2022 IL App (5th) 210076-U
NOTICE
NOTICE
Decision filed 03/07/22. The
This order was filed under
text of this decision may be NO. 5-21-0076 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is
changed or corrected prior to
the filing of a Petition for not precedent except in the
Rehearing or the disposition of IN THE limited circumstances allowed
the same. under Rule 23(e)(1).
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIFTH DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Madison County.
)
v. ) No. 17-CF-825
)
MICHAEL A. WEIS, ) Honorable
) Kyle A. Napp,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE MOORE delivered the judgment of the court.
Presiding Justice Boie and Justice Vaughan concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: In this direct appeal, the defendant’s eight convictions and sentences are affirmed,
because the trial judge did not err when she (1) denied the defendant’s third motion
to suppress evidence, (2) denied his January 31, 2020, motion to dismiss for lack
of a speedy trial, (3) granted the State’s motion to bar evidence of certain phone
calls and texts that the defendant maintains should have been admitted, (4) denied
the defendant’s motion in limine that attempted to bar evidence of his extramarital
affairs, (5) allowed at trial evidence of one of his extramarital affairs, while denying
video evidence and other evidence about the victim that the defendant wished to
introduce, and (6) allowed evidence on the charges of child pornography that the
defendant was being tried upon.
¶2 The defendant, Michael A. Weis, appeals his eight convictions and sentences, after a trial
by jury in the circuit court of Madison County. For the following reasons, we affirm.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
¶4 We present only those facts necessary to our disposition of this appeal, which are as
follows. On April 6, 2017, the defendant, who was born in May 1981, was charged, by amended
1
information, as follows: count I alleged that the defendant committed aggravated criminal sexual
abuse, with the offending conduct being that he “fondled the sex organ of K.S.,” who was born in
October 2003; count II alleged a second offense of aggravated criminal sexual abuse, with the
offending conduct in this count being that he “rubbed the breast of K.S.”; count III alleged that the
defendant committed criminal sexual assault, with the offending conduct being that he “inserted
his penis into the sex organ of K.S.”; count IV alleged a second offense of criminal sexual assault,
with the offending conduct in this count again being that he “inserted his penis into the sex organ
of K.S.”; and count V alleged a third offense of criminal sexual assault, with the offending conduct
in this count being that he “inserted his penis into the mouth of K.S.” All of the charged offenses
were alleged to have occurred between January 1, 2017, and March 20, 2017, when K.S. was 13
years old.
¶5 On June 26, 2017, the defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence. A hearing on the
motion was set for August 10, 2017. By agreement of the parties, the hearing was subsequently
moved to August 29, 2017. At the hearing, the defendant contended, as he did in his written motion,
that, inter alia, the March 21, 2017, search warrant granted to the Granite City Police Department
to search certain of the defendant’s possessions was limited in scope to items reasonably related
to the defendant’s service as a member of the Granite City auxiliary police department, and that
the seizure of certain other items—including his cellular telephone and some computer
equipment—was beyond the scope of the warrant. He also argued that the phone was not “obvious
and immediately indicative of a criminal activity of any sort and particularly not of criminal sexual
assault,” and thus could not be seized under any kind of “plain view” theory.
¶6 The State argued that the complaint for the search warrant—which was signed by Judge
Schroeder at the same time he signed the warrant—indicated that the State sought “any other
evidence or instrumentalities that may be evidence of criminal sexual assault,” which the State
2
argued clearly included the phone and computer equipment. The State contended that the failure
to include this language in the warrant “was a clerical error, that it was an oversight that it was not
included in the search warrant but that it had been intended to be included and was omitted in
error.” The State also argued that seizing the phone and computer equipment was consistent with
K.S.’s description of some of her contact with the defendant occurring by means of electronic
devices such as a phone or computer, and thus the seized items fit squarely into the description of
instrumentalities that may contain evidence of the charged crimes and their seizure was supported
by probable cause.
¶7 In a written order also entered on August 29, 2017, the trial judge stated that she was taking
the defendant’s motion to suppress under advisement, and was granting the parties 30 days to
submit relevant case law. She also ruled that by September 11, 2017, the State was required to
provide a written response listing which items that were seized had been examined by the police,
and which had not, as well as what items could then be returned to the defendant so that he could
prepare his defense. She further ordered that “[c]opies of all downloaded material from computers,
cell phones, or any other electronic devices” must be provided to the defendant by September 11,
2017.
¶8 Thereafter, most of the electronic equipment in question was returned to the defendant.
Additional procedural matters followed, and various continuances of the defendant’s trial were
entered, with each continuance noting that it was done on the motion of the defendant, with any
delay attributed to the defendant. On December 4, 2017, an entry of appearance was filed by an
attorney from the firm that continues, through this appeal, to represent the defendant. A speedy
trial demand was filed by new counsel on that same day. Throughout the remainder of the record
on appeal, many additional continuances of the defendant’s trial were entered thereafter, with each
3
continuance noting that it was done on the motion of the defendant, with any delay attributed to
the defendant. Continuances that did not so note are described in more detail below.
¶9 On March 7, 2018, a hearing was held on some of the then-pending motions. Of relevance
to the issues raised by the defendant in this appeal, the defendant’s new counsel, at the hearing,
renewed prior counsel’s motion to suppress evidence, with regard to items still seized by the police.
The trial judge granted the motion to suppress with regard to any item not specifically listed in the
March 21, 2017, search warrant. She asked defense counsel if that resolved the issues with regard
to the motion to suppress. He answered that it did. When thereafter asked if defense counsel had
any other matters that needed to be addressed, counsel answered, “I don’t remember if we reset
this for a future date on just a general trial docket, but it is our intent we are going to be obtaining
some expert services so we are not in a rush on this so to speak because I know it is going to take
some time for disclosure to be properly made.”
¶ 10 On March 22, 2018, the defendant filed a second motion to suppress evidence, which was
limited to a “Snapchat picture” that was purportedly recovered from the defendant’s phone by
police using a “Cellebrite extraction.” A hearing on the motion to suppress—as well as on other
pending motions—was held on May 31, 2018. At the hearing, Detective Jeff Donahey testified
that he had been employed for the last approximately 11 years by the Granite City Police
Department, and that he had specialized training making “digital extractions of cell phones.” He
testified that he had some training with social media applications such as Snapchat. He testified
about an error, interpreting who was the recipient of a Snapchat photograph, that he made in his
initial forensic report in this case. In argument, the defendant contended that the error in Donahey’s
report should lead to suppression of the photograph in question. The trial judge disagreed, and
denied the motion to suppress the photograph. She noted, however, that if the defendant contested
the relevancy of the photograph—which allegedly depicted the defendant having sexual contact
4
with K.S.’s mother, and with another woman, but not with K.S., who was not in the photograph—
he could always file a motion in limine to attempt to prevent its introduction at trial.
¶ 11 On July 12, 2018, the State filed a motion to bar evidence of phone calls, in which it
contended that the defendant purported to have evidence, in the form of text messages, that K.S.
made a prank call or calls to the defendant’s wife. The State asserted that the prank calls were
made by K.S.’s sister, not K.S., and that K.S. texted an apology for her sister’s action. The State
further asserted that the phone call and text evidence were “irrelevant” to the criminal case against
the defendant and should be barred from trial. The trial judge thereafter took the motion under
advisement.
¶ 12 On August 8, 2018, the defendant filed a motion in limine in which he sought to bar from
trial, inter alia, “[a]ny mention of [his] extramarital affairs, if any, that may exist.” The defendant
claimed that any such evidence was irrelevant and was “more prejudicial than probative to any
issue in this case.” The State argued that evidence of the defendant’s sexual relationship with
K.S.’s mother was relevant because it provided the context necessary for the jury to understand
how the defendant met K.S. and had “access to her.” The trial judge thereafter ruled that she would
allow only questioning regarding the relationship between the defendant and K.S.’s mother, and
would not allow any photographs of sexual relations between the defendant and K.S.’s mother
unless any such photographs were “necessary for impeachment or another purpose raised outside
the presence of the jury.” She stated on the record that she also believed that information about the
relationship between K.S.’s mother and the defendant was relevant if K.S.’s mother testified at
trial, because it “goes to her credibility on the witness stand, her motive, her bias, her interest.”
¶ 13 On August 29, 2018, the defendant filed a motion to bar discovery tendered to the
defendant after the final pretrial hearing, or, in the alternative, to continue the trial setting that was
scheduled for September 4, 2018. Therein, he stated that the State provided new discovery to the
5
defendant on August 27, 2018, which included a PDF file with “over 14,600 pages of data/images,”
and which the State informed him purportedly included “at least 3” photos of K.S. that previously
had been “hidden in a calculator app” on the defendant’s seized cell phone. He stated that the State
had informed him that the materials were recovered from the defendant’s cell phone, which had
been in the police department evidence vault, using “new” Cellebrite software. The defendant
contended that the “new” Cellebrite software update had been available for approximately eight
months, and that the police could have discovered the evidence, and turned it over to the defense,
much sooner if they had employed due diligence. The defendant further stated “that at the time of
his arrest [he] voluntarily gave all pin codes and passwords to the police for his cellular devices
and Nest accounts. His intent was to allow the police to thoroughly examine all cellular data with
the belief that after doing so his name would be cleared.” The defendant asked the trial judge to
“enter an order barring use of any evidence contained in the supplemental discovery from use at
any future hearing or trial due to the lateness of disclosure,” and to “enter an order barring the use
of such evidence as a sanction against the State for intentionally/negligently disclosing such
voluminous evidence only a few days prior to [the scheduled trial date].” He further stated that if
the trial judge allowed the “evidence to be introduced at trial,” he “request[ed] that the trial be
continued to a future date” to allow him to “obtain expert witness services relevant to the data.”
¶ 14 Also on August 29, 2018, the trial judge, by docket entry, noted that a hearing had been
held on the defendant’s motion to bar discovery tendered to the defendant after the final pretrial
hearing, or, in the alternative, to continue the trial setting that was scheduled for September 4,
2018. However, the defendant has not provided a transcript of that hearing, or a bystander’s report,
in the record on appeal. Also in her docket entry, the trial judge denied the defendant’s motion to
bar the discovery, but granted the defendant’s motion to continue the trial, setting a new trial date
of September 17, 2018. On that date, the trial judge entered an order that stated that, by agreement,
6
the trial was being reset for October 9, 2018. On September 27, 2018, the defendant moved to
continue the trial again, and the trial judge granted the defendant’s request.
¶ 15 On October 25, 2018, the defendant was indicted on the original five counts discussed
above, as well as three new counts, each of which was for child pornography, and each of which
alleged that K.S. was the victim of the count in question. Additional continuances of the
defendant’s trial were entered thereafter, with each continuance noting that it was done on the
motion of the defendant, with any delay attributed to the defendant.
¶ 16 On January 29, 2019, the defendant filed a motion to release evidence for forensic review,
in which he contended that the “new charges” found in the indictment were based upon data
extracted from his seized cell phone, which the defendant’s expert witness needed to access so that
the expert could prepare for trial.
¶ 17 Also on January 29, 2019, the defendant filed his third motion to suppress evidence. In the
new motion, the defendant contended that he was “arrested” at his place of business in Granite
City on March 21, 2017, and was handcuffed. He further contended that he was not given Miranda
warnings (see Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)), but was nevertheless questioned about
“where his security system was located, that it was called a NEST system[,] and that it worked
with a cloud software system.” He alleged that his cell phone was seized from him, and that it “was
equipped with encryption that required a password.” He alleged that he was taken to the police
department, where he attempted to use a telephone in a holding cell to call his father to ask his
father to obtain an attorney to assist him. He alleged that police “deactivated” the phone in the cell,
and that after terminating “his attempt to obtain legal counsel to represent him,” authorities “began
formal questioning of” him. The defendant thereafter alleged the following:
“Prior to being Mirandized, Det. Jeff Donahey questioned the [d]efendant asking him how
to unlock his cellular phone (Samsung Galaxy). Detectives asked the [d]efendant for the
7
PIN in an attempt to access the cellular phone. Had the [d]efendant not given them the PIN
they would not have been able to access the device’s data. Attempts to obtain the data
without the PIN would have resulted in the phone having to be ‘cracked’ per Detective
Donahey’s conversation with [the d]efendant, and the data being locked and becoming
inaccessible to law enforcement.”
