order was the product of deliberate misconduct by Detective Jacobson, who
disingenuously invoked the ECPA’s pen-register provision, rather than the CSLI provision, for
the express purpose of making it easier to obtain defendant’s CSLI. Specifically, this tactic was
meant to relieve the police of the burden of providing specific and articulable facts in support of
the application for a court order. And this, defendant says, is “exactly the sort of unlawful
activity that the exclusionary rule is designed to deter.”
¶ 155 The exclusionary rule is designed to deter future violations of constitutional rights. See,
e.g., Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643, 655 (1961) (“evidence obtained by searches and seizures in
violation of the Constitution is *** inadmissible in a state court”); see also Davis, 564 U.S. at
236 (rule created to “ ‘compel respect for the constitutional guaranty’ ” (quoting Elkins v. United
States, 364 U.S. 206, 217 (1960)); Herring, 555 U.S. at 147 (rule meant to deter “disregard of
constitutional requirements”); United States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338, 348 (1974) (rule meant
“to safeguard Fourth Amendment rights”).
¶ 156 So if an officer deliberately evades a fourth amendment requirement—for example, if the
officer misleads the judge about the facts used to establish probable cause for a warrant—the
good-faith exception will not apply, and the officer cannot rely on the warrant procured by his or
her own misrepresentations, since that is precisely the kind of misconduct that the exclusionary
rule is meant to deter. Leon, 468 U.S. at 923.
¶ 157 But if, as we have concluded, an officer could have reasonably believed at the time that
collecting CSLI without a warrant was constitutional, then the “unlawful activity” defendant
alleges amounts to nothing more than statutory non-compliance. And on its own, statutory non-
compliance, whether deliberate or mistaken, does not violate the fourth amendment. Defendant’s
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argument thus depends on the premise that the exclusionary rule applies to violations of purely
statutory requirements.
¶ 158 Defendant cites no authority that supports this premise, and we are not aware of any. To
the contrary, federal case law overwhelmingly rejects this premise. See, e.g., United States v.
Giordano, 416 U.S. 505, 508, 523 (1974) (violation of Title III wiretapping statute implicated
statutory remedy of suppression but not exclusionary rule); United States v. Adams, 740 F.3d 40,
43 (1st Cir. 2014) (“statutory violations, untethered to the abridgement of constitutional rights,”
do not justify exclusion); United States v. Dawson, 425 F.3d 389, 394 (7th Cir. 2005) (“as a
device for enforcing nonconstitutional rules,” exclusion is “disfavored”); United States v.
Thompson, 936 F.2d 1249, 1251 (11th Cir. 1991) (collecting cases from federal circuits holding
that exclusionary rule does not apply to statutory violations).
¶ 159 And our supreme court has held that our state exclusionary rule does not apply to purely
statutory, non-constitutional violations. People v. Carlson, 185 Ill. 2d 546, 555-60 (1999) (under
Krueger, officers may reasonably rely on warrant with statutory defect for purposes of good-faith
exception).
¶ 160 So while the conduct defendant alleges would do the police no credit, it would not trigger
the exclusionary rule or provide a basis for suppressing the CSLI. (Unless, of course, the statute
itself made that remedy available, but the SCA does not. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 2707, 2708, 2712
(SCA’s remedial scheme); United States v. Gasperini, 894 F.3d 482, 489 (2d Cir. 2018).) Thus,
it does not negate the State’s assertion of the good-faith exception.
¶ 161 What’s more, the record does not bear out defendant’s allegation that the court order was
obtained by means of deliberate police misconduct. It is one thing to allege that an officer misled
the court about the basis for a finding of probable cause. Having no independent knowledge of
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No. 1-16-1219
the facts, the judge, in this context, is at the mercy of the officer’s representations. See Leon, 468
U.S. at 923. But here, defendant alleges that the detective deliberately misled the court about a
question of law—in particular, the correct construction of the ECPA.
¶ 162 Defendant’s guiding thought is this: Detective Jacobson “knew” his application for a
court order failed to comply with the ECPA, even if the presiding judge and trial judge evidently
did not. And on what basis are we asked to draw this inference? As an “electronic surveillance
officer,” the detective (not to mention the supervising state’s attorney) must have known the
different standards that Congress established in the ECPA for different modes of electronic
surveillance. So the error in the detective’s application must have been calculated.
¶ 163 That inference is dubious at best. It bears repetition that the detective’s understanding of
the ECPA passed muster with two judges. And although that understanding was wrong, we are
mindful that in 2007, this area of the law was only first emerging. It is not entirely implausible,
as the State insists, that pen registers and CSLI—along with the statutory provisions that apply to
each—were sometimes conflated. Perhaps that is what happened here; indeed, the trial judge
went so far as to say that in 2007, courts and litigants often used the terms “cell-site location”
and “pen register” interchangeably. In any event, defendant has not shown that the error was
anything worse than a garden-variety error. His first allegation of “unlawful activity” is
unfounded.
¶ 164 Second, before the court order (or grand-jury subpoena) was issued, and before Nailah’s
body was found, the police obtained at least some of defendant’s CSLI by requesting it directly
from the carrier. In defendant’s view, that initial request for his location data had nothing to do
with trying to find Nailah alive; by then, the police had already concluded that defendant
murdered her. The police were thus “desperate” to arrest defendant, but they knew they did not
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No. 1-16-1219
have probable cause. So they set out to gather evidence against defendant and develop probable
cause by “unlawful” means—that is, by deliberately bypassing section 2703(d) of the SCA.
¶ 165 This argument suffers from the same legal deficiency as the last one. If the police could
have reasonably believed at the time that collecting defendant’s CSLI did not trigger the fourth
amendment, based on the third-party doctrine and Smith, then the “unlawful” conduct defendant
alleges is just one more effort to evade a purely statutory requirement. Again, we would not
condone that kind of conduct from the police, but we have no authority to apply the exclusionary
rule in (alleged) circumstances like these.
¶ 166 And the record, which is exceedingly sparse on this issue, does not bear out defendant’s
allegation, anyway. In sum, all we really know is that sometime between September 21 (when
the police first interviewed defendant, three days after Nailah went missing) and September 28,
2007 (when Detective Jacobson applied for a warrant to search defendant’s home and computer,
the day after Nailah’s body was found), the police requested and obtained some of defendant’s
CSLI from his carrier. The scope of the request is unknown, and the request may or may not
have been styled as an “exigency request,” submitted as part of a missing person’s investigation.
For what it’s worth, on September 21, 2007, the police submitted such an “exigency request” for
the prior three days’ worth of Nailah’s own CSLI. (That is, starting from September 18, when
she was last seen—with defendant.) The State asserts that the request for defendant’s CSLI
paralleled the request for Nailah’s CSLI in these respects. That is not implausible, but it is also
not established by the record.
¶ 167 In fact, the record does not permit us to draw any definitive conclusions, one way or the
other. Because the request for defendant’s CSLI is not in the record and was not the subject of
any testimony at trial or at a pretrial hearing (unlike the request for Nailah’s CSLI), we cannot
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No. 1-16-1219
say for sure when it was made, how broad it was, or whether it was a reasonable request to make
as part of a missing-person’s investigation. But it is certainly not implausible, given what little
we know, that the request was made for exactly that purpose. Whatever the specifics of the
request may have been, defendant does not dispute that it was made before Nailah’s body was
found; yet he would have us conclude that the police had abandoned all hope of finding Nailah
alive and were simply trying to build a case against him while sidestepping the legal (more
precisely, statutory) constraints on their collection of evidence. As the record stands, that is
nothing more than speculation.
¶ 168 Because the record is undeveloped on the relevant points, defendant cannot support his
allegations that the police engaged in misconduct of any kind, much less misconduct of the kind
that the exclusionary rule is meant to deter. The State has carried its burden of showing that the
Davis/LeFlore good-faith exception applies, based on the third-party doctrine, and defendant’s
unsupported allegations of misconduct do not show otherwise.
¶ 169 Because we find no basis for a claim of police misconduct here, it is unnecessary to
consider many of the arguments the parties debate, such as whether the exigent-circumstances
exception to the warrant requirement applies; whether the inevitable-discovery doctrine applies;
whether the search warrant for defendant’s home was “based on illegally obtained CSLI,” such
that the fruits of the search must be suppressed; and whether any or all of these arguments were
forfeited by the other side in the trial court. We will leave the matter at that. Defendant is not
entitled to suppression of the CSLI.
¶ 170 II
¶ 171 Defendant’s alleged acts of domestic violence against Nathaly Figueroa and Ina Dorsey
were admitted as evidence of his propensity to murder Nailah. 725 ILCS 5/115-7.4 (West 2014).
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No. 1-16-1219
Further uncharged conduct, of various kinds, was admitted as evidence of defendant’s motive
and/or Nailah’s state of mind. Defendant argues that the jury instructions improperly allowed,
and even “directed,” the jury to consider all other-crimes evidence as propensity evidence.
¶ 172 Because the error is unpreserved, defendant alleges plain error by the trial court and,
alternatively, ineffective assistance based on counsel’s failure to object to the instruction.
