People v. Arna

Court: Appellate Court of Illinois
Date filed: 2022-02-10
Citations: 2022 IL App (1st) 200010-U
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                                     2022 IL App (1st) 200010-U
                                            No. 1-20-0010
                                     Order filed February 10, 2022
                                                                                        Fourth Division


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

 ______________________________________________________________________________
                                                IN THE
                                  APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                          FIRST DISTRICT
 ______________________________________________________________________________
 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                           )    Appeal from the
                                                                )    Circuit Court of
           Plaintiff-Appellee,                                  )    Cook County.
                                                                )
     v.                                                         )    No. 14 CR 13298
                                                                )
 DAVIS ARNA,                                                    )    Honorable
                                                                )    William G. Lacy, and
           Defendant-Appellant.                                 )    William G. Gamboney,
                                                                )    Judges, presiding.



           JUSTICE LAMPKIN delivered the judgment of the court.
           Presiding Justice Reyes and Justice Rochford concurred in the judgment.

                                              ORDER

¶1        Held: Defendant’s conviction and sentence are affirmed where: (1) defendant has failed
                to establish plain error in the admission of testimony by two detectives, and
                (2) defendant has failed to establish that he was denied the effective assistance of
                counsel.

¶2        Following a jury trial, defendant Davis Arna was convicted of first-degree murder and

found to have personally discharged a firearm that proximately caused death to another individual.
No. 1-20-0010


Defendant was sentenced to 23 years’ imprisonment on the first-degree murder charge and a

consecutive 25-year mandatory firearm enhancement for discharging a firearm that proximately

caused death, for a total sentence of 48 years.

¶3     On appeal, defendant alleges that: (1) the trial court erroneously admitted hearsay

statements made by the decedent to the police, and (2) he was denied the effective assistance of

counsel based on trial counsel’s failure to object to the admission of identification evidence by the

decedent and remarks made by the State during closing argument.

¶4     For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶5                                      I. BACKGROUND

¶6                                    A. Pretrial Proceedings

¶7     Defendant filed a motion in limine to bar the State from introducing evidence of two

statements made by the decedent to the police on May 20, 2013, and the decedent’s identification

of defendant as his assailant on May 26, 2013. Defendant maintained that the decedent’s

statements were inadmissible hearsay. Defendant further argued that the decedent’s May 26, 2013,

identification should be excluded where it was not recorded in any fashion and should have been

the subject of a video deposition.

¶8     The State maintained that the decedent’s oral statements of May 20, 2013, were admissible

as excited utterances. With respect to the decedent’s viewing of a photo array on May 26, 2013,

the State did not intend to elicit the fact that the decedent nodded “yes” when shown a picture of

defendant. Rather, the State sought only to elicit testimony that established the police officers’

course of investigation. Defense counsel replied that course-of-investigation testimony was

improper if it permitted the jury to infer that the decedent identified defendant as the offender.


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No. 1-20-0010


¶9      The trial court 1 found that the decedent’s statement to the initial responding officer, Officer

Margret Susnis, was made after a sufficiently startling event to produce a spontaneous and non-

reflective statement. The statement was made two to three minutes after the decedent was shot and

provided little time for him to fabricate. The statement also related to the shooting.

¶ 10    The trial court found the decedent’s statement to Detective Christopher Tenton at Advocate

Christ Hospital two hours after he was shot also admissible as an excited utterance. The court

found that this statement, which was made while the decedent was being treated and prepped for

emergency surgery, was made “while the excitement of the shooting was predominant.” The court

concluded that “the circumstances surrounding these initial statements bear a great indicia of

reliability.”

¶ 11    Regarding the photo array shown to the decedent one week later, the trial court ruled in

defendant’s favor, finding that the decedent’s act of nodding his head was hearsay and not subject

to exception. As such, it would not be allowed in evidence. However, the State would be permitted

to present police testimony that apprised the jury of the course of their investigation, including the

fact that the police showed the decedent a photo array and any other investigatory steps that

resulted in the police looking for defendant.

¶ 12    The trial court rejected defendant’s reliance on People v. Wheeler, 186 Ill. App. 3d 422

(1989), finding it to be inapposite. The court maintained that its ruling comported with People v.

Ochoa, 2017 IL App (1st) 140204, and relied on People v. Simms, 143 Ill. 2d 154 (1991), to support




        1
       Judge William G. Lacy ruled on the pretrial motions in this matter. Judge William G.
Gamboney presided over the trial.

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No. 1-20-0010


the proposition that course-of-investigation testimony is admissible even if it suggests that the

declarant implicated defendant. The court clarified its ruling:

                “THE COURT: In this case what I am allowing, just so we are clear, is for

       the State to introduce that the police talked to the complaining witness, that they

       showed him a photo array, they are not going into how the photo array – they will

       not be allowed to go into how the photo array was [displayed], just what a photo

       array is and that they showed the complaining witness a photo array and that, in

       conjunction with all the other things they did, their interviews with other witnesses

       and things of that nature, whatever that investigation is, after that investigation was

       completed they were looking for your client.

                That is the extent of what I have allowed into evidence. I believe it is

       supported by the law, including the case law, the Ochoa case which you have

       presented to me, Mr. Gorelick.”

¶ 13                              B. Evidence Adduced at Trial

¶ 14   On May 20, 2013, Adrienne Michelle Newbern resided with her boyfriend of 18 years,

decedent Maurice Wooden, who went by the nickname “Marcus,” in a third-floor apartment at

9625 South Halsted Street. The two had lived in the apartment for five or six months on this date.

¶ 15   The third floor of the apartment building had multiple tenants who rented out individual

bedrooms that had separate locks. The tenants of the third-floor apartment shared the kitchen,

dining area, and bathroom. Trinika Esco, her daughter, Serenity, and Mark Hegwood rented

another bedroom in the third-floor apartment. They knew decedent by the nickname “Red.”




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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 16   Newbern testified that she had three other boyfriends in addition to the decedent: Leonard

Green, Leonard Clark, and defendant, whom she only knew as “D.” The decedent knew about

Newbern’s other relationships. Newbern testified that before May 20, 2013, defendant visited her

at the apartment on multiple prior occasions. Newbern further testified that Esco and Hegwood

had both previously met defendant.

¶ 17   On May 20, 2013, Newbern arrived home from work between 7 and 7:30 a.m. She and the

decedent fought when he told Newbern they were being evicted. The decedent did not pay the

landlord for rent and storage, despite Newbern giving him money to do so. A fight ensued which

was both verbal and physical. The decedent struck Newbern, but Newbern did not strike him.

¶ 18   Newbern testified that the decedent left the apartment, and she called the police to see what

could be done to prevent her from being evicted. The police told her that nothing could be done

until the landlord actually moved her out of the apartment.

¶ 19   The argument resumed when the decedent returned to the apartment later that afternoon.

The decedent went to the kitchen and prepared something to eat. Newbern remained in the

bedroom and called defendant on the phone. Newbern told defendant about the eviction and the

police response to her inquiry about what she could do to prevent being illegally evicted. Newbern

testified that defendant became upset because he believed that the decedent was mistreating

Newbern.

¶ 20   Newbern and the decedent continued fighting and arguing. Newbern ran to the bathroom

and again spoke with defendant on the phone. Defendant told Newbern that he was at the “herbal

place” paying a light bill. Newbern explained that the “herbal place” was “a place where you go




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No. 1-20-0010


where they help you pay – at that time, they only help you pay your light or your gas.” The store

was on the same street as Newbern’s apartment building.

¶ 21   Newbern testified that her phone suddenly disconnected, and she heard the decedent say,

“[o]h, what the f***.” This was followed by the sound of seven or eight gunshots. When Newbern

opened the bathroom door, she saw defendant standing outside her bedroom door holding a gun.

The gun was pointed at the door. Newbern said, “[n]o, no, no,” and asked defendant, “[w]hat the

heck, what you doing?” Defendant did not respond. Newbern saw holes in the bedroom door.

¶ 22   Newbern ran downstairs, and when she went outside to the alley, she saw defendant’s

parked car. Newbern jumped in on the passenger side, slid over to the driver’s side, and attempted

to drive away, but she did not know how to drive. As Newbern was trying to drive the car, she

looked up to see defendant opening the driver’s side car door. Newbern then slid back over to the

passenger seat. Defendant drove the car out of the alley and told Newbern, “now you see what

happened to him, the same can happen to you.” Newbern believed defendant because he belonged

to a group called the “Masons.” Newbern testified that the Masons were dangerous people.

¶ 23   Defendant drove Newbern to her sister’s house. Newbern then called Green, who picked

her up in a green four-door Ford and drove her back to the apartment. When Newbern arrived at

the apartment, she was arrested. Newbern testified that she lied to the police, denying that she was

at the apartment when the shooting occurred. Newbern testified that she did not tell the police what

happened because she was scared of defendant and his “crew.”