¶ 18 The defendant further alleged that he, “without advice of counsel, or the benefits of his
Miranda rights, gave the PIN number to Detective Donahey” and that “detectives used the PIN to
gain access to the cellular phone and all the digital data included therein.”
¶ 19 With regard to the “new search” of the phone in August 2018, the defendant alleged that
this search would have been impossible without his initial revelation of the PIN to police, because
the data found during that search “would have been completely locked.” He noted that a second
search warrant was never obtained, and that the first warrant allowed “a search for only evidence
related to criminal sexual abuse, not child pornography.” The defendant claimed that the following
evidence was obtained “unconstitutionally”: (1) verbal statements he made at his business when
he was arrested, but had not yet received Miranda warnings, (2) his PIN number, “prior to being
Mirandized,” and (3) all evidence related to the counts that alleged child pornography. He asked
for the suppression of this and all related evidence.
¶ 20 A hearing on the defendant’s motion was held on March 13, 2019. The defendant’s father
testified that the defendant called him from the Granite City Police Department. He testified that
he had contacted an attorney to represent the defendant after learning that the defendant had been
taken into police custody “[a] few hours” before, and that he was about to tell the defendant that
an attorney had been retained, when their phone call was terminated “about two minutes” after it
began. He could not recall with certainty whether the defendant ever asked him to get an attorney
for him. Kari Shipley testified that she was a dispatcher with the Granite City Police Department,
8
and that on March 21, 2017, when the defendant was in a holding cell, she noticed that he was
using the telephone in the cell. She testified that a detective told her that the defendant was not
allowed to use the telephone, and that Officer Ryan Jones then terminated the phone call.
¶ 21 Detective Donahey testified, as he did at the May 31, 2018, hearing, about his specialized
training making digital extractions of cell phones. He testified that on March 21, 2017, he was
present with other officers when the defendant’s place of business was searched pursuant to a
search warrant. He testified that he did not observe any officers give the defendant Miranda
warnings. He testified that he arrived after other officers “had gotten there,” and could not recall
if the defendant was handcuffed when he arrived. Donahey testified that he did not recall having a
conversation with the defendant about the defendant’s PIN number. Eventually, when he accessed
the phone to do a Cellebrite search of the phone, he accessed the phone “through a port.” He did
not recall if he first entered a PIN number. He testified that using a PIN “would have not been
completely necessary,” but “would have only made it easier.” He testified that although he did not
remember if he asked the defendant for his PIN number, it was “possible” that he did. When asked,
he testified again that he could “get into [the defendant’s] phone without the passcode.” He agreed
that the search warrant for the phone did not specifically authorize him to seize the defendant’s
PIN number. Donahey testified that he began his search of the phone “[w]ithin one hour” of
receiving the phone on March 22, 2017, and that it was his understanding that a “second search
occurred in August of 2018.”
¶ 22 On cross-examination, Donahey testified that the defendant did not request an attorney
during any of the conversations the defendant had with Donahey. He testified that when executing
a warrant, it is “common” for him to ask questions to facilitate the execution of the warrant, such
as asking for a PIN number to open a garage, rather than having officers break down the garage
door without asking, to avoid making things “potentially unusable” after the warrant is executed.
9
He testified that, in the context of a cell phone, if he were required to remove memory chips from
a phone to examine them, the phone “would probably not be operable” if returned to its owner.
When asked if he had to “crack” the defendant’s cell phone, he testified that with the defendant’s
model of cell phone—a Samsung 7—he could “bypass the lock” by using the Cellebrite system to
“basically just walk[ ] underneath the passcode.” On redirect examination, he testified that
although he, personally, did not have the technology on March 22, 2017, to bypass the defendant’s
PIN number using his then-current Cellebrite software, he could have done so “using our site out
of Missouri or Cellebrite themselves.” He testified as well that there were “multiple techniques
that could have been used *** to bypass the lock.” He reiterated that he could not recall if he used
the defendant’s PIN to access the phone or not, but testified, “I would assume that he gave me the
PIN code.”
¶ 23 Detective Dean Bastilla testified that he had been employed by the Granite City Police
Department for approximately 12.5 years. He testified that he did not observe the defendant being
read his Miranda rights at the defendant’s place of business, but that he gave the defendant his
Miranda rights the following day before conducting a formal interview with him. On cross-
examination, he testified that he waited until the following day to interview the defendant because
he wanted to first examine the evidence from the defendant’s cell phone. He testified that the
defendant did not ask him for an attorney prior to the interview. At approximately 20 minutes into
the interview, the defendant requested an attorney. Bastilla testified that he did not ask any
additional questions after that.
¶ 24 The defendant testified that on March 21, 2017, he was standing outside of his place of
business when two police officers approached him, he was immediately handcuffed, and the
concealed weapon he was legally carrying was taken from him. He testified that he did not receive
Miranda warnings at either his place of business or the police department. He testified that his cell
10
phone was taken from him after he was handcuffed, outside of his place of business, and that later,
when he was in a holding cell at the police department, Donahey asked him for his PIN number to
access the phone. Specifically, the defendant testified that Donahey told him that the police had a
search warrant for his phone, and that if Donahey had to “crack” the phone, it would not “be usable
again.” He testified that Donahey asked, “ ‘so do you want to give me your PIN number?’ ” He
testified that he “hesitated,” and told Donahey that he did not feel comfortable, but that he would
give it to Donahey if Donahey needed it and if it would help the defendant get out of the holding
cell. He testified that he then provided his “PIN number at that time.” He testified that to his
knowledge, the phone could not be accessed without the PIN. When asked, he reiterated that he
had not received Miranda warnings at that time. With regard to his subsequent phone conversation
with his father while the defendant was in the holding cell, the defendant testified that he
“believe[d]” he was in the “middle” of telling his father he wanted an attorney when the phone call
was terminated. On cross-examination, the defendant agreed that he voluntarily gave his PIN to
Donahey, and that Donahey did not threaten him or harm him in any way.
¶ 25 Following testimony, the parties agreed to submit argument and case law in writing, and
the trial judge indicated that she planned to take the case under advisement. After discussing some
of her frustrations with the case to date, she added, “let’s be clear, once this motion is ruled on and
I rule on the other motion [presently under advisement], this case is going to trial.” She then added,
“And I am going to push it to the first available date. So I don’t care if you have vacations planned.
I don’t care if you have other trials going. This case is two years old.” She further added that, in
light of the severity of the charges, “I want it to be clear that we did everything that we were
supposed to do in moving this case along and presenting the evidence in a manner that the law
requires.”
11
¶ 26 The day after the hearing—March 14, 2019—the trial judge filed a docket entry in which
she noted that she was taking the motion under advisement as of that date, and that the parties were
“given 14 days to submit argument and case law.” Additional orders were entered continuing the
defendant’s jury trial, with each continuance noting that it was done on the motion of the defendant,
with any delay attributed to the defendant. On March 27, 2019, the defendant filed a brief in
support of the motion to suppress. Also on March 27, 2019, the State filed its response to the
defendant’s motion to suppress.
¶ 27 On July 2, 2019, a little over three months after the trial judge received the arguments and
case law of the parties, the defendant filed a “first supplemental brief in support of [his] motion to
suppress,” in which he discussed a recently-filed case from our colleagues in the First District of
this court. Thereafter, five additional continuances were entered, with the first three noting, as in
previous continuance orders in this case, that they were done on the motion of the defendant, with
any delays attributed to the defendant. The fourth continuance noted, with an asterisk, “motion to
suppress under advisement,” and was followed with a checkmark by a box that stated “Said motion
does toll speedy trial,” and was followed at the bottom with the statement that the defendant
“announce[s] ready for trial.” The fifth continuance noted, as in previous continuance orders, that
it was done on the motion of the defendant, with any delays attributed to the defendant, and with
the notation, at the bottom, that the defendant “announces ready for trial.”
¶ 28 On November 14, 2019, the State filed a supplemental response to the defendant’s motion
to suppress, in which it discussed a federal district court case that it believed was relevant to the
defendant’s motion.
¶ 29 On November 20, 2019, the defendant filed a “first amended motion to suppress evidence.”
Therein, the defendant argued for the first time that “all searches of the defendant’s cellular phone
were overbroad and not particular enough to satisfy the fourth amendment.” Also on November
12
20, 2019, the defendant filed a “second supplemental brief in support of [his] motion to suppress
evidence.” Therein, the defendant cited a 2015 federal district court case that he believed was
relevant to his new argument presented in his first amended motion to suppress, and he attempted
to distinguish the federal case cited by the State in its November 14, 2019, filing. Thereafter, an
order continuing the trial was entered, which noted, as in previous continuance orders, that it was
done on the motion of the defendant, with any delays attributed to the defendant, followed on
January 13, 2020, by a second order that again continued the trial, but this time did not specify
whether the continuance was by agreement or at the request of the defendant, and did not indicate
that the delay was attributed to the defendant. This continuance also noted, at the bottom, that the
defendant “announces ready for trial.”
¶ 30 On January 31, 2020, the defendant filed, pro se, a motion to dismiss, in which he
contended that his speedy trial rights had been violated. A hearing on his motion was set for April
17, 2020, and additional continuances of his trial were entered. However, in an order filed on April
21, 2020, it was noted that the hearing on the defendant’s motion “was cancelled due to COVID-
19,” and was rescheduled for June of 2020. Ultimately, the hearing was held on June 4, 2020.
¶ 31 At the June 4, 2020, hearing, no testimony was adduced. The parties offered argument, and
the trial judge then explained her view of the procedural posture of the case, and resulting delays.
She stated that the “motion to dismiss completely ignores the fact that trial orders were entered
where the case was continued on the motion of the defendant,” as well as continuances by
agreement of the parties. She described the motion to dismiss as “not well pled,” and inaccurate in
light of “the entire court file and all the pleadings that were filed in it.” She denied the motion, and
likewise denied the motion to suppress, stating that a written ruling would follow. With the
agreement of the parties, a tentative trial date of June 15, 2020, was set.
13
¶ 32 On June 10, 2020, the trial was continued due to an order entered by the chief judge of the
circuit, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The trial was reset for August 17, 2020. On June
29, 2020, the State filed an amended motion in limine, asking the trial judge to bar, inter alia,
evidence that while the case was pending, K.S. gave birth to a child. The motion alleged that the
father of the child was a juvenile at the time of conception, that no charges were brought against
him, and that the birth of the child was irrelevant to the case against the defendant. On July 22,
2020, the trial judge entered an order noting that a hearing had been held that day on the State’s
amended motion in limine, and that the motion was “granted without objection.” The defendant
has not included a transcript of the hearing, or a bystander’s report, in the record on appeal
provided to this court. The July 22, 2020, order also noted that pursuant to the administrative order
issued regarding COVID-19, the defendant’s jury trial was continued until September 21, 2020.
¶ 33 On September 3, 2020, the defendant filed a motion to continue the trial. A hearing on his
motion was held on September 9, 2020. At the hearing, the defendant argued that COVID-19 might
limit the jury pool in such a manner that he could not get a fair trial. The State objected to the
continuance, arguing that the defendant’s position was “speculative.” The trial judge denied the
motion to continue.
¶ 34 On September 18, 2020, the trial judge entered a written order in which she noted that the
defendant’s pro se motion to dismiss was adopted by the defendant’s counsel at the previous
hearing on the matter, and was denied, with the present order being entered to further explain her
ruling. She made the following findings of fact:
“Over the course of this case, through June 4, 2020, the Court has held over a dozen
hearings, dealing with numerous motions, including: three separate motions to suppress
evidence and/or statements with hundreds of pages of attachments and supplemental
addendums, two motions to dismiss, motions to compel, motion for bill of particulars,
14
multiple motions in limine, motion to quash subpoenas, motion for sanctions, motion to
bar evidence, motion for in camera review of records, motion to bar discovery, motion for
release of evidence and motions to continue. On March 13, 2019, this court held a hearing
on a third motion to suppress evidence and statements. On March 27, 2019, parties filed
memorandums of law and briefs for the Court to consider. On July 21, 2019, the defendant
filed a supplemental brief. The State indicated they would file a response and did so on
November 14, 2019. On November 20, 2019, the defendant filed a second supplemental
response. The defendant filed his motion to dismiss on January 31, 2020, and shortly
thereafter COVID-19 occurred. The Court understands the need to issue timely rulings but
the law surrounding the issues in the motion to suppress evidence was fluid and the parties
were indicating to the Court they would be supplementing their original briefs, which they
did.
