Court Opinion

ID: 4648047
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-30 22:03:31.258239+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:10.795451
License: Public Domain

2020 IL App (1st) 170500

                                                                             THIRD DIVISION
                                                                             December 30, 2020

                                 No. 1-17-0500
______________________________________________________________________________

                                    IN THE
                        APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                           FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,            )     Appeal from the
                                                )     Circuit Court of
      Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )     Cook County.
                                                )
      v.                                        )     No. 10 CR 6406 (02)
                                                )
MARION ANDRE COMIER,                            )     Honorable
                                                )     Geary W. Kull,
      Defendant-Appellant.                      )     Judge Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE McBRIDE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justice Ellis concurred in the judgment and opinion.
       Presiding Justice Howse specially concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.

                                            OPINION

¶1     Defendant, Marion Andre Comier, was charged with intentionally setting fire to an

apartment building in Cicero, Illinois, which resulted in the deaths of seven people, for the purpose

of assisting his codefendant, Lawrence Myers, who is not a party to this appeal, to collect insurance

proceeds on the building. Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of seven counts of first-

degree murder and sentenced to a term of natural life imprisonment. Defendant appeals his

conviction on the grounds that (1) the trial court erroneously conditioned the admission of expert

testimony concerning defendant’s mental state when he gave an inculpatory statement upon

defendant’s submission to an examination by a State expert and (2) the trial court erroneously
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failed to strike the State’s expert’s testimony that the fire was intentionally set using an accelerant

and open flame because that opinion resulted from a flawed methodology and lacked a proper

scientific basis.

¶2      The record shows that defendant and Myers were charged with 122 counts of first-degree

murder, three counts of aggravated arson, two counts of aggravated battery to firefighter Dennis

Ahrens, two counts of residential arson, two counts of conspiracy to commit aggravated arson and

residential arson, three counts of arson, and one count of conspiracy to commit arson. The charges

stemmed from a February 14, 2014, fire in an apartment building in Cicero, Illinois, which killed

seven victims who resided in an attic bedroom of a second-floor apartment in the building. The

victims who died in the fire included Sallie Gist and Byron Reed; their two children, three-year-

old Rashon Reed, and three-day-old Brian Reed; Sallie’s siblings, 16-year-old twins, Elijah Gist

and Elisha Gist; and Tierra Davidson, a friend of the family who had stayed the night. The cause

of death of the newborn, Brian, was determined to be an inhalation injury due to the apartment

fire, and the cause of death of the remaining six victims was determined to be carbon monoxide

intoxication due to the inhalation of smoke and soot due to the apartment fire. The second-floor

apartment was also occupied at the time of the fire, but the people in that area were able to escape.

Myers, who owned the building, was tried separately and convicted of first-degree murder for

soliciting someone to burn down his building so that he could collect the insurance proceeds.

¶3      Defendant was charged with actually setting the fire, and the evidence against him included

inculpatory statements made by defendant and Myers that were captured by police through a

consensual overhear recording performed by Myers’s girlfriend, Bonita Robertson.

¶4      Prior to trial, the defense hired a psychiatrist, Dr. Bruce Frumkin, to examine defendant.

The defense tendered Dr. Frumkin’s report to the State in discovery, in which the doctor opined
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that defendant suffered from a psychotic disorder not otherwise specified and a cognitive disorder

not otherwise specified on axis I and schizotypal disorder on axis II. Dr. Frumkin later updated his

report to comply with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) criteria

but his diagnosis did not change. The updated report stated that defendant suffered from

unspecified neurocognitive disorder, unspecified psychotic disorder, and schizotypal personality

disorder. Specifically with regards to defendant’s inculpatory statements captured on the

consensual overhear, Dr. Frumkin opined:

               “[Defendant] is an individual who has eccentric and bizarre thinking, has at times

               a detachment from reality (although not to the extent he would be diagnosed as

               having schizophrenia), and has great difficulty processing emotional events.

               Sometimes people with serious mental disorders are not accurate in what they say.

               This may be something the trier of fact might want to consider when evaluating the

               weight to give to [defendant’s] statements to *** Robertson.”

¶5     On December 3, 2015, the State filed a written motion requesting the court order defendant

to submit to a behavioral clinical examination and conduct a hearing on defendant’s fitness for

trial. The State asserted that it had been tendered Dr. Frumkin’s report, which contained

observations of defendant relevant to his fitness to stand trial. Based on the report, the State

contended that bona fide doubt existed as to defendant’s fitness to stand trial.

¶6     The defense asked the court to deny the State’s request, alleging that there was no bona fide

doubt of defendant’s fitness to stand trial. Defendant attached a letter authored by Dr. Frumkin and

dated after the State’s motion, opining that defendant understood and appreciated “how the court

system works and *** [was] capable of working with [counsel] towards his defense.”

                                                -3-
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¶7     At a hearing on the State’s motion on December 11, 2015, the State asserted that it was not

the State’s “position that the defendant was unfit for trial” but that the report raised certain doubts

about defendant “having a detachment with reality.” Accordingly, the State maintained that the

“best practice” would be to have defendant evaluated so that his fitness did “not become an issue

down the road.” Defense counsel disagreed, maintaining that the defense was not raising fitness as

an issue and that counsel had no doubt about defendant’s fitness to stand trial. The court denied

the State’s request, noting that it had not observed anything that would make it question

defendant’s fitness.

¶8     Regarding Dr. Frumkin’s report, the court stated, “I don’t anticipate [he] is going to testify

in this case in any fashion, is that correct?” Defense counsel responded, “Well, I’m not so sure

about that, Judge, we may call him.” The court continued:

                       “THE COURT: But what would Dr. Frumkin be able to testify to?

                       DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, Judge, this is a situation where the totality of

               the circumstances of the statement that [defendant] made to Bonita Robertson is

               going to be at play, and I imagine that [defendant] is going to testify, and I imagine

               that the trier of fact in evaluating how much weight to give to the statement that

               [defendant] made to Miss Robertson, that weight can—how much weight it should

               give is going to be based also, I believe, on the psychological makeup of

               [defendant].

                       ***

                       THE COURT: Well, it certainly raises an issue as to whether or not [the

               State is] entitled to have an expert comment on the same information that *** they

               believe that their expert will comment on. If that’s my understanding of what
                                                 -4-
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                they’ve said. If [the defense] intend[s] to call Dr. Frumkin and say at the time that

                he gave this statement he was under some sort of specific mental incapacity, then I

                think [the State] ha[s] the right to have an expert say the opposite of that, if that’s

                what the doctor would say.”

¶9      Defense counsel reiterated that defendant had not “filed an insanity answer, because that is

not our defense in this case.” Counsel proposed “if the State would like to retain an expert who

wants to review Dr. Frumkin’s psychological report and, also, the data from his psychological

testing, they can be our guest. *** They have that report, and if they wanted to make an inquiry as

to Dr. Frumkin’s raw data from the tests that he administered, the testing instruments that he

administered on [defendant], obviously, we would be more than happy to provide those to their

psychologist.” Counsel stated, however, that allowing defendant to be examined by a State expert

would be “something we would object to.”

