People v. DeBolt

Court: Appellate Court of Illinois
Date filed: 2022-07-28
Citations: 2022 IL App (2d) 200784-U
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                                  2022 IL App (2d) 200784-U
                                        No. 2-20-0784
                                   Order filed July 28, 2022

      NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
      except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
______________________________________________________________________________

                                            IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF             ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
ILLINOIS,                              ) of Kendall County.
                                       )
      Petitioner-Appellee,             )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 17-CF-366
                                       )
KEVIN DEBOLT,                          ) Honorable
                                       ) Jody Gleason,
      Respondent-Appellant.            ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices Jorgensen and Brennan concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held: Defendant’s conviction was supported by the evidence. Doctrine of invited error
             or acquiescence barred consideration of certain issues raised on appeal, but trial
             counsel did not provide ineffective assistance with regard to those or other issues
             identified by defendant. The trial court did not err in barring certain DNA evidence.

¶2     In December 2019, a jury convicted the defendant, Kevin DeBolt, of one count of criminal

sexual assault of someone who was unable to give knowing consent to sexual penetration (720

ILCS 5/11-1.20(a)(2) (West 2016)). He was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment. He appeals,

raising multiple issues. We affirm.

¶3                                    I. BACKGROUND
2022 IL App (2d) 200784-U


¶4     The State initially charged the defendant with two counts of aggravated criminal sexual

assault alleging bodily harm (counts 1 and 2), and two counts of criminal sexual assault against a

victim whom he knew was unable to give knowing consent (count 3) or unable to understand the

nature of the act (count 4). The State ultimately dismissed the counts of aggravated criminal sexual

assault before trial and proceeded only on counts 3 and 4. The trial took place over four days and

included two days of jury deliberations.

¶5     The victim, A.P., lived in a two-bedroom condominium with her two daughters, 4-year-old

A.V. and 13-year-old A.Z. On August 10, 2015, A.P. attended a cookout at the house of her

neighbor, Tara Newcomer, where she met the defendant for the first time. It was undisputed that

A.P. and the defendant had sex that included sexual penetration that night. The primary issue at

trial was whether the defendant knew or should have known that A.P. was unable to consent to the

sexual penetration or to understand the nature of that act.

¶6     A.P. testified that she had five or six alcoholic drinks at Newcomer’s over the course of

four to six hours, including a beer, a glass of wine, a vodka cocktail, and several shots of liquor.

At some point she vomited, and she felt sick and nauseous. She walked back home with her older

daughter, A.Z., and lay down in bed for a while. She began to feel nauseous and got up to go to

the bathroom. She vomited, getting vomit on her clothes. She showered in her clothes, continuing

to vomit. A.Z. was in and out of the bathroom with her, leaving to get clean clothes. She testified

that at one point the defendant entered the bathroom and got into the shower with her while still

clothed, twice telling her to suck his dick. However, no sexual penetration or oral sex occurred,

and the defendant left the bathroom.

¶7     After she finished showering, A.P. got into a T-shirt and shorts and went to bed. She went

to sleep alone. The next thing she recalled was waking at 6 a.m., naked, with both her younger


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daughter A.V. and the defendant in bed with her. She did not recall inviting the defendant into her

bed, did not know why he was there, and was scared. Leaving the defendant in bed, she took A.V.

into the living room and woke up her older daughter, then began getting ready for work. She

showered without washing the inside of her vagina and then put on a clean pair of underwear and

clean clothes. A.P. had a conversation with her daughter that made her concerned that something

had happened that she was not aware of. She was also very sore in her vaginal area. She did not

see the defendant until she and her daughters were outside. He asked her for a ride. She did not

know what to do and felt scared. She drove him to his mother’s house.

¶8     A.P. felt sick and vomited throughout that day; she did not know why. However, she

worked a full day. After work she went to the hospital, where registered nurse Lisa Thiltgen

administered a rape kit. Thiltgen took DNA samples from A.P.’s mouth, vaginal area, anal area,

and underwear, and took her clothing as well. No drugs were detected in A.P.’s system. DNA

testing of the underwear revealed two DNA sources, the defendant’s DNA and that of someone

else who was unknown. The parties stipulated that the defendant sexually penetrated A.P. A.P.

testified that she did not give the defendant consent to penetrate her or agree to have sexual

relations of any kind.

¶9     The fact that A.P.’s underwear contained DNA from someone other than the defendant was

the subject of repeated motions in limine by the defense prior to trial. The State argued that

evidence about the second DNA was barred by the rape shield law, section 115-7 of the Code of

Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code) (725 ILCS 5/115-7 (West 2014)). During the hearings on the

motions in limine, the trial court held that the evidence regarding the second DNA would be

admissible as a defense on the first two counts, to show that the alleged bodily harm (the vaginal

soreness A.P. reported) could have been caused by someone else. However, it was not relevant to


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the issues on counts 3 and 4. Once the State dismissed counts 1 and 2, the trial court barred the

evidence from being mentioned. After A.P. testified on direct examination, defense counsel

renewed the motion, arguing that A.P.’s testimony about her vaginal soreness opened the door to

admission of the other-DNA evidence to show that someone else could have caused the soreness.

The trial court agreed that the testimony opened the door, but only permitted defense counsel to

ask A.P. whether she had had sex with anyone else that night. Defense counsel was required to

accept whatever answer was given without introducing the DNA evidence. A.P. testified that she

did not remember how many people she had sex with that night; she did not remember having sex

with anyone that night. She did not recall any males other than the defendant coming to her house

that night.

¶ 10    On cross-examination, A.P. admitted that her memory of that night was unclear. She told

the police that she did not remember anything after her older daughter came to check on her at the

party and she went back home, but she did tell them about the defendant coming into the bathroom

when she was showering. She also told them that, although she did not remember vomiting, when

she looked in her trashcan she saw vomit. A.P. stated that, after she gave the police a statement

that first night, she remembered more. However, she did not remember Newcomer coming to her

house to check on her. She did not remember leaving her bedroom after taking a shower and going

to bed. She did not recall returning to the party after vomiting and sitting next to the defendant or

smoking marijuana on Newcomer’s porch.

¶ 11    A.P. did recall laughing and talking with the defendant in Newcomer’s kitchen while she

made herself a drink. They spoke for about 30 minutes, during which the defendant told her that

he had been charged for “fighting an officer” and “resisting arrest,” and he showed her pictures of

the incident on his phone. Defense counsel then asked whether the defendant had told A.P. that


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he was arrested. During a sidebar in which the trial court asked defense counsel why she had

brought out the possibility of the defendant’s arrest, defense counsel said that she would introduce

evidence that the defendant was never arrested for that, and perhaps A.P. was confusing the

defendant with someone else at the party. However, the defense never actually introduced such

evidence.