On March 23, 2017, the defendant was charged with multiple counts which included
charges of Aggravated Criminal Sexual Abuse and Criminal Sexual Assault. The first
scheduled trial date for this matter was May 8, 2017. A review of the record indicates that
from 5/8/17 until the date of this hearing 6/4/2020, the defendant has continued this matter,
on his motion, 27 times. This cause was continued by agreement of the parties four times
and has never been continued on motion of the State. The defendant, in his written motion
to dismiss[,] contends that the length of time this court had the third motion to suppress
evidence under advisement deprived the defendant of his speedy trial rights. However, the
defendant completely ignores the fact that he, either on his own motion or by agreement[,]
continued the case through and until June 4, 2020.”
¶ 35 On September 21, 2020, the defendant’s jury trial commenced. Prior to taking testimony
in the trial, the trial judge, at the request of the parties, issued her ruling on the State’s July 12,
15
2018, motion to bar evidence of phone calls (in which, as described above, the State contended
that the defendant purported to have evidence, in the form of text messages, that K.S. made a prank
call or calls to the defendant’s wife), which the trial judge previously had taken under advisement.
With regard to the alleged prank call or calls, she ruled that they would not be allowed because
they were “not relevant,” did not “prove any element of any of the offense[s] or negate any element
of any offense,” and did not “have any bearing on this case” because they “happened a year after
these alleged incidents occur[ed], and after this case has been charged.” With regard to the text
messages related in time to the call or calls, she ruled that because there were messages directly
between K.S. and the defendant, she would allow them to be admitted at trial.
¶ 36 Because the defendant does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence used at trial to
convict him, we need not discuss his trial in detail, although we note that the State did indeed
adduce at trial sufficient evidence to sustain all eight convictions of the defendant, and that any
argument to the contrary would fail. Not only did K.S. testify in detail about the facts that supported
each of the eight charges against the defendant, but Officers Bastilla and Donahey also testified
consistently with their earlier testimony at hearings in this case, and each specifically testified
about the steps they took during the investigation. Bastilla also testified about portions of his
interview with the defendant, which were played for the jury, and which included discussions with
the defendant about the defendant’s “large volume” of social media communications with K.S.
prior to the events that led to the charges against the defendant. On both direct examination and
cross-examination, Bastilla authenticated copies of many of the messages, which were admitted
into evidence and read to the jury by Bastilla. On direct examination, he testified that via Facebook
Messenger, the defendant and K.S. exchanged 575 messages in January of 2017, 460 in February
of 2017, and 132 in March of 2017.
16
¶ 37 Detective Nicholaus Roberts testified that he was employed by the Granite City Police
Department, and that in August 2018, following his completion of a 40-hour class put on by
Cellebrite, he became a Cellebrite certified operator. He testified that he knew that in March 2017,
Donahey had done a “file system extraction” on the defendant’s phone, and so in August 2018 he
did a more advanced Cellebrite extraction, using their latest software, which was called a “physical
extraction.” He testified that the data contained on the phone was the same in August 2018 as it
was in March 2017, but that the physical extraction was “able to get to the memory of the phone
on the most basic level, the binary level,” to take “a complete image of the memory on the phone,
which has the capability of getting deleted information, hidden information, things like that, and
puts it on the computer and the computer can change it into a form where we can actually read it.”
He further testified that by August 2018, “Cellebrite had updated their software to where I was
able to get a physical extraction off the phone, which gave us a lot more data than what Detective
Donahey was able to do a year and a half prior.”
¶ 38 Roberts testified that while reviewing images recovered by the physical extraction, he
discovered an application on the phone that was designed to look and function like an ordinary
phone calculator, but that, via a password, could be used to hide photos, videos, and other
information. He testified that the physical extraction led him to nude images of K.S. that had been
hidden in this “calculator vault,” which were the same nude images of K.S. that K.S. had
previously testified at trial that she sent, at the request of the defendant, to the defendant’s phone
by Snapchat. He also testified with regard to other communications between the defendant and
K.S. using Snapchat.
¶ 39 Aleena Hernandez testified that K.S. was her friend, and that in the winter of 2017, they
talked on a regular basis. She testified that K.S. disclosed to her that the defendant had sexually
assaulted K.S. “more than once,” and that Aleena eventually told Aleena’s mother what had
17
happened. She subsequently clarified that by the time she told her mother what had happened, K.S.
had already told K.S.’s foster mother about the assaults. Thereafter, the defendant’s wife testified
about the times she met K.S. when K.S. was with the defendant. The State’s final witness was
Patricia Radcliffe, who testified that she was a therapist at Alternatives Counseling Services, where
she worked with, inter alia, victims of sexual abuse. After being tendered, without objection by
the defendant, as an expert in the area of child development and children’s response to sexual
abuse, she testified about the grooming process used by many sex offenders to get close to their
victims, and testified as to the reasons a victim of sexual abuse might continue to have contact
with the offender, even after being abused, particularly if the victim is vulnerable and comes from
an unstable or chaotic home.
¶ 40 Because it is relevant to the issues raised by the defendant in this appeal, we also describe
the following events from the defendant’s jury trial. During the defendant’s cross-examination of
K.S., he requested a sidebar, outside of the presence of the jury, at which he requested permission
to play for the jury a copy of a video of K.S. he had obtained from a Facebook account, that was
posted approximately one week prior to the trial, because he believed the video showed her to be
“not quiet at all like she’s portrayed herself” when in the courtroom, and he believed the jury
should be able to see the difference in her demeanor, as part of their determination of her credibility
as a witness. He conceded that he had not previously disclosed the video to the State. The State
objected, noting that the video appeared to show K.S. “hanging out with her friends, which is a
completely different scenario than sitting in a courtroom talking about sexual assault.” Counsel for
the State then added, “I would not expect her to act the same way she does in a courtroom as with
her friends. I don’t think anyone in this courtroom would act the same way in the courtroom versus
when you’re hanging out with your friends.”
18
¶ 41 The trial judge denied the defendant’s request to play the video, because “One, it wasn’t
supplied in discovery. Two, it was filmed a week ago.” She added, “We’re talking about instances
that occurred back in 2017, and you’re wanting to play a video of her from a week ago. *** It’s
not relevant to what happened, whether or not the defendant [sexually assaulted] her or not.” She
also ruled that “as far as someone’s demeanor, I can say everyone in this courtroom acts different
because they’re in a courtroom. It’s a scary place to be. Particularly sitting on the stand talking
about a sexual experience.” She opined that the defendant’s request to play the video was “clearly
intended to just smear [K.S.].”
¶ 42 At the conclusion of the trial, the defendant was convicted by the jury of all eight charges
against him. On October 6, 2020, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which subsequently
was denied, but which preserved for review by this court many of the errors alleged by the
defendant in this appeal. On March 12, 2021, following the sentencing of the defendant, the trial
judge entered an order explaining her factual findings and the legal reasoning behind her decision
to deny the defendant’s third motion to suppress evidence and the documents that supplemented
it, which, as explained above, she had previously denied from the bench on June 4, 2020. In her
March 12, 2021, order, she noted that the defendant testified at the hearing on his motion to
suppress that “he voluntarily gave the police the passcode to his phone,” and that “Officer Donahey
testified he did not recall if the [d]efendant gave him the passcode[,] but that he would have been
able to ‘break-into’ the phone using the Cellebrite program without the passcode.” She found that
“[l]ooking at the totality of the circumstances, the [c]ourt finds the giving of the passcode, if this
occurred, was knowing and voluntary,” and “that even if it was not voluntary, the police could
have ran Cellebrite without the passcode and discovered the contents, inevitable discovery.” She
further found that the August 2018 search of the defendant’s phone was based upon “an objectively
reasonable reliance on a search warrant previously secured for the defendant’s phone,” and that
19
“[w]hen viewing the conduct of the police in this case, there was no reckless disregard of the truth,
deceit or intentional bad conduct when they ran the updated version of Cellebrite on the
defendant’s phone,” because they “believed in good faith that because the [d]efendant’s phone had
been in evidence the entire time, because they had obtained a search warrant to search the phone
initially[,] that the search warrant was still valid and an updated version of the same Cellebrite
program could be ran without securing another search warrant.” The defendant filed a timely notice
of appeal. Additional facts will be presented as necessary throughout the remainder of this order.
¶ 43 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 44 On appeal, the defendant contends the trial judge erred when she (1) denied the defendant’s
third motion to suppress evidence, (2) denied his January 31, 2020, motion to dismiss for lack of
a speedy trial, (3) granted the State’s motion to bar evidence of certain phone calls and texts that
the defendant maintains should have been admitted, (4) denied the defendant’s motion in limine
that attempted to bar evidence of his extramarital affairs, (5) allowed at trial evidence of one of his
extramarital affairs, while denying video evidence and other evidence about K.S. that the
defendant wished to introduce, and (6) allowed evidence on the charges of child pornography that
the defendant was being tried upon. We address each of these contentions in turn. We note, at the
outset, that a trial judge’s decisions may be affirmed on any basis supported by the record on
appeal. See, e.g., People v. Burns, 2020 IL App (3d) 170103, ¶ 32.
¶ 45 With regard to his contention that the trial judge erred when she denied his third motion to
suppress evidence, the defendant argues that the trial judge “should have found that the PIN [to
the defendant’s cell phone] was obtained in contravention of” his constitutional rights because he
had not received Miranda warnings “before the detectives questioned him about his PIN and
access to his phone.” He further contends that he was “compelled” to disclose his PIN. The
defendant asserts that “access to his cellular device could not have been gained without the PIN,”
20
and that accordingly, “all evidence seized from his cellular device should have been suppressed.”
The defendant further contends that “the warrant in this case was facially overbroad and exceeded
the probable cause to support it,” which is another reason that the trial judge “erred in not
suppressing the evidence obtained by the search.” With regard to the August 24, 2018, analysis of
the contents of his phone, the defendant contends this analysis constituted a “second search” for
which no new warrant was ever obtained, and which was not covered or authorized in any way by
the first warrant. The defendant notes that the first warrant mentioned looking only for evidence
of aggravated criminal sexual assault, not child pornography, and posits that therefore the August
24, 2018, search was related to a “subsequent crime” rather than the offense already under
investigation, and therefore was not permissible. In making these arguments, the defendant does
not discuss in detail the burden of proof on a motion to suppress evidence, or the proper standard
of review, both of which we describe below, and does not acknowledge that the trial judge made
findings of fact as to many of the points he raises related to this issue.
¶ 46 The State responds that the defendant’s issues related to the initial search of his phone fail
because (1) that search “did not exceed the parameters of the warrant,” which “was sufficiently
particular,” (2) the defendant admitted that he volunteered to investigators the PIN number to his
phone because he believed a search of his phone would exonerate him, and (3) the police could
have obtained the information on his phone even without his PIN. The State further responds that
the defendant’s issues related to the “second search” of his phone fail because (1) that search “did
not exceed the scope of the original warrant,” (2) applicable case law holds that “the fourth
amendment does not subject data searches to any rigid time limit [because] they may involve much
more information than an ordinary document search and require more preparation and a greater
degree of care in their execution,” and (3) “the images of child pornography found during the
second examination were admissible under the plain-view doctrine.” The State, in so arguing,
21
provides analysis and case law, including the recent Illinois Supreme Court opinion in People v.
McCavitt, 2021 IL 125550, that distinguishes the points of authority relied upon by the defendant.
The State also points to the testimony from police at trial that no PIN was required to access the
phone, and contends that once K.S. reported the defendant’s crimes, “there was sufficient evidence
to seize [his] phone as evidence.” The State asserts that because when police “later did the physical
extraction on [his] phone,” they did so in a manner that did not require a PIN or password, “all the
information on [his] phone would have inevitably been discovered.” With regard to the August 24,
2018, examination of the defendant’s phone, the State argues that, pursuant to the principles put
forward by the Illinois Supreme Court in McCavitt, “it is clear that the second look at [the]
defendant’s cell phone with updated software was not an unreasonable search,” and “[t]he warrant
for [the] defendant’s cell phone was sufficiently particular and was reasonable.” The State rejects
the defendant’s contention that the second examination had anything to do with searching for
evidence of a “subsequent crime,” instead arguing that “[t]he second look at [the] defendant’s
phone was looking for exactly the same thing as the first look at his phone—evidence of criminal
sexual assault,” and that pursuant to McCavitt, there is no error if authorities are “reasonably
reviewing data for evidence of one crime and happen[ ] to view data implicating [a] defendant in
other criminal activity.”
