2023 IL App (2d) 220340-U
No. 2-22-0340
Order filed December 5, 2023
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 ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
OF ILLINOIS, ) of Lake County.
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) No. 21-CF-935
)
GIOVANNI M. SMITH, ) Honorable
) Patricia S. Fix,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
Presiding Justice McLaren and Justice Birkett concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: Defendant’s arguments raising plain-error, evidentiary error, ineffective-assistance
of counsel, and as-applied unconstitutionality of a statute fail. We affirm.
¶2 After a jury trial, defendant, Giovanni M. Smith, was convicted of armed habitual criminal
(720 ILCS 5/24-1.7 (West 2020)) and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon (720 ILCS 5/24-1.1(a)
(West 2020)). Defendant was present for trial but did not appear on the day that the jury returned
the verdicts. He was sentenced in absentia to 21 years’ imprisonment for the armed habitual
criminal conviction. Defendant appeals, challenging: two of the trial court’s evidentiary rulings
and his counsel’s effectiveness regarding those rulings; the court’s decision to refuse a limiting
2023 IL App (2d) 220340-U
instruction; and the constitutionality of the armed habitual criminal statute as applied to him. For
the following reasons, we affirm.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
¶4 A. Pretrial Motions and Rulings
¶5 On July 4, 2021, dispatch informed police officers that a 911 call was received, claiming
that a man in a turquoise shirt possessed a weapon, may have discharged the weapon, and drove
off in a vehicle with two female passengers. The caller also provided a description of the vehicle,
including the license plate number. Officers located the vehicle and arrested defendant, the driver,
who was wearing a turquoise shirt, after a loaded firearm was found under the cupholders in the
center console between the front driver and passenger seats.
¶6 The three-count indictment charged armed habitual criminal and two counts of unlawful
use of a weapon by a felon (one of these counts was later dropped). With respect to armed habitual
criminal, the indictment specified the predicate felonies as: (1) manufacture or delivery of a
controlled substance, a class 1 felony, in case No. 10CF640; and (2) unlawful use of a weapon by
a felon, in case No. 12CF1528. The parties later entered various stipulations, including that
defendant had “two qualifying felony convictions in the State of Illinois that satisfy the element of
prior convictions for the charge of armed habitual criminal.” A similar stipulation was entered
concerning the charge of unlawful use of a weapon by a felon.
¶7 Prior to trial, both the State and defendant filed various motions in limine. Relevant to this
appeal, the State moved to introduce, under the excited-utterance exception to the hearsay rule, the
contents of a 911 telephone call made by Daryl Steele on July 4, 2021. Ill. R. Evid. 803(2) (eff.
Sept. 28, 2018) (allowing admission of a statement relating to “a startling event or condition made
while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event or condition”). The
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State argued that Steele’s call was in response to the startling event of seeing a man jump out of a
car with a gun and chase another person, then return to the car and drive off. The State noted that
Steele lacked time to fabricate the statements and would be subpoenaed for trial. Defendant
objected that the caller was calm and the report was unreliable, as the caller reported hearing
gunshots, but there was no evidence (no casings found, no gunshot residue found on defendant’s
hands, and his fingerprints were not found on the gun) to corroborate that statement. After a
hearing, the court granted the State’s motion. It reduced the length of the call, however, finding it
admissible substantively as an excited utterance from the start of the call to the 2-minute, 24-
second mark.
¶8 Defendant moved in limine to prohibit the State from eliciting testimony from police
officers about the information they received from dispatch. Defendant argued that the evidence
was inadmissible hearsay because it tended to prove that defendant was the individual who
possessed the gun, which was sole issue in controversy for the jury to decide. Further, defendant
argued, the evidence should not be admitted for purposes of explaining the investigative steps the
officers took leading to defendant’s arrest because defendant would not be challenging the legality
of the traffic stop. As such, defendant argued, the State needed to demonstrate only that the officers
were on duty, received a radio call, and, as a result of the call, conducted the traffic stop.
¶9 The court, noting that it had granted the State’s motion to admit the 911 call substantively,
denied defendant’s motion. In announcing its decision, the court found that the information was
admissible not for the truth of the matter asserted, but to explain the officers’ course of conduct
for stopping that particular vehicle. The court explained that, if the testimony at trial was different
or other circumstances changed, defendant could again object and, further, that there would be
“curative instructions given to the jury that this is not for the truth of the matter asserted. I would
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do a limiting instruction prior to his testimony if that’s what the defense was asking for, which you
can do as well.” The court’s April 12, 2022, order provided, “subject to further objections at trial,
and depending on trial testimony, the responding officers shall be permitted to testify to their
course of conduct to explain to the jury why they effectuated the traffic stop at issue, to include
that they received a call from dispatch for a man with a gun, that identifiers were provided, and
the car description and license plate provided.”
¶ 10 B. Trial
¶ 11 At trial, Steele testified that, on July 4, 2021, he was at a barbeque in North Chicago with
family, including children. The party started early that day, and he drank alcohol and smoked
marijuana there. In the afternoon, Steele saw a man with a gun exit a burgundy Chevy Tahoe sport
utility vehicle (SUV) and run off across the street. Steele “panicked” and called 911 to report what
he saw, and he described the SUV, the license plate, and the individual’s clothing.
¶ 12 A portion of the 911 call was played for the jury. In it, Steele reported seeing a man chase
someone with a gun, he described the vehicle and license plate number, he explained that the man
was wearing a turquoise shirt and, at one point, he stated that he “just heard a gunshot.”