¶ 24   Trinika Esco testified that she heard the decedent and Newbern arguing on the morning of

May 20, 2013. Later that day, at about 1:30 p.m., while Esco and Serenity watched television,

Hegwood came home from work. As Hegwood removed his work boots, Esco heard noises that



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No. 1-20-0010


sounded like gunshots and a person saying, “[n]o, no, no.” Hegwood told Esco and Serenity to get

down on the floor. Hegwood looked out the apartment window and then opened their bedroom

door. The back door of the third-floor apartment that led to the rear of the building was open.

Hegwood told Esco and Serenity to stay inside the apartment and to stay down. He also instructed

Esco to call the police and an ambulance.

¶ 25   While Esco called the police, she heard Hegwood yelling, “Red been shot. Red been shot.”

Esco ran outside with Serenity and flagged down a female police officer.

¶ 26   Esco testified that in the past, a male visitor picked up Newbern outside the apartment

building and drove her to work when the decedent was at his job. She identified this person in open

court as defendant. On one prior occasion, defendant drove Esco and Newbern to a liquor store.

¶ 27   Esco identified a photograph of a car, later established to be defendant’s vehicle, as the car

that was always parked in front of their apartment building when defendant gave Newbern a ride

to work.

¶ 28   Esco testified that she provided the police with a description of defendant as dark-skinned,

6’2”, approximately 160 pounds, lanky and skinny, and having an eye that made him appear to

have had a stroke. She described defendant’s car as tan and bearing a Mason sign. On cross-

examination, Esco admitted that she described defendant as being 130 pounds and as having a

mustache and being between 6’0” and 6’1”. The weight description was a “guess” based on

defendant being small and skinny and lanky and tall. Esco clarified that defendant had “a little

fuzz,” which she described as a mustache.

¶ 29   Esco denied telling two detectives that she saw the decedent lying on the floor bleeding.




                                               -7-
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 30   Mark Hegwood testified to the layout of the apartment building at 9625 South Halsted

Street. The building had a front and rear entrance. The rear entrance abutted an alley. The third-

floor apartment had four bedrooms that had individual locks. The third-floor tenants shared the

bathroom and kitchen. Hegwood and Esco’s apartment had two windows. One faced the alley

while the other faced the house next door.

¶ 31   On May 20, 2013, Hegwood, Esco, and Esco’s daughter had lived at 9625 South Halsted

Street for a couple of months. The decedent and Newbern moved into the apartment after Hegwood

and Esco. That day, Hegwood, who worked at a waste management company in Crestwood,

Illinois, arrived home at about 1 p.m. Before entering his bedroom, Hegwood saw the decedent

cooking in the kitchen.

¶ 32   When Hegwood sat down and began taking off his shoes, he heard “scuffling” that sounded

like someone was fighting in the middle of the apartment. Hegwood put his shoe back on and heard

gunshots as he went to the door. He told Esco and her daughter to get into the closet, locked their

door, and dropped to the floor. Hegwood heard four gunshots followed by a pause, after which he

heard four more gunshots. He then heard the sound of two sets of footsteps running past his

bedroom to the apartment’s back door. Hegwood waited a few seconds before looking out the

window where he saw a beige Mercury Marquis bearing what appeared to him to be a cancer

ribbon on it, parked in the alley. Hegwood testified that he saw this same car parked in the side

driveway of the apartment building on four or five prior occasions. Hegwood was familiar with

the person who drove this car, whom he identified in court as defendant. Defendant previously saw

Newbern being driven by defendant in this car. In the past, Hegwood also saw defendant in the

third-floor apartment and had said hello or goodbye to him.



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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 33   As he looked out of his bedroom window, Hegwood saw defendant run to the back of the

Marquis, throw something into the car’s open trunk, and enter the driver’s side of the vehicle.

Hegwood heard the sound of two doors closing but could not see the person who entered the

passenger side. The car then headed southbound down the alley.

¶ 34   Hegwood told Esco that he was going to see what had happened. He left their apartment

and observed that the decedent’s bedroom door was kicked in and had four bullet holes in it. The

decedent was lying in the middle of the doorway. Blood was on the floor. The decedent told

Hegwood that he was hurt. Hegwood went back to his bedroom and told Esco to call an ambulance.

Hegwood told Esco that he would stay with the decedent until someone came. Hegwood tried to

talk to the decedent after he was shot, but the decedent was unable to speak to him.

¶ 35   Hegwood testified that he heard the decedent and Newbern have verbal arguments in the

past but never witnessed any physical fights nor observed marks or bruises on her.

¶ 36   Former Chicago Police Officer Margret Susnis testified that on May 20, 2013, at 1:31 p.m.,

she received a call that an individual was shot at 9625 South Halsted Street. She went upstairs to

the third-floor apartment two minutes later, where she saw the decedent lying on his bedroom

floor. The bedroom door, which had gunshots in the center of it, was on top of him. Ambulance

technicians lifted the door off the decedent.

¶ 37   Officer Susnis attempted to talk to the decedent because she “was afraid he might be

dying.” The decedent “said that he did not know why they did this to him.” In response to Officer

Susnis’s question of who “they” were, Officer Susnis recalled that he replied, the boyfriend of his

wife or girlfriend. Officer Susnis asked if the decedent saw what the person looked like. The

decedent said the person had braids, dark skin, and was as tall as him. The decedent said that he



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No. 1-20-0010


thought the person was 37 years old. The ambulance then transported the decedent to Advocate

Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn.

¶ 38   Officer Susnis also spoke with Hegwood, who told her what he witnessed. In contrast to

Hegwood’s trial testimony, Officer Susnis testified that Hegwood said that he saw Newbern get

into the tan-colored Mercury Marquis. He saw two people in the car but was unable to see the

driver. The passenger was a woman. Officer Susnis also testified that Hegwood did not tell her

that he saw someone throw something into the car’s trunk.

¶ 39   Detectives Christopher Tenton, Greg Buie, Don Clark, and Sergeant Donovan Jackson 2

were assigned to investigate this shooting. Upon arriving at the scene, the decedent was already

transported to Advocate Christ Hospital. The detectives split up into two teams. Detectives Tenton

and Buie went to the hospital, while Sergeant Jackson and Detective Clark remained at the scene.

¶ 40   While at the shooting scene, Sergeant Jackson interviewed Esco, who, in contrast to her

trial testimony, told the detective that she entered the dining room after hearing the gunshots and

saw the decedent bleeding.

¶ 41   In the meantime, at Advocate Christ Hospital, Detectives Tenton and Buie observed

medical staff treating the decedent in the trauma room. Detective Tenton learned that the decedent

had sustained five gunshot wounds. Detective Tenton asked the decedent what had happened to

him. The decedent told him that he had been shot. Detective Tenton asked the decedent whether

he knew who shot him. The decedent told Detective Tenton that his wife’s boyfriend had shot him.

The decedent said that there was a knock at his door, and upon opening the door, he saw his wife’s

boyfriend standing at the door holding a gun. The decedent closed the door, and shots struck him


       2
           On May 20, 2013, Sergeant Jackson had not yet been promoted and was still a detective.

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No. 1-20-0010


through the door. The decedent fell to the ground, the door came off its hinges, and the door landed

on top of him. The boyfriend then entered the room and shot the decedent multiple other times.

¶ 42   The decedent said that he had seen the shooter before and had a previous altercation with

him behind the apartment building. The decedent described his assailant as a male black 37 years

of age, dark-complected, with short braids, 6’0”-6’2”, and weighing 180-200 pounds. He also

described the shooter’s car as a tan or brown four-door Mercury Marquis. The decedent said that

he would be able to identify the shooter and wanted to prosecute.

¶ 43   During the conversation, a nurse walked into the room, and the decedent asked why he

could not feel his legs. The nurse informed him that he had a bullet in his spine and was paralyzed.

The decedent was then taken out of the room to undergo emergency surgery.

¶ 44   On cross-examination, Detective Tenton testified that when he spoke with the decedent, he

did not know whether the decedent was going to live or die. The decedent’s statement was neither

audiotaped nor videotaped.

¶ 45   Sergeant Jackson and Detective Clark remained at the shooting scene until the arrival of

Evidence Technician Anthony Beam. Officer Beam testified that he arrived at 9625 South Halsted

Street at about 3:25 p.m., spoke with police personnel, surveyed the scene, photographed it, and

marked and recovered firearm evidence. Seven fired cartridge cases and three fired bullets were

recovered from the scene. The expended shell casings were 9-millimeter Lugers. The decedent’s

room door was knocked off the hinges and had what appeared to be bullet holes in it. The recovered

evidence was inventoried. The parties stipulated to the chain of custody of the evidence and that

the fired bullets were all fired from the same firearm.