¶ 47 In reply, the defendant asserts that he was in fact “compelled” to turn over his PIN to
authorities, who he alleges told him that his phone might become inoperable if he did not give
them the PIN and they had to “crack” it. He claims that in light of this, he should have been given
Miranda warnings before the authorities again asked for his PIN code. The defendant reiterates
his contention that the warrant was not sufficiently particular, arguing that it was overly broad
because it requested, inter alia, “all data within, and any data within” the phone, and “any or all”
things that were “used in the commission of or may constitute evidence of the offense(s) in
22
connection with which this warrant is issued, being Criminal Sexual Assault.” The defendant also
provides legal analysis in an attempt to distinguish McCavitt from this case, and contends that
overall, the warrant “exceeded the probable cause to support it.”
¶ 48 The defendant also argues that the “second search” in this case was not permissible,
McCavitt notwithstanding, because unlike in McCavitt, the “second search” in this case “was not
a search for evidence contained in the warrant” but was instead a search “for evidence of child
pornography.” The defendant provides no factual support for this assertion. The defendant further
argues that the question of the timeliness of the “second search” is also distinguishable from
McCavitt, because unlike in that case, in this case he asserts that he “has claimed prejudice by the
17-month delay of the second search and that the police department acted in bad faith.” However,
nowhere in his briefs does he provide any evidence, or argument, of prejudice as a result of the 17-
month delay between the first search and the second one, and nowhere in his briefs does he provide
evidence and argument that the Granite City Police Department acted in bad faith in this case. As
in his initial brief, at no point in his reply brief does the defendant discuss in detail the burden of
proof on a motion to suppress evidence, or the proper standard of review, both of which we
describe below, and he again does not acknowledge that the trial judge made findings of fact as to
many of the points he raises related to this issue.
¶ 49 We turn now to the law applicable to the defendant’s first issue on appeal. When a
defendant files a motion to suppress evidence, that defendant bears the burden of proof with regard
to that motion. See, e.g., People v. Woods, 2019 IL App (5th) 180336, ¶ 27. If the defendant is
able to make “a prima facie showing that the evidence to which the defendant objects was obtained
in an illegal search or seizure, the burden then shifts to the State to provide evidence to counter the
prima facie case.” Id. The ultimate burden of proof, however, always remains with the defendant.
Id. As the Illinois Supreme Court recently reiterated in People v. McCavitt, 2021 IL 125550, ¶ 53,
23
the well-established standard of review when a defendant appeals the denial of a motion to
suppress evidence is two-fold. We review the trial judge’s findings of historical fact for clear error,
giving due weight to any inferences drawn from those facts by the trial judge. Id. We defer to the
factual findings, and will reverse them only if they are against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Id. A trial judge’s factual finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence only if the opposite
conclusion is clearly evident, or if the finding is arbitrary, unreasonable, or not based on the
evidence. People v. Cardona, 2012 IL App (2d) 100542, ¶ 36. Reviewing courts employ this
deferential standard for factual issues because the trial judge “is in a better position to determine
the weight and credibility of the witnesses, observe their demeanor, and resolve conflicts in the
witnesses’ testimony.” People v. Cash, 396 Ill. App. 3d 931, 938 (2009). If a reviewing court
accepts the trial judge’s factual findings, the reviewing court will then review de novo whether
suppression of the evidence is warranted under those facts. Id. The reviewing court, however,
remains free to engage in its “own plenary review, assessing the facts in relation to the issues
presented and drawing [its] own conclusions when deciding what relief is warranted.” Id. at 938-
39.
¶ 50 In this case, a number of facts are in dispute with regard to the first issue raised by the
defendant. As explained above, the defendant makes the following assertions of fact on appeal:
(1) he had not received Miranda warnings “before the detectives questioned him about his PIN
and access to his phone,” (2) he was “compelled” to disclose his PIN, (3) “access to his cellular
device could not have been gained without the PIN,” (4) the Granite City Police Department acted
in bad faith in this case, and (5) the “second search” was specifically a search for evidence of a
“subsequent crime” (child pornography), rather than a search for more evidence of the crimes
already charged.
24
¶ 51 The trial judge did not make any factual findings as to whether the defendant received
Miranda warnings before he was asked about his PIN and access to his phone, but it is clear from
a review of the record that the defendant’s factual assertion is not rebutted by the record, as there
is no evidence in the record that any officer gave the defendant Miranda warnings prior to
Detective Bastilla giving him warnings the day after his arrest, just prior to Detective Bastilla’s
formal interview with him. We discuss the relevance of the defendant’s factual assertion in more
detail below.
¶ 52 Notwithstanding the lack of a factual finding on the foregoing, the trial judge did find, as
a factual matter, that the defendant testified at the hearing on his motion to suppress that “he
voluntarily gave the police the passcode to his phone,” and that “Officer Donahey testified he did
not recall if the [d]efendant gave him the passcode[,] but that he would have been able to ‘break-
into’ the phone using the Cellebrite program without the passcode.” She found that “[l]ooking at
the totality of the circumstances, the [c]ourt finds the giving of the passcode, if this occurred, was
knowing and voluntary,” and “that even if it was not voluntary, the police could have ran Cellebrite
without the passcode and discovered the contents, inevitable discovery.” She further found that the
August 2018 search of the defendant’s phone was based upon “an objectively reasonable reliance
on a search warrant previously secured for the defendant’s phone,” and that “[w]hen viewing the
conduct of the police in this case, there was no reckless disregard of the truth, deceit or intentional
bad conduct when they ran the updated version of Cellebrite on the defendant’s phone,” because
they “believed in good faith that because the [d]efendant’s phone had been in evidence the entire
time, because they had obtained a search warrant to search the phone initially[,] that the search
warrant was still valid and an updated version of the same Cellebrite program could be ran without
securing another search warrant.”
25
¶ 53 With regard to her factual finding that the defendant testified at the hearing on his motion
to suppress that “he voluntarily gave the police the passcode to his phone,” it is indisputably true
that on cross-examination, the defendant did agree that he voluntarily gave his PIN to Donahey,
and that he also testified on cross-examination that Donahey did not threaten him or harm him in
any way. Although it is also true that the defendant testified on direct examination that after
Donahey asked for the PIN, the defendant “hesitated,” and told Donahey that he did not feel
comfortable, but that he would give it to Donahey if Donahey needed it and if it would help the
defendant get out of the holding cell, this testimony does not directly contradict his testimony that
he voluntarily gave the PIN to Donahey. The defendant never testified that he was “compelled” or
otherwise forced to give the PIN, and accordingly there is no testimony to support the defendant’s
assertion on appeal that he was “compelled” to provide the PIN. Moreover, as explained above, it
was the province of the trial judge to resolve any conflicts, or potential conflicts, in the testimony,
and it is clear that she believed the defendant’s testimony on cross-examination that he voluntarily
gave Donahey the PIN was more credible than any possibly contradictory testimony on direct
examination. The opposite conclusion to her factual finding is not clearly evident, nor is her finding
arbitrary, unreasonable, or not based upon the evidence. Accordingly, as explained above, it is not
against the manifest weight of the evidence, and we will defer to it.
¶ 54 Moreover, the trial judge’s factual finding is, as the State suggests on appeal, also supported
by the defendant’s statement in his August 29, 2018, motion “that at the time of his arrest [he]
voluntarily gave all pin codes and passwords to the police for his cellular devices and Nest
accounts. His intent was to allow the police to thoroughly examine all cellular data with the belief
that after doing so his name would be cleared.” This statement reveals, unequivocally, that the
defendant’s decision to give his PIN to police at the time of his arrest was a voluntary, strategic,
and intentional decision. It demonstrates that at the time of his arrest, either (1) he truly believed
26
there was no incriminating evidence on the phone, perhaps because he believed he had successfully
deleted it all, or (2) he believed that to the extent that there still was incriminating evidence on his
phone of his relationship with K.S.—including, inter alia, the nude photos of K.S. that were in fact
still on the phone at that time—he had adequately hidden the incriminating photos in the
“calculator vault” application that was designed expressly for the purpose of hiding images and
other materials, and that therefore the police would not find the evidence and the defendant’s
“name would be cleared.” Either way, his choice was clearly voluntary, strategic, and intentional.
The fact that the police ultimately were able to find the evidence the defendant had hidden in the
“calculator vault” does not somehow retroactively invalidate the consent he granted to authorities
“to thoroughly examine all cellular data with the belief that after doing so his name would be
cleared.” We note as well that on August 29, 2018, the trial judge, by docket entry, noted that a
hearing had been held on the motion in which the defendant made the foregoing statement, but the
defendant has failed to provide a transcript of that hearing, or a bystander’s report, in the record
on appeal. Thus, although the docket entry notes that no testimony was taken at the hearing, and
that the defendant was not present, we have no way of knowing what argument was presented by
the State or by the defendant’s attorney at the hearing.
¶ 55 Because, for the above reasons, we reject the defendant’s factual assertion that he was
“compelled” to reveal his PIN code in this case, and instead conclude that he voluntarily revealed
it, we find inapposite the case advanced by the defendant in support of his argument—People v.
Spicer, 2019 IL App (3d) 170814, ¶¶ 13-25—which, unlike this case, involved a situation in which
the State asked the trial court to compel the defendant to unlock his lawfully-seized telephone, the
trial court denied the request to compel, and our colleagues in the Third District of this court upheld
the trial court’s denial, reasoning that compelling a defendant to supply the defendant’s passcode
to unlock a cell phone implicates the defendant’s fifth amendment right against self-incrimination.
27
In addition to Spicer being factually distinguishable from this case, and therefore inapplicable, for
the above reasons, we note as well that a recent decision from our colleagues in the Fourth District
of this court—People v. Sneed, 2021 IL App (4th) 210180, ¶¶ 59-63—has called into question the
validity of the reasoning of the Spicer court, and has held instead that requiring a defendant to
unlock a cell phone, or provide a passcode PIN to unlock that phone, does not compel that
defendant “to provide testimony within the meaning of the fifth amendment.” However, due to our
factual finding, we need not weigh in on the relative merits of Spicer and Sneed, and therefore
decline to do so.
¶ 56 With regard to the defendant’s factual assertion on appeal that “access to his cellular device
could not have been gained without the PIN,” the trial judge’s finding that “Officer Donahey
testified he did not recall if the [d]efendant gave him the passcode[,] but that he would have been
able to ‘break-into’ the phone using the Cellebrite program without the passcode” was indisputably
correct as well, as Donahey did so testify. In fact, Donahey testified unequivocally, multiple times,
that he could have accessed the phone without the defendant’s PIN. This testimony was never
directly rebutted, although the defendant testified that to his knowledge, the phone could not be
accessed without the PIN. Again, it was the province of the trial judge to resolve any conflicts in
the testimony, and it is clear that she believed Donahey, not the defendant, and relied upon a factual
finding that Donahey’s testimony was truthful and correct to support her conclusion that the police
could have used Cellebrite to access the defendant’s phone even without a PIN. The opposite
conclusion to her factual finding is not clearly evident, nor is her finding arbitrary, unreasonable,
or not based upon the evidence. Accordingly, as explained above, it is not against the manifest
weight of the evidence, and we will defer to it.
¶ 57 With regard to the defendant’s factual assertion that the Granite City police acted in bad
faith with regard to the “second search” in this case, the trial judge found that the August 2018
28
search of the defendant’s phone was based upon “an objectively reasonable reliance on a search
warrant previously secured for the defendant’s phone,” and that “[w]hen viewing the conduct of
the police in this case, there was no reckless disregard of the truth, deceit or intentional bad conduct
when they ran the updated version of Cellebrite on the defendant’s phone,” because they “believed
in good faith that because the [d]efendant’s phone had been in evidence the entire time, because
they had obtained a search warrant to search the phone initially[,] that the search warrant was still
valid and an updated version of the same Cellebrite program could be ran without securing another
search warrant.” With regard to these findings that the police did not act in bad faith, the opposite
conclusion is not clearly evident, nor are the findings arbitrary, unreasonable, or not based upon
the evidence. Accordingly, as explained above, they are not against the manifest weight of the
evidence, and we will defer to them.