¶ 13 Three North Chicago police officers who responded to the dispatch call testified. Officer
Matthew Decowski testified, in part,
“STATE: At some point were you contacted by dispatch with regard to a shots fired
call?
DECOWSKI: Yes.
STATE: And what information without getting into what was said, what
information did you have as far as a possible incident that occurred?
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DECOWSKI: Initially dispatch provided us with information of a subject with a
gun in the area of 24th Street and Sherman Avenue, and that subject had chased another
subject and then fled in a vehicle.
STATE: Did dispatch provide you with the clothing that the suspect was wearing?
DECOWSKI: Yes.
STATE: Did dispatch provide you with the car type that the suspect was driving?
DECOWSKI: Yes.
STATE: Did dispatch provide you with a license plate?
DECOWSKI: Yes.
STATE: At some point did you locate that vehicle?
DECOWSKI: I did.
STATE: What did you do when you located that vehicle?
STATE: When I located the vehicle, I pulled behind it and conducted a high-risk
or a felony traffic stop.
STATE: Explain why you conducted a high-risk or felony traffic stop?
DECOWSKI: We conducted a high-risk felony stop due to the fact of the possibility
of a firearm being inside the vehicle. It’s a safer position for officers and the suspect
vehicle to be in.” (Emphasis added.)
¶ 14 According to Decowski, when he pulled over the SUV, defendant was driving, although
he was not the vehicle’s owner, and two female passengers were in the car. Defendant was wearing
a teal shirt and black pants. Decowksi was wearing a body camera, and a portion of that video
was played for the jury wherein he asked defendant where he got the gun. Defendant said it was
not his, and Decowski stated that guns do not just appear in cupholders. Defendant then answered
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that “it ain’t my pipe.” Decowksi testified that, in his experience and training, common terms or
lingo for guns include the word “pipe.”
¶ 15 Next, Officer James Ramirez testified, in part,
“STATE: At approximately 7:39 p.m., did you receive a call that you responded
to?
RAMIRIEZ: There was a call put on the radio of shots fired, but I was responding
as cover.
***
STATE: And based on the information that you received from that call, what did
you do?
RAMIREZ: So I responded—relocated from I don’t recall where I was at in the city
at the moment. I just started relocating to the call’s direction where the shots fired occurred.
STATE: Okay. So based on the information that you had, there had been a 9-1-1
call about—was there—did you have information that there was a person with a gun?
RAMIREZ: It was a call of shots fired and a subject fleeing in a red SUV vehicle.”
¶ 16 According to Ramirez, defendant provided permission to search the vehicle. In doing so,
Ramirez found a firearm underneath the cup holders in the center console. Ramirez also found a
vape pen and an object for grinding marijuana.
¶ 17 Finally, Officer Timothy Zamora testified that “[t]he call was for a man with a gun, possible
shots fired.” After the gun was found, Zamora secured it and placed it into evidence. The weapon
had one bullet in the chamber and six bullets in the magazine. Ultimately, no fingerprints or DNA
were found on the weapon.
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¶ 18 In a phone call from jail, also admitted at trial, defendant called someone who then asked
defendant what had happened. He responded, ultimately, that “they” had “bumped me off my
pipe.”
¶ 19 During the jury instruction conference, defendant offered an instruction not found in the
Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions (IPI). Specifically, he offered a non-IPI instruction, requesting
that, because the court had ruled that certain testimony from the officers could be introduced only
for course-of-conduct purposes, the court instruct the jury,
“Evidence by way of police officer testimony of what they were told by dispatch
and other officers has been received for a limited purpose, and should not be considered
for any other purpose than to explain why the vehicle operated by the Defendant was
stopped.”
¶ 20 The State objected that the instruction, in part because,
“The police officers’ testimony is largely based on substantive evidence, evidence
of what they observed, what they did, and it’s based on the 911 call which is in evidence
as substantive evidence per a prior ruling. It was also authenticated by Daryl Steele. So at
this point after the evidence has closed it is impossible to parse out and separate what
should be considered by the jury to be limited or not. This objection and request should
have been made at the time the evidence was entered into evidence.”
The trial court expressed that it was concerned that the non-IPI instruction highlighted “one
particular piece of evidence over other pieces of evidence, even over other testimonial pieces of
evidence, and I have a concern about that type of an instruction.” Ultimately, the court refused the
instruction.
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¶ 21 In closing argument, the State referenced that defendant chased someone with a gun.
Further, it played the 911 call in opening and rebuttal arguments. Finally, the assistant State’s
Attorney commented, “Now, you heard in the 911 call some indication that—some suggestion that
Daryl Steele may have heard a shot. It was the Fourth of July. Maybe that was a firework. There’s
not any evidence and there doesn’t need to be any evidence to find the defendant guilty of these
two crimes that there was a shot actually fired. But it’s clear that the defendant was prepared to
fire this gun.”
¶ 22 On August 4, 2022, the jury found defendant guilty of the charges.
¶ 23 C. Posttrial Motion and Sentencing
¶ 24 Defendant moved for a new trial on multiple grounds, including the court’s denial of his
proposed non-IPI jury instruction. The motion was denied. On September 7, 2022, the court
sentenced defendant in absentia to 21 years’ imprisonment for armed habitual criminal (the
unlawful-use-of-a-weapon conviction merged into that count). The court denied a motion to
reconsider sentence filed on defendant’s behalf. Defendant appeals. 1
¶ 25 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 26 On appeal, defendant challenges: two of the trial court’s evidentiary rulings, as well as the
effectiveness of his trial counsel with respect to those rulings; the court’s decision to refuse his
proffered limiting instruction; and the constitutionality of the armed habitual criminal statute, as
applied to him.