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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 46     At some unspecified time later that day, Newbern, who had been arrested when she

returned to the apartment, was interviewed by Sergeant Jackson at the police station. Sergeant

Jackson also interviewed Leonard Green and spoke with Newbern’s sister.

¶ 47     On May 26, 2013, Sergeant Jackson received a voicemail message from the decedent’s

sister. After returning the call and speaking with her, Sergeant Jackson went to 1452 West 72nd

Street. Sergeant Jackson was looking for a tan or brown-colored Mercury Marquis car. Upon

seeing it, Sergeant Jackson ran the car’s license plate number to determine the vehicle’s registered

owner.

¶ 48     A certified copy of a vehicle record for the car was admitted in evidence without objection.

It showed that the car, a 2003 Mercury Marquis four-door vehicle, was registered to defendant.

¶ 49     After running the license plate to determine the car’s registered owner, Sergeant Jackson

compiled a photo array that included a photograph of a person. Sergeant Jackson then went to

Advocate Christ Hospital. He continued his investigation in this matter. Sergeant Jackson was

looking for a suspect at this time. The suspect had the last name “Arna” and the first name “Davis.”

¶ 50     The testimony establishes that defendant was arrested on either May 27, 2013, or May 28,

2013. Sergeant Jackson testified that at the time of defendant’s arrest, he was 6’0”, weighing

approximately 155 pounds, wore his hair in short braids, had a dark complexion, and was 36 or 37

years old. Sergeant Jackson also noticed that one of defendant’s eyes “kind of droops a little bit

***.”

¶ 51     After defendant’s arrest, Hegwood viewed a lineup and identified him as the person he saw

on May 20, 2013, leaving the apartment building, placing an item in the car’s trunk that he

recognized, and driving away.


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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 52    The victim died on June 17, 2014, at the age of 53. His sister, Sherry Rhone, testified that

she last saw her brother on May 19, 2013, at a backyard party. At that time, her brother was healthy.

After he was shot, her brother was hospitalized at Advocate Christ Hospital for 30 days. Afterward,

he went to Kindred North, where he died one year, one month, and four days after being shot. Ms.

Rhone’s brother was very agitated after being shot because he could not talk due to the trach tube

in his throat. He was also unable to speak, write, or walk due to his injuries. The decedent also had

a feeding tube and a colostomy bag.

¶ 53    On the other hand, Newbern testified that she never visited the defendant after he was shot.

She did not know where he was and did nothing to find out. Newbern testified that the decedent’s

family disallowed her from seeing him.

¶ 54    Sergeant Jackson testified that on June 17, 2014, after learning that the victim had died, he

spoke with Newbern and showed her a photo array. He did not testify to what, if anything, Newbern

said at this time.

¶ 55    At trial Newbern testified that she was again arrested on August 21, 2013. At this time, she

denied knowing defendant and told the police that the decedent might have been “messing around”

with one of the ladies that lived in the apartment. She said that this might have had something to

do with the decedent getting shot.

¶ 56    At trial Newbern testified that her August 21, 2013, statement was a complete lie but that

she told it because it was “convenient at the time.”

¶ 57    On June 20, 2014, Dr. Kristin Escobar, a forensic pathologist with the Cook County

Medical Examiner’s Office, conducted an autopsy on the decedent’s body. The decedent had a

history of a traumatic spinal cord injury and quadriplegia due to multiple gunshot wounds. Dr.


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No. 1-20-0010


Escobar opined that the victim died of complications from his multiple gunshot wounds and that

the manner of his death was homicide. The decedent developed pneumonia because he was

quadriplegic and because of the traumatic injury to his spinal cord from the gunshot wounds he

sustained the previous year. If not for the gunshot wounds that caused the quadriplegia, he would

not have developed pneumonia, his acute and fatal cause of death. The multiple gunshot wounds

were the “cascading event” that led to pneumonia.

¶ 58   On July 2, 2014, Newbern was again picked up by the police. She now provided a video-

recorded statement in which she said that defendant was involved in the shooting. Newbern came

forward with the “truth” because she felt that it was the right thing to do, and it was time for her

to stop being scared.

¶ 59   Newbern denied saying that she did not see a gun in defendant’s hand. She testified, “No,

that can’t be true, because when I came out of the bathroom, it was smokey. All I saw was like this

black thing, a black gun in his hand, and I believe it was black, in his hand.” Newbern was then

impeached with her videotaped statement in which she denied seeing a gun in defendant’s hand.

¶ 60   The evidence adduced at trial also revealed that both Hegwood and Esco had pending

contempt cases for failing to respond to subpoenas issued for them to appear in court in this matter.

Both testified that no promises or threats were made regarding that case. Hegwood was uncertain

whether the contempt charge would be dismissed. Esco hoped that the contempt charge would be

dismissed after she testified, although she was not told that this would happen.

¶ 61   Also, on cross-examination, Hegwood admitted telling Officer Susnis that he did not see

the driver of the Mercury Marquis. He denied recalling whether he said that he “saw Adrienne

Newbern sneak around, get in the car, and drive through the alley southbound.” Hegwood testified



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No. 1-20-0010


that he did not tell Officer Susnis that he had previously seen defendant because “she never asked.”

He denied telling Detective Buie that he did not know who owned the Mercury Marquis. Hegwood

clarified that while he did not know defendant’s name, he was familiar with defendant’s face.

Detective Buie never asked Hegwood whether he could recognize defendant by his face. Hegwood

thought that he told the detective that the person who put something in the car’s trunk was a person

he had seen previously. Hegwood testified that he was initially hesitant to get involved but later

changed his mind.

¶ 62   In defendant’s case-in-chief, the parties stipulated that if called to testify, Detective Buie

would testify that Hegwood told him that he saw the tan-colored Mercury Marquis outside his

home on several occasions but did not know who drove the car. Furthermore, Hegwood never told

Detective Buie that the person he saw on four or five prior occasions and identified as defendant,

threw something into the trunk of the Mercury Marquis.

¶ 63   At trial, defendant testified as follows. On May 20, 2013, defendant woke up and walked

his children to school. Defendant resided at 72nd Street and Green Street. After dropping off his

children, defendant returned home and waited for his co-worker, David Scott, to arrive. Scott was

a friend who worked odd jobs with defendant. At that time, defendant and Scott were rehabbing

the house of a friend, Elaine, at 72nd Street and Ada Avenue.

¶ 64   Scott arrived at defendant’s home between 8:30 and 9 a.m. The two then went to Elaine’s

house and determined that the floor was corroded upon pulling up some bathroom floor tiles.

Defendant then called his friend, Juda, to drive them to Home Depot to get supplies to repair the

floor. Defendant needed a ride because he had left his car with Newbern the previous day. Newbern

needed his car that day to get back and forth from work.



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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 65       At the time, Newbern and defendant had been casually dating for eight or nine months, and

it was not unusual for defendant to loan her his car. Defendant resided with the mother of his

children, Tanell Wandas. He had another girlfriend too. Defendant claimed not to know Newbern’s

precise address and denied having ever been inside her apartment. In the past, defendant picked

up Newbern in the area of her home.

¶ 66       Juda drove defendant and Scott to Home Depot. After getting the necessary supplies,

defendant returned to the job site. Defendant spoke with Elaine about the fact that more supplies

would be needed to make the necessary repairs. Elaine said she did not have money to pay for

additional materials, so they scheduled another date to continue the work.

¶ 67       Defendant left Elaine’s house at 12 or 12:30 p.m. Juda went his own way, and defendant

and Scott walked to Ashland Avenue and took a bus to Scott’s apartment at 49th Street and Laflin

Street, where they had lunch and a couple of beers. While he was at Scott’s apartment, Newbern

called him. She sounded “[f]ine, normal.” Defendant went back to his house to change his clothes

and get ready to retrieve his car from Newbern. Newbern told defendant to meet her at her sister’s

home, nearby. Defendant went to Newbern’s sister’s house and picked up his car.

¶ 68       On May 28, 2013, as defendant was driving to the store, he was pulled over by the police.

They told him to turn off his car, and he complied. Defendant gave the police permission to search

his car.

¶ 69       Defendant testified that he met one of Newbern’s friends outside her sister’s house a while

ago. He denied having ever seen Hegwood before he testified in court. Defendant denied knowing

the decedent or shooting him on May 20, 2013.




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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 70   On cross-examination, defendant said he used to hang out with Scott daily. Scott lived in

a two-flat at 4942 South Laflin Street. Defendant did not know where Scott currently resided

because he had not talked to him since 2013. Defendant did not know Elaine’s last name or her

address. Defendant did not know Juda’s last name or his phone number. Defendant did not recall

his phone number or have any phone records to show where defendant was on May 20, 2013.