¶ 10    Thereafter, on January 13, 2016, the State filed a motion in limine to bar the testimony of

Dr. Frumkin. The State asserted that Dr. Frumkin’s testimony was improper commentary on

defendant’s credibility, was not relevant or necessary, and that its probative value was outweighed

by its prejudicial effect.

¶ 11    On January 27, 2016, the court heard arguments on the State’s motion in limine. The State

asserted that Dr. Frumkin’s proposed testimony would be “irrelevant and unnecessary” and that

“Dr. Frumkin’s opinion of whether this defendant believes his statements to be true or not are

wholly irrelevant, something that the trier of fact would be able to evaluate for themselves.” The

State further pointed out that “one of the most important things to establish here is the statements

the defendant made to Miss Robertson were not under police—were not while he was in police

custody. They weren’t statements made to police officers.” The State further asserted that Illinois
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courts had “consistently barred that testimony because *** it would adversely comment on the

credibility of a witness.”

¶ 12   The court then stated,

       “I don’t know that Dr. Frumkin says that that statement—I don’t think he can offer an

       opinion on whether or not the statement that you intend to introduce was, in fact, fabricated

       or not. *** What I’m not sure if we’re talking about here is an actual mental incapacity or

       mental disease or defect that Dr. Frumkin would like to say he suffers from. Yet they would

       like to not have this to be an insanity defense. I’m somewhat in a quandary, but that’s my

       understanding of what [the defense] want[s].”

¶ 13   The State responded,

       “Well, Judge, [Dr. Frumkin] also states, *** I’m quoting, ‘Sometimes people with serious

       mental disorders are not accurate in what they say.’ What they want to believe and argue

       basically is because of whatever mental disorders the defendant may or may not have been

       suffering at the time, whatever he said to Miss Robertson may not be true, and he may be

       making it up. So *** that would be improper. That invades the province of the jury or the

       trier of fact.”

¶ 14   The court then asked defense counsel,

                         “THE COURT: Doesn’t the State have the opportunity to have [defendant]

               examined by an expert to determine—

                         DEFENSE COUNSEL: No.

                         THE COURT: Why not?

                         DEFENSE COUNSEL: Because I’m not using the insanity defense.

                         THE COURT: Sure, you are. You’re using the same defense.
                                               -6-
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                    DEFENSE COUNSEL: No, I’m not.

                    THE COURT: You just told me that the sole reason for me to allow this

            expert to testify is so that the jury could be aware that [defendant] might have been

            suffering from a mental illness, let’s semantically take this apart, and if that’s what

            you want to do, it would be clear to me that the State’s expert should be allowed to

            talk to [defendant] to determine whether or not his diagnosis is the same or not

            because that’s what you want that jury to decide, this statement. And what you’ve

            just said—and I think—I don’t know the facts of all of the case, but the case gets

            down to this statement, and if this statement is the crux of the case and you want a

            doctor to say, you know, he could have been nuts when he said that, the State has

            an opportunity to say there’s nothing wrong with this guy, if that’s what their expert

            says.

                    DEFENSE COUNSEL: Right, and we’ve talked about this before. He’s

            gone through the testing. If the State wants to retain an expert, he will provide the

            tests that our client—

                    THE COURT: You’ll provide your client.

                    DEFENSE COUNSEL: No, we don’t have to provide our client.

                    THE COURT: Yes, you will. If you want to put him on for the purpose of

            what I just said, then you’ll have to provide him.

                    ***

                    DEFENSE COUNSEL: [W]e will not allow our client to be examined by

            the State’s doctor, period, because he has a right under the Fifth Amendment not to

            speak to anyone else regarding this case.
                                             -7-
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                        THE COURT: Not if what you’re raising—

                        DEFENSE COUNSEL: But I’m not raising an insanity defense.

                        THE COURT: You’re calling it a mental illness. A rose by any other name

               is still a rose.

                        ***

                        THE COURT: You think that they don’t have the right to have an expert

               determine whether or not [defendant] is suffering from that mental illness by

               examining [defendant]?

                        DEFENSE COUNSEL: By examining, no. They can hire all the experts

               they want, and the experts can review the records that were generated from the tests

               that were administered by Dr. Frumkin, and they can come to their own conclusions

               based on the police reports and their listening of the [consensual overhear] and their

               review, like I said, of the tests that were administered and come up with their own

               opinion. That happens all the time, but they don’t have a right to speak to my client.

                        ***

                        STATE: [W]hether this is a[n] insanity defense or Dr. Frumkin’s allowed

               to testify as he states in his report, [the State should] be allowed to retain an expert

               for that same purpose.”

¶ 15   In closing, the court informed the parties of its “belief, and you can brief this if you want,

because I’m not necessarily ruling, because you can tell where my inclination is, is that if, in fact,

you wish to have an examining doctor testify that [defendant] suffers from a mental illness as the

three unspecified there, that [the State] ha[s] a right to examine him, whether you call it an insanity

defense or not.” The court then indicated that by the next status date, it “hop[ed] [that the State
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would] have an expert who will be able to touch base with the defense expert, hopefully been able

to have reviewed at least the documents.”

¶ 16   On February 4, 2016, the defense filed an “Objection to the State’s Expert Examining

[Defendant],” in which defendant asserted that he could not be forced to participate in an

evaluation requested by the State or ordered by the court.

¶ 17   Thereafter, on February 16, 2016, the State informed the court that it had retained an expert

who had “reviewed Dr. Frumkin’s materials as well as the recordings of the conversations in

question” and had advised the State “that he would be unable to render an opinion without a face-

to-face examination of the defendant.” The State read from Dr. Frumkin’s report and stated that it

appeared that the doctor would opine “that [defendant] was lying when he made the statements”

to Robertson and that the State’s “concern was that Dr. Frumkin was going to be allowed to testify

as to whether he believed the defendant was being accurate in giving the statement.” Defense

counsel stated that Dr. Frumkin would not be opining on whether the statements made to Robertson

were true or false but that the defense’s “objective is to provide the finder of fact with the

psychological characteristics of [defendant] such that when the statement is introduced by the

State, the jury has enough data within which to determine what weight to give that type of

statement.” The court then stated:

               “To some extent I agree with the fact that then of what relevance is all of this, other

               than it shows the finder of fact, assuming a jury, what the mental status of

               [defendant] is during the course of the period of time which in he made this

               statement; what he would be doing on a regular basis; would he be making

               exaggerated statements, whatever it might be, because of what he is diagnosed as

               some sort of unspecified schizophrenia, unspecified something else. *** And so
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                 my belief is that if I were to order [the State expert] to interview [defendant], I

                 would not be ordering him to inquire about the facts of the case or the facts

                 regarding the statement. I would be ordering, if I ordered, an examination by [the

                 State expert] as to whether or not [defendant] suffered from the illnesses as

                 diagnosed by Frumkin.”

¶ 18    On March 2, 2016, the court and parties continued discussing issues related to Dr.

Frumkin’s proposed testimony. The court expressed concern that the testimony would confuse the

jury, stating:

                 “And what [the defense is] doing is presenting to a jury evidence of an individual

                 who has been suffering from these illnesses for whatever period of time Dr.