1
On January 9, 2023, we granted defense counsel’s motion to dismiss this appeal without
prejudice until defendant returned to the jurisdiction. On April 6, 2023, upon defendant’s return
to custody, we granted counsel’s motion to reinstate the appeal.
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2023 IL App (2d) 220340-U
¶ 27 The first three issues are related. Namely, defendant notes that the charges did not involve
endangerment or discharging a weapon. However, the 911 call referred to shots fired and
defendant chasing someone, three police officers testified that dispatch referred to shots fired, and,
in closing argument, the State referred to shots fired and played the 911 call two more times. In
addition, the court refused defendant’s proposed limiting instruction. Accordingly, he argues that,
where the jury heard and was allowed to substantively consider repeated evidence suggesting other
serious uncharged acts, including firing the gun, his due process right to a fair trial was violated.
For the following reasons, we disagree.
¶ 28 A. Admissibility of the 911 Call
¶ 29 Defendant argues first that the court erred in its manner of admitting the 911 call. He
contends the court should have redacted the call to remove any reference to chasing someone with
a gun and shots fired, because there were no charges that shots were fired, no evidence suggesting
that shots were fired, the statements were highly prejudicial, and they held no probative value to
the State’s case. If the call could not have been redacted to remove the other-crimes references,
defendant asserts, it should have been excluded. Defendant acknowledges that, according to
Illinois Rule of Evidence 803(2) (eff. Sept. 28, 2018), an excited utterance is not excluded by the
hearsay rule, even when, as here, the declarant is available as a witness. Yet, defendant argues
that all the State needed in this case was to connect defendant with a gun, so Steele’s statements
in the 911 call that he heard a gunshot and saw the alleged perpetrator chasing someone with a gun
were irrelevant, held no probative value, and were highly prejudicial, particularly where the State
placed undue emphasis on the evidence in closing argument. Defendant contends that, given
Steele’s testimony at trial, the 911 call was superfluous and served no purpose other than to
unnecessarily bring into evidence prejudicial other-crimes statements. We disagree.
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¶ 30 Preliminarily, defendant concedes that, although he objected to the State’s motion to admit
the 911 call as an excited utterance, he did not request that the court redact the call to remove
references to chasing someone down the street and to shots being fired. Further, he also did not
seek to exclude the 911 call if those redactions were impossible, nor did counsel include this issue
in the motion for a new trial. Thus, defendant requests that we consider this issue for first-prong
plain error and ineffective assistance of counsel.
¶ 31 Generally, a defendant must object at trial and raise an alleged error in a posttrial motion
to preserve the issue for appeal and avoid forfeiture. People v. Belknap, 2014 IL 117094, ¶ 66.
However, we may excuse a defendant’s procedural default if there exists plain error affecting
substantial rights. Ill. S. Ct. R. 615(a) (eff. Jan. 1, 1967); see also People v. Clark, 2016 IL 118845,
¶ 42. Specifically, we may address an unpreserved issue where a clear or obvious error occurred
and either: (1) the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone threatened to tip the scales
of justice against the defendant, regardless of the seriousness of the error (prong one), or (2) the
error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial and challenged the integrity
of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence (prong two). People v.
Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d 551, 565 (citing People v. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d 167, 186-87 (2005)). Under
either prong, the burden of persuasion remains with the defendant. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d at 187.
¶ 32 Again, defendant argues that the error raised here should be reviewed under prong one.
Although the initial step of the plain-error analysis ordinarily involves determining whether there
was, in fact, a clear or obvious error (Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at 565), we need not resolve whether
there was an error under prong one if the evidence was not closely balanced. People v. White,
2011 IL 109689, ¶ 148. Indeed, “[w]here the only basis proffered for plain-error review is a claim
that the evidence is closely balanced, an assessment of the impact of an alleged evidentiary error
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is readily made after reading the record. When it is clear that the alleged error would not have
affected the outcome of the case, a court of review need not engage in the meaningless endeavor
of determining whether error occurred.” Id.
¶ 33 Here, we disagree that the evidence was closely balanced. Defendant points out that the
State’s case was purely circumstantial, as Steele did not identify defendant as the person he saw
with the gun, no fingerprints or DNA were found on the gun, and the gun was hidden in a car that
defendant did not own. However, to assess whether evidence is closely balanced, we conduct a
“qualitative, commonsense assessment” of it within the context of the case and while considering
the substantive elements of the charged offense. People v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 53. As
defendant was charged with armed habitual criminal, the State needed to establish only that
defendant (1) possessed a firearm, and (2) was previously convicted of two prior qualifying
offenses. 720 ILCS 5/24-1.7(a) (West 2020) (“A person commits the offense of being an armed
habitual criminal if he *** possesses *** any firearm after having been convicted a total of 2 or
more times of any combination of the following offenses”). 2 Defendant stipulated to the second
element, i.e., that he was previously convicted of two prior qualifying offenses. As to the first
2
Although not phrased as such in the statute, the jury here was instructed that, for armed
habitual criminal, the State had to demonstrate that defendant “knowingly or intentionally
possessed a firearm.” For unlawful use of a weapon by a felon, the jury was instructed, per the
statute, that the State needed to establish “knowing” possession of a firearm and a previous felony
conviction. 720 ILCS 5/24-1.1(a) (West 2020) (“It is unlawful for a person to knowingly possess
on or about his person *** any firearm or any firearm ammunition if the person has been convicted
of a felony under the laws of this State or any other jurisdiction.”).