¶ 12   A.P. testified that the defendant did not give her drinks or try to get her intoxicated. She

invited him to walk back to her house with her to check on her daughters, and she was walking

and talking normally at that point. Later in her testimony, A.P. recalled that this happened earlier

in the evening, albeit after dark. She recalled that, when she vomited in the shower, the defendant

was also in the shower. She remembered him leaving her house after that.

¶ 13   A.P. testified that, when she woke up the morning after the party, she went to Newcomer’s

house to look for her phone. She had a conversation there with Louis Galante, who she initially

thought had been the person in her bed when she woke up. Galante said that it was not him, and

A.P. asked him if he knew who it was. After she spoke with police, they came to her house and

collected bed linens and clothing, including a gray men’s shirt. When she drove the defendant to

his mother’s home that morning, he was fully clothed.

¶ 14   Defense counsel began to ask A.P. about whether she was concerned that her daughter

would tell her father that A.P. and her four-year old daughter had woken up in bed with a strange

man. The State objected, as this topic had been the subject of a motion in limine to bar evidence

of A.P.’s child custody proceedings. Defense counsel was ultimately permitted to ask the question.

A.P. answered that she herself had told her daughter’s father the night she spoke with the police.

Defense was not permitted to inquire further about that.




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¶ 15   A.P. was confronted by inconsistent statements she had made in filing a petition for a no-

contact order against the defendant. She admitted that, although she’d said in the petition that the

defendant walked her home about midnight, she had no idea if or when he had done that. She also

admitted that, contrary to her statements in the petition, she did not tell the defendant that she had

no romantic interest in him.

¶ 16   The State called witnesses who testified about collecting and testing the DNA, and finding

DNA consistent with the defendant’s DNA on A.P.’s underwear. The State then rested its case.

¶ 17   Before beginning its case, the defense renewed its motion to admit evidence of the second

DNA, and moved for the limited admission (following an in camera inspection) of certain files

from an earlier DCFS investigation. It also moved for a directed verdict. The trial court denied

all of the motions.

¶ 18   Outside the presence of the jury, the parties discussed with the court the possibility of

calling A.V., A.P.’s younger daughter who had been four years old at the time, as a witness. A.V.,

who was eight by the time of trial, had stated that she did not remember anything about the evening.

The defense then sought to admit part of A.V.’s videotaped statement made shortly after the

incident, in which A.V. stated that A.P. went to bed wearing only a towel, to impeach A.P.’s

testimony that she was wearing pajamas when she went to bed. The State objected, arguing that

if that testimony came in then other relevant testimony should also come in. Both parties

recognized that portions of the statement were inadmissible. The parties ultimately stipulated that

A.V. had been four years old, she had made a statement at the Child Advocacy Center, and part of

that statement would be played for the jury. Defense counsel identified the portion of the video

from 25:48 to 26:18 as the relevant portion. That portion was played to the jury and was admitted

into evidence. In it, A.V. told the interviewer that A.P. was naked when she got out of the shower


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and that she was “sort of” naked in the bed as she “had a towel on.” The portion admitted into

evidence did not include A.V.’s statement that A.P. “didn’t put her jammies on” when she got into

bed.

¶ 19   The defense then called to the stand Newcomer, whose cookout A.P. attended. She

testified that A.P. arrived before 7 or 8 p.m. with a bottle of Fireball. Newcomer observed A.P.

drinking heavily and smoking marijuana. Shortly after the incident, she described A.P. to police

as “pretty well intoxicated” that evening. However, closer to trial, she stated that A.P. was

coherent, walking and talking normally, throughout the evening. She saw A.P. talking and

laughing with the defendant. She also saw A.P. leave the party several times’ and at least once,

the defendant was with her. However, the defendant came back alone soon afterwards. She did

not recall the last time she saw A.P. that night. She was intoxicated that night and it affected her

memory.

¶ 20   Newcomer went to A.P.’s house to check on her more than once. The first time she went,

A.P.’s older daughter A.Z. told her that A.P. was in the shower. A.Z. told her that A.P. had

vomited. Newcomer recalled that the defendant was at Newcomer’s house at that point. The

second time, she saw A.P. in the kitchen. At the end of the night, she, Galante, and the defendant

were the only people left at her house. Galante was asleep and the defendant sat at the counter

while she cleaned up the kitchen. After she finished cleaning, she went to A.P.’s house again and

saw A.P. and the defendant in bed sleeping together. She turned on the light, but they did not react

or wake. When she spoke with the police, she described them as “passed out.”

¶ 21   Newcomer testified that between 7 and 9 p.m. the defendant came into her house wearing

only a towel because his clothes had gotten wet, and she loaned him boxer shorts to wear. He put

his clothes back on at some point. Newcomer admitted that she did not tell the police this; the first


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2022 IL App (2d) 200784-U


time she told anyone was when she spoke with the defense attorneys. That was also the first time

she told anyone about A.P. smoking marijuana. Before that she was worried about getting A.P. in

trouble.

¶ 22   The defendant then testified.      He stated that his friend Galante had driven him to

Newcomer’s house because he did not have a license. They began drinking, and he had about

three drinks before dinner. A.P. arrived within one or two hours of when he arrived. At some

point, she was handing out shots of Fireball. The defendant found A.P. easy to talk to and mostly

talked to her and Galante during the party.

¶ 23   A.P. invited him to go with her to her home to check on her daughters. The defendant went

with her and waited outside. Not long after, they walked back to the party and A.P. asked the

defendant for his number. They hung out together for the rest of the night. The defendant never

saw A.P. behaving incoherently, struggling to walk, vomiting, or slurring her speech. A.P. left a

couple more times to check on her daughters. Once, one of her daughters came over to the party

and asked her to come home. Another time, A.P. was gone for a while, but she was in the same

clothes when she returned and did not seem to have showered.

¶ 24   Later, A.P. invited him back to her apartment, saying that it was all right for him to stay at

her place and that she could give him a ride home in the morning. At her home, the lights were

off and the children were asleep, the younger one in A.P.’s bed and the older one in her own room.

The defendant testified that A.P. then insisted that they go into the bathroom and, once there, took

his pants off and performed oral sex on him. They then removed the rest of their clothing and had

sex in the shower, during which he ejaculated into her vagina. He did not ask or tell her to undress,

kiss, or have sex, she just did so. His clothes got soaked during the sex because the shower curtain




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was open and water hit the clothes on the floor. The defendant then walked back to Newcomer’s

house in a towel, where Newcomer gave him boxers and pajama pants.