¶ 173 A
¶ 174 Subject to limited statutory exceptions (id. §§ 115-7.3, 115-7.4), other-crimes evidence is
not admissible to prove that the defendant has a propensity or disposition to commit the charged
offense(s). Ill. R. Evid. 404(b) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011); People v. Pikes, 2013 IL 115171, ¶ 13. The
problem is not that other-crimes evidence has no probative value, but rather that it has “too
much”: It may tempt the jury to infer, all too easily, that since the defendant has committed other
crimes, or bad acts more generally, he must have committed this crime, too. People v. Clark,
2015 IL App (1st) 131678, ¶ 27. But other-crimes evidence is admissible as proof of any material
fact at issue other than propensity, as long as its potential for prejudice does not substantially
outweigh its probative value. Ill. R. Evid. 404(b) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011); People v. Donoho, 204 Ill.
2d 159, 170 (2003).
¶ 175 When the trial court admits other-crimes evidence for a non-propensity purpose, it should
instruct the jury to consider the evidence only for that purpose. People v. Brown, 319 Ill. App. 3d
89, 99 (2001) (error to omit “only” from instruction listing allowable purposes of other-crimes
evidence). The appropriate limiting instruction is set forth in Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions,
Criminal, No. 3.14 (4th ed. 2000) (hereinafter IPI Criminal 4th), to be given, in the instructions
at large, at the end of trial.
¶ 176 IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14 may also be given orally, when the evidence is introduced. But
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whether to give a contemporaneous instruction is a matter left to counsel’s discretion; the
defense may reasonably choose to go without one to avoid calling undue attention to other-
crimes evidence. See People v. Johnson, 368 Ill. App. 3d 1146, 1160 (2006) (limiting instruction
should not be given over defense objection (citing People v. Denny, 241 Ill. App. 3d 345, 360-61
(1993))); Ill. R. Evid. 105 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) (instruction “shall” be given at defense counsel’s
request).
¶ 177 We review de novo whether the instructions, taken as a whole, properly convey the legal
principles that the jury must apply. People v. Parker, 223 Ill. 2d 494, 501 (2006).
¶ 178 The trial court gave the jury one oral limiting instruction during trial, immediately before
the “FBI” e-mail was introduced. Recall that the e-mail, sent by Nailah to Tiffani Miley and
Dana McClellan, included a Chicago Sun-Times article detailing defendant’s stint in federal
custody. After he was arrested on drug and weapons charges and for threatening a Highland Park
police officer who was investigating him for stealing cars, defendant escaped from custody at the
Dirksen federal courthouse. While “on the lam,” he called FBI agents to “taunt” them, boasting
“You’re not going to catch me.” Two weeks later, the FBI found him and arrested him again.
¶ 179 The trial court admitted the e-mail as proof of the State’s theory of motive: that defendant
was furious at Nailah, among other reasons, for sharing details of his sordid past with others in
their circle. (Defendant does not challenge the admission of the e-mail on this basis.) At defense
counsel’s request, the trial court instructed the jury that it was about to hear evidence “that the
defendant has been involved in conduct other than that charged in the indictment. This evidence
has been received strictly on the issue of the defendant’s motive and may be considered only for
that limited purpose.”
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¶ 180 No other limiting instructions were given during the presentation of evidence. At the end
of the trial, the court began its instructions in the usual way, with IPI Criminal 4th No. 1.01, and
included this relevant bracketed material: “Any evidence that was received for a limited purpose
should not be considered by you for any other purpose.”
¶ 181 The court then gave IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14, modified as follows:
“Evidence has been received that the defendant has been involved in offenses other than
that charged in the indictment. This evidence has been received on the issues of the
defendant’s propensity, motive, and state of mind and may be considered by you only for
those limited purposes.” (Emphasis added.)
¶ 182 As defendant notes, the instruction incorrectly implied that other-crimes evidence was
admitted as proof of his state of mind but not Nailah’s as well. But defendant does not seek relief
on this basis, so we will leave this point aside.
¶ 183 Defendant focuses on the fact that the end-of-trial instruction allowed, or even “directed,”
the jury to consider all of the other-crimes evidence as propensity evidence. That is because the
instruction did not “delineat[e]” for the jury which other-crimes evidence it could properly
consider for each of the listed purposes. A properly tailored instruction, he says, would have laid
this all bare: You may consider this for motive, that for state of mind, such-and-such for
propensity.
¶ 184 There are real dangers to the defense in precisely “delineating” the permissible use(s) of
each item of other-crimes evidence in a jury instruction. Like any other limiting instruction, but
perhaps even more so, the instruction defendant proposes would risk drawing undue attention to
damaging evidence. And unlike limiting instructions modeled on IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14, it
would recapitulate the State’s arguments—say, its theory of motive—and put those arguments
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No. 1-16-1219
into the judge’s mouth. These are good reasons why the defense might not want this kind of
instruction, no matter what issues it includes—and especially when one of those issues is
propensity. See Johnson, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 1161 (“Counsel may have made a tactical decision
not to request such an instruction to avoid unduly emphasizing the other-crimes evidence.”).
¶ 185 But that’s not to say that the instruction was fine as it stood. It included propensity as an
issue that the jurors could consider but failed to confine the consideration of propensity to the
specific evidence which they could properly for this purpose. Not to worry, the State says, there
is no danger in leaving the jurors to cast about other-crimes evidence on their own. Any
“reasonably intelligent juror” will “easily” sort out which evidence is “relevant” to that issue.
¶ 186 In this vein, the State argues that IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14 does not require the trial
court to specify the precise conduct to which each issue listed in the instruction applies. We said
as much in People v. Lopez, 371 Ill. App. 3d 920, 940 (2007), cited here by the State. But the
instruction in Lopez listed only non-propensity purposes. Id. at 938 (“intent, motive, or absence
of mistake”).
¶ 187 And that difference is the whole ballgame. The great fear of other-crimes evidence—and
thus the reason for IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14—is that the jury may consider other-crimes
evidence for a propensity inference. If the jury is permitted to consider other-crimes evidence in
a certain case for, say, identity, and the jury instruction improperly includes other non-propensity
reasons like motive or absence of mistake—it is error but often harmless error, as in Lopez,
because the other non-propensity purposes are not the overriding concern here. Including
propensity as one of the permissible purposes, however, is an entirely different story.
¶ 188 In a case like this, where some evidence (prior acts of domestic violence) could be
considered for propensity purposes but various other types of other-crimes evidence could not,
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the jury instructions had to delineate as much. When all the other-crimes evidence is lumped
together in a single jury instruction and the jury is told that it may consider any of it for
propensity purposes, why would lay jurors naturally limit the propensity inference to the
domestic violence evidence but not the other other-crimes evidence? They wouldn’t. There
would be no logical or natural reason to do so. Other types of other-crimes evidence may just as
easily tempt jurors to draw propensity inferences, as a consequence of their human biases, when
it involves conduct other than domestic violence. See, e.g., Clark, 2015 IL App (1st) 131678,
¶ 27 (collecting cases and reiterating that other-crimes evidence may “ ‘prove[ ] too much’ ” or
overpersuade jurors). And jurors would have no way of knowing that domestic violence evidence
has been given special evidentiary treatment via statute, based on specific public policy decisions
made by our legislature. See 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3, 115-7.4 (West 2014).
¶ 189 Thus, if an instruction lists “propensity” as a question at issue but fails to confine the
jurors to the specific other-crimes evidence that was admissible for this purpose, the unqualified
reference to “propensity” may lead the jurors to draw improper propensity inferences along with
the proper ones. How much of a risk it creates will depend, of course, on the specifics of the
other-crimes evidence and the offenses charged in the indictment. (More on this later.)
¶ 190 What was the trial court—or defense counsel—to do? We can say this much with
certainty: The reference to “the defendant’s propensity” should not have been included in IPI
Criminal 4th No. 3.14. It didn’t belong there. It never does. The whole point of giving IPI
Criminal 4th No. 3.14 is to prevent the jury from doing exactly that—considering evidence for
the purposes of propensity—by listing the exclusive, non-propensity purpose(s) for which the
jury may consider the other-crimes evidence. Allowing the jury to consider propensity under IPI
Criminal 4th No. 3.14 defeats the whole point of the limiting instruction.
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¶ 191 On the other hand, in a trial such as this one, when there is some other-crimes
“propensity” evidence and some other-crimes evidence that cannot be considered for propensity
evidence, the trial court must chart a middle path. We are aware of no solution, and have been
cited none, in the Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions. But if the word “propensity” were omitted
from IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14, the State would be entitled to an instruction that certain
evidence could be considered for propensity purposes. Maybe that takes the form of a separate
instruction for the propensity evidence. Maybe it would require the trial court to heavily modify
IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14 to specifically lay out which evidence could and could not be
considered for propensity purposes. (And of course, in a tactical decision, defense counsel may
weigh the risks of highlighting that particularly damaging propensity evidence and request that
the jury be instructed on none of this.)
¶ 192 What cannot happen, however, is what happened here: The jury was told that it could
consider all of the other-crimes evidence for propensity purposes, when that was not the case.
¶ 193 Including “the defendant’s propensity” in what was supposed to be a limiting instruction
was a “substantial defect[ ]” warranting plain-error review. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 451(c) (eff. Apr. 8,
2013; R. 615(a); see People v. Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d 166, 189 (2010) (Rule 451(c) is “coextensive”
with plain-error rule). For the same reasons, counsel had no valid strategic reason to let the
reference to “propensity” stand. It was not required by the pattern instruction; it was basically the
opposite of a limiting instruction; and it could only hurt defendant. Counsel’s failure to object to
the defective instruction, or to tender an adequate one, was deficient performance. See, e.g.,
People v. Getter, 2015 IL App (1st) 121307, ¶ 73 (counsel deficient for acquiescing in defective
jury instruction tendered by State).