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element, i.e., possession, the evidence was not closely balanced. True, Steele did not identify
defendant as the person he saw with the weapon, defendant’s fingerprints and DNA were not found
on the weapon, and he was not the registered owner of the vehicle. However, Steele testified that,
on July 4, 2021, he saw a man with a weapon. Further, he described the vehicle the man was
driving as a burgundy SUV and provided the vehicle’s license plate number. In the 911 call, Steele
described the man as wearing a turquoise shirt. When, shortly thereafter, police pulled over the
described vehicle, defendant was driving, wearing a turquoise shirt, and he was the only man in
the vehicle. A loaded firearm was found hidden under the cupholders in the driver’s seat console
where he had been sitting. Further, after police found the weapon and Decowski asked him where
he got the gun, defendant stated that it was not his “pipe,” which Decowski explained is a common
term meaning “gun.” Defendant’s jail phone call was also played, wherein he explained to a
listener that “they” had “bumped” him off his “pipe.” Although defendant points out that a vaping
pen was also found in the vehicle, a commonsense assessment of the context of his statements does
not render closely balanced the question whether he was referring to the vaping pen, as opposed
to the gun, when he mentioned the “pipe.” Collectively, the evidence of defendant’s possession
of a firearm and two qualifying convictions was not closely balanced. Accordingly, the court’s
admission of a non-redacted portion of the 911 call, even if error, did not threaten to tip the scales
of justice against defendant. As there is no prong-one plain error, we honor the forfeiture.
¶ 34 We note that defendant also raises an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, arguing that
counsel was ineffective for failing to argue that the 911 call should have been excluded or redacted
due to the prejudicial reference to other crimes. Defendant contends that counsel’s unreasonable
performance prejudiced him, because the jury should not have been allowed to hear allegations
that he may have chased someone or fired the gun, and the prejudice was compounded by the
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repetition of those allegations at trial by the police officers, replaying the 911 call during closing
and rebuttal arguments, and the State’s reference to shots fired during the closing argument.
Defendant argues that counsel’s errors allowed the jury to potentially convict him based on
prejudicial, uncharged other acts.
¶ 35 We reject this claim, however, because, to succeed, an ineffective-assistance claim must
establish not only deficient performance, but prejudice. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
687 (1984); see also People v. Brown, 2023 IL 126852, ¶ 11 (“[t]o prevail on an ineffective-
assistance claim, a criminal defendant must show both that (1) counsel’s performance was
deficient and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced defendant such that he was deprived of a
fair trial.”). To establish prejudice, a defendant must generally demonstrate that, but for counsel’s
deficient performance, there is a reasonably probability that the result of the trial would have been
different. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687; Brown, 2023 IL 126852, ¶ 28 (noting that claims of
ineffective assistance of counsel require a showing of actual prejudice, not mere speculation of
prejudice). As noted above, however, the evidence of defendant’s possession of the firearm and
prior convictions was not closely balanced and, thus, there is no reasonable probability that the
result of trial would have been different if counsel had raised additional objections to the 911 call.
Thus, in the absence of prejudice, defendant’s ineffective-assistance claim fails. People v.
Simpson, 2015 IL 116512, ¶ 35 (failure to establish either deficient performance or prejudice
defeats an ineffective-assistance claim).
¶ 36 B. Police Officers’ Testimonies
¶ 37 Next, defendant argues that the court erred in allowing the police officers to testify to
specific details of the dispatch call, including that dispatch told them shots had been fired.
Defendant asserts that the comments from dispatch about the call were hearsay, admissible under
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an exception only to show investigative steps and the officers’ course of conduct. However, he
argues, course-of-conduct testimony is allowed only where necessary to fully explain the State’s
case to the jury. Here, he contends, three officers testified to everything dispatch told them,
including the irrelevant and prejudicial statements that a suspect was chasing someone and shots
were fired. Defendant notes that there was no issue concerning why the officers pulled over the
car he was driving, and, so, the fact that the stop was “high risk” was irrelevant to the State’s case.
Further, he contends that there was no concern that the jury would be confused as to why they
made the traffic stop, therefore, the details that dispatch relayed to the officers were irrelevant and
prejudicial. Defendant notes that, prior to trial, he moved in limine to prohibit this testimony as
inadmissible hearsay. Defendant argues that the court erred in denying that motion, because the
State went far beyond offering dispatch’s statements to explain the officers’ actions; rather, it
repeated the prejudicial and unnecessary statements through testimony from three separate
officers. Defendant relies on People v. Jura, 352 Ill. App. 2d 1080 (2004), as being “nearly
identical,” and notes that the court in Jura concluded there was reversible error where three police
officers had testified to contents of a radio call and the State relied on the statements in closing
argument. Here, defendant argues, the officers’ testimony should have been limited to only that
they were on duty, received a call, and conducted a traffic stop based on that call. Defendant
concedes that, although he raised this issue in a motion in limine, it was not included in his posttrial
motion. Thus, he again requests we review the issue for first-prong plain error and ineffective
assistance of counsel.