¶ 25     A.P. had asked him to wait 10 or 15 minutes to put her kids back to bed before he returned,

so he waited at Newcomer’s, talking to her as she cleaned up. He then gathered his things and

walked back to A.P.’s house. A.P. was coming from the kitchen, still wearing her towel. She did

not ask him to leave. He and A.P. went to sleep in her bed. They did not have sex again because

A.P. told him she was afraid her children would walk in on them. A.P. told him that she had to

work early the next morning, and he said he needed to catch an early train to Chicago.

¶ 26     The next morning, he woke up alone in A.P.’s bed. He was sure they did not have sex in

A.P.’s bed. A.P. was rushing to get ready but did not seem upset. She could not find her phone at

her house, so they drove to Newcomer’s house to look for it. A.P. then drove him to his mother’s

house.

¶ 27     On cross-examination, the defendant testified that A.P. did not tell him in words that she

wanted to have sex, but she pulled him into the bathroom and kissing him, which indicated that

she wanted to have sex. They had not discussed having sex before then. Asked if he had discussed

birth control with her, the defendant asked, “Why would I do that?”

¶ 28     Although A.P. had been drinking, she was not intoxicated to the point that she was falling

over herself, crawling on the ground, or in need of someone to carry her home. He did not see her

vomit and never heard from anyone that she had vomited. In the morning, he got his clothes from

the bathroom floor; they had dried enough for him to put them back on for the short drive to his

mother’s house. Anticipating the State’s rebuttal evidence, he denied that he ever came to A.P.’s

house to look for an envelope or paperwork, or helped A.P. into the shower when she was

vomiting.


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¶ 29   The State began its rebuttal by putting the defendant’s four prior criminal convictions into

evidence: two 2014 burglary convictions, a 2017 aggravated battery conviction, and a 2018

conviction of criminal damage to government-supported property.        It then called A.P.’s older

daughter, A.Z., to the stand. A.Z. identified the defendant as the man she had seen in her home in

August 2015.

¶ 30   A.Z. testified that on the night of the party she went to get her mother from Newcomer’s

house and brought her mother home to bed. She then saw her mother get out of bed and throw up

in the hallway and the bathroom. The defendant was in the doorway, having come over to check

on A.P. The defendant helped her bring A.P. to the bathroom so she could finish vomiting, and

then he left. After that, Newcomer and Galante came and briefly helped her mother while she was

vomiting. A.Z. helped her mother take off her clothes to shower and then went to play video

games. When A.P. was finished showering, A.Z. brought her pajamas and A.P. got dressed. A.P.

got back into bed but did not stay there; she got up and went into the kitchen. She later went back

to bed. A.Z. saw her mother, wearing pajamas, get into bed with A.V., who had fallen asleep in

her mother’s bed.

¶ 31   A.Z. saw the defendant again. He came back to A.P.’s house because he had forgotten his

drink and an envelope. He waited at the door while A.Z. got them and gave them to him, and then

left. A.Z. played video games for another 20 minutes or so and then went to bed in her room,

across the hall from her mother’s bedroom. She had no idea what her mother did after that. The

next time she saw the defendant was the next morning, in her living room. He came out of her

mother’s bedroom wearing pajama pants. That morning, she told her mother that she had vomited

the night before.




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¶ 32   At trial, A.Z. testified that, after the defendant left the first time and before he came back

for the drink and envelope, she saw him leave the bathroom in wet clothes. Cross-examination

established (1) that A.Z. first had this memory, which she had never told anyone before, after her

mother read her a statement shortly before trial, and (2) that although A.Z. had assumed it was an

earlier statement of her own that her mother read, in fact it was the statement of her little sister,

A.V. Nevertheless, A.Z. asserted that hearing the report about wet clothing had reminded her that

she herself had seen the defendant leaving the bathroom in wet clothes. She also testified that she

heard her mother say “get out!” to the defendant in the bathroom.

¶ 33   At the jury instruction conference, defense counsel asked that Illinois Pattern Jury

Instruction, Criminal, No. 11.63 (4th ed. 2000) (“IPI Criminal 4th”) be given: “It is a defense to

the charge of sexual assault that [A.P.] consented.” Defense counsel also asked that IPI Criminal

4th No. 11.63A, which defines “consent,” be given: “The word ‘consent’ means a freely given

agreement to the act of sexual penetration in question. Lack of physical or verbal resistance or

submission by the victim resulting from the use of force or threat of force by the defendant shall

not constitute consent.” The State tendered the same definition of consent but modified it to

include only the first sentence. The defense agreed with the shorter version and withdrew its own

version.

¶ 34   The elements instruction for count 3 required the jury to find two propositions: that the

defendant committed an act of sexual penetration of A.P., and that the defendant knew that A.P.

was unable to give knowing consent to the act. Defense counsel objected to this instruction,

preferring a disjunctive instruction. The trial court gave the instruction over objection.

¶ 35   A few minutes before 7 p.m., after closing arguments and instructions, the jury retired to

deliberate. While deliberating, the jury sent out several notes. The first asked for clarification of


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what “that the defendant knew that A.P. was unable to understand the nature of the act” meant.

Over objection by the defense, the trial court responded that the jury had “been given the law

applicable to the case.” At 9:21 p.m., the jury sent out another note, asking for a transcript of

A.P.’s testimony relating to her level of intoxication. The court responded that a transcript would

not be available until late the next morning, to which the jury replied that they would not need the

transcript.

¶ 36    At 11:05 p.m., the jury sent out a note saying that they were deadlocked and no one was

willing to change their position. The note also gave a breakdown of the current votes, which

included three for guilty, eight for not guilty, and one “no verdict” on each count. The trial court

read the note about deadlock to counsel. The court also told them the jury had listed the current

votes, but did not tell counsel what those votes were. The court and counsel then conferred on the

best response:

                 “THE COURT: So do you want me to bring them out and give them the instruction

        that your verdict must be unanimous, you should continue to deliberate, or are you asking

        for a Prim [instruction] at this time?

                 MR. WEIS [ASSISTANT STATE’S ATTORNEY]: Judge, I don’t think with a

        four-day and four hours of deliberation that Prim is anywhere close to that at this point.

                 THE COURT: Right. It’s not very long.

                 MR. WEIS: Obviously with the time of day, I guess is the bigger issue, it’s a little

        after 11:00 in the evening.

                 MR. MOTTA [DEFENSE ATTORNEY]: It’s a very long day.

                 MR. WEIS: I probably would want to, one, either have the court just make the

        decision or request if they want to come back tomorrow because it’s 11:00. At some point--


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               THE COURT: I totally get that. So would you suggest that I write your verdict

       must be unanimous. You should continue to deliberate further in an effort to reach a verdict

       based upon the evidence and testimony presented during the trial. Would you like to

       continue to deliberate tonight or return tomorrow morning?

               MR. WEIS: I’m fine with that, judge. Like I said, with the hour I start getting a

       little worried too.