¶ 194 B
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¶ 195 Our next question is whether the error warrants reversal. Defendant argues for reversal
under theories of first- and second-prong plain error and ineffective assistance of counsel. Under
any analytical framework, the threshold question is whether the instruction created a serious risk
that a reasonable juror, conscientiously striving to apply the court’s instructions, would have
drawn an improper propensity inference from any of the evidence on which defendant bases his
claim. See, e.g., Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d at 191 (inquiry is whether instructional error created serious
risk that jurors convicted defendant because they did not understand applicable law).
¶ 196 If so, we then ask whether the risk of having the jury draw that inference was either a
serious enough error to deny defendant a fair trial, regardless of the strength of the State’s case,
or a damaging enough error, given the strength of the evidence as a whole, to potentially swing
the verdict against him. See People v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 48 (standards for first- and
second-prong plain error); People v. White, 2011 IL 109689, ¶ 133 (similar showing of prejudice
needed for first-prong plain error and ineffective assistance).
¶ 197 Defendant lists several pieces of evidence that could have been improperly considered for
propensity purposes. We start with the “FBI” e-mail, which listed several of defendant’s
previous criminal offenses.
¶ 198 Did the end-of-trial instruction create a serious risk that the jury would draw a propensity
inference from the information about defendant’s alleged criminal history conveyed in the “FBI”
e-mail? The e-mail itself undoubtedly courted that risk. But limiting instructions are presumed to
be effective. People v. Boston, 2018 IL App (1st) 140369, ¶ 75; People v. Lenley, 345 Ill. App.
3d 399, 411 (2003); see People v. Wilmington, 2013 IL 112938, ¶ 49 (“Absent some indication
to the contrary, we must presume that jurors follow the law as set forth in the instructions given
them.”). And here, the trial court not only gave a contemporaneous instruction at defense
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counsel’s request, but also reinforced that instruction with IPI Criminal 4th No. 1.01.
¶ 199 To overcome the presumption that these limiting instructions served their purpose,
defendant would have to establish that they were undercut, and thus rendered ineffective, by the
reference to “the issue of the defendant’s propensity” in the other end-of-trial instruction, IPI
Criminal 4th No. 3.14. But he fails to develop any substantive argument along these lines. And
we doubt that the argument would succeed, anyway.
¶ 200 Such an argument might have legs if the “FBI” e-mail was the only clear instance of
other-crimes evidence offered at trial. Then there might be a perceived conflict between the
contemporaneous limiting instruction regarding the “FBI” e-mail, plus the reinforcing instruction
of IPI Criminal 4th No. 1.01, on the one hand, and IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14, on the other.
¶ 201 But here, as defendant is keen to point out, other examples of his alleged prior offenses
were also presented to the jury. And while the oral instruction for the “FBI” e-mail was limited
to motive, the end-of-trial instruction listed not only motive but also propensity and state of
mind. A reasonable and diligent juror could put two and two together: In addition to the “FBI” e-
mail, the end-of-trial instruction also applied to the other evidence, and that evidence could be
considered for certain purposes other than motive.
¶ 202 In short, the end-of-trial instruction did not conflict with the oral instruction for the “FBI”
e-mail. The instructions were not difficult to reconcile, and the jury never expressed confusion or
sought clarification from the court about any perceived conflict. So the usual presumption stands:
The limiting instructions for the “FBI” e-mail were effective; they kept the jury from drawing an
improper propensity inference from that evidence. So we fail to see how the end-of-trial
instruction would have led the jury to improperly consider the offenses mentioned in the “FBI”
e-mail.
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¶ 203 Defendant cites other examples of defendant’s uncharged “offenses,” the most prominent
of which was surely Nathaly’s and Ina’s testimony about his alleged domestic violence. The trial
court admitted their testimony as evidence of defendant’s propensity to commit acts of violence
toward his intimate partners and, thus, in the end, as evidence of his propensity to murder Nailah.
See 725 ILCS 5/115-7.4 (West 2014) (authorizing admission of such evidence for propensity
purposes). That evidence was thus properly admitted for propensity purposes and cannot form
the basis of an error here.
¶ 204 Defendant bases his claim of error, in part, on Nailah’s responses to his “B***, I’m rich”
e-mail and a contemporaneous e-mail to Ina. These e-mails revealed that in the days leading up
to her murder, Nailah came to view defendant as a threat and sought an order of protection
against him. Nailah’s concerns were partly fueled by her recent discovery of defendant’s alleged
violence against Ina, to which she openly refers in the e-mails: “You are crazy, you hit women,
you are a bully ***.” In this context, Nailah proposed that they share information documenting
the “danger” that defendant posed.
¶ 205 These e-mails were admitted as evidence of Nailah’s state of mind. Defendant contends
that the defective instruction also permitted the jury to draw a propensity inference from them.
Even if we grant defendant that much, his argument goes nowhere. Because the propensity
inference would have been based on the domestic violence evidence, it would have been proper,
as just noted above. Thus, there is no risk that the instruction may have led the jury to draw an
improper propensity inference from these e-mails. To this extent, the instructional error was
harmless.
¶ 206 The “FBI” e-mail and domestic violence evidence were the most obvious and potentially
damaging examples of other-crimes evidence offered at trial. But defendant argues that the jury
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would have understood the end-of-trial instruction to allow it to draw propensity inferences from
a host of other evidence admitted for non-propensity purposes.
¶ 207 For example, in early September 2007, after discovering that Nailah had been digging
into his past, defendant allegedly left her an angry voicemail threatening to “erase” her or make
her “disappear.” (The message itself was not recovered, but Dana and Tiffani both testified that
Nailah played it for them.) This apparent threat to kill Nailah was admitted as evidence of
defendant’s motive and of Nailah’s state of mind. Defendant says that the jury would have
treated it as propensity evidence, too, because the defective instruction allowed or even
“directed” it to do so.
¶ 208 True, the jury instruction permitted the jury to consider this evidence for propensity, as
well, but the overwhelming, obvious relevance of this testimony was not that defendant generally
was a man of violent character who was thus more likely to have behaved violently in the
future—the forbidden propensity inference. See Ill. R. Evid. 404(b) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011)). Rather,
the clear relevance was that it showed defendant’s motive to kill Nailah because she had been
digging into his past, or if you prefer, his state of mind in wanting to commit violence against
Nailah. Neither of those inferences are propensity inferences.
¶ 209 Some of the evidence defendant cites was not other-crimes evidence; it was, as he says,
evidence of “bad conduct” in a broader sense. When a limiting instruction is meant to apply to
other-crimes evidence, strictly speaking, it should refer to “offenses other than that charged in the
indictment.” See IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14. The term “offenses” should be replaced with the
broader term “conduct” when the evidence does not reveal a crime allegedly committed by the
defendant but rather non-criminal behavior that, given the facts of the case, might still tempt the
jury to draw a propensity inference. See IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14, Committee Note.
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¶ 210 Here, the end-of-trial instruction used the term “offenses,” not “conduct.” (The limiting
instruction for the “FBI” e-mail used the broader term “conduct.”) But defendant does not argue
that the broader term should have been used, so we need not decide whether that was error by the
trial court or deficient representation by counsel.
¶ 211 Thus, defendant’s claim of instructional error can only be based on evidence that the jury
likely would have understood to reveal an alleged “offense.” We are mindful that lay jurors are
not versed in criminal law, and that our determination of how the jury may have understood the
instruction in this respect cannot fairly be based on technical legal analysis. The question, rather,
is whether a reasonable person, exercising ordinary common sense, would likely view certain
alleged conduct as criminal in nature.
¶ 212 It is hard to imagine that the jury viewed defendant’s calls to Tiffani, cited in this context
by defendant, as a criminal “offense.” After his relationship with Nailah fell into a downward
spiral, defendant repeatedly called Tiffani, who told him, in no uncertain terms, that she did not
want to get in the middle of any “drama” between them. (And that defendant’s advances on her
would continue to go nowhere.) When Tiffani asked defendant to stop calling, he refused; when
she blocked his number, he called from a different one.
¶ 213 Defendant’s conduct was disrespectful toward Tiffani and perhaps, in Nailah’s phrase,
“obsessive” to boot. But not criminal. There is no reason why the jury would have thought that,
per the court’s instructions, it could consider defendant’s unwelcome calls to Tiffani as evidence
of his propensity to commit murder. And the instructional error aside, the jury was unlikely to
draw such a strained and implausible inference, anyway. Whatever human biases they inevitably
bring with them, reasonable jurors will not take every impertinence to reveal a violent and
murderous character.
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¶ 214 Similar points apply to the evidence that defendant stiffed Remi Ivanovas, a contractor he
hired to renovate his condo, by refusing to make good on a bounced check. And to his “B***,
I’m rich” e-mail—an arrogant, demeaning, and spiteful rant, sent in response to the “FBI” e-
mail, in which defendant said that if Nailah kept “talking s*** and sending around articles”
about him, he would retaliate by “passing around” a sex tape of them. (There was no evidence
that he did.)