¶ 58 Moreover, nowhere in his briefs on appeal has the defendant provided even a scintilla of
evidence, or argument related to that evidence, regarding how he was prejudiced by the 17-month
delay in this case, and he has provided no evidence or argument on appeal in support of his
unsubstantiated assertion that the police acted in bad faith in this case, both of which therefore
amount to nothing more than speculation by the defendant on appeal. Such speculation is not
sufficient to provide a factual basis for his claim, which would therefore fail even if this court were
to employ a de novo review of the claim, because, as explained above, when a defendant files a
motion to suppress evidence, that defendant bears the burden of proof with regard to that motion.
See, e.g., Woods, 2019 IL App (5th) 180336, ¶ 27. If the defendant is able to make “a prima facie
showing that the evidence to which the defendant objects was obtained in an illegal search or
seizure, the burden then shifts to the State to provide evidence to counter the prima facie case.” Id.
The ultimate burden of proof, however, always remains with the defendant. Id. In this case, with
regard to this claim, the defendant has failed with regard both to his initial burden, and his ultimate
29
burden. In addition, it is well-established that a claim on appeal that is not supported by evidence
and argument is forfeited. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020) (argument must contain
the contentions of the appellant, the reasons therefor, and the citation of authorities; points not
argued in an opening brief are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral argument,
or in a petition for a rehearing). Moreover, contrary to the unsupported insinuations of the
defendant, when the efforts of the police, and the State, in this case are reviewed in their entirety
in the record on appeal, there is nothing to suggest that either ever had any motive other than the
proper investigation and prosecution of serious crimes of a sexual nature that involved the
exploitation and victimization of a vulnerable 13-year-old child.
¶ 59 With regard to the defendant’s factual assertion that the “second search” was conducted
specifically to seek out evidence of crimes different from those already charged—a theory the
defendant alluded to in his January 29, 2019, motion to suppress evidence when he noted that a
second search warrant was never obtained, and that the first warrant allowed “a search for only
evidence related to criminal sexual abuse, not child pornography”—the defendant certainly had
the opportunity, at the March 13, 2019, hearing on that motion, to subpoena and question police
witnesses in an effort to develop such a theory. He did not do so. In fact, not a single question was
asked of law enforcement witnesses by the defendant during that hearing about his theory that the
“second search” was conducted to seek out evidence of crimes other than those already charged.
Thus, there is no factual evidence in the record to support the defendant’s theory, and we decline
to indulge a theory that is based purely upon speculation, particularly where the opportunity to
develop the theory in the trial court existed and was not utilized. Again, as explained above, when
a defendant files a motion to suppress evidence, that defendant bears the burden of proof with
regard to that motion. See, e.g., Woods, 2019 IL App (5th) 180336, ¶ 27. If the defendant is able
to make “a prima facie showing that the evidence to which the defendant objects was obtained in
30
an illegal search or seizure, the burden then shifts to the State to provide evidence to counter the
prima facie case.” Id. The ultimate burden of proof, however, always remains with the defendant.
Id. In this case, with regard to this claim too, the defendant has failed with regard to both his initial
burden and his ultimate burden.
¶ 60 When the defendant’s unsupported theory is discarded, the only reasonable conclusion is
that the purpose of the “second search” was to look for, as the State aptly puts it, “exactly the same
thing as the first look at his phone—evidence of criminal sexual assault.” As the State also
correctly notes, pursuant to McCavitt and the well-established precedent cited therein, under the
plain view doctrine there is no error if authorities are reasonably reviewing data for evidence of
one crime and happen to view data implicating a defendant in other criminal activity. McCavitt,
2021 IL 125550, ¶¶ 109-15. We conclude that is what happened in this case.
¶ 61 Because we have accepted the factual findings of the trial judge that are described above,
we review de novo whether suppression of the evidence is warranted under these facts. See, e.g.,
People v. Cash, 396 Ill. App. 3d 931, 938 (2009). We begin with the defendant’s strictly legal
claim that the search warrant in question was “overly broad” because it requested, inter alia, “all
data within, and any data within” the phone, and “any or all” things that were “used in the
commission of or may constitute evidence of the offense(s) in connection with which this warrant
is issued, being Criminal Sexual Assault.” We agree with the State that United States v. Bishop,
910 F.3d 335, 336 (7th Cir. 2018), is dispositive of this claim. Therein, the federal Seventh Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled that a search warrant that authorized officials to search the defendant’s cell
phone and to seize “ ‘any evidence (including all photos, videos, and/or any other digital files,
including removable memory cards) of suspect identity, motive, scheme/plan along with DNA
evidence of the crime of Criminal Recklessness with a deadly weapon which is hidden or secreted
[in the cellphone or] related to the offense of Dealing illegal drugs’ ” was permissible. Id. The
31
court ruled that the warrant was not “too general” for fourth amendment specificity purposes
simply because it allowed “the police to look at every file on [the defendant’s] phone and decide
which files satisfy the description.” Id. The court reasoned that “specificity is a relative matter,”
and that a warrant will be found to be “too general” only in cases where “some more-specific
alternative would have done better at protecting privacy while still permitting legitimate
investigation.” Id. at 337. The court added that “a warrant need not be more specific than
knowledge allows,” and that as long as a warrant is as specific as the known facts and
circumstances allow, “[t]he Constitution does not require more.” Id. at 338. In this case, the
defendant has presented no argument on appeal that there were facts or circumstances known to
the police at the time they sought their warrant that required them to be more specific in their
description in the warrant. Accordingly, the defendant has forfeited consideration of any such
argument. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020) (argument must contain the contentions
of the appellant, the reasons therefor, and the citation of authorities; points not argued in an opening
brief are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral argument, or in a petition for a
rehearing).
¶ 62 Although the defendant asks this court to rely on United States v. Winn, 79 F. Supp. 3d
904, 919 (S.D. Ill. 2015), rather than Bishop, the defendant does not explain how a federal trial
court memorandum and order such as the federal district court order in Winn can take precedence
over a later-issued decision of a federal appellate court, such as the Bishop decision of the Seventh
Circuit Court of Appeals. Instead, he erroneously claims in his reply brief that Bishop and Winn
are both federal district court orders. Moreover, the State is correct that decisions such as Winn
that are issued by “federal district courts are not binding upon state courts and are, at most,
persuasive authority.” Rockford Police Benevolent & Protective Ass’n v. Morrissey, 398 Ill. App.
3d 145, 153 (2010). In any event, we agree with the reasoning of the Bishop court, and conclude
32
that because the language in the warrant in this case is certainly no more broad than that in Bishop
(which, we reiterate, allowed authorities “to look at every file on [the defendant’s] phone” to search
for evidence related to the crimes listed in the warrant (see 910 F.3d at 336)), there is no merit to
the defendant’s claim that the warrant in this case was overly broad, or somehow morphed into an
impermissible “general warrant.” With regard to the defendant’s related claim that the warrant
“exceeded the probable cause to support it,” in support of this claim the defendant relies upon the
Winn reasoning, which we have already rejected. Moreover, as a factual matter, there was ample
probable cause, following K.S.’s report of the crimes committed by the defendant against her, to
support the issuance of the warrant in this case.
¶ 63 With regard to the defendant’s legal claim that the August 24, 2018, analysis of the contents
of his phone was a “second search” for which no new warrant was ever obtained, and which was
not covered or authorized in any way by the first warrant (because the first warrant mentioned
looking only for evidence of aggravated criminal sexual assault, not child pornography), the State
claims that McCavitt is dispositive. The defendant disagrees. Applying the factual findings of the
trial judge in this case, as well as our other findings above, to the legal principles set forth by the
Illinois Supreme Court in McCavitt, we agree with the State. We first note that McCavitt involved
a computer, rather than a cell phone. 2021 IL 125550, ¶¶ 1-2. However, we agree with the State—
and the defendant does not disagree in his briefs on appeal—that a cell phone is essentially a
“minicomputer,” and that accordingly the same analysis applies to both types of electronic devices.
See, e.g., Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 393 (2014) (many cell phones “are in fact
minicomputers that also happen to have the capacity to be used as a telephone,” and that have
“immense storage capacity”). The McCavitt court began with the premise—for which it cited a
recent en banc decision from the Michigan Supreme Court—“that a search of an electronic storage
device pursuant to a warrant must be reasonably directed at obtaining evidence relevant to the
33
criminal activity alleged in the warrant,” and that accordingly, “[a] search of digital data that is
directed instead at uncovering evidence of criminal activity not identified in the warrant is
effectively a warrantless search that violates the fourth amendment absent some exception to the
warrant requirement.” 2021 IL 125550, ¶ 5.
¶ 64 The McCavitt court noted that the first search warrant complaint in the matter on appeal
before the McCavitt court “alleged that digital evidence of criminal sexual assault could be found
on [the] defendant’s cellular phone,” and that therefore “the warrant authorized the seizure of ‘any
electronic media cable [sic] of video/audio recording’ and ‘any electronic storage media capable
of stor[ing] pictures, audio or video.’ ” Id. ¶ 14. The court further noted that the first warrant also
authorized, inter alia, the seizure of “any additional items of evidentiary value.” Id. The court then
noted that a second search warrant was obtained, which authorized authorities “to search the
[defendant’s] computer for ‘any and all digital images, including, but not limited to JPG, GIF, TIF,
AVI, MOV, and MPEG files’ and ‘any evidence of’ the offenses of (1) aggravated criminal sexual
assault, (2) unlawful restraint, and (3) unauthorized video recording and live video transmission.’ ”
Id. ¶ 19. The court further noted that “[t]he warrant authorized a search of ‘any and all
stored/deleted data to determine which particular files are evidence or instrumentalities of criminal
activity.’ ” Id. The police officer who examined the defendant’s computer “made an exact,
unalterable digital copy of its contents” (id. ¶ 21), which was examined by police on two separate
occasions. Id. ¶¶ 22, 25-26. During the second search, images that appeared to be child
pornography were discovered, and the officer who discovered them then suspended his search and
applied for another warrant to further examine the computer’s contents for more evidence of child
pornography. Id. ¶ 26. Once that warrant was obtained, police searched the computer again and
found more evidence of child pornography. Id. ¶¶ 34-35.
34
¶ 65 Thereafter, the defendant was tried and convicted of several counts of child pornography.
Id. ¶ 43. On appeal from those convictions, the McCavitt court considered, inter alia, the “scope”
of the warrant at issue (id. ¶¶ 89-104) and the timeliness of the second examination of the data
found on the defendant’s computer. Id. ¶¶ 105-08. With regard to scope, the court began with the
longstanding principle that a search warrant need not contain a minute and detailed description of
the property to be seized, but that the property must be so definitely described that the officer
making the search will not seize the wrong property. Id. ¶ 89. Ultimately, the court did not find
that the warrant authorizing authorities to search for “ ‘any and all digital images, including, but
not limited to JPG, GIF, TIF, AVI, MOV, and MPEG files’ ” (id. ¶ 102) was problematic (which
we note, is consistent with the finding in Bishop, discussed above), and did not find that the search
exceeded the scope of the warrant, because under the circumstances it was clear that the police
officer in question “did not engage in a fishing expedition” such as occurs if an officer
“purposefully searches for evidence of a crime other than the one identified in the warrant.” Id.
¶¶ 103-04.
¶ 66 With regard to the timeliness of the second examination of the data found on the
defendant’s computer, the court did not find the eight-month delay between the searches to be
unreasonable, noting that “the fourth amendment does not place explicit limits on the duration of
any forensic analysis authorized by a warrant.” Id. ¶ 106. The court further noted that “[a] search
of digital data that takes several years may be reasonable as long as the search ends before trial
and does not exceed the scope of the original search warrant.” Id. ¶ 107 (citing United States v.
Johnston, 789 F.3d 934, 942-43 (9th Cir. 2015)). The court also found the delay to be reasonable
because there was no evidence that (1) probable cause for the warrant had lapsed, (2) the defendant
had been prejudiced by the delay, or (3) the police acted in bad faith. Id. ¶ 108. With regard to
35
probable cause lapsing, the court noted that such was not possible in the case before it, because
the data in question “remained secured and unaltered” while in police custody. Id.
¶ 67 As noted above, in his reply brief, the defendant attempts to distinguish McCavitt by
claiming that, unlike in McCavitt, the “second search” in this case “was not a search for evidence
contained in the warrant” but was instead a search “for evidence of child pornography.” We have
already determined that there is no support in the record for this factual assertion. He further claims
that the question of the timeliness of the “second search” is also distinguishable from McCavitt,
because unlike in that case, in this case he asserts that he “has claimed prejudice by the 17-month
delay of the second search and that the police department acted in bad faith.” We have already
determined that there is no support in the record, or his briefs on appeal, for either of these
assertions of fact as well.