Defendant did not recall what time he called Juda, what time Juda arrived, or what type of car Juda

drove. Defendant had no receipts for the items purchased at Home Depot. Defendant did not recall

what time he arrived back at Elaine’s house. Defendant did not recall what time Newbern called

him.

¶ 71   Defendant testified that in 2013 he wore short braids, weighed 155 pounds, had a mustache

and some facial hair, and was about 6’0”. Defendant admitted that the Mercury Marquis was his

car and had a Mason symbol on it. Defendant was a Mason. Defendant denied ever parking his car

in the parking lot at the apartment building or in the alley. When defendant picked up Newbern,

he parked a couple of houses down from the building.

¶ 72   Defendant denied that he told the police that he did not know anyone near 96th and Halsted

Street. Defendant denied telling the police that he did not know anyone named Adrienne. He could

not recall whether he told the police that he did not know anyone who matched Newbern’s

description.

¶ 73   Defendant denied telling the police that he was in his car the day before the shooting with

a light-complected female black with short hair named “Shady.” Defendant denied telling the




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No. 1-20-0010


detectives that he had just met another girl named Kenyatta, in her thirties. He denied telling the

police that he went to Cedar3 the day after the shooting.

¶ 74   Defendant said that he never told the detectives that he was with Scott on May 20, 2013,

because they never asked him that question.

¶ 75   In rebuttal, Detective Tenton testified that he and Sergeant Jackson interviewed defendant

after his arrest. Defendant was advised of his Miranda warnings from a Fraternal Order of Police

[FOP] book. Defendant acknowledged his rights and agreed to speak with the detectives.

Defendant denied knowing anyone who lived near 95th Street or 96th Street and Halsted Street.

He denied knowing anyone named Adrienne or a female black fitting her description: dark-

complected, short, with long black hair.

¶ 76   The shooting occurred on Monday, May 20, 2013. Detective Tenton questioned defendant

about his activities the day before Sunday, May 19, 2013, and the day after, Tuesday, May 21,

2013. Defendant claimed that the day before the shooting, he was in his car with a girl named

Shady, a light-complected female black with short hair. The day following the shooting, defendant

said that he went to Cedar. Defendant never told Detective Tenton that he was with David Scott at

1:30 p.m. on May 20, 2013.

¶ 77   On cross-examination, Detective Tenton testified that defendant’s statements were neither

audiotaped nor videotaped.

¶ 78   After deliberations, the jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder and found that

he personally discharged a firearm that caused the death of another individual.




       3
           No further details were provided as to where “Cedar” is located.

                                                   - 18 -
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 79   At sentencing, the decedent’s mother, Newhampshire Wooden, read her written victim

impact statement to the trial court. In aggravation, the State presented defendant’s criminal history,

starting with a 1993 burglary conviction for which he received probation. Defendant later violated

his probation and was sentenced to the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC). He was then

convicted of aggravated battery in 1997 and sentenced to serve seven years in the IDOC. In 2007,

defendant received a three-year sentence in the IDOC for gun and drug charges.

¶ 80   In mitigation, defense counsel argued that defendant was no longer associated with any

gangs. Five siblings and a woman named Lakeshia Wilson attended his trial. They were all

devastated by defendant’s situation. They loved him and were supportive of him.

¶ 81   Defendant’s parents suffered from alcohol and drug abuse. Defendant had learning

disabilities and was in special education classes in high school. Defendant completed his General

Equivalency Diploma (GED) while in the Cook County Department of Corrections. Defendant

was previously employed doing rehabilitation projects. Defendant had children who he helped to

support. He was authorized to pick up and drop his children off at school.

¶ 82   Defendant had health issues. His feet swelled because of complications from diabetes.

Defendant had psychiatric issues for which he took medication. Defendant took no pride in his

criminal behavior. Defendant lacked control over the events in his life.

¶ 83   Counsel urged the court to impose a minimum sentence because defendant had “value” and

was a loving brother, son, father, uncle, and nephew.

¶ 84   Defendant made a statement in allocution in which he maintained his innocence.

¶ 85   The trial court sentenced defendant to 23 years in the IDOC plus an additional mandatory

minimum 25-year sentencing enhancement.


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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 86                                       II. ANALYSIS

¶ 87            A. Whether Hearsay Testimony Was Improperly Admitted at Trial

¶ 88    Defendant alleges that the trial court erred by permitting inadmissible hearsay evidence to

be admitted at trial. First, defendant alleges that the trial court erroneously allowed Sergeant

Jackson to provide testimony which implied that the decedent identified him as the shooter after

viewing a photo array. Second, defendant alleges that the trial court improperly permitted

Detective Tenton to testify to the decedent’s statement at Advocate Christ Hospital two hours after

being shot.

¶ 89    The State alleges that both claimed errors have been forfeited. Alternatively, the State

maintains that the rulings on the admissibility of such evidence were not in error. We agree with

the State.

¶ 90                                        1. Forfeiture

¶ 91    As previously discussed, the admissibility of the decedent’s statements to both Officer

Susnis and Detective Tenton and the identification of defendant after viewing the photo array

compiled by Sergeant Jackson were the subject of extensive pretrial litigation. However,

defendant’s posttrial motion did not allege that the trial court’s ruling allowing Sergeant Jackson

to testify regarding his course of investigation was in error. Furthermore, while defendant’s

posttrial motion did allege that the trial court erred in permitting defendant’s statement to Detective

Tenton to be testified to, defendant never alleged that such testimony violated the confrontation

clause. U.S. Const., amend. VI.

¶ 92    To preserve an error on appeal, defendant must object at trial and raise the issue in a written

posttrial motion. People v. Enoch, 122 Ill. 2d 176, 186 (1988). Failure to set forth the trial court's


                                                - 20 -
No. 1-20-0010


alleged errors and specify the grounds for a new trial in a posttrial motion constitutes a procedural

default of the issue on review in the absence of plain error. People v. Naylor, 229 Ill. 2d 584, 592–

93 (2008).

¶ 93   We agree with the State that defendant failed to properly preserve both claimed errors.

Defendant did not preserve the course-of-investigation claim in his posttrial motion and never

alleged that the admission of the decedent’s statement at the hospital violated the confrontation

clause. Defendant only sought to exclude the decedent’s statements to Officer Susnis and Detective

Tenton based on Illinois’ hearsay rules. The hearing on the motion and the court’s findings were

likewise limited to the question of whether such evidence constituted inadmissible hearsay. Nor

did defendant’s posttrial motion assert a confrontation clause violation.

¶ 94   We reject defendant’s claim that he “essentially raised a [c]onfrontation [c]lause challenge”

by claiming that the introduction of such hearsay evidence was prejudicial and deprived him of a

fair trial. The hearsay claim litigated and decided by the trial court is analytically distinct from the

confrontation clause claim that he now advances. Defendant admits as much when he argues that

“even if this statement constitutes an excited utterance, the excited utterance exception to the

hearsay rule does not resolve the Confrontation Clause issue” and relies on People v. Sutton, 233

Ill. 2d 89 (2009), in support of his argument.

¶ 95   Sutton demonstrates the problem with defendant’s attempt to overcome his procedural

default of this claim. In contrast to this case, in Sutton, the question of whether the declarant’s out-

of-court statement to police officers while in an ambulance violated the confrontation clause was

litigated before the trial court and decided in defendant’s favor. Id. at 91. The appellate court found

the statement to be testimonial but determined that it did not violate the confrontation clause



                                                 - 21 -
No. 1-20-0010


because the declarant was available for cross-examination. People v. Sutton, 375 Ill. App. 3d 889,

899 (2007).

¶ 96    The supreme court first determined that the statement was admissible under the

spontaneous declaration exception to the hearsay rule in reviewing the claimed error. Sutton, 233

Ill. 2d at 109. The court then considered whether the statement was testimonial and violative of

Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 68 (2004), and its progeny. Sutton, 233 Ill. 2d at 110-13,

116-20. The court affirmed the appellate court’s ruling, agreeing that the declarant’s statements in

the ambulance were testimonial but finding that their admission did not violate Crawford where

the declarant was available to testify at trial. Id. at 122-23.

¶ 97    Our conclusion that a defendant’s challenge to the admissibility of a statement on hearsay

grounds is fundamentally different from a confrontation clause challenge finds additional support

in People v. Hughes, 2015 IL 117242. In Hughes, the court rejected defendant’s claim that his

challenge to the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress was preserved where the grounds

alleged in the defendant’s motion, while “not factually hostile” to the grounds alleged on appeal,

were “almost wholly distinct from one another.” Id. ¶ 40.