                 Frumkin says they are, which leads a finder of fact to have in the back of their mind,

                 well, geez, maybe even if he set this fire, was he crazy when he did so, and that’s

                 not a farfetched rationale. Whether you actually argue that or not, and I don’t

                 imagine that you would *** [b]ut you still have—you still have the mental disease

                 or defect or mental illness, if you want to call it that, in front of that jury for

                 relatively no reason other than it’s just out here somewhere and it seems to me that

                 they should have the right to have that interview done.”

¶ 19    The parties and the court discussed that, even if the State was able to find an expert witness

who could review and comment on Dr. Frumkin’s report without actually examining defendant,

the credibility of that expert could be challenged by the fact that he or she did not actually examine

defendant. The court then asked, “But that’s the point, isn’t it? The point is that [the defense has]

this incredible advantage of having your expert speak to your client, which is fine, that’s all up to

you, but [the State doesn’t] get to rebut it by having a personal interview and diagnosis.”
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¶ 20   In ruling, the court clarified that it would allow Dr. Frumkin to testify to defendant’s

diagnoses and the characteristics of those diagnoses, but that he would not be able to “get[ ] into

specifically the facts of the case or the statements that [defendant] made.” Given the narrow

framework of “what Dr. Frumkin [could] testify to,” the court also ordered that the State’s expert

would be prevented from inquiring into the facts of the case and whether defendant committed the

offense. The State’s expert would similarly be able to only testify regarding “whether or not

[defendant] suffers from those illnesses” and what were the “symptoms of the illnesses that he

suffers from.” The court then told defense counsel, “then, of course, if you don’t want [defendant]

examined, then I’m going to preclude you from putting on Dr. Frumkin.”

¶ 21   Thereafter, on April 20, 2016, the State informed the court that its psychologist had

reviewed documents received from Dr. Frumkin and confirmed that he would not be able to render

an opinion without a personal interview of defendant. In light of the defense’s position that it

would not submit defendant to an interview with a State expert, the trial court ruled that Dr.

Frumkin would not be allowed to testify. The court explained, “so that it’s clear, without making

[defendant] available for the State’s expert, I’m going to exclude him from testifying ***. If [the

defense] should change [its] position on that, [it] can certainly do so.”

¶ 22   The matter continued to trial. Robertson testified that in late 2009 to February 2010, she

was living with Myers, with whom she had a romantic relationship. Robertson testified that

Myers’s health was deteriorating, and she considered herself Myers’s caregiver, helping keep track

of his multiple medications. Robertson also considered herself Myers’s business partner, helping

him collect rents and manage financial aspects of the multiple rental properties Myers owned.

Robertson testified that she was aware of Myers’s financial situation. In early 2010, Myers was

having financial difficulties; he had approximately $7000 in property taxes on the buildings he
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owned coming due, as well as approximately $18,000 in taxes owed to the Internal Revenue

Service (IRS).

¶ 23   Robertson testified that she knew defendant because he rented an apartment from Myers,

and Myers later hired defendant to do maintenance work on his rental properties. In December

2009, Robertson overheard a conversation between defendant and Myers during which Myers

asked defendant if defendant would “get the job done,” to which defendant responded

affirmatively. Later that day, Robertson asked Myers what job he was asking defendant to do, and

Myers told Robertson that defendant had proposed burning down the building at issue so that

Myers could collect insurance proceeds. Also that day, Robertson asked defendant about the

conversation and whether they planned to burn down the building. Defendant responded, “yeah,

we are, but that’s none of your f*** business.”

¶ 24   Robertson further testified that around that time, Robertson’s cousin, Brian Trent, was

living with her and Myers. In late December 2009 or early January 2010, Myers asked Robertson

and Trent if they would burn a building down for him. Robertson told Myers “no” and that she did

not want any “part of it.”

¶ 25   Later, in February 2010, Robertson and Trent had a conversation with defendant.

Robertson again asked defendant if he still planned to burn the building. Defendant responded that

Myers had been constantly calling him about burning the building and why he had not done it yet,

but defendant said he was not going to burn the building and was only telling Myers what Myers

wanted to hear.

¶ 26   Robertson testified that a few days before the fire she was present for a conversation during

which Myers screamed at defendant about why he had not set fire to the building yet. During

another conversation around the same time, Myers commented on how much money he had offered
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defendant to “do the job,” and defendant stated that he had put some clothes on a couch that was

sitting on the back porch of the building and poured gasoline and oil over them. Robertson testified

that defendant said all that had to be done was to “strike a match and walk out.”

¶ 27   The night before the fire, Robertson, Trent, and Myers went to a bar and stayed until

approximately 1 a.m. They later went to a fast food restaurant, ate, and fell asleep in their

apartment. Robertson testified that she woke around 6:30 a.m. when Myers’s phone rang.

Robertson heard Myers answer the phone and have a very brief conversation. Approximately five

minutes later, a tenant called Myers. Myers then told Robertson and Trent to go to the building to

see “if it was indeed on fire.” Robertson asked Myers about the first phone call he received, and

Myers told her the call was from defendant and that defendant had told Myers, “it’s done, don’t

call.” Robertson and Trent drove to the building and saw that it was engulfed in flames.

¶ 28   After seeing the building, Robertson returned home and spoke to Myers. Myers told

Robertson that if she was questioned by police, she should “deny, deny, deny that [she knew]

anything.”

¶ 29   Approximately two days after the fire, Robertson asked defendant if he had set the fire, and

defendant told her, “yes, I did.” Robertson told defendant that Myers had been saying that he did

not think defendant had done it, and defendant said, “aw, that’s bulls***” and went on to tell

Robertson “exactly how he set the fire in full detail.”

¶ 30   Robertson testified that when she first began to hear about the plan to burn the building,

she attempted to tell a police officer on one occasion that she “knew about something bad that was

being planned,” but the police never followed up with her. Robertson did not continue to attempt

to alert police because defendant repeatedly assured Robertson he was not actually going to set the

fire and that he was just telling Myers what Myers wanted to hear.
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¶ 31   Two days after the fire, Robertson contacted police and eventually spoke with an assistant

state’s attorney. The police asked Robertson if she would be “willing to wear a wire,” and she

agreed. On February 18, 2010, Robertson signed the necessary paperwork for a consensual

overhear. The consensual overhear captured several conversations between Robertson, Myers, and

defendant, which were played for the jury at trial.

¶ 32   In a February 21, 2010, recorded conversation between Robertson and defendant,

defendant admitted setting the fire and explained how he did it. In that conversation, Robertson

told defendant that Myers “has some fears and so do I cause we know that the police are gonna be

talking to everybody” and that they were “gonna come after all of us.” Robertson then said to

defendant:

                       “ROBERTSON: Now, Larry [Myers] told me he offered you about 3,000.

                       DEFENDANT: Bulls***, he’s lying.

                       ROBERTSON: Okay, what did he offer you?

                       DEFENDANT: He offered me 15. He’s lying.

                       ROBERTSON: 15,000?

                       DEFENDANT: Yeah.”

¶ 33   Robertson then told defendant that Myers was “questioning whether or not you did it.”

Defendant laughed. The conversation continued:

                       “ROBERTSON: I’m not kidding you.

                       DEFENDANT: See, that’s crazy.

                       ROBERTSON: He wants to know if you really did it cause he’s saying he

               thinks you’re taking him for the money.

                       DEFENDANT: Oh, he’s full of s***. Don’t start this, man.
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                         ***

                         ROBERTSON: Did you do it?