¶ 215 Defendant paints with too broad a brush when he complains that this evidence revealed
“a very negative picture of [his] character.” No doubt it cast him in an unfavorable light, but it
did not reveal him as having committed other criminal “offenses,” much less the kind of offenses
that would reveal a general disposition to commit murder. As with defendant’s calls to Tiffani, it
is highly unlikely that the jury would have taken the court’s instruction to sanction a propensity
inference from any of this evidence, or that the jury would have drawn the inference, anyway.
¶ 216 That brings us to Nailah’s “Adios” e-mail, in which she told defendant that his failure to
disclose his “jail time and illegal history” was one reason, among many, why she was ending the
relationship. The “Adios” e-mail was unique in that (i) it referred to defendant’s alleged offenses
other than domestic violence and (ii) no contemporaneous limiting instruction was given for it.
¶ 217 If defense counsel had requested a limiting instruction, that would be the end of the
matter, as it was for the “FBI” e-mail. But counsel did not. And that was not unreasonable. By
comparison, the “FBI” e-mail revealed concrete details about defendant’s alleged criminal
activities—enough for counsel to reasonably conclude that a limiting instruction was the only
hope of fending off a damaging inference about defendant’s violent criminal propensities. The
“Adios” e-mail, in contrast, made only a minimal, unadorned reference to defendant’s alleged
criminal history—minimal enough for counsel to reasonably conclude that a limiting instruction
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No. 1-16-1219
would risk drawing more attention to this reference than the jury may have given it on its own.
¶ 218 But having foregone a limiting instruction for the “Adios” e-mail, it was incumbent upon
counsel to ensure that this other-crimes evidence, minimal as it was, did not get swept into an
instruction that allowed the jury to draw a propensity inference from it. And it was incumbent
upon the trial court not to give that erroneous instruction in the first place. The end-of-trial
instruction did, on its face, permit the jury to draw an improper propensity inference from the
“Adios” e-mail. In that respect, that e-mail is unlike any of the other evidence defendant has
cited. If there was any prejudice or fundamental unfairness caused by the erroneous instruction, it
is to be found here.
¶ 219 But we find little prejudice, if any. Nailah’s isolated, minimal reference to defendant’s
alleged criminal past, and any inferences the jury might draw from that reference, were too thin
and insubstantial on their own to deny defendant a fundamentally fair trial. And given the
extensive, far-reaching evidence against defendant—set forth above and too voluminous to
repeat here—it is hard to imagine that this reference loomed large in the jurors’ minds. Whatever
tack counsel might have taken—a corrected end-of-trial instruction, a contemporaneous limiting
instruction, or even a successful bid to redact this reference from the “Adios” e-mail—we are
confident that the verdict would have been the same. Defendant has not shown Strickland
prejudice or plain error of either kind.
¶ 220 Defendant’s principal citation, People v. Johnson, 2013 IL App (2d) 110535, does not
convince us otherwise. In Johnson, counsel unreasonably agreed to a simultaneous jury trial on
charges of domestic battery and unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon (UUWF) that were
not subject to joinder. Id. ¶¶ 1, 45. On the domestic-battery charge, the trial court admitted the
defendant’s prior incidents of domestic violence toward the victim as propensity evidence. Id.
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¶ 63. On the UUWF charge, the parties stipulated to the defendant’s prior felony conviction. Id.
¶ 12. On each charge, the jury was thus presented with other-crimes evidence that never would
have been before it, if not for the improper joinder.
¶ 221 At the end of the trial, in a single rendition of IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14 meant to cover
both charges, the court instructed the jury that it could consider evidence of the defendant’s
uncharged conduct “ ‘on the issues of [his] intent, motive, design, knowledge, absence of
mistake, and propensity.’ ” Johnson, 2013 IL App (2d) 110535, ¶ 69.
¶ 222 The trial court’s failure to give a “precisely tailored version” of IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14
for each charge “compounded” or “amplified” the prejudice caused by the improper joinder of
the charges. Johnson, 2013 IL App (2d) 110535, ¶¶ 2, 67, 73. (The appellate court did not hold,
as we do today, that “propensity” does not belong in IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.14 at all.) A series of
erroneous propensity inferences were thus allowed: For example, on the UUWF charge, the jury
was allowed to consider the charged domestic battery, the prior domestic violence incidents, and
the threats that accompanied this conduct—which included, notably, a threat to start a “shootout”
should the victim call the police—as propensity evidence. Id. ¶¶ 20, 75. On the domestic battery
charge, the jury could consider the defendant’s stipulated felony conviction (as well as other-
crimes evidence admitted on the domestic battery charge for non-propensity purposes). Id. ¶ 75.
¶ 223 This litany of “intertwined” errors in Johnson, and the series of propensity inferences it
allowed the jury to draw, denied the defendant a fair trial, regardless of the strength of the
evidence against him. Id. ¶¶ 2, 76. The instructional error here, on the other hand, did not come
close, in scope or in consequence, to the morass of mutually compounding errors that rendered
the trial in Johnson hopelessly defective and thus fundamentally unfair. The erroneous
instruction in this case, as we explained above, allowed one isolated inference, not a slew of
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inferences; and it was a very weak inference at that, unlike at least some of the inferences that
the jury was likely to draw in Johnson.
¶ 224 One final point. Johnson rejected the State’s contention that the instructional error could
not be reviewed at all, even as plain error, because the defendant had “invited” the error and was
therefore estopped from raising it on appeal. Id. ¶¶ 77-81. Since the State tendered the defective
instruction, defense counsel’s failure to object—or “acquiescence,” as the State says here—was a
garden-variety forfeiture (and deficient performance), not an invitation to error. Id. ¶ 78. So too
here. As in Johnson, we again reject the State’s theory of invited error on these grounds.
¶ 225 For these reasons, we reject defendant’s claim of instructional error as a basis for finding
either plain error or ineffective assistance of counsel.
¶ 226 III
¶ 227 Defendant argues that counsel was ineffective for promising, in opening statement, that
Tyrone Stevenson would testify in support of his alibi defense and then failing to call Tyrone
during the defense case. And the prejudice to his defense was compounded, he says, when the
prosecutor, during rebuttal argument, improperly commented on Tyrone’s failure to testify and
accused defense counsel of fabricating the entire alibi.
¶ 228 A
¶ 229 In the defense’s opening statement, counsel sketched an account of defendant’s plans that
purported to explain his presence in Hammond on September 18. Defendant wanted to borrow
Tyrone’s van, so he could move some appliances out of the townhouse in Naperville. A friend
dropped him off at Tyrone’s house in Hammond. Defendant and Tyrone argued about a real
estate deal that went bad, and Tyrone refused to loan him the van. Defendant asked Hugh and
Castra Echols to come pick him up, which they did. Defendant told them he was stranded in
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Hammond because he got into a fight with his uncle there.
¶ 230 As a threshold matter, the record shows that while counsel mentioned Tyrone in the
course of sketching the alibi defense to come, counsel never explicitly promised that Tyrone
would testify. Still, defendant says, counsel “created an expectation in the jurors’ minds that they
would hear from witnesses in support of [his] alibi, including, most importantly, Tyrone.”
¶ 231 Although Tyrone did not testify, this “story of [defendant’s] innocence,” as he calls it,
was told through the testimony of the other defense witnesses—Aaron and Mark Rush—and, to a
lesser extent, Hugh and Castra Echols, who testified for the State. It is not true, as defendant
says, that he could not convey his “innocent reason” for being in Hammond without Tyrone’s
testimony. Collectively, the witnesses conveyed that defendant had plans to move his appliances
out of the townhouse (Mark), that Tyrone had vans at his house in Hammond (Aaron), that
defendant was dropped off at Tyrone’s house (Aaron), and that defendant got into an argument
with Tyrone, leaving him stranded in Hammond (Hugh and Castra), just two or three blocks
from where Nailah’s car was found. All of this testimony, as woven together by defense counsel,
apprised the jury of defendant’s alleged innocent reason for going to Hammond, even without
Tyrone’s explicit testimony about the plan for defendant to borrow one of his vans or the dispute
that caused this plan to fall apart.
¶ 232 Granted, having listened to the other witnesses, the jurors might have expected Tyrone to
take the stand; he was, after all, one of the major characters in the story. And his testimony could
have made one piece of the story more explicit. But that doesn’t mean the alibi was not conveyed
in its essentials, or that the jury did not understand, clearly enough, defendant’s purported reason
for being in Hammond. Indeed, the jury may well have found any further details provided by
Tyrone, about his arrangement or his argument with defendant, to be largely beside the point.
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¶ 233 Unlike in defendant’s principal citations, counsel neither promised to call Tyrone as a
witness nor failed to present evidence to support the theory sketched in opening statement. See
People v. Briones, 352 Ill. App. 3d 913, 914-15 (2004) (counsel promised defendant would “ ‘get
up here on this witness stand’ ”); People v. Patterson, 192 Ill. 2d 93, 121 (2000) (counsel
promised but completely failed to present evidence that confession was coerced). And that all but
scotches his claim that counsel was unreasonable, and thus deficient, for failing to call Tyrone to
the stand. A broken promise is a strong basis for a finding of deficiency, as it seriously
undermines the defense’s credibility and invites the jury to infer that the undelivered evidence
would have been adverse to the theory at issue. Briones, 352 Ill. App. 3d at 914-18. But here,
there was no broken promise, and so the failure to call Tyrone is properly analyzed as an
ordinary decision about whether to call a known alibi witness.