               THE COURT: Right. It’s late.

               MR. MOTTA: You see what the numbers are so, I mean, I’m not asking what they

       are. I think they need to sleep. It’s been a 12-hour day.

               THE COURT: Well, I think we need to ask them what they want to do * * * because

       I think if you tell them that, go home, just go home and come back tomorrow, that may

       make people much angrier than giving them the choice do they want to continue to

       deliberate tonight.

               MR. MOTTA: Defer to you.

               THE COURT: Okay. So this is the answer:

       Your verdicts must be· unanimous. You should continue to deliberate further in an effort

       to reach a verdict based upon the evidence and testimony presented during the trial. Do

       you want to continue tonight or come back tomorrow? Please advise.”

The trial court sent back a response with that language. The jury replied with a note saying that

they would come back tomorrow. They wanted to see the transcripts of the testimony by A.P. and

Thiltgen (the emergency room nurse), along with the nurse’s report, because they were “hung up

on the level of” A.P.’s intoxication.




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¶ 37   The jury returned to the courthouse and its deliberations about 9 a.m. the next day. Soon

afterwards, they sent out a note asking about the transcripts, to which the court responded that the

testimony was being transcribed but it might take several hours to complete. The court asked that

the jurors continue to deliberate in the meantime.

¶ 38   The jury then asked to see the exhibits. The State did not think that any of its exhibits (such

as the rape kit and clothing) should go back to the jury room. The defense asked to send in a

recording of the excerpt of A.V.’s statement that had been played for the jury. At that point,

defense counsel discovered that the excerpt began at 25:48 and ended at 26:18, not 27:18 as she

had wanted, and thus did not include A.V.’s statement that her mother “didn’t put on jammies”

when she got into bed. The court reporter confirmed that the attorney had specified that the excerpt

should end at 26:18, and the trial court listened to the entire portion that defense had wanted played

and made a factual finding that the extra minute had not been played to the jury earlier. Hence,

the extra minute was not in evidence.

¶ 39   Defense counsel asked that the trial court reopen the proofs so that the extra minute could

be admitted. The State objected, arguing that reopening proofs when the jury had already begun

to deliberate was improper. The trial court denied the request. It responded to the jurors’ note

asking for exhibits by sending in the DNA experts’ resumes and a tape recorder with a recording

of the admitted portion of A.V.’s statement, and saying, “Exhibits 3 and 4 are available. The

scientific exhibits do not come back. Exhibit 4A [the recording] is in the recorder.”

¶ 40   A little after noon, the jury asked for the “original statements” of A.P., A.Z., A.V., and


-
Newcomer. The parties and the court discussed whether this meant transcripts of testimony or

out-of-court statements (to the police, for example) that had not been admitted into evidence. The

court ultimately responded that the jury already had all the exhibits that were available. The jury


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then asked about the status of the transcripts, and the trial court responded that the transcripts

would be provided as soon as they were ready. The transcripts eventually were completed and

were given to the jury.

¶ 41   At some point in the afternoon, the jury returned its verdict. It acquitted the defendant of

count 4, the “unable to understand the nature of the act” charge, but convicted him of count 3,

which charged him with sexually penetrating A.P. while knowing that she was unable to

knowingly consent to that penetration. The jury was polled and each juror affirmed his or her

verdict. The jury was then dismissed.

¶ 42   The defendant filed a post-trial motion, arguing among other things 1 that the verified

statement of one of the jurors raised a question of improper influence from the jurors’ independent

observations, and that there was “newly discovered evidence” of phone calls made from the

defendant’s phone to A.P.’s phone that “contradicted” A.P.’s testimony in an unexplained way.

The trial court denied the motion. This appeal followed.

¶ 43                                      II. ANALYSIS




       1
           The post-trial motion also alleged prosecutorial error: that through body language and

gestures, the prosecutor improperly “directed” the State’s rebuttal witness, A.Z., in her in-court

identification of the defendant. An evidentiary hearing on this allegation was held before a

different judge, who found that no error was proved. At the defendant’s request, the trial judge

also reviewed that finding and considered whether to review the video from the courtroom security

cameras. The trial judge found no error and denied the request to view the security footage. While

noting these events in his brief, on appeal the defendant raises no argument regarding these rulings.


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¶ 44       On appeal, the defendant argues that (1) the State did not prove him guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt; (2) the trial court erred in giving jury instructions stating that consent was a

defense and defining consent; (3) the trial court erred in its responses to the jury note regarding

“deadlock”; (4) defense counsel rendered unconstitutionally ineffective assistance in failing to

object to the trial court’s actions with respect to the last two issues, and also in other ways; (5) the

trial court’s evidentiary rulings regarding the other DNA denied him a fair trial; and (6) the trial

court erred in failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the juror’s statement submitted after

trial. 2



           2
               The defendant also initially argued that the trial court erred in refusing to admit records

of an investigation of A.P. by the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) because

the records could show a motive for A.P. to have denied consenting to sex with a stranger. (The

trial court denied the motion after learning that the investigation was not opened until after A.P.

reported the assault, and it was ultimately unfounded.) Because the DCFS records had never been

admitted into evidence and were not part of the record, the State filed a motion to strike, asking us

to strike this argument and also to strike or disregard portions of the defendant’s statement of facts

that it characterized as overly argumentative. The defendant then moved this court to admit the

records and supplement the record on appeal. We denied the defendant’s motion to supplement,

and the defendant thereafter withdrew the argument.

           We took the State’s motion to strike with the case and now deny the motion on the ground

that, as to the DCFS-records argument, it is moot because that argument is not before us now, and,

as to the “argumentative” portions of the statement of facts, we do not find that they run afoul of

the Supreme Court rules.


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¶ 45                              A. Insufficient Evidence of Guilt

¶ 46    The defendant first argues that the State did not prove him guilty beyond a reasonable

doubt, because A.P.’s testimony was improbable, impeached, and contradicted by other evidence.

We find this argument unpersuasive.

                “When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal case,

        our function is not to retry the defendant. [Citation.] Rather, our inquiry is whether, after

        viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of

        fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.

        [Citation.] This means that we must allow all reasonable inferences from the record in

        favor of the prosecution. [Citation.] ‘We will not reverse a conviction unless the evidence

        is so improbable, unsatisfactory, or inconclusive that it creates a reasonable doubt of

        defendant’s guilt.’ ” People v. Lloyd, 2013 IL 113510, ¶ 42 (quoting People v. Collins,

        214 Ill. 2d 206, 217 (2005)).

As we cannot reweigh the evidence, and there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the

jury’s verdict, we will not set that verdict aside.