¶ 98    Based on the foregoing, we find defendant’s allegations of court error properly regarded as

forfeited. Such forfeiture may only be excused if defendant establishes plain error. People v.

Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d 598, 613 (2010). Specifically, the plain error doctrine permits “a reviewing

court to consider an unpreserved error when (1) a clear or obvious error occurred and 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, or (2) a clear or obvious error occurred, and

that error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant's trial and challenged the



                                                 - 22 -
No. 1-20-0010


integrity of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence.” People v. Piatkowski,

225 Ill. 2d 551, 565 (2007) (citing People v. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d 167, 186-87 (2005)). Under either

prong of the plain error doctrine, the burden of persuasion remains on the defendant. People v.

Bowman, 2012 IL App (1st) 102010, ¶ 29 (citing People v. Lewis, 234 Ill. 2d 32, 43 (2009)).

¶ 99    For the reasons that follow, we find defendant has failed to establish plain error.

¶ 100                       2. Sergeant Jackson’s Testimony Was Properly
                               Elicited Course-of-Investigation Testimony

¶ 101 Defendant’s claim that improper photo array testimony was admitted at trial is based on

the following testimony given by Sergeant Jackson in response to the State’s questions:

                       “THE STATE: You compile the photo array, do you go to Christ

        Hospital?

                       SERGEANT JACKSON: Yes.

                       THE STATE: Do you then later continue your investigation into that

        day?

                       SERGEANT JACKSON: Yes.

                       THE STATE: Are you looking for a suspect at that time?

                       SERGEANT JACKSON: Yes.

                       THE STATE: And who are you looking for?

                       SERGEANT JACKSON: Last name Arna, first name Davis.”

¶ 102 Evidentiary rulings are within the trial court’s sound discretion and are to be given

deference on appeal. People v. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d 52, 89 (2001). An abuse of discretion will only

be found where the trial court’s ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable, or where no reasonable


                                                - 23 -
No. 1-20-0010


person could take the view adopted by the trial court. People v. Connolly, 406 Ill. App. 3d 1022,

1026 (2011).

¶ 103 We reject defendant’s assertion that the trial court erroneously allowed photo array

evidence to be admitted at trial. Defendant successfully moved in limine to disallow evidence that

upon viewing the photo array at the hospital, the decedent identified defendant as his attacker by

affirmatively nodding his head. Judge Lacy determined that such evidence was inadmissible

hearsay but permitted the State to elicit testimony which showed that the police: (1) spoke to the

victim; (2) showed him a photo array; (3) described what a photo array was; and (4) were looking

for defendant after they investigated.

¶ 104 To be clear, no photo array testimony was admitted at trial. The State not only stayed within

the limitations set by the trial court but offered less evidence than what the trial court authorized.

Sergeant Jackson did not testify that he: (1) took the photo array to the hospital; (2) saw or spoke

with the decedent at the hospital; or (3) was looking for defendant after speaking with defendant

at the hospital.

¶ 105 The trial court’s ruling constituted a proper exercise of discretion. Statements that detail

the progress of a police investigation and why the police arrested an individual or took other action

fall under the course-of-investigation exception to the hearsay rule. In re Jovan A., 2014 IL App

(1st) 103835, ¶ 23. Evidence properly admitted under the course-of-investigation exception is not

hearsay because it is not offered for the truth of the matter asserted. People v. Rush, 401 Ill. App.

3d 1, 15 (2010). Testimony of an out-of-court statement offered for the limited purpose of

explaining the reason the police conducted their investigation as they did is not hearsay. People v.

Jones, 153 Ill. 2d 155, 159-60 (1992); People v. Hunter, 124 Ill. App. 3d 516, 529 (1984). The



                                                - 24 -
No. 1-20-0010


rationale underlying the investigatory course of conduct rule is that “an arresting or investigating

officer should not be put in the false position of seeming to have happened upon the scene; he

should be allowed some explanation of his presence and conduct.” People v. Cox, 377 Ill. App. 3d

690, 702 (2007) (citing People v. Cameron, 189 Ill. App. 3d 998, 1004 (1989)).

¶ 106 Even if a jury can infer that the police began looking for defendant due to what a non-

testifying witness said, course-of-investigation testimony is proper as long as the testimony does

not gratuitously reveal the substance of the statements and inform the jury that they told the police

that the defendant was responsible for the crime. People v. Henderson, 142 Ill. 2d 258, 304 (1990).

Therefore, the testimony also may not include the substance of any conversation with a person

who does not testify. People v. Short, 2020 IL App (1st) 162168, ¶ 69; People v. Jura, 352 Ill.

App. 3d 1080, 1088 (2004).

¶ 107 In People v. Rush, defendant alleged that the trial court erred in allowing hearsay testimony

under the course of investigation exception. People v. Rush, 401 Ill. App. 3d 1, 14 (2010). At trial,

a sergeant testified that after speaking with a detective and two individuals that he went to the

crime scene with a specific description of the gender, weight, height, and hair color and texture of

the alleged offender, as well as the fact that he bore a tattoo on his arm. Id. at 14-15. The court

rejected defendant’s claim, finding that such testimony did not violate the defendant’s

constitutional confrontation rights where it merely explained the investigation undertaken by the

police. Id. at 16.

¶ 108 Here, Sergeant Jackson was a police officer acting in the line of duty. His scant testimony

properly explained the course of the investigation that led to defendant’s arrest. The paucity of his

testimony not only stayed within the court’s ruling but, indeed, was more minimal than what the



                                               - 25 -
No. 1-20-0010


ruling allowed. We agree with the State that the substance of Sergeant Jackson’s scaled-back

testimony did not necessarily lead the jury to infer that the decedent was shown the photo array

and identified defendant.

¶ 109 However, even if such inference naturally flowed from the testimony of Sergeant Jackson,

it was permissible under People v. Gacho, 122 Ill. 2d 221 (1988). In Gacho, an officer testified

that after speaking with a decedent at the hospital, he and his partner began to look for “Robert

Gacho,” the defendant. Id. at 248. Our supreme court affirmed the admission of the officer’s

testimony, stating that although any testimony as to the substance of the officer’s conversation

with the decedent would be improper hearsay, the officer’s given testimony “was not of the

conversation with [the decedent] but to what [the officer] did and to investigatory procedure.” Id.

¶ 110 Defendant misplaces reliance on the factually inapposite case of People v. Sample, 326 Ill.

App. 3d 914 (2001). In Sample, two police officers testified that they began searching for the

defendant after speaking with the two codefendants. Id. at 918. The appellate court found that the

State exceeded the boundaries of the course-of-investigation exception where “the repetition of

strong inferences that his codefendants implicated defendant in the crimes, the use of those

statements to build a substantive link in the State’s case, and the State’s several comments on the

upcoming testimony during opening statement, lead us to conclude that the boundaries set for the

investigative process hearsay exception were breached.” Id. at 924.

¶ 111 Although the State’s “serial questions” in Sample were designed to cause the jury to infer

that defendant was named by his co-offenders, the court nevertheless affirmed defendant’s

conviction based on the remaining overwhelming evidence of his guilt. Id. at 925.




                                              - 26 -
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 112 We also reject defendant’s claim that the State enhanced the inference that the decedent

identified defendant during its closing argument. The State neither discussed nor alluded to the

photo array in its closing argument. The State’s remarks concerning the decedent’s description of

defendant and his actions were clearly related to his statements to Detective Tenton and Officer

Susnis. We now consider the admissibility of that evidence.

¶ 113                3. Defendant Has Failed to Demonstrate That the Admission of the
                        Decedent’s Statement to Detective Tenton Was a Clear Error

¶ 114 On appeal, defendant has abandoned his challenge to the admissibility of the decedent’s

initial statement to Officer Susnis but maintains that Detective Tenton should have been disallowed

from testifying to the statement made by the decedent at Advocate Christ Hospital. Defendant

suggests that the statement did not constitute an excited utterance because it was made two hours

after the decedent was shot and further maintains that the admission of this testimony violated the

confrontation clause. U.S. Const., amend. VI. We disagree with both assertions.

¶ 115                          a. The Excited Utterance Exception

¶ 116 We review the trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. People v. Perkins, 2018 IL

App (1st) 133981, ¶ 72. Evidentiary rulings are within the trial court's sound discretion, and we

review such rulings with deference to the trial court. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d at 89. A trial court’s ruling

will only constitute an abuse of discretion where it is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable, or where

no reasonable person could take the view adopted by the trial court. Id.