¶ 234 Defendant cannot prevail on such a claim. For one, because counsel did not renege on a
promise, it was not, as defendant asserts, counsel’s burden to make a record of the trial strategy
that justified the decision not to produce the promised evidence. See id. at 918. Rather, it is
defendant’s burden to overcome the usual presumption that counsel’s decisions about which alibi
witness to call (or not) were based on strategic considerations. See, e.g., People v. Brown, 371
Ill. App. 3d 972, 981 (2007); People v. West, 187 Ill. 2d 418, 432 (1999).
¶ 235 Defendant fails to carry this burden. And to be sure, the record discloses any number of
ways in which Tyrone’s credibility as an alibi witness would have been vulnerable to attack. He
was a relative of defendant’s, and a former law enforcement officer, who nonetheless failed for
years to come forward with alleged exculpatory information in his relative’s high-profile murder
case. See People v. Deloney, 341 Ill. App. 3d 621, 635 (2003) (jury may give family, such as
cousins, little weight as alibi witnesses); People v. Singleton, 367 Ill. App. 3d 182, 189 (2006)
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(delay in coming forward is grounds for skepticism).
¶ 236 The State used Aaron’s similar failure to come forward for many years—despite his own
law enforcement background (in the military police) and close relationship with defendant—as
the starting point of a withering cross-examination that left his credibility in serious doubt. And
Tyrone could have fared even worse: He was not only a former law enforcement officer but a
disgraced cop who was fired for shaking down drug dealers. Counsel could have reasonably
concluded that Tyrone threatened to do more harm than good to the defense case.
¶ 237 Assuming, that is, that Tyrone was available and willing to testify in the first place. The
record does not affirmatively establish that he was. And for all we know, he may not have been.
A basic premise of the alibi defense, after all, was that defendant and Tyrone had a falling out.
¶ 238 Most importantly, defendant fails to show that his defense was prejudiced by Tyrone’s
absence. There are at least two reasons why. First, as far as we have been told, Tyrone would
have testified that defendant came to his house to borrow a van, but they got into an argument
about a real estate deal. For the reasons we have given, that testimony would not have added
much to the alibi defense, the essentials of which were made clear to the jury by the other
witnesses.
¶ 239 Second, it is very difficult to square the overall arc of the alibi story with the available
objective evidence, namely the CSLI and surveillance footage. Defendant would have the jury
believe that although he was seen walking out of Nailah’s condo building with her around 1 p.m.
on September 18, the last time she was confirmed to be alive, they went their separate ways at
that time. Yet their phones just happened to spend the rest of the day pinging cell towers that
traced a highly overlapping trajectory—culminating in both phones accessing the same towers
and sectors, at nearly identical times, in the areas where Nailah’s car, sample boxes, and body
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were found. Supplementing the alibi defense with Tyrone’s testimony, given its limited scope (as
far as we have been told) and his myriad credibility problems, would not have changed anything.
Tyrone’s absence does not undermine our confidence in the jury’s verdict.
¶ 240 B
¶ 241 Defendant also alleges that the prosecutor improperly commented on Tyrone’s failure to
testify and accused counsel of fabricating his alibi defense. He argues, on these grounds, that the
prosecutor committed misconduct and that counsel was ineffective for failing to object. For ease
of exposition, we take defendant’s allegations in reverse order.
¶ 242 Accusing counsel of fabricating a defense is improper unless the accusation is based on
competent evidence. People v. Hudson, 157 Ill. 2d 401, 442-43 (1993); People v. Emerson, 97
Ill. 2d 487, 497 (1983). There was no such evidence here. But neither was there such an
accusation.
¶ 243 In rebuttal argument, the prosecutor repeatedly characterized Aaron’s alibi testimony as a
“fabrication” and asserted that he “was told what to say.” By whom? The prosecutor never said.
But “the insinuation was clear,” defendant argues. It had to be defense counsel, since the “whole
tenor” of the State’s argument was that the alibi defense was fabricated, and “only the defense
team would fabricate a defense.”
¶ 244 To begin, the prosecutor’s argument in rebuttal was a legitimate attack on the defense
theory, not an improper attack on defense counsel. The crux of the argument was twofold: that
Aaron’s testimony did not square with the available objective evidence, namely, the CSLI and
surveillance footage, and that this was not defendant’s first purported alibi. He initially claimed
to be at Target, with Hugh and Castra, and it was only after the police debunked this initial story
(with the security footage of Hugh and Castra alone at Target) that he claimed to be with Aaron.
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From all of this evidence, the State could fairly argue that Aaron’s testimony, like defendant’s
original alibi story, was false, a fabrication.
¶ 245 As for who, if anyone, may have put these words into Allen’s mouth, the prosecutor made
no bones about it: It was defendant, not counsel. And it was defendant, not counsel, who spent
much of September 18 trying to lay the foundation for a false alibi. Just as defendant allegedly
fabricated the initial alibi story for Hugh and sent bogus messages from Nailah’s phone until he
could make himself seen in public—all of which happened years before trial counsel came into
the picture—he later fabricated a new alibi for Aaron, after the initial story was unmasked. In
this context, the prosecutor asked, rhetorically, “So what does he come up with?” The answer:
“He comes up with a new and improved alibi starring *** Aaron Allen.” Obviously enough,
“he” refers to defendant.
¶ 246 There is no basis in the record for defendant’s claim that the prosecutor either explicitly
or implicitly accused counsel of fabricating the alibi. Rather, this case is like Hudson, 157 Ill. 2d
401. There, the prosecutor argued that the defense theory was “ ‘concocted,’ ” and the defendant
claimed on appeal that this statement implicitly accused counsel of fabricating the defense. Id. at
442-43. The supreme court rejected this claim, noting that while the term “ ‘concoct,’ ” much
like the term “fabricate[ ]” here, may suggest a disingenuous strategy conjured up for trial, it
does not necessarily imply that counsel played any role in its creation. Id. at 443. To the
contrary, the supreme court found that the prosecutor’s statement in Hudson was a comment on
the veracity of the defendant, not counsel. Id. So too here.
¶ 247 After arguing that the alibi defense was bogus, the prosecutor commented in rebuttal on
Tyrone’s failure to testify: “Where is the other half of this alibi team? Why didn’t we hear from
Uncle Tyrone Stevenson, his uncle? Why? Could it be because Uncle Tyrone wasn’t willing to
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come in here and lie under oath the way Aaron Allen was?”
¶ 248 Defendant contends that this remark was also improper. To begin, the prosecutor did not
imply that counsel suborned perjury, as defendant appears to suggest; for the reasons we have
given, the prosecutor fairly argued that Aaron’s alibi testimony was untruthful, without casting
aspersions on counsel’s conduct.
¶ 249 And because Tyrone was a potential alibi witness identified by the defense at trial, the
prosecutor was permitted to comment on his failure to testify as long as the commentary was not
misleading, unfair, or unduly prejudicial. People v. Kubat, 94 Ill. 2d 437, 498 (1983); People v.
Brown, 122 Ill. App. 3d 452, 460 (1984). In this vein, defendant objects to the rhetorical question
at the end of the prosecutor’s remark, which mentioned the possibility that Tyrone did not testify
because he was unwilling to lie.
¶ 250 We have approved of a prosecutor’s use of similar rhetorical questions about the absence
of a known alibi witness before. See, e.g., Brown, 122 Ill. App. 3d at 459 (“ ‘Now I don’t know
why [the witness] isn’t here. Is he afraid to take the stand? Is he afraid to tell the truth? Will the
truth hurt the defendant? I don’t know.’ ”). Defendant is correct that there was no evidence as to
why Tyrone did not testify. But as in Brown, we do not read the prosecutor’s rhetorical question
as falsely implying that the evidence established the actual reason for Tyrone’s absence. Rather,
the upshot of the remark was that the jury could take the defense’s failure to call its own named
(albeit not promised) witness as one more hit to the credibility of an alibi defense that was
already hard to believe. And that much was fair argument. See Kubat, 94 Ill. 2d at 497.
¶ 251 And this rhetorical question about Tyrone was, if nothing else, inconsequential. The alibi,
on its face, suggested at least one other possible reason why Tyrone did not testify: He had a
falling out with defendant. The jury was free to reject any competing inference about Tyrone that
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the prosecutor’s rhetoric may have invited it to draw. Last but not least, the alibi defense was
weak, for all of the reasons we have discussed. We find no misconduct or ineffective assistance.
¶ 252 IV
¶ 253 Defendant alleges numerous other instances of prosecutorial misconduct. Since none of
them were met with an objection, and defendant does not claim that counsel was ineffective on
any of these grounds, his burden is to show plain error.
¶ 254 The parties dispute the proper standard of review for claims of prosecutorial misconduct,
and the case law gives mixed signals. But defendant’s claims have little, if any, substance, and
they would fail under any standard of review. So we can leave this dispute for another day.
¶ 255 First, defendant claims that the prosecutors “ridiculed” and “disparaged” defense counsel
for cross-examining the medical examiner, Dr. Crowns, and challenging his determination that
the cause of death was asphyxiation. In the same breath, he says, the prosecutor “denigrated” his
constitutional right to the assistance of counsel by implying that only a guilty person would
challenge the State’s evidence.