¶ 68 To the contrary, based upon the factual findings of the trial judge which we, as described
above, accept as true because they are not against the manifest weight of the evidence, and our
other findings above, the defendant’s attempts to distinguish McCavitt fail. As in McCavitt, in this
case, when we review de novo whether suppression of the evidence is warranted in light of the
trial judge’s historical findings of fact, as well as our other findings above, we are led to conclude
that (1) the “second search” of the data on the defendant’s cell phone was for evidence of the
crimes alleged in the search warrant, not “subsequent” or different crimes of child pornography,
and thus the search was authorized pursuant to the warrant and no additional warrant was required;
(2) the police did not act in bad faith; (3) the defendant did not demonstrate that he was prejudiced
by the 17-month delay; and (4) probable cause could not have lapsed, because the defendant’s cell
phone was “secured and unaltered” in the Granite City Police Department evidence vault at all
relevant times. Accordingly, the defendant’s argument on appeal does not provide a basis for us to
conclude that the trial judge erred when she denied the defendant’s third motion to suppress
36
evidence, because he has not shown that either the search warrant in this case, or the actions of
police pursuant to the warrant, were in any way flawed.
¶ 69 We return now to the relevance of the defendant’s factual assertion that he had not received
Miranda warnings “before the detectives questioned him about his PIN and access to his phone.”
As discussed above, the trial judge did not make a finding of fact with regard to this point, and as
also discussed above, the record does not rebut the defendant’s factual assertion, as there is no
evidence in the record that any officer gave the defendant Miranda warnings prior to Detective
Bastilla giving him warnings the day after his arrest, just prior to Detective Bastilla’s formal
interview with him. However, because we have concluded, directly above, that the search warrant
issued and executed in this case was legally sufficient, and because we have concluded that the
trial judge’s factual finding that no PIN was required for the police to access the defendant’s cell
phone was correct, it is of no consequence if the defendant did not receive Miranda warnings
before he was asked about his PIN and access to his phone. Pursuant to the doctrine of inevitable
discovery, evidence that might otherwise be excluded from trial may be admitted if the State can
demonstrate that the evidence would inevitably have been discovered, notwithstanding any alleged
police error or misconduct. See, e.g., Burns, 2020 IL App (3d) 170103, ¶ 48. In this case, armed
with the aforementioned legally-sufficient search warrant, and with or without the defendant’s
PIN, the police could have, and would have, accessed the defendant’s phone and discovered all of
the evidence that he seeks to suppress. Thus, for all of the aforementioned reasons, the trial judge
did not err when she denied the defendant’s third motion to suppress evidence.
¶ 70 With regard to the second issue raised in this appeal—that the trial judge erred when she
denied the defendant’s January 31, 2020, motion to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial—the
defendant contends that although it is true that in general, delays occasioned by a defendant’s filing
of a motion to suppress evidence are to be attributed to the defendant for purposes of tolling the
37
speedy trial requirements, in this case, the trial judge took such a long time to issue her ruling on
his third motion to suppress evidence that this court “should reverse and dismiss the case against”
him. The defendant attempts to invoke, inter alia, federal law, related to federal regulations, and
state law from other jurisdictions, as well as from Illinois, to buttress his claim that when a motion
to suppress evidence is taken under advisement for a lengthy period of time, at least some of the
resulting delay should not be attributed to the defendant for speedy trial purposes. The defendant
also contends that under the Illinois statutory speedy trial provisions for persons—such as
himself—who were out on bond the entire time prior to trial, this court should find a speedy trial
violation because he does not believe it is clear from the record that he agreed to many of the
delays that were attributed to him. In making these arguments, the defendant does not discuss in
detail the proper standard of review, which we describe below, and does not acknowledge that the
trial judge made findings of fact as to whom the delays were attributable in this case.
¶ 71 The State responds that the defendant has failed to meet his burden to show that the trial
judge erred because, inter alia, (1) “the record readily establishes that defense counsel agreed to
every delay of the trial, from May 8, 2017, through the denial of his pro se motion to dismiss, all
the way until the day his trial started,” and (2) “this case was delayed by the emergency of the
worldwide COVID-19 pandemic, which caused delays in jury trials, which further tolled the
speedy trial clock.” The State asserts that case law is clear that “to show a violation of his speedy
trial right, a defendant must show that he did not cause or contribute to the delays,” and that in this
case, the record on appeal simply does not support the defendant’s position. The State contends
that when the record on appeal is examined in conjunction with relevant case law regarding to
which party a delay must be attributed, it is clear that the “defendant is responsible for all but 47
days of the delay in this case,” which means that there was no speedy trial violation in this case.
In particular, the State notes case law that “[a] defendant is considered to have occasioned a delay
38
when he requests a continuance, agrees to a continuance, or when his actions otherwise cause or
contribute to the delay,” and that such actions by the defendant are the reasons for the delays he
attempts to avoid in this case. The State adds that under the same case law, “[d]elay cannot be
attributed to a defendant only when the record is silent or the defendant fails to object to a delay
requested by the State,” and that here, “the record is not silent as to defendant’s agreement to (or
request for) any of the continuances,” and “the State did not file any requests for continuance
which would have delayed [the] defendant’s trial.” The State rejects the defendant’s argument that
the trial judge’s delay in issuing a ruling on the defendant’s third motion to suppress evidence was
unreasonable, and notes that in any event, if the defendant wished to invoke his speedy trial rights,
“objected to further continuances[,] *** insisted on a decision on the motion to suppress which
was under advisement[,] or if he was ready to go to trial without a ruling on that motion, [he]
should have made a record,” which he did not.
¶ 72 In reply, the defendant reiterates his contention that the trial judge’s delay in issuing a
ruling on his motion to suppress was unreasonable, and that accordingly, at least some of that delay
should not be attributed to him and should instead be considered as proof that his speedy trial rights
were violated. He thereafter contends that the “entire time the motion was under advisement should
not be attributed to” him, because the length of time was, again, “unreasonable.” He also disputes
the State’s position that he asked for or agreed to almost all of the continuances, and contends that
any announcement by a defendant that the defendant is ready for trial must be construed strictly as
an objection to any continuances, notwithstanding the absence of a record showing that he actually
made any such objections in the trial court. He cites no case law in support of this proposition. He
contends that the State misinterprets his argument, and that in fact his argument is “that his
constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated by the unreasonable delay in resolving [his]
[m]otion to [s]uppress.” The defendant does not directly address the State’s contention that during
39
the time the motion to suppress was under advisement—which, as explained above, is the period
of time that the defendant claims in his briefs was unreasonable—the defendant made no efforts
to expedite the trial judge’s ruling on his motion, did not inform the trial judge that he wished to
go to trial without a ruling on the motion, and did not make any type of speedy trial demand, on
the record, during that time, aside from his announcement that he was ready for trial, and his
counsel’s subsequent adoption of his pro se motion to dismiss. As in his initial brief, at no point
in his reply brief does the defendant discuss in detail the proper standard of review, or acknowledge
the findings of fact made by the trial judge with regard to this issue in this case.
¶ 73 We turn now to the law applicable to this claim. Criminal defendants in Illinois have both
constitutional (federal and state), and statutory, rights to a speedy trial. People v. Sykes, 2017 IL
App (1st) 150023, ¶ 35. In this case, the defendant asserts both. With regard to our standard of
review, a trial judge’s findings of fact on a defendant’s speedy trial claim are reviewed under the
manifest weight of the evidence standard. Id. As noted above, a trial judge’s factual finding is
against the manifest weight of the evidence only if the opposite conclusion is clearly evident, or if
the finding is arbitrary, unreasonable, or not based on the evidence. Cardona, 2012 IL App (2d)
100542, ¶ 36. As with a motion to suppress evidence, we review de novo the ultimate question of
whether a defendant’s statutory right to a speedy trial has been violated. Sykes, 2017 IL App (1st)
150023, ¶ 35.
¶ 74 The State has a responsibility to bring a defendant to trial within the appropriate statutory
period, but if a defendant files a motion to dismiss on speedy trial grounds, that defendant is
obligated to “affirmatively show” that the defendant’s rights were violated. Id. ¶ 36. If a
defendant’s acts caused or contributed to a delay, that delay is attributed to the defendant. People
v. Jones, 273 Ill. App. 3d 377, 380 (1995). “A court of review must only consider the record made
in the trial court in determining the existence of a speedy trial violation.” Id. at 380-81. If the
40
parties have expressly agreed to a continuance, that is an affirmative act by the defendant
contributing to the delay of the proceedings. Id. at 381. However, a “[d]elay based upon a silent
record cannot be attributed to the defendant.” Id. If it is difficult for a reviewing court to determine
from the record to whom a delay is attributable, then the trial judge’s “judgment is given substantial
deference.” Id. Unless we discern “a clear abuse of discretion, this court must sustain the trial
[judge’s] determination as to whom delay is attributed.” Id. A trial judge abuses the judge’s
discretion when the judge acts arbitrarily or where no reasonable person would take the judge’s
view. People v. Stoffel, 389 Ill. App. 3d 238, 244 (2009). We note as well that the State is correct
that, as a general proposition of law, only in exceptional circumstances will a delay in ruling on a
defense motion not be attributed to the defendant. See, e.g., People v. Harper, 279 Ill. App. 3d
801, 808 (1996).
¶ 75 With regard to this issue, as with regard to the defendant’s first issue, several key facts are
in dispute on appeal. As explained above, the trial judge made the following factual findings:
“Over the course of this case, through June 4, 2020, the Court has held over a dozen
hearings, dealing with numerous motions, including: three separate motions to suppress
evidence and/or statements with hundreds of pages of attachments and supplemental
addendums, two motions to dismiss, motions to compel, motion for bill of particulars,
multiple motions in limine, motion to quash subpoenas, motion for sanctions, motion to
bar evidence, motion for in camera review of records, motion to bar discovery, motion for
release of evidence and motions to continue. On March 13, 2019, this court held a hearing
on a third motion to suppress evidence and statements. On March 27, 2019, parties filed
memorandums of law and briefs for the Court to consider. On July 21, 2019, the defendant
filed a supplemental brief. The State indicated they would file a response and did so on
November 14, 2019. On November 20, 2019, the defendant filed a second supplemental
41
response. The defendant filed his motion to dismiss on January 31, 2020, and shortly
thereafter COVID-19 occurred. The Court understands the need to issue timely rulings but
the law surrounding the issues in the motion to suppress evidence was fluid and the parties
were indicating to the Court they would be supplementing their original briefs, which they
did.
On March 23, 2017, the defendant was charged with multiple counts which included
charges of Aggravated Criminal Sexual Abuse and Criminal Sexual Assault. The first
scheduled trial date for this matter was May 8, 2017. A review of the record indicates that
from 5/8/17 until the date of this hearing 6/4/2020, the defendant has continued this matter,
on his motion, 27 times. This cause was continued by agreement of the parties four times
and has never been continued on motion of the State. The defendant, in his written motion
to dismiss[,] contends that the length of time this court had the third motion to suppress
evidence under advisement deprived the defendant of his speedy trial rights. However, the
defendant completely ignores the fact that he, either on his own motion or by agreement[,]
continued the case through and until June 4, 2020.”
¶ 76 Also as explained above, the defendant does not even acknowledge, in his briefs on appeal,
these findings of fact by the trial judge, let alone attempt to explain to this court how the opposite
conclusion to that of the findings is clearly evident, or how the findings are arbitrary, unreasonable,
or not based on the evidence, and therefore how the findings are against the manifest weight of the
evidence. See, e.g., Cardona, 2012 IL App (2d) 100542, ¶ 36. That failure on the part of the
defendant notwithstanding, we have thoroughly reviewed the defendant’s factual assertions about
the state of the record, and we do not believe that they are sufficient to show that the trial judge’s
factual findings were against the manifest weight of the evidence, or that the delay in this case was
so unreasonable as to have violated the speedy trial rights of the defendant.