¶ 117 “Hearsay evidence is an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter

asserted, and it is generally inadmissible due to its lack of reliability unless it falls within an

exception to the hearsay rule.” People v. Olinger, 176 Ill. 2d 326, 357 (1997). To qualify as an

excited utterance, “there must be an occurrence sufficiently startling to produce a spontaneous and

                                                 - 27 -
No. 1-20-0010


unreflecting statement, there must be an absence of time for the declarant to fabricate the statement,

and the statement must relate to the circumstances of the occurrence.” Sutton, 233 Ill. 2d at 107.

In determining whether the exception applies, the totality of the circumstances is to be considered.

People v. Williams, 193 Ill. 2d 306, 352 (2000). The critical question is whether the statement was

made while the declarant was still affected by the excitement of the event. Id.; Sutton, 233 Ill. 2d

at 107. The time factor’s significance varies with the facts of the case. Williams, 193 Ill. 2d at 353.

A statement’s spontaneity is not destroyed simply because it is made in response to questioning.

Id. The critical question is whether the excitement of the event predominated when the statement

was made. People v. Smith, 152 Ill. 2d 229, 260 (1992).

¶ 118 In Connolly, the defendant was convicted of domestic battery and endangering the life or

health of a child. People v. Connolly, 406 Ill. App. 3d 1022 (2011). At trial, his wife denied that

defendant struck her. Id. at 1023-24. The State was permitted to introduce evidence under the

excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule of her statements to a police officer that were made

shortly after the incident. Id. at 1023. The court determined that the totality of the circumstances

supported the trial court’s finding that the wife’s statements were excited utterances. Id. at 1026.

¶ 119 Pretrial, the trial court properly exercised its discretion when it determined that the

decedent’s statement to Detective Tenton qualified as an excited utterance. Perkins, 2018 IL App

(1st) 133981, ¶ 68. The statement was the product of a startling occurrence; there was an absence

of time for the decedent to fabricate, and the statement related to the circumstances of the

occurrence. The passage of approximately two hours from the time of the shooting does not

undermine the fact that the decedent, who was in the emergency room at Advocate Christ Hospital




                                                - 28 -
No. 1-20-0010


about to undergo surgery and who asked a nurse why he was unable to feel any sensation in his

legs, was still affected by the excitement of the event.

¶ 120                               b. The Confrontation Clause

¶ 121 Insofar as defendant’s forfeited confrontation clause argument is concerned, the

preliminary question of whether the plain error doctrine applies is whether a clear or obvious error

occurred. People v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 49. Whether a defendant has suffered a violation of

the confrontation clause presents a question of law and is subject to de novo review. People v.

Lovejoy, 235 Ill. 2d 97, 141-42 (2009); People v. Burney, 2011 IL App (4th) 100343, ¶ 45.

¶ 122 Under the sixth amendment, a criminal defendant has the right to be confronted with the

witnesses against him. U.S. Const., amend. VI. In Crawford v. Washington, the Supreme Court

held that the confrontation clause disallows “testimonial” hearsay statements from being admitted

against a criminal defendant unless the declarant is unavailable to testify, and the defendant has

had an opportunity to cross-examine the declarant. Crawford, 541 U.S. at 68.

¶ 123 In Davis v. Washington, the Supreme Court held that statements will not be deemed

testimonial when made in the course of a police interrogation where “the primary purpose of the

interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency” rather than “to establish

or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.” Davis v. Washington, 547

U.S. 813, 822 (2006).

¶ 124 In Michigan v. Bryant, the Supreme Court noted that standard rules of hearsay, designed

to identify statements as reliable, are relevant in determining whether a statement is testimonial.

Michigan v. Bryant, 562 U.S. 344, 356-57 (2011). Excited utterances are considered reliable

because the stress of the excitement of an emergency focuses an individual on ending the


                                                - 29 -
No. 1-20-0010


threatening situation as opposed to fabricating a story for prosecution purposes. Id. at 361-63. An

assessment of whether an emergency is ongoing “cannot narrowly focus on whether the threat

solely to the first victim has been neutralized because the threat to the first responders and public

may continue.” Id. at 363. The Bryant court also recognized that police officers may have dual

motives to respond to an emergency situation and gather evidence. Id. at 368.

¶ 125 In determining whether an emergency is ongoing, courts should consider whether the

offender is still on the loose, the type of weapon employed, the motive for the offense, and the

decedent’s medical state. Id. at 365, 373-74.

¶ 126 An additional factor that may be considered is the formality of the interrogation. Id. at 377.

A formal interrogation in a police station is more likely to provoke a testimonial statement than

less formal questioning. Ohio v. Clark, 576 U.S. 237, 245 (2015).

¶ 127 Here, defendant relies on four “facts” to support his claim that the admission of the

decedent’s statement violated the confrontation clause: (1) two hours transpired before the

statement was made; (2) the decedent was “safe in the hospital” when the statement was made;

(3) “the detectives chose not to record the interview”; and (4) “the detectives asked questions to

establish events that occurred previously.”

¶ 128 Regarding defendant’s claim that the detectives’ questions were designed to establish

events that already occurred, defendant relies on Detective Tenton asking the decedent “what

happened to him.” We reject defendant’s reliance on this question as supporting his claim.

¶ 129 In People v. Feliciano, the court held that a police officer’s question “[s]imply asking what

happened certainly cannot be construed here as an attempt to identify a perpetrator for future

prosecution of a case.” People v. Feliciano, 2020 IL App (1st) 171142, ¶ 95.


                                                - 30 -
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 130 In Burney, the defendant alleged that the trial court erred in admitting the victim’s hearsay

statements. Burney, 2011 IL App (4th) 100343, ¶ 34. The court rejected defendant’s claim that the

victim’s statements were testimonial where the suspect remained on the loose after barging into

the elderly victim’s home and demanding her car keys. Id. ¶ 53. The court found it “reasonable to

conclude the police interrogation of [the victim] sought to bring an end to the situation.” Id.

¶ 131 Additionally, the court distinguished Sutton. Burney, 2011 IL App (4th) 100343, ¶ 54. The

court found no indication that the officer conducted a “structured interrogation,” and the

informality of the encounter with the victim suggested that the officer was seeking to discern the

facts of an ongoing emergency. Id.

¶ 132 In contrast, in Sutton, after questioning the victim at the scene and receiving a detailed

description of the offender, the same officer again questioned the victim who was in an ambulance

on the way to the hospital. Sutton, 233 Ill. 2d at 89. The officer testified, “I asked him, can you

please tell me again exactly what happened tonight,” at which point the victim provided a second

narrative of the events of that evening. Id. at 118-19.

¶ 133 The court noted that the scene was fully secured by the time the question was asked and

that the officer’s questions were not directed at addressing an ongoing emergency. Id. at 119. The

court further noted that the officer did not dispatch the second description of the assailant following

his questioning of the victim, nor did he dispatch any information from the ambulance to

investigators at the scene. Id. Based on the totality of the circumstances, the court rejected the

State’s claim that the interrogation in the ambulance was conducted to assist in an ongoing

emergency. Id.




                                                - 31 -
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 134 Viewed objectively, defendant has failed to establish a clear or obvious error in the

admission of the decedent’s statement to Detective Tenton at Advocate Christ Hospital. In contrast

to Sutton, where the defendant’s confrontation clause claim was fully litigated before the trial

court, defendant only raised a hearsay objection to the admissibility of the decedent’s statement at

Advocate Christ Hospital. As such, the State was never obligated to establish the primary purpose

of Detective Tenton’s interview to counter a later-waged claim that the testimony would violate

the confrontation clause.

¶ 135 The record in this matter disallows us from concluding that defendant has established a

clear or obvious error. The evidence supports the conclusion that at the time that this statement

was made, the police (1) were still uncertain as to why this crime occurred; (2) knew that the

offender was still on the loose; (3) knew that the offender left the scene armed and in a car; and

(4) knew that a second individual was potentially at risk. While the timeline does not establish

precisely when Newbern was arrested on May 20, 2013, the testimony suggests that her arrest

occurred after the decedent was interviewed at the hospital. Based on what the police learned at

the scene of the offense and the decedent’s initial statement to Officer Susnis, they arguably had

reason to believe that the emergency was ongoing until Newbern was located.

¶ 136 Furthermore, based on the manner in which Detective Tenton testified, the record only

establishes that he asked the decedent two questions: (1) what had happened to him; and

(2) whether he knew who shot him. As in Burney, nothing supports the conclusion that Detective

Tenton conducted a “structured interrogation” of the decedent. The interview was prematurely

terminated when the decedent was wheeled off to emergency surgery. In light of the totality of the




                                               - 32 -
No. 1-20-0010


circumstances, we do not believe that defendant has established Detective Tenton’s interview of

the decedent violated the confrontation clause.