¶ 38 Again, although the initial step of the plain-error analysis ordinarily involves determining
whether there was, in fact, a clear or obvious error (Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at 565), we need not
resolve whether there was an error under prong one if the evidence was not closely balanced.
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White, 2011 IL 109689, ¶ 148. For the same reasons described above, the evidence was not closely
balanced and, so, even if admitting the officers’ testimony was error, defendant’s prong-one, plain-
error argument fails, and we honor the forfeiture.
¶ 39 We wish to note, however, that we find this case distinguishable from Jura. In Jura, three
officers repeatedly testified to hearsay information received from dispatch, including not only the
type of crime reported, but the detailed description they received of the suspect, including his tattoo
of a teardrop under his eye, and that the defendant matched the description received. Jura, 352 Ill.
App. 3d at 1082-84. The State also relied on the hearsay information in opening and closing
statements. Id. at 1088-89. The court acknowledged that, where necessary to fully explain the
State’s case to the trier of fact, hearsay may be admissible for the limited purpose of showing the
course of a police investigation. Id. at 1085. However, the court concluded it was not necessary
to admit the hearsay received from dispatch, where the defendant was charged with unlawful use
of a weapon by a felon and the three officers testified that they witnessed the defendant remove a
handgun from his waistband and throw it in a garbage can. Id. at 1084, 1087. The court determined
that the State’s use of the evidence went beyond merely explaining course of conduct and, instead,
the evidence was used substantively to establish the truth of the matter asserted, i.e., that the
defendant matched the hearsay description. Id. at 1087. Further, the court noted that, generally,
under the investigative-steps exception, police officers should not testify to the contents of
conversations and, moreover, that the fundamental reason for excluding hearsay is the lack of an
opportunity to cross-examine the declarant. Id. at 1085, 1087. Where neither the radio call nor
the “concerned citizen” caller were introduced or, consequently, subjected to adversarial testing,
the officers’ hearsay testimony was deemed inadmissible. Id. at 1089, 1091.
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¶ 40 Here, defendant acknowledges that the declarant was available. However, he argues that
the prejudice was not the absence of the declarant, but, rather, the use of course-of-conduct
testimony to repeat inadmissible other-crimes statements, particularly where there was no need to
explain why the officers conducted a high-risk stop. We disagree. Considering all circumstances,
the court’s decision cannot be considered an abuse of discretion. People v. Ruback, 2013 IL App
(3d) 110256, ¶ 24 (on appeal, the trial court’s decision to admit evidence is reviewed for an abuse
of discretion). When it made the decision, the court was aware that, unlike in Jura, the 911 call
and Steele, the caller, would be available for adversarial testing and, in context, the testimony
might explain why multiple officers arrived to conduct a “high-risk felony stop” of that particular
vehicle. See People v. Banks, 237 Ill. 2d 154, 181 (2010) (noting that an out-of-court statement
offered not to prove the truth of the matter asserted but, rather, to explain the investigatory
procedure followed is proper). Further, unlike in Jura, the officers did not personally witness
defendant holding the weapon. Importantly, when questioning Decowski here, the assistant State’s
Attorney specifically asked him to describe the information he received from dispatch “without
getting into what was said.” None of the officers, when questioned, described the contents of the
call, in terms of the specific description of the person seen with a gun. Also, again unlike in Jura,
none of the officers testified that defendant matched the description provided to dispatch. Rather,
they explained only generally that they were told shots were fired, a person with a gun had chased
someone and was fleeing in a red SUV, and they received a description of the person and the
vehicle. And while the State mentioned in closing shots fired, it also explicitly told the jury that
there was no evidence that shots were actually fired and that the sound might have been July 4
fireworks. In sum, we disagree with defendant that this case is nearly identical to Jura, such that
its holding applies here, and his plain-error claim fails.
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¶ 41 Further, as we do not find the officers’ testimony was erroneous or prejudicial, defendant’s
ineffective-assistance claim similarly fails. Simpson, 2015 IL 116512, ¶ 35.
¶ 42 C. Limiting Instruction
¶ 43 In a related argument, defendant next contends that, even if it was acceptable for the
officers to testify to the contents of the dispatch call, the testimony should not have been admitted
substantively. He notes that, when the court initially denied his motion in limine, it agreed that the
testimony should be considered only as course-of-conduct evidence and, accordingly, that the jury
would receive curative instructions. However, when defendant submitted a curative instruction,
the court refused it. Defendant contends the refusal was error because, when a court admits an
out-of-court statement for the limited purpose of explaining the steps of an investigation, it “must”
instruct the jury that the statement is not to be accepted for the truth of its contents. Further, he
argues that the fact that the instruction was a non-IPI instruction should not have precluded its use,
because there does not exist an IPI instruction for this type of testimony and, in any event, his
proffered instruction was similar to other IPI limiting instructions. By allowing the statements to
come in substantively without a limiting instruction, the jury was allowed to consider inadmissible
hearsay and other-crimes evidence. Defendant argues that, contrary to the State’s assertion, the
erroneous admission of this hearsay without limitation was not harmless because the repeated and
inflammatory nature of the uncharged and unfounded statements that shots had been fired denied
him due process.