                         DEFENDANT: It doesn’t matter, Bonita, let’s just leave it alone, man.

                         ROBERTSON: No, you have to let me know so I can tell him what—

                         DEFENDANT: He knows that already.

                         ***

                         ROBERTSON: So you did do it?

                         DEFENDANT: Well, I, I had mitts in it, so, yeah. If that’s what you want

              to hear, yeah. So that’s, I mean we shouldn’t even be talking about this, man.”

¶ 34   Robertson then asked defendant about how he started the fire. She asked:

                         “ROBERTSON: I need to ask you a question. *** [T]hey’re saying that it

              started on the second floor. Now, if you started it on the couch, how the f*** did

              it start on the second floor?

                         DEFENDANT: Just went up. It went up. They don’t know what they

              talking about.

                         ***

                         ROBERTSON: Cause they said that the—well, here’s what they’re

              saying. *** Detective Melone and the fire chief came and talked to me and Larry.

                         DEFENDANT: Yeah.

                         ROBERTSON: They said they didn’t smell any accelerants like gas or any

              of that.

                         DEFENDANT: And I, and I know, and I know why, I know why they

              didn’t.
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                   ROBERTSON: Why?

                   ***

                   DEFENDANT: Cause I put oil with the gas. That’s why.

                   ***

                   ROBERTSON: Whew, smart thinking, you know.

                   DEFENDANT: Of course, man, I thought this s*** out for a long time,

            man.

                   ROBERTSON: Smart thinking because *** he was scared *** cause they

            told us they took dogs in. *** And that the dogs *** were trained *** for

            smelling—

                   DEFENDANT: But that cuts down the—

                   ROBERTSON:—you know the gas—

                   DEFENDANT:—oil, the oil.

                   ROBERTSON: So the oil took the gas smell out?

                   DEFENDANT: Yeah.

                   ROBERTSON: So that the dogs couldn’t pick it up?

                   DEFENDANT: There you go, and, and it burnt too bad for them to find

            anything.

                   ROBERTSON: But you started it on the back porch?

                   DEFENDANT: And it went up, Bonita. I don’t want to talk about this. ***

            Everybody just say they don’t know, okay, just leave it like that. That’s what you

            do. Don’t worry, okay. They didn’t find nothing and that’s great. They think the

            electrical box did it. ***
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                     ROBERTSON: What the couch started it though?

                     DEFENDANT: Yeah, please, pretty much.

                     ***

                     ROBERTSON: All right, but you’re sure—

                     DEFENDANT: I’m sure.

                     ROBERTSON:—you used oil with the gas?

                     DEFENDANT: And gas.

                     ROBERTSON: That’s why the dogs didn’t—

                     DEFENDANT: Get it.

                     ROBERTSON:—get that accelerant.

                     DEFENDANT: At the same time—and then the same time.

                     ROBERTSON: And you soaked it on the couch and the clothes.

                     DEFENDANT: I didn’t have to soak it. Just—that’s why I didn’t soak it.

                     ROBERTSON: You just dumped it on the couch and the clothes—

                     DEFENDANT: Dumped it on there and threw the match.

                     ROBERTSON:—lit a match?

                     DEFENDANT: And that was it, yeah. And that’s why it went up—

                     ROBERTSON: And you just walked out?

                     DEFENDANT: Yeah, pretty much.”

¶ 35   At the end of the February 21, 2010, conversation, Robertson asked defendant about

whether he called Myers the morning of the fire, telling him that the police were “gonna be

checking [Myers’] records, phone records.” She asked:

                     “ROBERTSON: I need to know did you call Larry that morning?
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                       DEFENDANT: Yeah.

                       ROBERTSON: What did you say to him?

                       ***

                       DEFENDANT: I just said it’s done and that was it.

                       ROBERTSON: You said it was done and that’s it, okay. Before - what,

               what time did you call him[,] I need to know so I can—

                       DEFENDANT: Right after it. I shouldn’t have called him like right after.

                       ROBERTSON: Right after.

                       DEFENDANT: Yeah. *** I knew I shouldn’t have called him.

                       ROBERTSON: Well, you better come up with, with a reason why you

               called him cause they’re checking phone records. I’m telling you.”

¶ 36   The next day, February 22, 2010, Robertson asked Myers in a recorded conversation if he

was giving defendant $15,000. Myers responded, “No, he’s dreaming, you know. He’s gonna get

nothing for murdering them f*** people. I told him not to hurt anybody.” Myers further told

Robertson that he “never told [defendant] 15, I told him 3. That’s what I told him was 3.”

¶ 37   During a conversation recorded the following day, February 23, 2010, Robertson, Myers,

and defendant discussed how much Myers had previously offered to pay defendant to burn the

building. Myers asked defendant, “Where the f*** did you get I’m gonna give you 15,000?” and

defendant answered, “That’s what you told me.” Myers denied telling defendant that, explaining

how much he would receive from insurance, and how much he could afford to pay defendant from

those proceeds. Specifically, Myers said that defendant would “get 5” if insurance gave “us more

for the stoves and ‘frigerators,” and “[i]f nothing else, I’ll give you 3. *** That’s the best I can do

with it.” Defendant agreed.
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¶ 38   Alan Strange testified that he is a senior forensic auditor with the Bureau of Alcohol,

Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and testified for the State as an expert in the field of forensic

financial examinations. Strange testified that he performed a forensic analysis regarding Myers,

reviewing various financial documents. Based on his review, Strange determined that Myers was

experiencing several financial difficulties at the time of the fire in February 2010. Specifically,

Myers had been failing to make his mortgage payments on three properties he owned, including

an apartment building in La Crosse, Wisconsin, a single-family home in Bolingbrook, Illinois, and

the Cicero apartment building at issue in this case. Regarding the La Crosse building, the bank that

owned the mortgage sent Myers a collection notice in October 2009 and, thereafter, filed a

foreclosure document with the circuit court in La Crosse County in January 2010. After Myers

failed to make a January 2010 mortgage payment on the Bolingbrook property, the bank that

owned that mortgage sent Myers a letter regarding the delinquency in early February 2010. Myers

also failed to pay two months of mortgage payments on the Cicero apartment building, and on

February 11, 2010, three days before the fire, the bank sent him a delinquency notice on that

building as well. Finally, Myers also had approximately $8000 in property taxes coming due in

March 2010. In total, Strange testified that February and March 2010, Myers owed approximately

$16,000 but only had approximately $7000 available to him in his bank accounts.

¶ 39   Special Agent Joseph Raschke of the Federal Bureau of Investigations testified as an expert

in the field of cell site tower analysis, regarding the 6:34 a.m. phone call from defendant to Myers

on the morning of the fire. Agent Raschke testified that his investigation of the cell towers used to

make the call indicated that the phone call was likely made from an area that included the location

of the Cicero apartment building, and likely was not made from defendant’s home.

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¶ 40   Illinois State Fire Marshal arson investigator Mitchell Kushner testified as an expert for

the State regarding his investigation into the fire. Kushner concluded that the fire was incendiary,

meaning man-made, and that the fire was lit with the use of an ignitable liquid and an open flame.