42
¶ 77 To the contrary, the trial judge’s factual findings are substantiated by the record on appeal,
which is discussed in detail above. In his opening brief on appeal, the defendant points to nothing
in the record that positively rebuts the trial judge’s findings. Instead, he points only to the following
purported inconsistencies, claiming that: (1) he did not agree to all of the delays in this case, but
at times “merely acquiesced” to trial dates set by the trial court, which means such delays should
not be attributed to him, despite the fact that he made no contemporaneous record of “merely
acquiescing” rather than agreeing to the delays; (2) “[a]lthough [he] agreed to the trial order
continuances, the fact of the matter was that the trial court had the motion to suppress under
advisement for close to a year and judicial procrastination should not be attributed to the
defendant”; and (3) some of the orders attributing delay to the defendant were “not [in] defense
counsel’s handwriting,” and he “did not consent to a continuance after announcing ready for trial.”
In his reply brief on appeal, the defendant reiterates his position that, as a factual matter, he “did
not ask for or agree to almost every continuance,” and then claims, without citation to authority,
that “his announcement that he was ready for trial starts the time for speedy trial considerations.”
He again argues the three purported inconsistencies described above, and claims that the issues
involved with his motions were not complex and should not have taken so long for the trial judge
to resolve.
¶ 78 In light of the defendant’s failure to raise any of these issues contemporaneously with the
issuance of the orders in question, we find the defendant’s later attempts to recharacterize them as
ambiguous, inconsistent, or otherwise favorable to him—both in the trial court and in this court—
to be highly dubious, as well as self-serving and lacking in credibility. If orders were being entered
by the trial judge, with regard to continuances or anything else, that the defendant believed were
not accurate in terms of to whom delays were attributable, or that the defendant believed were
internally inconsistent because the orders stated both that (1) the continuance in question was on
43
the motion of the defendant with the delay attributable to the defendant, and (2) that the defendant
was ready for trial, the defendant had a responsibility to call that to the attention of the trial judge
at that time. See, e.g., Mitchell v. Fiat-Allis, Inc., 158 Ill. 2d 143, 151 (1994) (attorney has a duty
“to monitor [attorney’s] case closely enough to become aware that the [trial judge has] ruled”). He
failed to do so, and only later attempted to recast those orders in a different light. On a related note,
the State is correct that if the defendant “objected to further continuances[,] *** insisted on a
decision on the motion to suppress which was under advisement[,] or if he was ready to go to trial
without a ruling on that motion, [he] should have made a record,” which he did not.
¶ 79 Indeed, the defendant’s belated attempts to recharacterize the record ring particularly
hollow in light of the trial judge’s comments, following the March 13, 2019, hearing on the
defendant’s third motion to suppress evidence, that she was frustrated with the pace at which the
case was proceeding to trial, after which she added, “let’s be clear, once this motion is ruled on
and I rule on the other motion [presently under advisement], this case is going to trial.” She then
added, “And I am going to push it to the first available date. So I don’t care if you have vacations
planned. I don’t care if you have other trials going. This case is two years old.” She further added
that, in light of the severity of the charges, “I want it to be clear that we did everything that we
were supposed to do in moving this case along and presenting the evidence in a manner that the
law requires.” Clearly, the trial judge was cognizant of the rights of everyone involved, and was
exercising diligence in attempting to get the case to trial. There is no evidence in the record on
appeal that her position with regard thereto ever changed.
¶ 80 Moreover, the defendant’s contentions also ignore the factual finding by the trial judge that
“the parties were indicating to the Court they would be supplementing their original briefs, which
they did.” Indeed, this factual finding is substantiated by the supplemental filings of the defendant
himself. It is, after all, undeniable that (1) on July 2, 2019, a little over three months after the trial
44
judge received the arguments and case law of the parties following the hearing on the defendant’s
third motion to suppress evidence, the defendant filed a “first supplemental brief in support of [his]
motion to suppress,” in which he discussed a recently-filed case from our colleagues in the First
District of this court, and (2) the defendant’s January 31, 2020, pro se motion to dismiss on speedy
trial grounds was filed only a little more than two months after the defendant, on November 20,
2019, filed his “first amended motion to suppress evidence”—as well as his “second supplemental
brief in support of [his] motion to suppress evidence”—in both of which he argued for the first
time a new theory under which he believed the evidence in question should be suppressed: that
“all searches of the defendant’s cellular phone were overbroad and not particular enough to satisfy
the fourth amendment.”
¶ 81 Although the trial judge certainly could have—pursuant to her “discretion to manage [her]
docket” (see Bank of America, N.A. v. Land, 2013 IL App (5th) 120283, ¶ 24)—set a cut-off date
for additional filings, and told the parties that she would not allow them to supplement their filings
beyond that date, even as new developments in this “fluid” area of the law emerged, we do not
believe it was unreasonable for her to decline to set such a date, particularly where the defendant
never asked her to do so. We note as well that had she done so sua sponte, the defendant’s
aforementioned July 2, 2019, supplemental brief, as well as his November 20, 2019, first amended
motion to suppress, and his brief in support thereof—which the defendant filed after two of his
“announcements” that he was ready for trial, and upon which he relies in part in this appeal—
might not have been allowed in this case. The trial judge also did not err when she found that “the
law surrounding the issues in the motion to suppress evidence was fluid.” Indeed, as discussed
above, McCavitt was not decided until after this appeal commenced.
¶ 82 For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that, with regard to the trial judge’s factual
findings as to the delays in this case, the opposite conclusion is not clearly evident, and her factual
45
findings are not arbitrary, unreasonable, or not based upon the evidence; accordingly, her factual
findings on this issue are not against the manifest weight of the evidence. See Cardona, 2012 IL
App (2d) 100542, ¶ 36. Although we need not rely upon it in this case, we reiterate that if it is
difficult for a reviewing court to determine from the record to whom a delay is attributable, then
the trial judge’s “judgment is given substantial deference.” Jones, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 381. Unless
we discern “a clear abuse of discretion, this court must sustain the trial [judge’s] determination as
to whom delay is attributed.” Id. A trial judge abuses the judge’s discretion when the judge acts
arbitrarily or where no reasonable person would take the judge’s view. Stoffel, 389 Ill. App. 3d at
244. In this case, for all of the foregoing reasons, we discern no abuse of discretion at all on the
part of the trial judge. Accordingly, because for all of the above reasons we accept the factual
findings of the trial judge, we conclude that the defendant has not established a sufficient factual
basis in support of his constitutional and statutory speedy trial claims, and those claims fail. Indeed,
in light of the record before us—which is far from silent with regard to the attribution of delays
(see Jones, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 381)—we conclude that there exist in this case no exceptional
circumstances that would result in a delay in ruling on a defense motion not being attributed to the
defendant. See Harper, 279 Ill. App. 3d at 808.
¶ 83 Because the defendant’s claims fail for the above reasons, we need not delve into the
federal law, related to federal regulations, and state law from other jurisdictions, as well as from
Illinois, that the defendant contends warrant speedy trial dismissal in this case. Those cases are
simply not relevant to a claim that is unsupported by any facts that show an unreasonable delay.
Thus, our de novo review of the ultimate question of whether the defendant’s right to a speedy trial
has been violated (see Sykes, 2017 IL App (1st) 150023, ¶ 35) leads us to the firm conclusion that
the defendant has failed to meet his burden to “affirmatively show” such a violation. See id. ¶ 36.
46
¶ 84 We note too that although the defendant, in his reply brief, asserts that delays caused by
the COVID-19 pandemic are not relevant to the time periods he considers to be unreasonable in
this case, the State is correct that if such delays were in dispute in this case, recent case law—with
which we agree—holds that general continuances made pursuant to the Illinois Supreme Court’s
administrative orders regarding the pandemic have the effect of tolling speedy trial computations.
People v. Mayfield, 2021 IL App (2d) 200603, ¶¶ 4-16.
¶ 85 Because the defendant’s third, fourth, and fifth issues raised on appeal all involve purported
errors by the trial judge with regard to the admission or exclusion of evidence, we will discuss and
analyze these issues together, although we will first describe each contention of error separately.
With regard to his third issue raised on appeal—that the trial judge erred when she granted the
State’s motion to bar evidence of certain phone calls and texts that the defendant maintains should
have been admitted—the defendant contends the ruling, taken with the other evidentiary rulings
he contests, “deprived [him] of the opportunity to put on a viable defense.” He claims the phone
call and text evidence was relevant to the question of K.S.’s credibility, and “was more probative
than prejudicial.” The State responds that there was no reversible error in this case, because there
was no clear abuse of discretion in this evidentiary ruling, or in any other evidentiary ruling made
by the trial judge. The State adds that it is well-established that a defendant is “not entitled to a
new trial based upon evidentiary rulings unless the error was substantially prejudicial and affected
the outcome of the case,” which the State argues is simply not the case here. Indeed, the State
contends that in fact the trial judge did not err at all, because she correctly determined that the
phone call and text evidence the defendant wished to introduce was not sufficiently relevant to the
charges the defendant faced at trial. The State also notes that the trial judge “did allow evidence of
the Snapchat” materials, because she “found the direct exchange between K.S. and [the] defendant
to be relevant and material.” The State posits that “[t]he admission of this evidence eliminates any
47
possible prejudice regarding the [excluded evidence] because it allowed [the] defendant to put on
evidence of K.S.’s character and argue to the jury that K.S. was playing games with [the]
defendant.” In reply, the defendant presents no case law, no legal analysis, and no attempt to rebut
the State’s position that other evidence that was allowed by the trial judge cured any potential
prejudice because it allowed the defendant to attempt to impugn K.S.’s character in the same
manner he wished to do with the evidence that was excluded; instead, the defendant merely
reiterates his contention that the jury should have been allowed to hear the evidence in question.
¶ 86 With regard to his fourth issue raised on appeal—that the trial judge erred when she denied
the defendant’s motion in limine that attempted to bar evidence of his extramarital affairs—the
defendant contends that this evidence was prejudicial to him because, he posits, it “cast a
prejudicial light on” him. The State responds that it was appropriate for the trial judge to allow
limited evidence that the defendant was having an extramarital affair with K.S.’s mother, because
it explained for the jury the manner in which the defendant insinuated himself into K.S.’s life,
groomed her, and then eventually forced her to have sexual contact with him on multiple occasions.
The State further points out that the trial judge found that the fact that K.S.’s mother “had an affair
with the defendant went to her credibility on the witness stand, as well as her motive, bias, and
interest.” The State also suggests that when objecting to this evidence in the trial court, the
defendant appeared to be less concerned about the nature of his relationship with K.S.’s mother,
and more “concerned about the nude photos of [K.S.’s mother] and other adult women which had
been found on defendant’s phone.” The State again contends there was no clear abuse of the trial
judge’s discretion in making this ruling, and that accordingly, there was no reversible error. In
reply, the defendant presents no case law, no legal analysis, and no attempt to rebut the State’s—
and the trial court’s—position that the evidence was relevant to the credibility of K.S.’s mother as
a witness, instead merely reiterating his contention that the evidence was “more prejudicial than
48
probative” and that testimony from K.S.’s foster care caseworker could have been used to explain
how the defendant was introduced to K.S.
¶ 87 With regard to his fifth issue raised on appeal—that the trial judge erred when she allowed
at trial evidence of one of his extramarital affairs, while denying video evidence and other evidence
about K.S. that the defendant wished to introduce—the defendant first incorporates by reference
his points from his fourth issue, then adds that he should have been allowed to introduce into
evidence the “Facebook video of [K.S.] a week before trial” which he contends “was completely
different than her demeanor and how she presented herself in court,” and that he should have been
allowed to ask K.S. if she had had a child after being sexually assaulted by the defendant, even
though the child was not the result of that assault and the father was not alleged to be the defendant.
The State responds that it incorporates by reference its argument, in the aforementioned issue, with
regard to the evidence of the defendant’s affair with K.S.’s mother. The State further argues that
there was no clear abuse of discretion in the trial judge’s other rulings because the Facebook video,
made three years after the defendant sexually assaulted K.S., was not (1) properly disclosed by the
defense in discovery, (2) probative in any way of K.S.’s demeanor at the time of the assault three
years earlier, or (3) relevant to her demeanor at trial, because, as the trial judge noted, “everyone
acts different in a courtroom” than they do when hanging out with their friends. The State contends
that the defendant seems to believe that K.S. should not be allowed to heal from the trauma of
being sexually assaulted by the defendant, and should at all times appear sad and glum, rather than
happy when hanging out with her friends. With regard to the trial judge’s ruling barring the
defendant from asking K.S. if she later had a child, the State again argues there was no clear abuse
of discretion in this ruling, because the evidence the defendant sought to adduce was not relevant
or material in any way to the defendant’s sexual assault of K.S. In reply, the defendant presents no
case law, no legal analysis, and no attempt to rebut the State’s position that there was no clear
49
abuse of discretion in this case, instead arguing only that the Facebook video and the fact that K.S.
later had a child were matters that went to her “credibility.” The defendant does not address the
manner in which his own failures—such as his failure to properly disclose the video in discovery
in a timely manner, rather than requesting a sidebar about it in the middle of his cross-examination
of K.S. at trial—may have contributed to the fact that there was no clear abuse of discretion in this
case.