¶ 47    The defendant attacks A.P.’s credibility by asserting that, although she professed to

remember nothing after taking a shower, getting dressed in sleep clothes, and getting into bed,

witnesses saw her “awake and coherent” after that. This is a misstatement of the record. A.Z.

testified only that her mother got up and walked into different rooms in the house, ineffectually

looking for certain items in the kitchen and elsewhere, not that she was “coherent” or even

particularly “awake.” Newcomer testified that A.P. left the party several times and returned, but

she could not recall what time she last saw A.P., so the jury could reasonably infer that all of those

entrances and exits happened before A.P. went home with her daughter, vomited, and showered.


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And although the defendant testified to an entirely different version of events, the jury was free to

disbelieve him and believe A.P. instead. The weight to be given to the witnesses’ testimony, the

determination of their credibility, and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence are

all matters within the jurisdiction of the trier of fact. People v. Smith, 185 Ill. 2d 532, 542 (1999);

Collins, 106 Ill. 2d at 261-62. Likewise, the resolution of any conflicts or inconsistencies in the

evidence is also within the province of the fact finder. Collins, 106 Ill. 2d at 261-62.

¶ 48   Similarly, the defendant argues that A.P.’s testimony that she vomited in the shower was

not believable because she did not mention doing so in her initial statement to the police and only

recalled it shortly before trial. However, the record shows that A.P. told the police that she vomited

in the bathroom, admitting that she did not remember doing so but knew that she had because she

saw the vomit in the bathroom trashcan. The defendant also asserts that A.P.’s testimony that she

did not recall Newcomer coming to her house that night was contradicted by her statement to

police, in which A.P. purportedly said that Newcomer and Galante helped her to the bathroom

when she began feeling sick. However, the contents of A.P.’s statement to police are unknown,

as that statement was never admitted into evidence and no testimony established its contents, and

thus it did not impeach A.P. We note that Newcomer’s own testimony supported A.P.’s testimony

on this point, as it does not reflect that A.P. ever saw Newcomer on any of her visits.

¶ 49   The defendant also argues that it would be “contrary to common experience” for a person

not to wake up during sex, but the jurors evidently found that that could occur if a person were



¶ 50
                                  -
intoxicated, and there is nothing outlandish about their conclusion.

       Similarly, the defendant argues that A.P.’s report to the police (which she adhered to at

trial) that the defendant entered the shower with his clothes on and told her to suck his dick while

she was showering makes no sense and was not heard by A.Z. We agree that this testimony depicts


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unusual and even illogical behavior by the defendant. However, certain aspects of it, such as the

defendant’s clothes getting wet, were corroborated by other witnesses including Newcomer.

Moreover, the jury could reasonably have found that this memory was evidence of A.P.’s confused

state at the time rather than an intent to lie. As the State argued in closing, if A.P. had decided to

make up a lie about the defendant, it would have made sense for her to adopt a more clear-cut story

of an attack. The jury could reasonably have concluded that this memory did not render the rest of

A.P.’s testimony untrustworthy or unbelievable.

¶ 51   Finally, at trial A.P. admitted that certain statements she made in a verified petition for a

no-contact order were either untrue or she did not know if they were true. A.P. explained that a

court advocate had filled out the form for her and she did not know why the petition contained

those statements. As we have noted, however, credibility determinations are the province of the

jury, and it was fully capable of giving A.P.’s testimony the weight it felt that testimony deserved.

¶ 52   Further, other evidence supported the conclusion that the defendant knew that A.P. was

unable to knowingly consent to sexual penetration. (This was the only real issue at trial, as the

defendant conceded that he sexually penetrated A.P.)          Testimony from multiple witnesses

established that A.P. had had a half dozen drinks during the evening, including a glass of wine,

beer, vodka and orange juice, and several shots, and that the defendant witnessed this. A.P.’s

testimony that the defendant was present when she vomited was supported by A.Z., who testified

that the defendant helped A.P. into the bathroom. Thus, the jury could infer that the defendant

knew that A.P. was intoxicated and sick. Newcomer stated that, when she checked on A.P. for the

last time and found the defendant in bed with her, they were both “passed out” and did not wake

when she turned on the light. Coupled with A.P.’s inability to remember the events of the previous

night when she woke, this was circumstantial evidence that A.P. had been substantially and


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noticeably impaired by her intoxication. Drawing all reasonable inferences from the evidence in

favor of the State, the evidence sufficiently supported the defendant’s conviction.

¶ 53                          B. Jury Instructions Regarding Consent

¶ 54   The defendant next claims that the trial court erred by instructing the jury that consent was

a defense to the charged offenses and defining consent. The defendant concedes that this issue

may fall under the doctrine of invited error, but argues that this should not be dispositive. The

defendant’s argument is unavailing.

¶ 55   The doctrine of invited error or acquiescence is that “a party cannot complain of error

which that party induced the court to make or to which that party consented.” In re Detention of

Swope, 213 Ill. 2d 210, 217 (2004). As our supreme court has explained, “[t]he rationale behind

this well-established rule is that it would be manifestly unfair to allow a party a second trial upon

the basis of error which that party injected into the proceedings.” Id. (citing McMath v. Katholi,

191 Ill. 2d 251, 255 (2000) and People v. Segoviano, 189 Ill. 2d 228, 240-41 (2000)). Importantly,

this type of waiver, which occurs through a defendant’s affirmative act or active agreement, is

different than a forfeiture that occurs when a defendant fails to bring an error to the trial court’s

attention, and is not subject to the plain error doctrine. People v. Bowens, 407 Ill. App. 3d 1094,

1101 (2011) (citing People v. Townsell, 209 Ill. 2d 543, 547-48 (2004)).

¶ 56   Here, the defendant tendered the jury instruction regarding consent being a defense, and

both the defendant and the State tendered versions of the consent definition instruction, with the

defendant then voluntarily withdrawing his own version in favor of the shorter version tendered

by the State. Under these circumstances, the defendant may not argue on appeal that these

instructions should not have been given. The defendant argues that he did object to another

instruction that included a reference to consent—the elements instruction for the charged


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offense—but that is a different instruction, and the record makes it clear that the defense objected

for reasons unrelated to the defendant’s contention that consent was a defense and his definition

of consent. Accordingly, this claim of error cannot be heard on appeal.

¶ 57            C. Trial Court’s Response to the Jury Note Regarding “Deadlock”

¶ 58   The defendant next complains that the trial court’s response to the jury’s 11 p.m. note

saying that it was “deadlocked” was coercive and improper under People v. Prim, 53 Ill. 2d 62

(1972). The defendant has also waived this argument, by acquiescing in the trial court’s response.

“When a defendant acquiesces in the trial court’s answer to a question from the jury, the defendant

cannot later complain that the trial court’s answer was an abuse of discretion.” People v. Averett,

237 Ill. 2d 1, 23-24 (2010). As with the waiver described above, this type of waiver is not subject

to the plain error doctrine. Bowens, 407 Ill. App. 3d at 1101.