Kushner further testified that on the day after the fire he spoke with a Cicero police officer who

had been on the scene of the blaze and observed V-pattern burns. From that conversation and

observation, Kushner determined the fire started on the south portion of an enclosed area of the

building’s back porch. He conducted a search of that area with an accelerant detecting canine, but

the canine did not indicate that it detected the presence of any accelerants. Kushner and other fire

investigators continued to investigate the fire scene. Fire investigators searched for physical

evidence that the cause of the fire was electrical but found none. Kushner spoke to firefighters who

responded to the scene on the morning of the fire to ask if they detected the presence of natural

gas and they had not. Kushner searched for physical evidence the cause of the fire was accidental,

including by looking for evidence of smoking or smoking materials and how the fire burned; he

also checked for lightning in the area at the time of the fire. Kushner found no evidence the cause

of the fire was accidental.

¶ 41   Kushner further testified that on February 18, 2010, he spoke to a Cicero police detective

who informed him that a female witness informed police that the fire had been started on the back

porch using an accelerant and open flame. Kushner conducted a search of the back porch with his

accelerant detecting canine. Kushner found the partial remains of couch springs and a couch strap

but neither his canine nor subsequent testing of the items indicated the presence of an accelerant.

Based on his investigation and witness statements, Kushner’s opinion was that the fire was

incendiary, the ignition source was a couch on the back porch, and the fire was started using a

flammable liquid and an open flame.
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¶ 42   On cross-examination, Kushner admitted that he based his opinion that the fire was

incendiary and that it was started with an incendiary liquid with an open flame solely on the

statement to police that gasoline was used to start the fire. The defense asked Kushner about the

“negative corpus” approach in fire investigation. According to Kushner, the “negative corpus”

method requires the fire investigator to consider all matters before jumping to conclusions and

involves eliminating all other possible causes leaving only one possible cause as the cause of a

fire. Kushner testified that at the time of trial, as opposed to the time of the fire, the use of the

negative corpus approach was not the standard among fire investigators. Instead, the standard at

the time of trial was to back up any findings with physical evidence, if possible, although

statements by witnesses could be used to form an initial hypothesis as to the cause of a fire.

Kushner agreed that no physical evidence existed that this fire was started with a liquid and an

open flame. On redirect, Kushner testified he used the scientific method in his investigation.

Kushner testified he used the witness statement in the process of gathering data, analyzing the data,

and making a determination. Kushner testified that his opinion was based on his fire scene

examination, witness information, training, and experience.

¶ 43   At the conclusion of Kushner’s testimony, the defense moved to strike his testimony in its

entirety on the ground that Kushner’s methodology was not accepted in the relevant field. The trial

court denied the motion to strike.

¶ 44   Defendant called Paul Bieber as an expert witness in the field of fire origin and cause

determination. Bieber testified that the National Fire Prevention Association (NFPA) codes and

standards contain the standards for fire investigation. Bieber testified that the 2011 version of the

NFPA explicitly rejects the negative corpus approach, and that the proper relevant standard for fire

                                               - 21 -
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investigation is stated in NFPA 921. 1 Bieber agreed that NFPA 921 allows a fire investigator to

rely on witness statements to develop a hypothesis as to how a fire started but testified that it does

not allow a fire investigator to make a final conclusion as to how a fire started based only on a

witness statement. Instead, the investigator’s conclusion as to how a fire started must be based on

physical evidence from the fire scene. Bieber opined that the determination by the State’s fire

investigators that the fire started on the rear porch and that the specific area of origin was

somewhere near the couch complied with NFPA 921. However, the conclusion that the ignition

source was an open flame, that an ignitable liquid was used, and that the fire was incendiary were

not reached in compliance with NFPA 921 or industry standards because those opinions were

based solely on a process of elimination of other possible causes—i.e., the negative corpus

       1
        NFPA 921 reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
                     “4.4.3.2 The actual investigation may include different steps and procedures,
             which will be determined by the purpose of the assignment. *** A fire *** investigation
             may include all or some of the following tasks: a scene inspection ***; witness interviews;
             *** and identification and collection of data from other appropriate sources.”
                     “18.4.4.3 There are times when there is not physical evidence of the ignition source
             found at the origin, but where an ignition sequence can logically be inferred using other
             data. Any determination of fire cause should be based on evidence rather than on the
             absence of evidence; however, there are limited circumstances when the ignition source
             cannot be identified, but the ignition sequence can logically be inferred. This inference may
             be arrived at through the testing of alternate hypotheses involving potential ignition
             sequences, provided that the conclusion regarding the remaining ignition sequence is
             consistent with all known facts ***.”
                     “18.5 The investigator should use the scientific method *** as the method for data
             gathering, hypothesis development, and hypothesis testing regarding the consideration of
             potential ignition sequences. *** Systematic evaluation (hypothesis testing) is then
             conducted with the elimination of those hypotheses that are not supportable (ore refuted)
             by the facts discovered through further examination. *** Potential ignition sources should
             be eliminated from consideration only if there is reliable evidence that they could not be
             the ignition source for the fire.” Nat’l Fire Prot. Ass’n, NFPA 921 Guide for Fire &
             Explosion Investigations §§ 4.4.3.2, 18.4.4.3, 18.5 (2017).

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approach—and not based on any physical evidence. Bieber opined that the cause of the fire in this

case was “undetermined.”

¶ 45   Myers testified for the defense. At the time of his testimony, Myers had been convicted of

seven counts of first-degree murder arising from the fire at issue in this case. Myers testified that

it was Robertson who suggested that Myers burn down the building for the purpose of killing a

16-year-old girl who lived in the building because she believed that Myers had sex with the girl.

Myers testified that on the morning of the fire, after he, Robertson, and Trent ate hamburgers at

the fast-food restaurant, Robertson entered Myers’s garage and came out with a quart of turpentine.

Myers then drove Robertson to the building where Robertson went to the back porch and poured

the turpentine all over a broken futon. Myers testified Robertson lit the futon on fire with a cigarette

lighter. Myers testified defendant called him on the morning of the fire to tell Myers defendant had

finished some work he had been doing for Myers. Myers testified that conversations Robertson

recorded in which Myers talked about money he was going to pay defendant were about

commissions Myers was going to pay defendant for showing the building to prospective buyers.

Myers did not recall conversations in which defendant said there was a pile of clothing on the

porch and that all that needed to be done was to light a match or in which Myers told Robertson it

was stupid for defendant to have done it in the morning because Myers did not want anyone to be

hurt. Myers denied telling a Cicero police detective that Myers told defendant to burn the building

while the children were at school and the women were at work, that he did not want anyone hurt,

or that he just wanted the insurance money. Myers also denied telling his cellmate that defendant

set the fire so that Myers could collect the insurance proceeds.

¶ 46   In rebuttal, the State called Sergeant Jason Stroud, of the Cicero Police Department, who

testified that on March 3, 2010, Myers told him that defendant set the fire. Myers further told
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Sergeant Stroud that defendant was supposed to set the fire at 11:30 a.m., when the adults were at

work and children were at school, but defendant made a mistake and did it at 6:30 a.m., when

everyone was in the building. Myers additionally stated that he had the fire set because he was in

“tremendous financial straits” and needed the insurance money.