¶ 137                           4. The Evidence Was Not Closely Balanced

¶ 138 Even if we were to agree with defendant that the court erred in allowing improper course-

of-investigation testimony or testimony that violated the confrontation clause, we would still find

that defendant has failed to establish plain error in this case. The record in this matter not only fails

to establish that the evidence was closely balanced but compels the conclusion that the evidence

of defendant’s guilt was overwhelming.

¶ 139 We begin by noting that defendant does not challenge the decedent’s initial statement to

Officer Susnis. That statement named Newbern’s “boyfriend” as his assailant and described

defendant’s appearance. The description was corroborated by Sergeant Jackson who testified that

at the time of defendant’s arrest, he was 6’0”, weighed approximately 155 pounds, wore his hair

in short braids, had a dark complexion, and was 36 or 37 years old.

¶ 140 Additionally, Sergeant Jackson also noticed that one of defendant’s eyes “kind of droops a

little bit ***.” This unique facial feature was consistent with Esco’s description of defendant as

having an eye that made him appear to have had a stroke and corroborated her testimony generally.

It also corroborated her claim that she previously met defendant and actually rode to a liquor store

with Newbern in his car.

¶ 141 Newbern’s trial testimony wherein she recounted that upon seeing defendant with the gun

in hand that she said “[n]o, no, no,” was also corroborated by Esco’s testimony that after hearing

gunshots she heard someone utter those very words.




                                                 - 33 -
No. 1-20-0010


¶ 142 After defendant’s arrest, Hegwood identified defendant after viewing a lineup. In court, he

testified that defendant was the person he saw on May 20, 2013, leaving the apartment building,

placing an item in the trunk of a car that he recognized, and driving away.

¶ 143 While defense counsel successfully impeached the testimony of all three witnesses to

various degrees, their overall testimony provided a clear, cohesive, generally consistent account

of defendant’s relationship with Newbern and his actions on May 20, 2013. Furthermore, their

testimony was consistent with and corroborated by the uncontested and significant fact that

defendant was the registered owner of the Mercury Marquis, which bore a unique Mason decal.

¶ 144 Defendant’s uncorroborated alibi testimony did nothing to undermine the substantial proof

of his guilt. Defendant’s testimony reinforced the fact that Newbern was his girlfriend at the time

of the shooting, that he owned the Mercury Marquis, that the car had a Mason decal, and that

defendant was a Mason.

¶ 145 Defendant’s trial testimony that he was never inside the apartment, had never met

Hegwood or Esco or given Esco a ride to a liquor store was directly contradicted by Hegwood,

Esco, and Newbern’s testimony. Defendant’s testimony regarding what he told the detectives when

he was arrested was impeached by Detective Tenton. His alibi testimony was devoid of any

corroboration.

¶ 146                                  5. Cumulative Error

¶ 147 Having found an insufficient showing of a clear or obvious error in the testimony of

Sergeant Jackson or Detective Tenton, we reject defendant’s claim that the cumulative effect of

the errors denied him a fair trial where defendant has failed to make a showing of individual error.




                                               - 34 -
No. 1-20-0010


People v. Mitchell, 2011 IL App (1st) 083143, ¶ 46. As our supreme court noted in Albanese, “The

whole can be no greater than the sum of its parts.” People v. Albanese, 102 Ill. 2d 54, 82-83 (1984).

¶ 148           B. Defendant Was Not Denied the Effective Assistance of Counsel

¶ 149 Defendant also claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel based on trial

counsel’s failure to interpose an objection to an allegedly improper cross-examination question

asked of defendant and by failing to object to remarks made by the prosecutor during closing

argument. Specifically, defendant maintains that counsel should have objected to the following

question: “You never told the detectives that you were with David Scott on May 20, 2013?”

Defendant maintains that trial counsel’s failure to object to this question resulted in a response that

violated Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976). He further maintains that trial counsel failed to object

to remarks that shifted the burden of proof and remarks that relied on the alleged Doyle violation,

where it characterized defendant’s alibi as “made up.”

¶ 150 Under the familiar test outlined in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 685 (1984), and

adopted by our supreme court in Albanese, 104 Ill. 2d at 525, defendant must establish both that

trial counsel’s performance was objectively unreasonable under prevailing professional norms,

and a reasonable probability that, but for the unprofessional performance, the outcome would have

differed. To establish deficient representation, the defendant must overcome the strong

presumption that the challenged inaction might have been the result of sound trial strategy. People

v. Richardson, 189 Ill. 2d 401, 411 (2000). To establish prejudice, the defendant must show that

counsel’s deficient performance rendered the result of the trial unreliable or the proceeding

fundamentally unfair. People v. Evans, 186 Ill. 2d 83, 93 (1999). If a claim can be disposed of




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No. 1-20-0010


based on an insufficient showing of prejudice, a reviewing court need not consider whether

counsel’s performance was deficient. People v. Givens, 237 Ill. 2d 311, 331 (2010).

¶ 151                                 1. Factual Background

¶ 152 In order to address defendant’s contentions of error, we begin by considering the manner

in which these claims were litigated before the trial court. On recross-examination, when the State

asked defendant about his failure to tell the detectives that he was with Scott on the date of the

offense, defendant replied, “[t]he detectives never asked me that question.”

¶ 153 After defense counsel asked defendant one additional unrelated question on redirect

examination, the defense rested. In rebuttal, Detective Tenton testified that defendant never told

him that he was with a person named David Scott at 1:30 p.m. on May 20, 2013.

¶ 154 Defense counsel then moved to restrain the State from being permitted to argue in closing

argument that defendant did not tell the police about David Scott when he was questioned because

defendant asserted his right to counsel at some point during the interview. Counsel maintained that

the State should be prevented from arguing that defendant should have told the police about the

alibi because such argument would be improper.

¶ 155 The trial court initially noted that defendant’s failure to mention David Scott was “fair

game” but should not be dwelled on. However, the following day, the trial court revisited

defendant’s motion sua sponte. The court expressed its concern that the testimony did not establish

that upon being questioned by the police defendant was informed of the date of this offense or

asked where he was on that date. The trial court cited the case of People v. Chriswell in support of

its ruling disallowing the State from arguing that defendant did not mention his alibi during the

police interview. People v. Chriswell, 133 Ill. App. 3d 458 (1985).


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¶ 156 We now consider the applicable law for determining whether the State’s cross-examination

of defendant violated Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976).

¶ 157                                    2. Relevant Caselaw

¶ 158 A defendant’s post-arrest silence after being Mirandized may not be used to impeach his

trial testimony. Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976). The prohibition does not apply when a

defendant makes a voluntary statement to the police and relates a version that is inconsistent with

his trial testimony. Anderson v. Charles, 447 U.S. 404, 408 (1980); People v. Rehbein, 74 Ill. 2d

435 (1978); People v. Herrett, 137 Ill. 2d 195, 213-14 (1990).

¶ 159 The State may remark on a defendant’s post-arrest silence when his in-court testimony is

inconsistent with the statement previously given to the police. People v. Frieberg, 147 Ill. 2d 326,

356 (1992). In making this determination, the court considers whether the defendant’s post-arrest

statements go beyond mere denial of knowledge and are manifestly inconsistent with exculpatory

trial testimony. Id. at 356. Where a defendant omits significant details in his initial version that are

inconsistent with his trial testimony, the State may use the inconsistency to test the defendant’s

theory of defense. People v. Maggio, 2017 IL App (4th) 150287, ¶ 24, People v. Mischke, 278 Ill.

App. 3d 252, 265 (1995).

¶ 160 In Chriswell, in his police interview, the defendant made a partial statement denying his

involvement in the offense and a substantive statement regarding his ownership of a car observed

near the scene at the time of the burglary. Chriswell, 133 Ill. App. 3d at 466. The court noted that

the record did not indicate whether the defendant was ever questioned as to his whereabouts during

the interview on the date and time that the offense was committed. Id. at 464.




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No. 1-20-0010


¶ 161 After testifying that he could not recall whether the police asked him where he was on the

date of the offense, the defendant later testified that he “could have told them” that he was at home.

Id. The State did not call a rebuttal witness to establish that the defendant was asked about his

whereabouts on the date and time in question. Id. Based on the foregoing facts, the court

concluded:

                “Thus, it is manifest that there was no inconsistency between the substantive

       statement which was given by defendant and defendant’s subsequent trial testimony

       regarding his alibi. In both versions, the defendant claimed his innocence and his

       lack of any knowledge of the incident in question.” Id.

¶ 162 Finding it improper to question a defendant about his post-arrest silence unless his trial

testimony is inconsistent with the pretrial statements made to the police, the court determined that

the State’s cross-examination on this point was improper. Id. at 466. Despite the error, based on

the overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt, the court affirmed defendant’s conviction. Id.