¶ 59   Here, when the trial court described how it would answer the jury’s note indicating that it

was deadlocked, defense counsel offered no objection, nor did it suggest an alternative response.

Instead, defense counsel agreed with the prosecutor’s comment that it had been a long day and

suggested that the jury needed to sleep. When the trial court reiterated its proposed response,

defense counsel acquiesced, saying it would defer to the court. Once again, there was no objection

or suggestion of a different response. On this record, we find that defense counsel clearly

acquiesced in the trial court’s response and cannot now challenge that response on appeal. Averett,

237 Ill. 2d at 23-24.

¶ 60                           D. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

¶ 61   Anticipating that we might find the previous two arguments waived under the doctrine of

acquiescence or invited error, the defendant asserts in the alternative that his trial counsel’s

tendering of the jury instructions on consent and failure to object to the trial court’s response to


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the “deadlocked” note, along with various other of counsel’s actions or omissions, constituted

ineffective assistance of counsel. We disagree.

¶ 62   Under the two-prong test developed in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), to

prevail on a claim of constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel, “a defendant must show

that (1) his counsel’s performance was deficient in that it fell below an objective standard of

reasonableness, and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the defendant in that, but for

counsel’s deficient performance, there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding

would have been different.” People v. Houston, 226 Ill. 2d 135, 144 (2007). Regarding the first

prong, there is a strong presumption that counsel’s actions or inactions—such as the decision not

to present certain arguments, or not to call witnesses, including the client herself—constitute sound

trial strategy. People v. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d 312, 341-42 (2007). To prove otherwise, a party must

show that counsel’s decision was so irrational and unreasonable that no reasonably effective

attorney, facing like circumstances, would pursue such a strategy. People v. Jones, 2012 IL App

(2d) 110346, ¶ 82. Because a defendant must satisfy both prongs of the Strickland test, the failure

to establish either is fatal to the claim. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687.

¶ 63   The defendant first contends that his trial counsel’s tendering of a defense-of-consent jury

instruction (which was then given) and assent to the State’s proposed instruction defining consent

amounted to deficient representation that prejudiced him.         We reject this argument, as the

defendant cannot show either deficient performance or prejudice.

¶ 64   “The purpose of jury instructions is to provide the jury with the correct legal principles

applicable to the evidence, so that the jury may reach a correct conclusion according to the law

and the evidence.” People v. Bannister, 232 Ill. 2d 52, 81 (2008). The correctness of jury

instructions “depends not on whether defense counsel can imagine a problematic meaning, but


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whether ordinary persons acting as jurors would fail to understand them.” Id. The operative

standard in assessing possible prejudice from jury instructions is whether, taken as a whole, they

clearly and correctly stated the law applicable to the case under the facts adduced at trial. See id.

at 86. A defendant is entitled to have the jury instructed on his theory of the case if there is even

slight evidence supporting it. People v. Washington, 2012 IL 110283, ¶ 43.

¶ 65   The defendant correctly observes that the committee comments to the defense-of-consent

instruction state that it should be given only when the use or threat of force is alleged. See IPI

Criminal 4th No. 11.63, Committee Notes; see also 720 ILCS 5/11-1.70(a) (West 2014). Here, of

course, no use of force was alleged, and the focus was on whether the defendant knew that A.P.

was unable to knowingly consent to the sexual penetration. Thus, giving the defense-of-consent

instruction was not supported by the IPI, and the State had grounds to object (which it did not do).

Nevertheless, in considering whether tendering the instruction was deficient performance by the

defense attorney, we note that there was some strategic basis for tendering the instruction, as it

reflected the defendant’s theory of the case under which he and A.P. had consensual sex. And

although the focus of the defense-of-consent instruction was on the complainant’s actions rather

than on the defendant’s knowledge, the instruction was not inconsistent with the offense charged:

if the jury found that A.P. did indeed voluntarily consent to sex with the defendant, they would be

free to conclude that the defendant had no reason to know that she did not consent. Similarly, as

to the definition instruction, the definition of consent was plainly relevant to the jury’s

deliberations. Thus, counsel’s tendering and acquiescing in these instructions did not amount to

deficient performance. Washington, 2012 IL 110283, ¶ 43. Further, when read together with the

elements instruction, the jury instructions clearly and correctly stated the law applicable to the

case. Bannister, 232 Ill. 2d at 86. Accordingly, the defendant cannot establish prejudice either.


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¶ 66   The defendant next argues that his counsel’s failure to object to the trial court’s response

to the jury note about “deadlock” constituted ineffective assistance. He argues that the trial court’s

response was reversible error because it improperly coerced the jury into reaching a verdict, and

therefore his counsel should have objected.

¶ 67   When a jury reports that it is deadlocked, a trial court may, in its discretion, give a Prim

instruction. Such an instruction should inform the jury that (1) the verdict must be unanimous, (2)

the jury has a duty to continue to deliberate, (3) jurors must impartially consider the evidence, and

(4) jurors should not hesitate to reexamine their views or change their opinions but should not do

so simply to return a verdict or conform to the majority opinion. Prim, 53 Ill. 2d at 75-76; People

v. Chapman, 194 Ill. 2d 186, 222 (2000). Whether and when to give the instruction are within the

trial court’s discretion. Chapman, 194 Ill. 2d at 222. Factors for the court to consider include “the

length of time already spent in deliberation and the complexity of the issues before the jury.” Id.

¶ 68   Here, the trial court received a note that the jurors were “deadlocked” after about four hours

of deliberations, following a four-day trial. The court responded, “Your verdicts must be·

unanimous. You should continue to deliberate further in an effort to reach a verdict based upon

the evidence and testimony presented during the trial. Do you want to continue tonight or come

back tomorrow? Please advise.” The jurors, who had previously sent out two notes seeking the

clarification of legal terms and transcripts, decided to return the next day. The following day, they

deliberated for at least another three hours, sending out a variety of other notes indicating that they

were actively considering various aspects of the case, before ultimately returning a verdict. Even

then, their verdict displayed a careful and thoughtful approach, convicting the defendant of only

one count and acquitting him of the other.




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¶ 69    The defendant argues that the instruction was coercive, similar to the instruction given in

People v. Wilcox, 407 Ill. App. 3d 151, 164 (2010), because it did not clearly inform jurors that

they had the option of not returning a verdict. This is a misstatement of the law, however; neither

Wilcox nor Prim require a trial court to explicitly inform a jury that it has the the option of returning

no verdict if they are unable to reach consensus. Rather, a trial court must simply respond in a

way that does not foreclose that option or convey that a jury is required to reach a verdict. The

trial court in Wilcox told the jurors that, when they were sworn in and placed under oath, they

“pledged” to return a verdict, and continued, “Please continue to deliberate and obtain a verdict.”