¶ 44 Defendant preserved this issue by raising it at trial and in his posttrial motion. Accordingly,
we consider whether the court abused its discretion in refusing the instruction. See, e.g., People
v. Jenkins, 2021 IL App (1st) 200458, ¶ 25 (an appellate court reviews for an abuse of discretion
a trial court’s refusal to tender a non-pattern jury instruction). A court abuses its discretion if its
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decision is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable (People v. Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d 159, 182 (2003)), or
where the jury instructions provided are unclear, misleading, or are not justified by the evidence
and the law (People v. Lovejoy, 235 Ill. 2d 97, 150 (2009)).
¶ 45 Under the specific circumstances in this case, the court did not unreasonably refuse the
proffered instruction. Although defendant is correct that the officers’ testimony was to be
considered for only a limited purpose and the court expressed prior to trial that it would provide
curative instructions to the jury, the court reasonably declined to do so when requested.
Preliminarily, we note that, pretrial, the court explained that it would provide the jury with a
limiting instruction prior to the officers’ testimony, “if that’s what the defense was asking for.”
The written order also specified that the ruling was “subject to further objections at trial and
depending on trial testimony.” Defendant did not, at trial, request a limiting instruction be
provided to the jury before or during the officers’ testimony.
¶ 46 Moreover, defendant relies on People v. Trotter, 254 Ill. App. 3d 514 (1993), where the
court stated that, when investigatory-procedure testimony is introduced, “the trial court must
instruct the jury that the testimony was introduced for the limited purpose of explaining what
caused the police to act, and that they were not to accept the statement as true.” (Emphasis added.)
Id. at 527-28. The Trotter court continued that, where no such instruction is provided, “it cannot
be presumed that the jury’s use of the evidence was limited to non-hearsay purposes.” Id.
However, even setting aside the State’s position that Trotter’s analysis was flawed, we do not
agree that it reflects an abuse of discretion here. Under the unique circumstances here, when
viewing the evidence collectively, it is apparent that the officers’ testimony, although admissible
for a limited purpose, was cumulative to portions of the 911 call and/or Steele’s testimony, which
the jury heard without limitation. Thus, here, the jury was already permitted to consider the
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evidence for nonhearsay purposes. Accordingly, we do not think unreasonable the court’s decision
to decline a limiting instruction at the close of trial, where it likely would have created confusion
and possibly mislead the jury about the degree to which it could consider the same evidence.
¶ 47 Further, as the State argues, even if the court should have provided the limiting instruction,
the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See, e.g., People v. Rush, 401 Ill. App. 3d 1,
16-17 (2010) (error is harmless if there is no reasonable possibility that, absent the error, the verdict
would have been different); see also People v. Irwin, 2017 IL App (1st) 150054, ¶ 26 (failure to
provide limiting instruction harmless if, given the facts of the case, the result would have been the
same, even if the instruction had been offered). The State bears the burden of establishing that an
alleged error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Irwin, 2017 IL App (1st) 150054, ¶ 26. In
determining whether an error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we may,
“(1) focus on the error to determine whether it might have contributed to the conviction;
(2) examine the other properly admitted evidence to determine whether it overwhelmingly
supports the conviction; or
(3) determine whether the improperly admitted evidence is merely cumulative or
duplicates properly admitted evidence.” Id.
¶ 48 Here, the alleged error in refusing the limiting instruction did not contribute to the
conviction, the properly-admitted evidence overwhelmingly supports the conviction, and the
allegedly improper hearsay introduced by the officers for which no limiting instruction was
provided was duplicative of properly-admitted evidence. As previously discussed, the jury had
ample evidence that defendant was guilty of the elements of armed habitual criminal based upon:
his stipulated prior convictions; Steele’s testimony; Steele’s 911 call, describing seeing a man in a
turquoise shirt with a gun and describing the vehicle and license plate number; the officers’
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testimony that, when they pulled over the vehicle with that license plate, defendant was the only
male in the car, was driving, was wearing a turquoise shirt, and a firearm was found under the
cupholders next to where defendant was seated; defendant’s statement that it was not his “pipe,”
which Decowksi testified is a common word for “gun;” and defendant’s telephone call, in which
he explained “they” had “bumped him” off of his “pipe.” The officers’ testimony for which no
instruction was provided, i.e., about someone chasing someone and shots fired, was also
duplicative of evidence received without limitation through the 911 call. Accordingly, we reject
defendant’s arguments that the absence of a limiting instruction requires reversal.
¶ 49 We note that defendant also argues that the aforementioned errors cumulatively deprived
him of his right to a fair trial. According to defendant, the 911 call, testimony from three different
police officers, use of the unredacted 911 call twice in closing and rebuttal arguments, reminder to
the jury in closing that the police responded to “shots fired,” and failure to instruct the jury that it
could not consider substantively the course-of-conduct hearsay statements, all served to require a
new trial. However, we have rejected defendant’s claims of error. Therefore, “because none of
the claims constituted error, there is no error to accumulate and no cumulative error.” People v.
Saulsberry, 2021 IL App (2d) 181027, ¶ 90.
¶ 50 D. Constitutionality of Armed Habitual Criminal Statute
¶ 51 Defendant next argues that, under the test established in New York State Rifle & Pistol
Ass’n, Inc. v. Bruen, 597 U.S. ___, 142 S. Ct. 2111 (2022), for evaluating gun laws, the armed
habitual criminal statute is unconstitutional as applied to him. He contends that the statute
unconstitutionally criminalizes his simple possession of a gun based on prior convictions of “two
nonviolent felonies” (emphasis in original.) and that the State cannot prove that there exists a
historical tradition of prohibiting persons with nonviolent felonies from possessing firearms.