¶ 256 In rebuttal argument, the prosecutor said, “This is how desperate they are. They go so far
when they are cross-examining Dr. Crowns to attack his manner of death. What are they saying,
she committed suicide ***?” After listing various other possibilities—none of which the defense
ever suggested—the prosecutor asked, rhetorically, “Why does he care? If he didn’t do it, why
does he care how she died?” And then the prosecutor answered her own question: “Because he
knows how devastating the testimony of Nathaly Figueroa *** was.”
¶ 257 The prosecutor neither disparaged counsel nor denigrated defendant’s right to counsel.
These allegations ignore the prosecutor’s own answer to the question, “Why does he care?” He
cared because Dr. Crowns’s finding that Nailah died by asphyxiation made the evidence that
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defendant had a history not only of abusing women but of choking and suffocating them that
much more damaging. The defense either had to explain away the suspicious resemblance
between Nailah’s death and defendant’s abuse of Nathaly and Ina, or else mount a successful
challenge to the medical examiner’s finding. Counsel pursued the latter approach. That was the
prosecutor’s point.
¶ 258 To be sure, the State made this point, and many others its rebuttal argument, through a
liberal use of rhetorical questions. But rhetorical questions are not inherently improper. And
here, they were aimed at the defense’s arguments, not at counsel personally or at defendant’s
right to conduct a defense with counsel’s assistance.
¶ 259 Second, defendant says that the prosecutor similarly mocked counsel for cross-examining
Agent Easter and challenging the CSLI evidence; and in so doing, the prosecutor again implied
that only a guilty person would challenge the State’s evidence.
¶ 260 The defense argued that the CSLI evidence, a cornerstone of the State’s case, actually
revealed an exculpatory fact: Defendant’s phone was still in Chicago when Nailah’s arrived in
Calumet City, which showed that they were not together and hence that defendant could not have
been the one who killed her. The defense pursued this point in cross-examination and highlighted
it on an exhibit published to the jury. In rebuttal argument, the prosecutor responded:
“Most of all, why does he care? If he didn’t do it, if he had nothing to do with her death,
why does he care? If she is alive or dead at 7:30 and 8:30 that night, why care about any
of those communications they had on their big exhibit? If he didn’t do it, why does he
care?”
¶ 261 Defendant quotes the prosecutor’s comment up to this point and lops off the answer to
her own rhetorical question: “Because of the cell tower.” Granted, the segue makes no obvious
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sense; the prosecutor’s favored rhetorical device fell flat in this particular instance. Be that as it
may, she went on to argue, rightly or wrongly, that the defense misunderstood the CSLI: It listed
“cell towers only” in its exhibit, ignored “which sectors are being used” and “the ranges being
used on those sectors,” and failed to account for the length of time an originating tower hangs on
to a call. Agent Easter, in contrast, took all of these factors into account in his analysis, rendering
it more trustworthy than the defense’s own. All of this was fair argument, directed at the defense
theory, not at counsel personally or at defendant’s constitutional rights.
¶ 262 Defendant also complains, in this context, that the prosecutor’s reference to the defense’s
“big exhibit” was improper mockery. The exhibit was, in fact, larger than others and so easily
referenced in this way. Defendant’s argument is frivolous and merits no further discussion.
¶ 263 Third, defendant argues that the prosecutor improperly “introduced” Dana’s hearsay
statement to Detective Przepiora during rebuttal argument, in defiance of the trial court’s order
barring that evidence.
¶ 264 To understand this claim, a fair amount of context is necessary. There was a dispute as to
what Dana saw when she went to Nailah’s condo on the day Nailah went missing. According to
the report written by Detective Carter (who was called by the defense), Dana said that she went
into the condo twice: The first time, it was orderly and Nailah’s laptops were there; the second
time, it was in disarray and Nailah’s laptops were missing.
¶ 265 But Dana testified that she only went inside the condo once—she could not get in the first
time she tried because she did not have the spare key with her—and when she did, it was in
disarray and Nailah’s laptops were missing. In response to this ostensible impeachment, the State
sought to introduce Detective Przepiora’s report, which was said to be consistent with Dana’s
testimony. Because Detective Przepiora did not testify, the State proposed to introduce the report
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through the testimony of Detective Carter.
¶ 266 The trial court did not allow the State to elicit the content of Detective Przepiora’s report
or that it was different than Detective Carter’s report. The court did allow the State to elicit that
Detective Przepiora took four pages of notes when he interviewed Dana. And the court ruled that
“this is a subject matter of argument.” The prosecutor “can argue that [Dana] was telling the
truth and that [Detective Carter] made a mistake because of the way he took the reports.”
¶ 267 And that is exactly what the State argued in rebuttal, in the course of responding to the
defense’s argument that Detective Carter’s report was accurate, and that Dana was either lying or
mistaken. Specifically, the prosecutor argued that Detective Carter—who conducted the missing
person’s investigation but was then removed from the case because he was not a violent-crimes
detective—was in over his head, did not take notes, wrote his report from memory, made other
demonstrable errors in his report that were brought out on cross-examination, and acknowledged
in his testimony that he might have gotten this wrong, too. In contrast, Detective Przepiora, a
violent-crimes detective, interviewed Dana promptly and based his report on the notes he took.
And if Dana “had told [Detective Przepiora] anything different than what she said on the witness
stand, you would have heard about it.”
¶ 268 In other words, the prosecutor argued that if Dana had made prior inconsistent statements
to Detective Przepiora, the defense would have introduced those statements to impeach her—just
as it sought to do with Detective Carter. We have held before that this line of argument is proper
when, as in this case, it responds to the defense’s argument that a State witness was not credible.
See People v. Wilson, 257 Ill. App. 3d 670, 690-91 (1993); People v. Thomas, 121 Ill. App. 3d
883, 893 (1984). And in making this argument, the State hewed closely to the terms of the trial
court’s ruling. The prosecutor argued all of the points she was permitted to argue, but she never
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revealed the content of Dana’s (alleged prior consistent) statement.
¶ 269 Fourth, defendant argues that the State elicited from Dr. Crowns improper hearsay that
the other pathologists at the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office reviewed and concurred
with his cause-of-death determination.
¶ 270 On direct examination, and over the defense’s hearsay objection, Dr. Crowns described
the office’s peer-review process. After conducting an autopsy, the examiner presents the findings
for discussion by the office at large. If the other pathologists agree, the findings are accepted as
final. If there is disagreement and “no resolution could be taken”—in other words, if a consensus
is not reached—“it would go to a vote and the majority would rule the cause and manner of
death.” Dr. Crowns presented his findings from Nailah’s autopsy at one such meeting, but he did
not remember what happened at the meeting other than that “there was a majority opinion
reached.” The trial court sustained a defense objection and struck the words “majority opinion.”
Dr. Crowns thus testified that “[t]he opinion for the cause of death was asphyxia.”
¶ 271 For starters, “eliciting hearsay” is generally not a basis for a finding of prosecutorial
misconduct. Even less could the prosecutor commit misconduct when the trial court ruled on a
defense objection and allowed the testimony that was elicited. And as a hearsay exception, an
expert witness may testify about the findings and conclusions of a non-testifying expert that the
witness used in forming his or her opinion. People v. Williams, 238 Ill. 2d 125, 143 (2010);
People v. Lovejoy, 235 Ill. 2d 97, 143 (2009). Here, Dr. Crowns was clear that the peer-review
process is a standard procedure for reaching a final determination as to the cause of death.
¶ 272 What’s more, defendant’s claim that Dr. Crowns’s findings were “unfairly bolstered” by
this evidence rests on a misreading of the record. Dr. Crowns never said that the pathologists
reached a consensus about Nailah’s cause of death. In fact, he said the opposite: A “majority”
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opinion was reached, and a majority vote is only taken when there is no consensus. In other
words, Dr. Crowns’s testimony implied that at least some of the other pathologists disagreed
with his findings. (Not a bad start to a reasonable doubt argument regarding the cause of death,
an argument the defense did pursue. But instead, the defense objected to this testimony.) This
was hardly the unfair bolstering that defendant makes it out to be.
¶ 273 Fifth, defendant claims that the State commented on evidence that was never introduced
when discussing its theory of motive in closing argument. The State’s theory was that defendant
had a “problem”: Nailah and Ina were sharing damaging information about his history of abusing
women and his criminal history more generally. When his “anger *** reached its boiling point,”
he had to decide what to do. And he decided to kill Nailah. Why Nailah? As the State argued, he
“can’t get rid of Ina because who will take care of [the baby]. Reginald Potts can’t be saddled
down with a baby while he is choosing his sex partner of the day.” So he “would have to keep
Ina alive. Nailah, yes, she is the expendable one. In his mind, erase Nailah, erase the problem.”
¶ 274 Defendant says there was no evidence that he ever contemplated killing Ina but decided
against it to avoid being saddled with a baby, as the prosecutor suggested. As we understand the
State’s argument, the prosecutor was merely asking the jury to consider a theory, namely, that
defendant had to choose between killing Nailah and Ina to rid himself of his ongoing “problem”
and that he chose to kill Nailah because he viewed her as more expendable. Granted, this theory
did ask the jury to infer that killing Ina presented itself to defendant as a possible solution to his
problem. But that inference was not unreasonable. The evidence showed that defendant, in a fit
of rage, locked Ina in a room, put their baby face down on the bed, and vigorously choked Ina
with both hands until her mother came by and broke the glass on the door. Not to mention the
times that defendant suffocated, choked, or otherwise beat Nathaly. A jury could reasonably infer
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from this evidence—and so the State could reasonably argue—that defendant would go so far as
to consider killing Ina, even if he ultimately decided to kill Nailah instead.