¶ 47   The State also called Myers’s cellmate in rebuttal, who testified that in November 2010,

Myers told him that he was “in for” arranging to have a building burned down to collect insurance

money. Myers told his cellmate that he had planned the fire for months and identified defendant

as being the person who actually set the fire. Myers also told the cellmate that he would have

gotten away with it, “had it not been for [Robertson] cooperating with the police.”

¶ 48   In closing argument the defense argued, in part, that there was no physical evidence of an

ignitable fluid or an ignition source for the fire and Kushner’s opinion was not in conformity with

NFPA 921. The defense asked the jury to believe its expert’s opinion that the cause of the fire was

undetermined.

¶ 49   After deliberations, the jury found defendant guilty of seven counts of first-degree murder.

The trial court sentenced defendant to natural life imprisonment.

¶ 50   In this appeal, defendant argues that the trial court denied him his constitutional right to

present the circumstances surrounding the making of his inculpatory statements when it

conditioned the admission of Dr. Frumkin’s testimony on defendant’s submission to an in-person

examination by the State’s expert. Defendant also argues that the trial court erroneously admitted

Kushner’s testimony the fire was incendiary and started with an ignitable liquid and open flame

because he did not follow accepted fire investigation methodology in forming his opinion and it

lacked a proper scientific basis. We will address each of defendant’s issues in turn.

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¶ 51   The due process clause of the fourteenth amendment (U.S. Const., amend. XIV) and the

confrontation clauses of the federal and state constitutions (U.S. Const., amend. VI; Ill. Const.

1970, art. I, § 8) guarantee criminal defendants “a meaningful opportunity to present a complete

defense.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Santos, 211 Ill. 2d 395, 412 (2004).

However, that right does not entitle a defendant to present his or her desired defense, unrebutted,

in whatever fashion the defendant chooses. “The admission of evidence is within the sound

discretion of a trial court, and a reviewing court will not reverse the trial court absent a showing

of an abuse of that discretion.” People v. Becker, 239 Ill. 2d 215, 234 (2010). A trial court may

exclude evidence upon which a proposed defense is based if, in the exercise of its discretion, the

court determines that the probative value of the evidence is outweighed by other factors, such as

unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or potential to mislead the jury. Holmes v. South Carolina,

547 U.S. 319, 326 (2006); People v. McCullough, 2015 IL App (2d) 121364, ¶ 104. When a

defendant claims he was denied his constitutional right to present a complete defense due to

improper evidentiary rulings, we review the trial court’s rulings for an abuse of discretion. People

v. Burgess, 2015 IL App (1st) 130657, ¶ 133. A court abuses its discretion only when its decision

is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable or when no reasonable person would take its view.

McCullough, 2015 IL App (2d) 121364, ¶ 104.

¶ 52   Initially, we note that the trial court neither ordered an examination of defendant, nor barred

the testimony of Dr. Frumkin. Instead, the defense chose to not present the testimony of Dr.

Frumkin after the court conditioned the introduction of that testimony on the State also having an

opportunity to have defendant examined. The court also carefully circumscribed its ruling so that

the State expert’s examination would be limited to defendant’s diagnoses and the symptoms of

those diagnoses and specifically prohibited the State’s expert from questioning defendant about
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the pending charges or any facts surrounding the alleged offenses. It was only when the defense

persisted in its position that it would not allow such an examination that the court ordered that Dr.

Frumkin would not be allowed to testify. The court reiterated, however, that if the defense

reconsidered its position, Dr. Frumkin would be allowed to testify. Accordingly, the question is

not whether the court erred in ordering an examination or barring Dr. Frumkin’s testimony but

rather whether the court abused its discretion in conditioning the introduction of Dr. Frumkin’s

testimony on the State having an opportunity to have its own expert examine defendant.

¶ 53   Defendant argues that, under section 115-6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963

(Code) (725 ILCS 5/115-6 (West 2010)), the trial court did not have the right to order defendant

to submit to a mental examination by the State and that doing so violated his fifth amendment

privilege against self-incrimination. Section 115-6 of the Code provides:

               “If the defendant has given notice that he may rely upon the defense of insanity as

               defined in Section 6-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the defendant indicates that

               he intends to plead guilty but mentally ill or the defense of intoxicated or drugged

               condition as defined in Section 6-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or if the facts and

               circumstances of the case justify a reasonable belief that the aforesaid defenses may

               be raised, the Court shall, on motion of the State, order the defendant to submit to

               examination by at least one clinical psychologist or psychiatrist, to be named by the

               prosecuting attorney.” Id.

¶ 54   Defendant contends that because he was not raising an insanity defense, seeking to plead

guilty but mentally ill, or pursuing an intoxication or drugged condition defense, the court was

prohibited from ordering an examination. However, that section requires the court to order an

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examination, not only when those defenses are actually raised but when “the facts and

circumstances of the case justify a reasonable belief that the aforesaid defenses may be raised.”

¶ 55    Here, defendant argued that he was not raising an insanity defense because he was not

admitting guilt to the murder charges and that the State had no right to an opposing psychological

examination. The court, however, disagreed with the defense’s stated purpose and expressed its

concern that introducing Dr. Frumkin’s testimony would amount to the presentation of an insanity

defense. The court explained that the introduction of that evidence could lead to confusion, causing

the jury to question defendant’s sanity at the time he set the fire, thus allowing the defense to

effectively enter what amounted to an insanity defense without complying with the requirements

of the insanity statute (see 720 ILCS 5/6-2(e) (West 2010) (“When the defense of insanity has been

presented during the trial, the burden of proof is on the defendant to prove by clear and convincing

evidence that the defendant is not guilty by reason of insanity.”)) or the examination requirement

of section 115-6. The circumstances presented here supported a reasonable belief by the trial judge

that defendant was attempting to raise a mental status defense, like insanity or guilty but mentally

ill, therefore warranting an order of an examination by a State expert.

¶ 56    Nonetheless, even if section 115-6 does not itself provide a basis for the court’s decision,

that section provides several circumstances in which a court is required to order defendant to

submit to an examination, but it provides no reciprocal prohibition of such an order in other

appropriate circumstances. As the trial court noted in its ruling, section 115-6 does not preclude

the State from requesting that defendant submit to a psychiatric examination, or the trial court from

ordering such an examination, when a defendant places his mental status at issue in a way not

specifically delineated by that section. The judge noted, “[I]t’s not really a prohibition. It’s just not

an inclusion.” In the circumstances presented by this case, we find no abuse of discretion by the
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trial court conditioning the defense’s presentation of Dr. Frumkin’s testimony upon the State

having an opportunity to rebut that testimony with its own psychological examination of

defendant.

¶ 57   A court presiding over a trial has the inherent authority or power to manage and control the

proposed evidence the parties intend to present, and the court can limit that testimony when it

would serve to confuse or confound the jury. People v. Johnson, 2018 IL App (1st) 140725, ¶ 58

(“[W]ell-established rules of evidence permit trial judges to exclude evidence if its probative value

is outweighed by other factors, such as unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or potential to

mislead the jury. [Citation.] A trial court has the inherent authority to admit or exclude evidence

***.”). As the trial judge indicated on several occasions, hearing only Dr. Frumkin’s opinion

would improperly suggest to the jurors that the question of defendant’s mental state and/or sanity

around the time of the offense was before them. According to the trial court, Dr. Frumkin’s

proposed testimony could easily have been misinterpreted by a jury as an insanity defense.