¶ 88 We turn now to the law applicable to the defendant’s third, fourth, and fifth issues on
appeal. “The determination as to whether evidence is relevant and admissible is within the sound
discretion of the trial court, and its ruling will not be reversed absent a clear abuse of discretion
resulting in manifest prejudice to the defendant.” People v. Gonzalez, 379 Ill. App. 3d 941, 948-
49 (2008). As explained above, “[a] trial court abuses its discretion when it acts arbitrarily or where
no reasonable person would take its view.” Stoffel, 389 Ill. App. 3d at 244.
¶ 89 We agree with the State that in this case, there was no error with regard to any of the trial
judge’s rulings on the defendant’s evidentiary claims. As explained in detail below, in analyzing
these claims, the trial judge did not act arbitrarily, and we do not believe that “no reasonable person
would take [her] view.” Id. Thus, there was no abuse of discretion with regard to any of these
evidentiary rulings. Gonzalez, 379 Ill. App. 3d at 948-49. We now address each contention in turn.
¶ 90 With regard to the defendant’s third issue on appeal, as explained above, at the outset of
the defendant’s September 2020 jury trial, the trial judge issued her ruling on the State’s July 12,
2018, motion to bar evidence of phone calls (in which, as described above, the State contended
that the defendant purported to have evidence, in the form of text messages, that K.S. made a prank
call or calls to the defendant’s wife), which the trial judge previously had taken under advisement.
With regard to the alleged prank call or calls, she ruled that they would not be allowed because
they were “not relevant,” did not “prove any element of any of the offense[s] or negate any element
50
of any offense,” and did not “have any bearing on this case” because they “happened a year after
these alleged incidents occur[ed], and after this case has been charged.” With regard to the text
messages related in time to the call or calls, she ruled that because there were messages directly
between K.S. and the defendant, she would allow them to be admitted at trial. We find no error in
these rulings, because we agree that the calls were “not relevant,” did not “prove any element of
any of the offense[s] or negate any element of any offense,” and did not “have any bearing on this
case” because they “happened a year after these alleged incidents occur[ed], and after this case has
been charged,” and thus are not, as the defendant claims, “more probative than prejudicial.” We
note that the State contended in the trial court that K.S. did not even make the “prank” call or
calls—her sister did—and contended that K.S.’s texts were to apologize for her sister’s mistake.
The State is correct that the trial judge “did allow evidence of the Snapchat” materials, because
she “found the direct exchange between K.S. and [the] defendant to be relevant and material.” We
agree with the State that “[t]he admission of this evidence eliminates any possible prejudice
regarding the [excluded evidence] because it allowed [the] defendant to put on evidence of K.S.’s
character and argue to the jury that K.S. was playing games with [the] defendant.” Thus, the
defendant was in no way deprived of his ability to present a defense in this case, as he was still
able to call into question K.S.’s credibility in front of the jury.
¶ 91 With regard to the defendant’s fourth issue on appeal—that the trial judge erred when she
denied the defendant’s motion in limine that attempted to bar evidence of his extramarital affairs—
we agree with the State that it was appropriate for the trial judge to allow limited evidence of one
such affair, the defendant’s affair with K.S.’s mother, because it explained for the jury the manner
in which the defendant insinuated himself into K.S.’s life, groomed her, and then eventually forced
her to have sexual contact with him on multiple occasions. It is also true, as the State contends,
that the trial judge found that the fact that K.S.’s mother “had an affair with the defendant went to
51
her credibility on the witness stand, as well as her motive, bias, and interest.” The defendant does
not address this aspect of the trial judge’s ruling at all. Accordingly, the defendant has forfeited
any claim with regard to the trial judge’s ruling. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020)
(argument must contain the contentions of the appellant, the reasons therefor, and the citation of
authorities; points not argued in an opening brief are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply
brief, in oral argument, or in a petition for a rehearing). Even if we overlook this forfeiture, and
set aside this aspect of the trial judge’s ruling, we still agree with the trial judge’s reasoning with
regard to the relevancy of the defendant’s affair with K.S.’s mother in terms of giving a
comprehensive context for the jury to understand the nature and extent of the defendant’s
insinuation of himself into K.S.’s life, as well as his subsequent grooming, sexual abuse, and sexual
assaults of her, which could not have been provided in the same way by testimony from K.S.’s
foster care caseworker, who had much more limited knowledge of the extent of the interactions
between the defendant and K.S. We therefore find the trial judge did not clearly abuse her
discretion in making her ruling, because we decline to conclude that no reasonable person would
take the view taken by the trial judge in this case. See Stoffel, 389 Ill. App. 3d at 244.
¶ 92 With regard to the defendant’s fifth issue on appeal, the first sub-issue, regarding allowing
K.S.’s mother to testify that she and the defendant had a sexual relationship, has been resolved
immediately above. With regard to the second sub-issue, as explained above, during the
defendant’s cross-examination of K.S. at trial, he requested a sidebar, outside of the presence of
the jury, at which he requested permission to play for the jury a copy of a video of K.S. he had
obtained from a Facebook account, that was posted approximately one week prior to the trial,
because he believed the video showed her to be “not quiet at all like she’s portrayed herself” when
in the courtroom, and he believed the jury should be able to see the difference in her demeanor, as
part of their determination of her credibility as a witness. He conceded that he had not previously
52
disclosed the video to the State. The State objected, noting that the video appeared to show K.S.
“hanging out with her friends, which is a completely different scenario than sitting in a courtroom
talking about sexual assault.” Counsel for the State then added, “I would not expect her to act the
same way she does in a courtroom as with her friends. I don’t think anyone in this courtroom
would act the same way in the courtroom versus when you’re hanging out with your friends.”
¶ 93 The trial judge denied the defendant’s request to play the video, because “One, it wasn’t
supplied in discovery. Two, it was filmed a week ago.” She added, “We’re talking about instances
that occurred back in 2017, and you’re wanting to play a video of her from a week ago. *** It’s
not relevant to what happened, whether or not the defendant [sexually assaulted] her or not.” She
also ruled that “as far as someone’s demeanor, I can say everyone in this courtroom acts different
because they’re in a courtroom. It’s a scary place to be. Particularly sitting on the stand talking
about a sexual experience.” She opined that the defendant’s request to play the video was “clearly
intended to just smear [K.S.].”
¶ 94 We find no error in the trial judge’s rulings. First, the defendant on appeal has not at all
contested the trial judge’s ruling that the video should be barred because it was not supplied in
discovery. Accordingly, the defendant has forfeited any claim with regard to the trial judge’s
ruling. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020) (argument must contain the contentions of
the appellant, the reasons therefor, and the citation of authorities; points not argued in an opening
brief are forfeited and shall not be raised in the reply brief, in oral argument, or in a petition for a
rehearing). Even if we overlook this forfeiture, and set aside the question of compliance with
discovery, we still agree with the trial judge’s reasoning with regard to the relevancy of the video,
and find the trial judge did not clearly abuse her discretion in making her ruling. In light of the
lack of relevancy of the video, we decline to find that no reasonable person would take the view
taken by the trial judge in this case. See Stoffel, 389 Ill. App. 3d at 244.
53
¶ 95 With regard to the third sub-issue of the defendant’s fifth contention on appeal—which is
the defendant’s argument that he should have been allowed to ask K.S. if she had a child after
being sexually assaulted by the defendant, even though the child was not the result of that assault
and the father was not alleged to be the defendant—we find no error in the trial judge’s ruling on
this matter either. As explained above, on June 29, 2020, the State filed an amended motion in
limine, asking the trial judge to bar, inter alia, evidence that while the case was pending, K.S. gave
birth to a child. The motion alleged that the father of the child was a juvenile at the time of
conception, that no charges were brought against him, and that the birth of the child was irrelevant
to the case against the defendant. On July 22, 2020, the trial judge entered an order noting that a
hearing had been held that day on the State’s amended motion in limine, and that the motion was
“granted without objection.” The defendant has not included a transcript of the hearing, or a
bystander’s report, in the record on appeal provided to this court, and has not alleged any error in
the trial judge’s order memorializing that the State’s motion was “granted without objection.”
These failures on the part of the defendant notwithstanding, we agree with the State, and the trial
judge, that there was simply no relevance to the fact that K.S. later had a child. As the State aptly
notes, the evidence the defendant sought to adduce was not relevant or material in any way to the
defendant’s sexual assault of K.S. There was no error.
¶ 96 In addition to the foregoing, we conclude that even if we were to assume, merely for the
sake of argument, that the trial judge erred with regard to one, or even all, of the defendant’s
evidentiary claims, the resulting abuse of discretion could not reasonably be said to have resulted
“in manifest prejudice to the defendant” (Gonzalez, 379 Ill. App. 3d at 949), because of the sheer
amount of credible evidence of the defendant’s guilt that was properly before the jury, as described
above. Thus, for this reason too, there was no error.
54
¶ 97 With regard to the defendant’s final issue raised on appeal—that the trial judge erred when
she allowed evidence on the charges of child pornography that the defendant was being tried
upon—the defendant contends that “[b]ecause the jury heard the evidence of child pornography,
[the defendant] was unduly prejudiced by this evidence and the testimony of child pornography
affected the outcome of the trial on the [other counts].” The defendant further contends that “the
child pornography charges were improperly in front of the jury.” The defendant frames the issue
as one involving the circumstances under which “other crimes” evidence is admissible, citing only
cases that employ an “other crimes” evidence analysis, even though his trial was, in part, literally
on the charges of child pornography.
¶ 98 The State responds that once the trial judge denied the defendant’s motion to suppress the
evidence of child pornography, the defendant had the option to ask the trial judge to sever the child
pornography charges from the other counts, but the defendant did not ask the trial judge to do so.
The State asserts that the defendant, on appeal, “cannot now complain that the jury saw the nude
pictures of K.S. as part of the sexual abuse charges when he never asked to sever the charges,” and
never moved to exclude the pictures on grounds other than those in his initial motion to dismiss.
The State further asserts that it believes that in any event, the pictures were admissible, even on
the sexual abuse charges, because the pictures “supported K.S.’s version of the facts, as stated
during her CAC interview and her testimony at trial.” The State provides precedent in support of
its position. In reply, the defendant ignores the fact that he could have moved to sever the charges
but did not, and instead argues that the prejudice he alleges that he suffered as a result of the
introduction of the pictures “clearly outweighed” their probative value, again relying upon cases
employing an “other crimes” evidence analysis to do so.
¶ 99 An exception to the general rule that all relevant evidence is admissible at trial unless
otherwise provided by law exists when the State attempts to introduce “evidence of offenses other
55
than those for which a defendant is being tried.” People v. Cruz, 162 Ill. 2d 314, 348 (1994). Such
evidence is often referred to as “other crimes” evidence. Id. at 348-49. In this case, the evidence
was clearly not “other crimes” evidence, because it pertained directly to some of the charges being
tried, and thus does not fit the definition of evidence of an offense other than those for which the
defendant was being tried. Moreover, the defendant has not argued, and could not successfully
argue, that the nude photographs of K.S. were not relevant and material to the child pornography
charges for which they were introduced into evidence. Indeed, the photographs were necessary for
the State to meet its burden to prove that the defendant committed the offenses of child
pornography with which he was charged and for which he was being tried. The defendant also has
not argued that the photographs were cumulative of other evidence of the offenses, an argument
that would have no merit and accordingly would fail as well. Put simply, the photographs were not
“other crimes” evidence under the facts and circumstances of this case: they were evidence of
some of the offenses for which the defendant was being tried in this case. The defendant did not
move to sever the child pornography charges from the other charges, and accordingly cannot now
be heard to complain that the trial judge erred by allowing the State to introduce evidence that was
directly related to meeting the State’s burden to prove the child pornography charges at trial. As
with his other issues, there is no merit to the defendant’s final issue raised on appeal.
¶ 100 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 101 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the defendant’s convictions and sentences.
¶ 102 Affirmed.
56