¶ 275 Sixth, defendant argues that the State “mischaracterized the CSLI evidence” in various
ways. For one, he says, the prosecutor repeatedly prompted Agent Easter to place defendant’s
and Nailah’s phones “together” or “in lockstep” at certain incriminating locations. Not so. The
prosecutor specifically elicited from Agent Easter that CSLI does not “give an exact location of a
cell phone.” (Times have changed somewhat, as Chief Justice Roberts noted in Carpenter, 585
U.S. at ___, 138 S. Ct. at 2219). And countless times, the prosecutor asked, and Agent Easter
answered, whether the CSLI was “consistent with” the two phones being in or “in the area of” a
particular location at a particular time. Defendant’s brief whitewashes all of these qualifying
phrases from the record.
¶ 276 Defendant complains that the prosecutor’s opening statement “overstate[d]” the CSLI
evidence. At one point, the prosecutor said, defendant’s phone was so close to the tower where
Nailah’s car was found that if the tower “had fallen down it would have hit him in the head.”
¶ 277 Taken literally, this quip does overstate the CSLI evidence; by the State’s own admission,
as we just noted, the CSLI could not pinpoint the location of defendant’s phone with that level of
precision. But we are not so sure the prosecutor meant this quip to be taken literally; it certainly
reads more like a stylized figure of speech. Prosecutors (and defense attorneys) should be
cautious with such expressions, particularly during opening statements, lest they run the risk of
misleading the jury about what the evidence is expected to show. See People v. James, 2017 IL
App (1st) 143391, ¶ 67 (parties do not enjoy same “ ‘wide latitude’ ” in opening statements as in
closing arguments). But the jury was instructed, as it always is, that an opening statement is not
evidence. And the evidence itself, presented through the direct examination of Agent Easter,
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made clear for the jury the level of precision that CSLI can achieve. The prosecutor’s quip may
have overshot the mark, but it was neither misconduct nor reversible error.
¶ 278 On a related note, defendant complains that the prosecutor described Agent Easter’s job
as “to catch criminals who are reckless with phones.” It is simply not true, as defendant asserts,
that this inappropriately branded him as a criminal or misdescribed Agent’s Easter’s job as an
FBI agent and expert in historical cell-site analysis.
¶ 279 Seventh, defendant says that the prosecutor personally vouched for the credibility of two
experts: Jessica Smith, the digital forensic examiner who examined the iPod found in defendant’s
condo, and Dr. Crowns.
¶ 280 A prosecutor may argue that a witness is or is not credible but may not personally vouch
for the credibility of a witness or use the credibility of the state’s attorney’s office to bolster a
witness’s testimony. People v. Williams, 2015 IL App (1st) 122745, ¶ 12. Improper bolstering
only occurs when the prosecutor explicitly offers a personal opinion about the witness. People v.
Deramus, 2014 IL App (1st) 130995, ¶¶ 51-52.
¶ 281 The prosecutor said that Smith had “amazing credentials, the best” and “gets paid a lot of
money to do what she does.” And as a “forensic pathologist,” Dr. Crowns had “performed
thousands of autopsies.” He had “no dog in this fight,” “no bias against defendant.” His “entire
job is to determine cause and manner of death, and he knows that the decisions he makes about
the dead can drastically affect the lives of the living. He doesn’t take that responsibility lightly.”
¶ 282 The prosecutor’s point was that both witnesses were highly qualified and experienced
experts whose opinions were for that reason reliable. In the case of Dr. Crowns, the prosecutor
further emphasized that the medical examiner functions as a neutral, independent fact finder,
whose assessment of the evidence should for that reason be considered unbiased. In neither
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instance did the prosecutor personally vouch for the witness.
¶ 283 Eighth, defendant argues that the prosecutors engaged in “evidentiary excess,” a species
of “prosecutorial overkill,” and therefore misconduct. In particular, the prosecutors published to
the jury a number of needlessly gruesome photos depicting Nailah’s decomposed and maggot-
infested corpse. In this way, they sought to arouse the jurors’ sympathy for Nailah and
resentment toward defendant.
¶ 284 The defense objected to the publication of these photos. The trial court heard from the
parties, overruled the objection, and permitted the State to publish the photos. It is frivolous to
argue that the prosecutors committed misconduct by publishing exhibits that the judge expressly
ruled they could publish.
¶ 285 Ninth, defendant says that the State shifted the burden of proof. While the State typically
may not argue that the defendant failed to produce evidence, “it is generally permissible for the
State to point out in closing argument that evidence is uncontradicted.” People v. Keene, 169 Ill.
2d 1, 21 (1995).
¶ 286 While arguing that the CSLI debunked defendant’s alibi, the prosecutor told the jury in
rebuttal that “[t]he only evidence that you heard about the location of the Defendant’s phone and
victim’s phone on September 18th came from Special Agent Easter. He is an expert in historical
cellular analysis, and you have to base your verdict on the evidence you heard.” In other words,
the CSLI, and Agent Easter’s analysis of it, was uncontradicted. The prosecutor did not shift the
burden of proof onto the defense.
¶ 287 Lastly, defendant argues that the prosecutor used “sarcasm” and “inflammatory remarks”
to “inflame the jurors’ passions” against defendant and engender sympathy for Nailah. Normally,
it is evidence, not argument, that is said to “ ‘inflame the passions of jurors’ ” and thus prejudice
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the defendant. People v. Burton, 338 Ill. App. 3d 406, 418 (2003).
¶ 288 In any event, defendant says that the prosecutor “likened [him] to an animal” with this
rhetoric: “There was the hunter and the hunted. The hunter, Reginald Potts, pursuing Nailah
Franklin. The hunted, the game, was Nailah.”
¶ 289 The prosecutor thus likened Nailah, “the hunted, the game” to an animal—or rather, to
someone whom defendant treated like an animal. And that description of defendant was proper.
See People v. Armstrong, 183 Ill. 2d 130, 145-46 (1998) (proper to describe defendant who beat
victim with a cane as “ ‘treating her like she was a baby seal’ ”).
¶ 290 But defendant, the “hunter?” While both animals and humans hunt, competent speakers
of English do not usually refer to animals as hunting game. With its obvious connection to sport,
this is a distinctly human idiom. Defendant’s interpretation is strained, unnatural, and unlikely to
reflect the jury’s reaction to the prosecutor’s rhetoric. And even if the remark admits of some
ambiguity, we “ ‘should not lightly infer’ ” that the prosecutor intended, or that the jury assigned,
the most damaging possible interpretation. People v. Phillips, 127 Ill. 2d 499, 529 (1989).
¶ 291 Defendant complains that the prosecutor called him sarcastic names like “Mr. Bentley,”
“Mr. Two-Story Condo,” “Mr. Highrise,” “Mr. Popular Guy,” and “Reginald Bullseye Potts.”
Countless cases have reiterated that the use of mild sarcasm or invective is not misconduct (e.g.,
People v. Banks, 237 Ill. 2d 154, 183 (2010); Burton, 338 Ill. App. 3d at 418), that reviewing
courts do not act as the “speech police” in reviewing closing arguments (People v. Montgomery,
373 Ill. App. 3d 1104, 1118-19 (2007)), and that unflattering “appellations” are not improper
where they are supported by the evidence or a reasonable inference from the evidence (People v.
Vargas, 409 Ill. App. 3d 790, 797 (2011)).
¶ 292 The prosecutor’s sarcasm was supported by ample evidence. Defendant endlessly boasted
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that he was “very, very wealthy,” drove a Bentley, and lived a lavish, swinging lifestyle full of
sexual exploits. The prosecutor coined sarcastic names to highlight defendant’s braggadocio and
used them to juxtapose both his lavish lifestyle and the domestic violence evidence against the
image of a doting father that defendant also tried to paint at trial. As the prosecutor reminded the
jury, “Mr. Bentley, Mr. Two-Story Condo, Mr. Highrise” not only choked but also demanded
money from the mother of his infant child—who still lived at home with her parents. Viewed in
its full context, the prosecutor’s sarcasm was not improper.
¶ 293 As for “Reginald Bullseye Potts,” this was a direct retort to a key defense argument, that
from the very start of the investigation, the police had “tunnel vision with one target, Reginald
Potts.” The prosecutor acknowledged that defendant was indeed the target, and because “every
single piece of evidence *** was a carefully sharpened dart [that] hit its target,” perhaps he
should be nicknamed “Reginald Bullseye Potts.” Whatever else one might say of this extended
metaphor, it was not misconduct.
¶ 294 Defendant claims that the prosecutor unfairly engendered sympathy for Nailah through
its “technique of [verbally] bringing [her] back to life in the courtroom.” By this he means that
the prosecutor invited the jury to “speak for Nailah,” to “be the voice of Nailah,” and to tell
defendant, on her behalf, that “the lies are over, the manipulations are over, the deceit is over, the
games are over, you can no longer outrun the evidence in this case.” A prosecutor may urge the
jury to administer justice and may phrase the call for justice as an invocation from the victim.
People v. Jackson, 399 Ill. App. 3d 314, 318 (2010). That is all the prosecutor did here, if in
somewhat metaphorical language. Defendant has not shown that the prosecutors committed
misconduct of any kind.