Id. at 163. This response improperly conveyed to the jurors that they were required by their oath

to reach a verdict and had to continue deliberating until they reached one. Id. at 164-65. Here, by

contrast, the trial court did not suggest that the jurors were required to arrive at a verdict but simply

instructed them to “deliberate further” (a directive that is entirely proper under Prim) “in an effort

to reach a verdict based upon the evidence and testimony presented during the trial” (emphasis

added). That phrasing in itself left open the possibility that such an effort might be unsuccessful.

As such, it was not coercive. And because it was not an improper response, defense counsel did

not render deficient performance by acquiescing in it.

¶ 70    In addition to attacking his counsel’s representation in these two areas, the defendant

asserts that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance in three other ways: by inadvertently

omitting from the record one minute of the recording of A.V.’s statement; by failing to obtain

records of calls from the defendant’s phone on the morning after the party; and by eliciting harmful

evidence about a prior arrest. We address each of these in turn.

¶ 71    In preparing for a portion of A.V.’s recorded statement to be played for the jury during the

trial, defense counsel identified the portion from 25:48 to 26:18 as the relevant portion, and that


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portion was played and admitted into evidence. However, when the jury asked for exhibits to aid

its deliberations, defense counsel asserted that she had intended to identify 27:18, not 26:18, as the

end point of the relevant portion. The portion that was actually played and admitted contained

A.V.’s statements that A.P. was naked when she got out of the shower and that she was “sort of”

naked in the bed as she “had a towel on.” According to the defendant, the inadvertently-omitted

minute contained A.V.’s statement that A.P. “didn’t put her jammies on” when she got into bed. 3

Although the defendant contends that the omitted minute was “an important piece of evidence,” it

was merely cumulative of A.V.’s other statements, which indicated that, contrary to A.P.’s

testimony, A.P. was not wearing clothes when she got into bed. Thus, even if the mistaken

omission of this evidence constituted defective performance by the defendant’s attorney, it did not

prejudice the defendant such that there was a “reasonable probability that the result of the

proceeding would have been different.” Houston, 226 Ill. 2d at 144.

¶ 72    The defendant also criticizes his trial counsel for failing to obtain the records of his cell

phone calls from the morning after the party. After trial, the defendant’s mother did so, and

discovered that they listed three calls from the defendant to A.P.’s phone, at 1:43 a.m., 7:42 a.m.,



        3
            We note that the extra minute of A.V.’s statement is not in the record, and thus there is

no record of what A.V. actually said during this minute. We could find this argument forfeited on

that basis, as it is the responsibility of the appellant to supply a complete record sufficient to permit

review of the issues it wishes to raise on appeal, and any doubts that arise from the incompleteness

of the record must be resolved against the appellant. People v. Carter, 2015 IL 117709, ¶ 19.

However, even if we assume that the defendant is accurately describing the contents of the omitted

portion, we would find that the argument lacks merit.


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and 7:46 a.m. The defendant asserts that these records helped him recall that A.P. had used his

phone to try to locate her phone, and that they would have been helpful to his case because they

would have supported his testimony that A.P. was awake and functioning. He attached the records

to his post-trial motion and argued their relevance, but the trial court ruled that they did not qualify

as “newly discovered” evidence. The defendant now recasts his argument as an ineffective-

assistance claim.

¶ 73   We reject the defendant’s argument on several grounds. First, he has not shown that

competent counsel would have obtained these records. As he concedes, he had forgotten about his

calls to A.P.’s phone, and thus we can infer that he did not tell his counsel about them. Nor would

the allegations against the defendant have suggested that his cell phone records would be relevant

to his defense. Thus, counsel had no reason to believe that the records would be a fruitful avenue

for investigation. Second, his argument that the lack of these records prejudiced him is highly

speculative. As he admits, the records do not show who made the calls from the defendant’s phone

to A.P., nor that she answered any of the calls. Without any further details, the records lacked any

probative value. Accordingly, we find this argument meritless.

¶ 74   The final contention of ineffective assistance concerns the defense counsel’s questioning

of A.P., on cross-examination, about a previous arrest of the defendant.              Contrary to the

defendant’s assertions on appeal, the record shows that defense counsel did not intentionally elicit

this testimony. Rather, in attempting to show that the defendant and A.P. became attracted to each

other and were conversing deeply, sharing intimate information with each other—evidence that

would support the defendant’s later testimony to that effect—defense counsel asked A.P. if she

remembered the defendant sharing details of his life with her. A.P. replied that he told her about

“being charged because he was fighting an officer” and showed her pictures.              Evidently not


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expecting this answer, defense counsel began to question A.P. further about the incident, asking

what the pictures were of and whether the defendant told her that he was arrested. The State

objected and, during the sidebar, the trial court asked defense counsel whether she really wanted

to inquire further into this area. Defense counsel explained that she believed A.P. was confused

and was thinking of someone else at the party, because the defendant had not been arrested for

that, and the defense intended to present proof that someone else had been arrested. When the

cross-examination resumed, defense counsel simply established when the conversation occurred

and then moved on to other events. The defense never called any witnesses to show that A.P. was

mistaken or that someone else at the party was arrested for fighting with police. On rebuttal after

the defendant testified, the State introduced evidence that the defendant had four prior convictions.

None of them was for resisting arrest, although one was for an unspecified aggravated battery.

¶ 75   There is a strong presumption that counsel’s actions or inactions, including the questioning

of witnesses, constitute sound strategy. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d at 341-42. To prove otherwise, a party

must show that counsel’s decision was so irrational and unreasonable that no reasonably effective

attorney, facing like circumstances, would pursue such a strategy. Jones, 2012 IL App (2d)

110346, ¶ 82. That standard was not met here. Defense counsel’s inquiry into the details of A.P.’s

report that the defendant revealed an arrest for fighting with police may have been misguided,

especially in light of counsel’s later failure or inability to present contrary evidence. Nevertheless,

even a competent attorney, surprised by negative testimony, may reasonably determine that the

best hope of negating the testimony lies in impeaching the witness. To do so effectively, the

witness must be questioned at least briefly about the details of the reported event, so that those

details can be disproven. Moreover, although other-crimes evidence ordinarily is considered

prejudicial, in this case the impact of A.P.’s testimony about the defendant’s arrest was blunted by


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the evidence that he had four prior convictions, one of which was for aggravated battery. In light

of this greater evidence of other crimes, which was properly admitted to cast doubt on the

defendant’s credibility, defense counsel’s brief inquiry into A.P.’s report of a conversation with

the defendant about his arrest was not so prejudicial as to create a reasonable probability that

without that inquiry, the jury would have acquitted the defendant. Houston, 226 Ill. 2d at 144.