Although the trial court mentioned these concerns on several occasions, it was careful to point out

that the defendant could call Dr. Frumkin so long as the State’s expert also had the opportunity to

examine the defendant regarding the issues to which Dr. Frumkin would testify.

¶ 58   Additionally, one of the most basic tenets of law is that a trial should be the search for truth.

People v. Daniels, 75 Ill. App. 3d 35, 41 (1979) (“ ‘[t]he basic purpose of a trial is the

determination of truth’ ” (quoting Tehan v. United States ex rel. Shott, 382 U.S. 406, 416 (1966))).

In furtherance of that purpose, the court may allow a party to present rebuttal evidence to explain,

contradict, or disprove evidence presented by the other party. See People v. Hood, 213 Ill. 2d 244,

259 (2004) (“rebuttal testimony is intended to explain, contradict or disprove defendant’s

evidence”). Whether to admit rebuttal testimony is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial
                                                - 28 -
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court, and its decision will not be overturned unless it has abused its discretion. People v. Woods,

2011 IL App (1st) 091959, ¶ 26; People v. Williams, 96 Ill. App. 3d 958, 964 (1981) (“[T]he

admissibility of rebuttal evidence is a matter left to the discretion of the trial court and is subject

to review only in cases of clear abuse.”). In the circumstances presented by this case, the evidence

intended to be elicited by the State expert’s examination of defendant—specifically, whether the

State’s expert agreed with Dr. Frumkin regarding defendant’s diagnoses and the symptoms of

those diagnoses—was a proper subject for rebuttal. See Mitchell v. State, 192 P.3d 721, 725 (Nev.

2008) (“even though [the defendant] did not raise an insanity defense,” the trial court could order

the defendant’s examination as part of its “responsibility to promote the ascertainment of truth and

to ensure the orderliness of the proceedings”).

¶ 59   Based on the above, it cannot be said the court’s ruling was fanciful, arbitrary, or capricious

or that no rational trier of fact would agree with the court’s decision. See People v. Hall, 195 Ill.

2d 1, 20 (2000). Rather, the record demonstrates that the trial court had legitimate and well-

founded concerns about the introduction and use of Dr. Frumkin’s report and proposed testimony

in the manner desired by defense counsel, without the State having any opportunity to

meaningfully respond to or test that evidence.

¶ 60   Defendant, however, contends that the trial court’s ruling allowing the State an opportunity

to rebut Dr. Frumkin’s findings amounted to a forced “surrendering [of] his Fifth Amendment

privilege.” Similar arguments have been repeatedly rejected by courts throughout the country.

¶ 61   It has long been held that when a defendant raises an insanity, guilty but mentally ill, or

other mental status defense, he may be constitutionally subjected to compulsory examination by a

court-appointed or government psychiatrist. In Buchanan v. Kentucky, 483 U.S. 402, 404 (1987),

the United States Supreme Court considered the question of “whether the admission of findings
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from a psychiatric examination of petitioner proffered solely to rebut other psychological evidence

presented by petitioner violated his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights where his counsel had

requested the examination and where petitioner attempted to establish at trial a mental-status

defense.” In those circumstances, the Supreme Court concluded that it did not, finding that because

defendant presented psychological evidence to raise the “mental status” defense of extreme

emotional disturbance, the prosecution “could not respond to this defense unless it presented other

psychological evidence.” Id. at 423. Accordingly, the Supreme Court held that the prosecution’s

introduction of a psychiatric report concerning the mental state of a homicide defendant, without

describing any statements by defendant dealing with crimes for which he was charged, did not

violate defendant’s fifth amendment right. Id. at 423-24.

¶ 62   The United States Supreme Court revisited this issue in Kansas v. Cheever, 571 U.S. 87,

93 (2013), which reaffirmed Buchanan and explained the expanse of its holding. In Cheever, the

Supreme Court concluded that where a defense expert examined a defendant and testified that he

lacked the requisite mental state to commit a crime, the prosecution could offer evidence from a

court-ordered psychological examination for the limited purpose of rebutting defendant’s evidence

without violating the fifth amendment. Id. at 98. The Court reaffirmed the “rule of Buchanan,”

specifically that “where a defense expert who has examined the defendant testifies that the

defendant lacked the requisite mental state to commit an offense, the prosecution may present

psychiatric evidence in rebuttal,” reasoning that “[a]ny other rule would undermine the adversarial

process, allowing a defendant to provide the jury, through an expert as proxy, with a one-sided and

potentially inaccurate view of his mental state at the time of the alleged crime.” Id. at 94. “When

a defendant presents evidence through a psychological expert who has examined him, the

government likewise is permitted to use the only effective means of challenging that evidence:
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testimony from an expert who has also examined him.” Id.; see also Schneider v. Lynaugh, 835

F.2d 570, 576-77 (5th Cir. 1988) (where defendant put his mental state at issue by calling social

workers and counselors, their testimony was “analogous to the expert psychological evidence that

the defendant introduced in Buchanan” and there was no fifth amendment violation because the

“State’s only effective means of countering Schneider’s [mental status] defense was independent

psychological testimony”; it would be “unfair and improper to allow a defendant to introduce

favorable psychological testimony and then prevent the prosecution from resorting to the most

effective and in most instances the only means of rebuttal: other psychological testimony”).

¶ 63   This approach is shared by a number of state courts, which have also held that where a

defendant demonstrates an intention to use expert testimony from a psychiatric examination to

establish a mental status defense, a court may compel the defendant to submit to an examination

by a government expert without violating the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

¶ 64   In State v. Briand, 547 A.2d 235, 239 (N.H. 1988), the Supreme Court of New Hampshire

held that because a defendant was offering her own testimony indirectly when using an expert, she

waived the right not to incriminate herself.

               “Because the expert’s testimony is thus predicated on the defendant’s statements,

               the latter are explicitly or implicitly placed in evidence through the testimony of the

               expert during his direct and cross-examination. Since a defendant would waive his

               privilege against compelled self-incrimination if he took the stand and made those

               same statements himself, his decision to introduce his account of relevant facts

               indirectly through an expert witness should likewise be treated as a waiver

               obligating him to provide the same access to the State’s expert that he has given to

               his own, and opening the door to the introduction of resulting State’s evidence, as
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               the State requests here, to the extent that he introduces comparable evidence on his

               own behalf.” Id.

¶ 65   In Mitchell, 192 P.3d at 725, the Nevada Supreme Court considered a case involving a self-

defense claim based on post-traumatic stress disorder and concluded that the district court had not

abused its discretion by ordering a compelled examination of defendant after he indicated that he

intended to use his own expert for a mental status defense. The court reasoned that a trial court

“had the inherent authority to order the psychiatric examination, even though [the defendant] did

not raise an insanity defense, because the district court had the responsibility to promote the

ascertainment of truth and to ensure the orderliness of the proceedings.” Id. Without the state’s

own psychiatric examination, the defendant would benefit from the “unfair asymmetry of

introducing his own favorable expert testimony based upon personal interviews, while limiting the

State’s ability to rebut his contentions to cross-examining those defense experts and introducing

generalized expert testimony.” Id.; see also Commonwealth v. Harris, 11 N.E.3d 95, 111 (Mass.