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Accordingly, defendant asks us to conclude that the statute is unconstitutional as applied to him
and reverse his conviction. We decline to do so.
¶ 52 Preliminarily, we note that defendant concedes that he raises his as-applied constitutional
challenge for the first time on appeal. The State, noting that as-applied constitutional challenges
are fact specific and require adequate development for purposes of review (see, e.g., People v.
Thompson, 2015 IL 118151, ¶ 37), argues that defendant’s failure to develop this argument below
should result in forfeiture. We disagree. As defendant notes, our supreme court has recognized a
narrow exception to the general rule that a defendant must present an as-applied constitutional
challenge to the trial court so as to create a sufficiently developed record. People v. Holman, 2017
IL 120655, ¶ 32, overruled on other grounds by People v. Wilson, 2023 IL 127666, ¶ 42. Where,
as here, the record is sufficiently developed to address defendant’s claim, we will not find the issue
forfeited. Defendant’s arguments do not require factual development because they are based on
caselaw, the statute, and the qualifying offenses as charged by the State in the indictment against
him. Although the State notes that defendant seeks to differentiate between violent and nonviolent
felonies, and, therefore, the record should be developed as to whether his underlying convictions
involved violent circumstances, as discussed later in this decision, we reject the notion that there
is a valid distinction between the two for purposes of our analysis and, therefore, we may address
defendant’s arguments without further record development.
¶ 53 Turning to the merits of defendant’s argument, we start with the presumption that a statute
is constitutional. Allegis Realty Investors v. Novak, 223 Ill. 2d 318, 334 (2006). The burden on
defendant to establish constitutional invalidity is “a formidable one, and this court will uphold a
statute’s validity whenever it is reasonably possible to do so.” Id.; see also In re Lakisha M., 227
Ill. 2d 259, 263 (2008) (if reasonably possible, a reviewing court must construe a statute so as to
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affirm its constitutionality). Moreover, an as-applied constitutional challenge requires a showing
that the law is unconstitutional as it applies to the specific facts and circumstances of the
challenging party. People v. Harris, 2018 IL 121932, ¶ 38. “All as-applied constitutional
challenges are, by definition, dependent on the specific facts and circumstances of the person
raising the challenge.” Id. ¶ 39. An as-applied constitutional challenge presents a legal question
that is reviewed de novo. People v. Kitch, 2019 IL App (3d) 170522, ¶ 49.
¶ 54 Defendant argues that the armed habitual criminal statute, as applied to him, given the
nonviolent nature of the predicate felonies used to convict him, is unconstitutional under Bruen.
We disagree. As background, in District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008), the Supreme
Court held that a series of laws violated the second amendment’s protection of “the right of law-
abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.” (Emphasis added.) Id.,
554 U.S. at 635. However, the Heller Court admonished lower courts that “nothing in [its] opinion
should be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by
felons[.]” Id., 554 U.S. at 626-27. Later, in McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742 (2010),
the Court held that the second amendment’s “right to keep and bear arms for the purpose of self-
defense” applies to the states through the fourteenth amendment (U.S. Const., amend. XIV), but
reiterated that its decision “did not cast doubt on such longstanding regulatory measures as
‘prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill[.]’ ” Id., 561 U.S. at 786,
789-91 (quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 626-27).
¶ 55 Most recently, in Bruen, the Court considered whether “ordinary, law-abiding citizens have
a *** right to carry handguns publicly for their self-defense.” (Emphasis added.) Bruen, 597 U.S.
at ___, 142 S. Ct. at 2122. The Court set forth the following test for assessing constitutionality
under the second amendment:
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“When the Second Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s conduct, the
Constitution presumptively protects that conduct. The government must then justify its
regulation by demonstrating that it is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of
firearm regulation. Only then may a court conclude that the individual’s conduct falls
outside the Second Amendment’s ‘unqualified command.’ ” Bruen, 597 U.S. at ___, 142
S. Ct. at 2129-30.
¶ 56 Initially, a court must ask whether the second amendment’s “plain text” covers an
individual’s conduct. Bruen, 597 U.S. at ___, 142 S. Ct. at 2129-30. At this initial step, it is the
burden of the defendant to show that the second amendment’s plain text covers his or her conduct.
See Bruen, 597 U.S. at ___, 142 S. Ct. at 2129-30. It is here that, if we follow a recent First District
appellate court decision, defendant’s constitutional claim fails. In Baker, the defendant raised an
as-applied challenge to the unlawful-use-of-a-weapon-by-a-felon statute, and the court decided
that, because he was a convicted felon, “Bruen just does not apply to him.” People v. Baker, 2023
IL App (1st) 220328, ¶ 37. It summarized,
“The Bruen Court could not have been more clear that its newly[-]announced test
applied only to laws that attempted to regulate the gun possession of ‘law-abiding citizens,’
and not felons like defendant. Bruen, 597 U.S. at ___, 142 S. Ct. at 2156 (the holding was
limited to laws affecting ‘law-abiding citizens’). Just in case a reader missed the first time
that the court said it, the court repeated it 18 times. Bruen, 597 U.S. ___, 142 S. Ct. 2111
passim (the six justices in the majority repeated the phrase ‘law-abiding’ 18 times in their
majority opinion and their concurrences). Further, Justice Kavanaugh in his concurrence
quoted an earlier case that stated: ‘ “ ‘[N]othing in our opinion should be taken to cast
doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons ***.’ ” ’ Bruen,
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597 U.S. at ___142 S. Ct. at 2162 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring, joined by Roberts, C.J.)
(quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 626-27 [ ]). Justice Kavanaugh’s concurrence was joined
by Chief Justice Roberts, and they both joined the six-justice majority opinion. Based on
the plain, clear, and repeated language of the justices in the majority, defendant is simply
outside the box drawn by Bruen.” Baker, 2023 IL App (1st) 220328, ¶ 37.
¶ 57 Accordingly, and as the State urges, Bruen may reflect that “the people” referenced in the
second amendment are “law-abiding” citizens. See also, United States v. Jackson, 69 F.4th 495,
501-06 (8th Cir. 2023); United States v. Garrett, 2023 WL 157961, at *2 (N.D. Ill. 2023); United
States v. Coleman, 2023 WL 122401, at *2 (N.D. W.Va. 2023); United States v. Medrano, 2023
WL 122650, at *2 (N.D. W.Va. 2023); United States v. Seiwert, 2022 WL 4534605, *1 (N.D. Ill.
2022); United States v. Ingram, 623 F. Supp. 3d 660, 664 (D. S.C. 2022). If so, and as defendant
concedes that he is a repeat convicted felon for purposes of the armed-habitual-criminal statute, he
is not a “law-abiding” citizen afforded the same second amendment protections enjoyed by “the
people” referenced in the second amendment. 3
3
Defendant asserts that the language from Heller reflecting that the longstanding
prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons are “presumptively lawful” is dicta. See, e.g.,
People v. Chairez, 2018 IL 121417, ¶ 24. This argument, however, does not alter our decision.
First, it was rejected by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v. Rozier, 598 F.
3d 768, 770-71 (11th Cir. 2010) (stating that “to the extent that this portion of Heller limits the
Court’s opinion to possession of firearms by law-abiding and qualified individuals, it is not dicta”
and that even “to the extent that this statement is [dicta], we shall still give it considerable weight”).
Second, even if dicta, Illinois courts have credited the impact of dicta from the Supreme Court.
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¶ 58 Nevertheless, even if we presume that, despite his status as a repeat convicted felon,
defendant’s conduct, i.e., possession of a weapon, satisfies the first part of the Bruen test, it fails
under the second. Specifically, defendant argues that the qualifying convictions upon which his
armed-habitual-criminal conviction rests (a drug conviction and prior conviction for unlawful
possession of a weapon by a felon) were nonviolent, and there is no well-established and
representative historical analogue for barring felons from possessing firearms, much less
nonviolent felons. We disagree.
¶ 59 Preliminarily, whether defendant’s qualifying convictions were “nonviolent” is irrelevant,
as the Supreme Court placed no qualifiers on the word “felons” in either Heller or McDonald. See
Medina v. Whitaker, 913 F. 3d 152, 159 (D.C. Cir. 2019) (observing that “[f]elonies encompass a
wide variety of non-violent offenses, and we see no reason to think that the [United States
Supreme] Court meant ‘dangerous individuals’ when it used the word felon” in Heller). We also
agree with the federal courts of appeal that have concluded that the country’s historical tradition
of firearm regulation included excluding felons from possessing firearms, as did this court recently
in Awkerman. Awkerman v. Illinois State Police, 2023 IL App (2d) 220434, ¶ 52 (citing Jackson,
69 F.4th at 501-06; United States v. Rahimi, 61 F.4h 443, 452 (5th Cir. 2023), cert. granted, No.
22-915, ___U.S. ___, ___S. Ct. ___, 2023 WL 4278450 (U.S. June 20, 2023) (distinguishing
between disarming a person pursuant to a civil order relating to domestic violence from convicted
See, e.g., People v. Williams, 204 Ill. 2d 191, 206 (2003) (“Judicial dicta have the force of a
determination by a reviewing court and should receive dispositive weight in an inferior court.”);
People v. Montgomery, 2016 IL App (1st) 142143, ¶ 14 (opting to follow the dicta set forth in
Heller).
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felons subject to the longstanding prohibition on the possession of firearms that exclude them from
the second amendment’s scope). Indeed, this position was also accepted by the First District
appellate court in People v. Brooks, 2023 IL App (1st) 200435, ¶¶ 90-105. There, the court
considered and rejected the defendant’s as-applied challenge to the armed habitual criminal statute,
raising identical arguments to those defendant raises here. Id. The court determined, under the
second step in Bruen, that founding-era historical records and Supreme Court precedent provide
historical underpinnings for our General Assembly’s prohibition of firearm possession by twice-
convicted felons, even if the convictions were for nonviolent felonies. Id.
¶ 60 Finally, defendant cites Range v. Attorney General, 69 F.4th 96 (3d Cir. 2023) (en banc)
and United States v. Bullock, 2023 WL 4232309, *2 (S.D. Miss. June 28, 2023), to support his
arguments. We disagree that either should alter our conclusion here, note that neither decision is
binding on us, and, further, agree with the court in Baker, where it pointed out that Range
concerned disarming those with only misdemeanor convictions (and, thus, does not apply to
defendant), and that Bullock is a district court decision, already subject to a pending appeal, which
is strongly critical of the Supreme Court and, as such, does not particularly aid our analysis. See
Baker, 2023 IL App (1st) 220328, ¶¶ 38-39.
¶ 61 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 62 For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County.
¶ 63 Affirmed.
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