¶ 76   Finally, the defendant contends that, even if his counsel’s individual deficiencies do not

meet the Strickland standard, cumulatively they amount to reversible error.             As we have

determined that none of the alleged deficiencies constituted ineffective representation or caused

the defendant meaningful prejudice, we reject this contention as well.

¶ 77                      E. Evidentiary Ruling on Other-DNA Evidence

¶ 78   The defendant next argues that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding certain

evidence, and that this error deprived him of a fair trial. Specifically, the defendant challenges the

exclusion of the evidence that, in addition to the defendant’s DNA, DNA from someone other than

the defendant was also found on A.P.’s underwear. 4 The determination of whether evidence is

admissible is within the sound discretion of the trial court, and we will not reverse that

determination unless there has been a clear abuse of its discretion. People v. Montano, 2017 IL

App (2d) 140326, ¶ 74. A trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, or



       4
           As we noted earlier (see note 2, supra), the defendant failed to supplement the record

through an offer of proof with the DCFS records he wished the trial court to admit, and we denied

his motion to supplement the record on appeal with the unadmitted records. He then withdrew his

argument relating to the barring of those records and any testimony based on them. We therefore

do not address that argument or make any ruling with respect to it.


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unreasonable, or no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court, or when its

ruling rests on an error of law. People v. Olsen, 2015 IL App (2d) 140267, ¶ 11.

¶ 79   The trial court excluded the evidence under the rape-shield statute, section 115-7(a) of the

Code (725 ILCS 5/115-7(a) (West 2014)). That law bars, in sexual assault cases such as this one,

the introduction of evidence of the prior sexual activity or reputation of the alleged victim, except

(1) to show that the victim consented to the sexual conduct on which the offense is based, or (2)

“when constitutionally required to be admitted.” Id. A defendant has a constitutional right to

present evidence that is “directly relevant to matters at issue in the case, notwithstanding that it

concern[s] the victim’s prior sexual activity.” (Emphasis in original.) People v. Santos, 211 Ill. 2d

395, 405-06 (2004). But evidence of the alleged victim’s sexual history “is not ‘constitutionally

required to be admitted’ unless it would make a meaningful contribution to the fact-finding

enterprise.” People v. Maxwell, 2011 IL App (4th) 100434, ¶ 76 (quoting 725 ILCS 5/115-7(a)

(West 2010)).

¶ 80   The defendant conceded that he and A.P. had sex, and thus the issue at trial was whether

he knew that A.P. could not knowingly consent to that sex. The other-DNA evidence is not directly

relevant to the defendant’s knowledge about A.P.’s ability to consent: whether she also had sex

with someone else has no bearing on whether she consented to have sex with him or whether he

knew she could not consent. However, he argues that the other-DNA evidence would be relevant

to show that A.P.’s genital soreness could have been caused by someone other than him, and that

the person in the shower with her when she vomited could have been someone else, thereby lending

credence to his assertion that he did not know she was intoxicated enough to be ill and vomiting.

¶ 81   The trial court did not err in barring the defendant from presenting the other-DNA

evidence. As the trial court and the parties discussed during the hearings on the defendant’s


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multiple motions in limine on this subject, the other DNA could have been deposited in A.P.’s

vagina up to 72 hours before it was collected, and so the mere presence of that DNA could not

establish whether A.P. had sex with someone else on the night of the party. The trial court

permitted the defendant to ask A.P. whether she recalled having sex with anyone else that night,

and A.P. said she did not. As the other-DNA evidence was not directly relevant to any issue in the

trial, its admission was not constitutionally required and the trial court did not abuse its discretion

in excluding it. Santos, 211 Ill. 2d at 405-06; Maxwell, 2011 IL App (4th) 100434, ¶ 76.

¶ 82                        F. Evidentiary Hearing on Juror’s Statement

¶ 83   On June 17, 2020, about six months after the trial, juror Robert Schillinger provided a

verified statement saying that, on the evening after the first night of deliberations, he and other

jurors were in the courthouse parking lot when they saw the defendant “peel out” of the parking

lot. The next day, the jurors discussed what they observed, and “several” jurors said they felt

intimidated and threatened by “the encounter.” According to Schillinger, other jurors then

discussed feeling “scared” and “frightened of retaliation,” and “not wanting to run into him [the

defendant] again.” The verified statement did not say that any jurors reported that their feelings

affected their ability to reach fair and impartial verdicts based on the evidence.

¶ 84     On appeal, the defendant complains that the verified statement was evidence of improper

extraneous information (some jurors’ observations of the defendant outside the courtroom) that

may have affected their verdicts, and thus the trial court should have held an “evidentiary hearing”

regarding the verified statement. However, the defendant has waived this argument.

¶ 85   The defendant submitted Schillinger’s statement in connection with his motion for a new

trial. At the hearing on that motion, after the defendant had presented the testimony of a witness

(regarding the phone records), the trial court asked whether he wished to call any other witnesses.


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The defendant asked to submit the verified statement. The trial court then specifically asked

whether the defense wanted to call Schillinger as a witness or simply use the verified statement, to

which the defense replied, “I’m asking to use the affidavit [sic].” As noted earlier, “a party cannot

complain of error which that party induced the court to make or to which that party consented.”

Swope, 213 Ill. 2d at 217. By failing to ask for such a hearing and instead telling the trial court

that he simply wished to place Schillinger’s statement into evidence, the defendant waived his

ability to raise this argument on appeal.

¶ 86   Even if he had not waived it, the argument has no merit. A party challenging a jury verdict

on the basis that jurors were exposed to improper external influences “must establish prejudice by

showing that the information relates directly to something at issue in the case and that it may have

influenced the verdict.” People v. Willmer, 396 Ill. App. 3d 175, 181 (2009). In assessing this

possibility, a court must focus on the nature of the conduct alleged to be an improper external

influence. “[E]vidence relating to the effect of such influences on the mental processes of the

jurors is inadmissible.” People v. Hobby, 182 Ill. 2d 404, 458 (1998). Thus, Schillinger’s

perceptions of the effect of the conduct on the jurors must be set aside.

¶ 87   Here, the defendant has no convincing argument as to how his burst of speed leaving the

courthouse parking lot late at night related to any issue in the case. Further, any assertion of

prejudice must be assessed by asking “whether the conduct at issue involved such a probability of

resulting prejudice that the verdict must be deemed inherently lacking in due process.” Id. Peeling

out of a parking lot, without more, simply does not meet this standard.

¶ 88                                        III. Conclusion

¶ 89   The motion to strike certain portions of the defendant’s opening brief is denied. For the

reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Kendall County is affirmed.


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¶ 90   Affirmed.




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