¶ 295 V
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¶ 296 Two days after defendant was sentenced—and nearly nine years after Nailah’s murder—
an anonymous witness contacted defense counsel and asked to meet in a parking lot. There, the
witness claimed to have information that tended to show defendant’s innocence, by implicating
someone else in Nailah’s murder. (Briefly: This other man was with Nailah, on September 18,
2007, at the Outback Steakhouse near the forest preserve, close to where her jewelry was found;
and the location of her jewelry, the defense had argued at trial, was “the scene of her death.”)
¶ 297 The anonymous witness was willing to sign an affidavit or testify before the judge, and to
reveal his identity to the parties and the trial court—as long as his identity was not disclosed, in
the process, to the broader public. Describing himself as a senior citizen who was well-known in
the African-American and Caucasian communities, the witness claimed to fear for his safety, and
his family’s safety, if he publicly came forward against this other individual—whom he
described, for the time being, as a business associate.
¶ 298 While a motion to reconsider defendant’s sentence was pending, defense counsel moved
for a protective order, pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 415(d) (eff. Oct. 1, 1971), to
shield the witness’s identity from public disclosure. Counsel’s stated intention, upon securing the
protective order, was to file a motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence. In
practical terms, this meant that the witness’s affidavit would have to be filed under seal and that
the hearing on the motion for new trial would have to be closed to the public or, as counsel put it,
held “in a chambers setting.”
¶ 299 The trial court denied the motion for a protective order. For one, the judge was extremely
skeptical of this supposed new evidence, given the timing and circumstances of its emergence.
(That a cell-phone was found in a stack of defendant’s papers at his sentencing hearing, five days
before the man came forward, probably didn’t help his cause, even if he claimed that he found
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the phone in the courtroom and was just passing it along, as if for the lost and found.) But the
judge’s skepticism about the provenance of this witness was not the key point.
¶ 300 More importantly, the judge ruled that no testimony would be given in this case other
than in open court, with the usual right of public access to the court’s proceedings and records.
As the judge emphasized, Nailah’s murder and defendant’s ensuing trial had received extensive
media coverage. Now that defendant stood convicted and sentenced, after a years-long, high-
profile proceeding that was open to the public, the judge was unwilling to change course, close
the courtroom, and allow defendant to litigate a motion for new trial free from public scrutiny of
the proceedings. Defendant argues on appeal that the trial court erred in so ruling.
¶ 301 One preliminary point. The parties are quick to agree, without argument or citation, that
the trial court could not have heard the motion for new trial that counsel proposed to file, for the
simple reason that defendant had already been sentenced. In the State’s view, this means that
defendant was improperly asking the trial court to initiate some “sort of quasi post-conviction”
proceeding and close it to the public. Defendant’s appellate counsel, meanwhile, infers that trial
counsel was ineffective for not filing a section 2-1401 petition for relief from judgment. 735
ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2014).
¶ 302 Whatever implications the parties may draw, we have serious doubts about the validity of
their shared premise. See People v. Gilmore, 356 Ill. App. 3d 1023, 1035-36 (2005) (trial court
could consider untimely motion for new trial, filed while motion to reconsider sentence pending,
because court had jurisdiction over case). As we explained in Gilmore, affording the trial court
discretion to hear an untimely motion for new trial, as long as the court still has jurisdiction over
the case generally, furthers the judiciary’s interest in resolving claims as quickly, economically,
and accurately as possible. See id. at 1036. When a claim is ripe for prompt resolution in post-
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trial proceedings, a sensible rule of procedure will not require it to be put off until collateral
review, as the parties suggest doing here. See People v. Downing, 2019 IL App (1st) 170329,
¶ 38.
¶ 303 But we need not explore these points in any more detail. Procedural doctrine aside, we
agree with the trial court on the merits of the underlying issue—namely, that the court was not
required to close its proceedings to the public—so we resolve defendant’s claim on this basis. In
so doing, we assume, for the sake of argument, that the trial court could properly hear the motion
for new trial that counsel proposed to file. Indeed, without that assumption, defendant’s claim
would not merit any further discussion at all.
¶ 304 Trial counsel framed the issue as a request for a protective order under Rule 415(d).
Appellate counsel correctly concedes that Rule 415 does not apply because it governs pretrial
discovery and recasts the issue as a matter of applying the informant’s privilege. That privilege
does not apply, either.
¶ 305 A confidential informant is someone who “submits information concerning a criminal act
to a law enforcement agency.” (Emphasis added.) 735 ILCS 5/8-802.3(a) (West 2014). As far as
the record shows, the anonymous defense witness was not an informant, within the meaning of
the statute and the privilege it codifies.
¶ 306 Illinois Supreme Court Rule 412(j)(ii) (eff, Mar. 1, 2001), cited by defendant, provides
that “[d]isclosure of an informant’s identity shall not be required where his identity is a
prosecution secret and a failure to disclose will not infringe the constitutional rights of the
accused.” (Emphasis added.) The Committee Comments further emphasize that this is a
“privilege[ ] accorded to the State,” in recognition of the “value of informants to effective law
enforcement.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 412(j), Committee Comments (eff. Mar. 1, 2001). In short, the
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informant’s privilege was not defendant’s to assert.
¶ 307 What’s more, Rule 412(j) governs disclosure of the informant’s identity to the defense, as
the rule’s title—“Disclosure to Accused”—makes clear. But nothing like that is at issue here; as
counsel explained, the witness was willing to reveal his identity to the parties and the court. (As
indeed he would have to, in order to testify at a hearing on the proposed motion for new trial. See
Ill. S. Ct. R. 412(j)(ii) (eff. Mar. 1, 2001).) What the witness refused to do was reveal his identity
to the public. And Rule 412(j) does not speak to that issue at all.
¶ 308 The public has a first amendment right of access to criminal trial proceedings and the
records of those proceedings. People v. Zimmerman, 2018 IL 122261, ¶ 26; Globe Newspaper
Co. v. Superior Court for the County of Norfolk, 457 U.S. 596, 603-06 (1982) (right to attend
trial); Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court of California, 478 U.S. 1, 10 (1986) (Press-
Enterprise II) (transcripts of preliminary hearing). Among other justifications, a public right of
access to criminal proceedings safeguards the integrity of the fact-finding process, fosters an
appearance of fairness, and serves as a check on the judicial process. Globe Newspaper Co., 457
U.S. at 606.
¶ 309 A defendant also has a personal right, guaranteed by the sixth amendment, to insist on a
public trial (and at least some other critical stages of the proceedings, such as a suppression
hearing). Waller v. Georgia, 467 U.S. 39, 44-47 (1984). But there is no right, under the sixth
amendment, to insist on a “private” one. Gannett Co. v. DePasquale, 443 U.S. 368, 382 (1979);
People v. Gacy, 103 Ill. 2d 1, 36 (1984).
¶ 310 That said, the public’s right of access to criminal proceedings is qualified and may yield
to overriding considerations, such as the defendant’s right to a fair trial. Zimmerman, 2018 IL
122261, ¶ 29; Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 9. “Such circumstances will be rare, however, and
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the balance of interests must be struck with special care.” Waller, 467 U.S. at 45. The
“ ‘presumption of openness’ ” is overcome only when “ ‘closure is essential to preserve higher
values and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest.’ ” Id. (quoting Press-Enterprise Co. v.
Superior Court of California, 464 U.S. 501, 510 (1984) (Press-Enterprise I).
¶ 311 Applying this framework, we take defendant to claim that the presumption of openness
should have yielded to his right to present exculpatory evidence, a right that he could effectively
exercise only if the trial court agreed to shield the witness’s identity from public disclosure. That
is because the witness feared retaliation if he publicly implicated his business associate in
Nailah’s murder. (Though the judge was left wondering whom the witness claimed to fear, we
agree with defendant that the answer was clear: the witness’s associate, whom he would
implicate.) Thus, the proceedings should have been closed, at least to the extent necessary to
protect the identity of the witness.
¶ 312 This generic allegation does not overcome the constitutional presumption of openness. In
calling it “generic,” we do not mean to disparage the fear of retaliation that witnesses in criminal
trials may face. That fear is often very real and not at all misplaced. But as the prosecutor argued
below, it is also ubiquitous.
¶ 313 To take but one common example, gang members may fear retaliation if they testify
against members of a rival gang, and even more so if they testify against members of their own.
Yet day in and day out, gang members and other witnesses testify at criminal trials—and sign
affidavits for postconviction petitions—in the face of such fears. If those fears were enough to
justify partial closure of the proceedings (even without any evidence of a specific, credible threat
to a witness) then closure would not be “rare” at all; it would be routine, if not the norm. See
Waller, 467 U.S. at 45. On this basis alone, the trial court was not required to close its courtroom
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No. 1-16-1219
and conduct post-trial proceedings outside of the public’s view.
¶ 314 Nothing we have said here precludes defendant from pursuing his claim of innocence in a
postconviction petition.
¶ 315 CONCLUSION
¶ 316 For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed in all respects.
¶ 317 Affirmed.
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No. 1-16-1219
No. 1-16-1219
Cite as: People v. Potts, 2021 IL App (1st) 161219
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 08-CR-06600;
the Hon. Thomas V. Gainer Jr., Judge, presiding.
Attorneys Jennifer L. Blagg, of Chicago, for appellant.
for
Appellant:
Attorneys Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J.
for Spellberg and Douglas P. Harvath, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of
Appellee: counsel), for the People.
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