¶ 163 In People v. Gagliani, the defendant alleged that the State’s repeated questions concerning

his failure to offer an exculpatory version of events to the police when he was initially questioned

violated Doyle. People v. Gagliani, 210 Ill. App. 3d 617, 624 (1991).

¶ 164 When the police initially questioned him, the defendant denied knowing anything about

the crimes or how his fingerprints came to be found in the decedent's home. Id. at 621. At trial, the

defendant testified that he was acquainted with the decedent and admitted having consensual sex

with her in her home on three prior occasions. Id. at 623. The State repeatedly questioned the

defendant about his failure to provide the exculpatory version he testified to when the police asked




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No. 1-20-0010


him. The trial court sustained defense counsel’s objections to such questions. Id. at 625-26. The

defendant failed to preserve the claimed error in his posttrial motion. Id.

¶ 165 The appellate court found that the plain error rule applied where the evidence was closely

balanced. Id. at 626. The court agreed with defendant that the State’s cross-examination was

improper and violated Doyle. Id. The prosecutor’s questions improperly “suggested that [the]

defendant’s trial testimony was fabricated because he could have told the police officers the same

story during the investigation but did not.” Id. Where defendant’s credibility was integral to his

defense of consent, the improper cross-examination provided the jurors an impermissible basis for

believing that defendant’s trial testimony was fabricated. Id. at 627.

¶ 166   3. Whether Defense Counsel’s Failure to Object to the State’s Cross-Examination
                 of Defendant Was Deficient Under the First Prong of Strickland

¶ 167 With this factual and legal backdrop in place, we now consider whether defense counsel’s

failure to object constituted deficient performance. Our decision hinges on whether or not the

State’s cross-examination question was proper.

¶ 168 The State’s question was improper. The record fully supports the conclusion that the trial

court realized this when it revisited defendant’s motion sua sponte after independently researching

the issue. The testimony is unambiguous. Not only did the State fail to offer any evidence to

establish that defendant was ever asked his whereabouts on May 20, 2013; additionally, Sergeant

Jackson testified that he asked defendant his whereabouts the day before the offense (Sunday, May

19, 2013), and the day following the offense (Tuesday, May 21, 2013).

¶ 169 The trial court properly relied on Chriswell to find that an insufficient foundation was

established for the State to be permitted to remark on defendant’s failure to provide the alibi to the

detectives when he was initially interrogated. Based on the trial court’s ruling, we have no doubt

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No. 1-20-0010


that the trial court would have sustained an objection to this question had it been made. Under

Chriswell and Gagliani, the State’s single cross-examination question was improper.

¶ 170 At oral argument, before this court, the State maintained that no error occurred and relied

on People v. Hinson, 70 Ill. App. 3d 880 (1979), to support its contention. However, Hinson is

distinguishable. In Hinson, defendant’s testimony at trial established that when he was initially

questioned, the arresting officer questioned him about his whereabouts on the date and time of the

offense Id. at 884. Specifically, in response to the defendant being asked whether the arresting

officer “questioned you about what happened the day before at the Bilbruck residence,” defendant

replied “Yes, he did.” In response to the State’s follow-up question of “And you told him you

didn’t know anything about it?” the defendant replied “Yes, sir.”

¶ 171 The State claimed that the questions asked of the defendant in Hinson related to his

whereabouts the day before the offense was committed. A close review of Hinson belies this claim.

The prosecutor’s reference to “the day before” clearly related to the date of the offense and the

precise time of the offense was referenced in a follow-up question.

¶ 172 The State in the instant case further maintains that defense counsel’s failure to object to the

question of whether defendant told the police about David Scott should be regarded as trial

strategy. We disagree. Even if we were to conclude that counsel determined that it was better to

have defendant respond to the question rather than leave it unanswered, this does not explain

defense counsel’s failure to object to the same testimony being elicited through Detective Tenton.

Detective Tenton’s unchallenged rebuttal testimony underscored the fact that defendant never

mentioned David Scott when he was questioned. In the absence of sufficient questioning to show




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that defendant was asked during his initial statement where he was at the time of this offense, the

question should not have been asked.

¶ 173 We next turn to defendant’s related claim that this error was exacerbated by defense

counsel’s failure to object to what he regards to be improper remarks by the State during its closing

argument.

¶ 174                  4. Remarks Made During the State’s Closing Argument

¶ 175 Defendant claims trial counsel was also deficient for failing to object to improper remarks

made by the State during closing argument. First, defendant alleges that counsel interposed no

objection to a remark that improperly shifted the burden of proof. Placed in context, the challenged

remarks are:

                “THE STATE: But I also want to be very clear on this, which is what I want

        to say is they have no burden, okay? But when they present evidence, when the

        defendant got up on the stand he put his credibility at issue. And again, that

        Instruction [1.02], the one I just read to you, that shows that you can consider his

        testimony. And in assessing, trying to see if maybe his testimony is credible, is

        corroboration. And David Scott is not here to corroborate it.

                And again they don’t have to put him on. They don’t have a burden. But it

        goes to his credibility. Because, really? I mean the person that has the most interest

        in lying in this case, the person who has the biggest motive, the most reason to lie

        to you is him, the person sitting charged with first degree murder.

                And David Scott, and this story of, well, we were having lunch and had a

        couple of beers, you know? David Scott and that fiction that he created over the last


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No. 1-20-0010


       six years is just that. It’s a story that he can’t even keep straight. David Scott is no

       more real than the bogeyman. It’s made up. He doesn’t exist, just like the

       bogeyman.

                And just because he got up and told you that doesn’t make it so. You assess

       his credibility. You treat his testimony like anyone else.

                He lied to you. He told you a story that isn’t true. And even worse, he lied

       to you about lying to the police. ***” (Emphases added.)

¶ 176 We reject defendant’s claim that the foregoing remarks improperly shifted the burden of

proof. It is well-established that “where a defendant injects into the case the name of an alibi

witness and then fails to call the witness, the prosecutor may legitimately comment on the lack of

such evidence although it may not be relied upon as proof of the charge.” People v. Kubat, 94 Ill.

2d 437, 498 (1997). The State’s remarks did not exceed the bounds of proper closing argument.

¶ 177 We also reject defendant’s claim that trial counsel was deficient for failing to object to

remarks that “built on the Doyle violation to cast doubt on [defendant’s] alibi.” As was previously

discussed, defendant received a favorable ruling on his motion in limine that prohibited the State

from relying on defendant’s failure to tell the detectives about Scott when he was interrogated.

While counsel did not immediately object to the State’s question, his motion ensured that the

admission of such evidence would not be exacerbated by the State’s closing argument.

¶ 178 Defendant relies on People v. Ridley to support his claim. People v. Ridley, 199 Ill. App.

3d 487 (1990). The facts of Ridley bear no resemblance to the facts of this case. In Ridley, in

rebuttal closing argument, the State explicitly relied on testimony that was improperly elicited by




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No. 1-20-0010


their improper cross-examination questions, thereby inviting the jury to infer that the alibi defense

was a recent fabrication. Id. at 493.

¶ 179 No such transgression occurred in this case. Trial counsel’s motion effectively prevented

the error in the cross-examination question from being exacerbated.

¶ 180 We have thoroughly reviewed the record and find that the State strictly adhered to the trial

court’s ruling prohibiting it from making any remarks about defendant’s failure to tell the police

about Scott. The State made no reference, either explicit or implicit, to defendant’s failure to

provide the alibi sooner. Rather, the State properly recounted the many examples of how

defendant’s trial testimony was directly inconsistent with Detective Tenton’s rebuttal testimony.

In sum, we find no error in the State’s closing argument.

¶ 181                  5. Whether Defendant Has Established Resulting Prejudice

¶ 182 While we agree with defendant that he should not have been asked whether he told the

police that David Scott was with him when this offense was committed, we do not believe that he

has satisfied the second prong of Strickland by showing any resulting prejudice. A defendant

shows prejudice when there is a reasonable probability that, but for the deficient performance, the

result of the proceedings would have differed. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. “A reasonable

probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id.

¶ 183 We do not believe that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of this trial would

have differed had this single question not been asked. Defendant was properly impeached on many

points where his trial testimony as to what he told the detectives directly conflicted with Detective

Tenton’s rebuttal testimony. We cannot say that a single improper question resulted in prejudice,

where defendant provided an explanation for why he did not mention Scott and where, as


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No. 1-20-0010


previously indicated, the testimony of Detective Tenton inferentially supported defendant’s claim.

Moreover, as we have previously noted, error aside, the evidence of defendant’s guilt was

overwhelming. Had this single question not been asked, we do not believe that the outcome of this

trial would have differed.

¶ 184                                  III. CONCLUSION

¶ 185 For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s conviction and sentence are affirmed.

¶ 186 Affirmed.




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