2014) (the admission of expert testimony regarding a murder defendant’s prior court-ordered

competency evaluation to rebut his claim of a mental impairment precluding the intent to kill did

not violate his right against self-incrimination); State v. Goff, 128 Ohio St. 3d 169, 2010-Ohio-

6317, 942 N.E.2d 1075, ¶ 58 (when a defendant demonstrates an intent to use expert psychiatric

testimony to establish, as element of self-defense, that battered-woman syndrome caused her to

have a bona fide belief that she was in danger of death or great bodily harm and that her only

means of escape was the use of force, the court could compel the defendant to submit to an

examination by another expert without violating her right against self-incrimination); People v.

Herdman, 2012 COA 89, ¶ 36 (the admission of prosecution’s experts’ testimony as to defendant’s

mental condition, based upon results of court-ordered examinations, did not violate the defendant’s
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privilege against self-incrimination, where defendant presented expert evidence concerning his

mental condition as a defense to sexual assault and kidnapping); State v. Hickson, 630 So. 2d 172,

176-77 (Fla. 1993) (when a defendant’s expert testified that the defendant suffered from battered-

spouse syndrome to support a claim of self-defense, the State was entitled to its own independent

examination so as to rebut the defense expert’s testimony); State v. Hess, 828 P.2d 382, 386 (Mont.

1992) (where the defendant put her own mental state at issue and offered psychological evidence

in her homicide defense, the trial court did not violate the defendant’s right against self-

incrimination when it required her to be examined by the State’s expert for the limited purpose of

rebutting the testimony of the defendant’s expert); Commonwealth v. Ostrander, 805 N.E.2d 497

(Mass. 2004) (the trial court did not violate defendant’s privilege against self-incrimination by

compelling defendant to undergo a psychiatric examination and using the expert’s opinion from

that examination on the issue of the voluntariness of defendant’s waiver of Miranda rights

(Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)) and his subsequent confession that he sexually abused

his stepdaughters in order to permit the Commonwealth to rebut defendant’s expert testimony on

the subject, reasoning that permitting only one party to introduce expert testimony on crucial issue

of voluntariness would have had a distorting effect on the fact finder’s role and would have

undermined society’s conduct of a fair inquiry into defendant’s culpability).

¶ 66   In light of this extensive and long-standing authority, we find no violation of defendant’s

fifth amendment rights by the trial court conditioning the defense’s presentation of Dr. Frumkin’s

testimony upon the State being able to rebut defendant’s mental status defense with their own

psychological evidence.

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¶ 67   In so holding, we are unpersuaded by defendant’s reliance on People v. Harlacher, 262 Ill.

App. 3d 1 (1994), and People v. Lee, 196 Ill. 2d 368 (2001), which are distinguishable for several

reasons.

¶ 68   In Harlacher, 262 Ill. App. 3d at 2, the defendant was convicted after a jury trial of

aggravated criminal sexual abuse and armed violence against his stepdaughter. The evidence

consisted mainly of the testimony of the victim, defendant’s statement to the police upon his arrest,

and the defendant’s own testimony. The defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress, which was denied

by the trial judge, was based upon testimony from the defendant’s psychiatrist that, given

defendant’s emotional state at the time of his arrest, defendant was not capable of making voluntary

statements to the detective who typed up a summary of defendant’s version of the events. Id. at 4.

¶ 69   The court granted several motions in limine precluding any mention of the defendant’s

voluntary admission to a psychiatric hospital following his arrest and statement, and any reference

to the fact that the victim’s natural father and stepmother’s positions as a prominent lawyer and

judge, respectively, in the county where the offenses took place. Id. at 4-5. The trial court also

ordered defendant be examined by a state psychiatrist, even though defendant’s attorney indicated

pretrial that he would not call his own mental health expert but did wish to present the defense of

the involuntariness of his statements to police. Id. at 5.

¶ 70   On appeal, the defendant argued there were numerous errors in the trial court’s exclusion

of evidence that would have permitted the jury to draw an inference that his admissions made to

the police were involuntary. The Appellate Court, Second District, reversed defendant’s

convictions, holding that the trial court erred in not permitting defendant to introduce evidence of

the voluntariness of his confession, and that the error was not harmless. Id. at 8. The appellate

court prefaced its decision on the fundamental principle of criminal procedure that a confession
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must be voluntary and noted its consternation with the trial judge’s failure to make any finding of

the voluntariness of defendant’s statements to police pretrial. The appellate court also concluded

that the trial court “erroneously believed that if the defendant was to bring in any evidence of

mental state, then he must be subjected to a section 115-6 hearing,” despite the fact that no insanity

or guilty but mentally ill defense was being raised. (Emphasis in original.) Id. at 7.

¶ 71   In reversing the convictions, the appellate court directed that the following evidence was

to be admitted on retrial: (1) defendant’s voluntary psychiatric admission to the hospital,

(2) evidence that defendant felt pressure to make a statement due to the fact that the victim’s father

and stepmother were prominent members of the legal bar of the community, (3) evidence of the

defendant’s concern about his wife’s alcohol consumption issues, and (4) testimony by expert

psychology witnesses who would attest to defendant’s susceptibility to suggestion at the time the

confession was made. Id. at 8.

¶ 72   We note initially that we are not bound by the Second District’s decision in Harlacher.

Nonetheless, that decision is meaningfully distinguishable from the instant case and does not

preclude a trial judge from setting reasonable conditions on the introduction of psychological

evidence. In particular, the Harlacher court’s decision was based principally upon the trial court

denying defendant the opportunity to challenge the voluntariness of his statements. In this case,

however, the voluntariness of defendant’s statements was not at issue. Additionally, there is no

indication that the trial judge in this case ordered an examination based upon an erroneous belief

that any mention of the defendant’s mental state required a section 115-6 examination. Instead, the

court indicated that, in fairness to both sides, if the defense wished to challenge defendant’s

statements by way of psychiatric testimony, then, and only then, would the State have the

opportunity to rebut that testimony with its own examination of defendant.
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¶ 73    Lee, 196 Ill. 2d 368, is also distinguishable and must be considered in the context in which

it was decided. The defendant in Lee was found guilty after a bench trial of aggravated vehicular

hijacking and murdering a police officer. At a subsequent death penalty hearing, the defense called

three experts who each testified that defendant suffered from varying mental disorders at the time

of the shooting and that he had been previously hospitalized for mental health issues. Id. at 383.

The defense also elicited testimony that defendant was adopted and that, just before the shooting

rampage leading to the death of the police officer victim, defendant learned that his adoptive

mother was about to remarry, which had a depressing effect on the defendant. Id. at 379. The jury

was also advised that defendant had no prior criminal history. Id. at 383.

¶ 74    After what could be described as an eleventh-hour request, the court ordered the defendant

to submit to an examination by a State psychiatrist, over the defense’s objection. Id. at 376. Dr.

Markos, an expert in the field of forensic psychiatry, testified in rebuttal, contradicting the defense

experts’ testimony. Id. at 379-80. Thereafter, following deliberations, a jury concluded that there

were no mitigating factors sufficient to preclude the imposition of a death sentence, and the trial

court sentenced the defendant to death. Id. at 372.

¶ 75    On appeal, the defendant in Lee did not make any claim regarding the sufficiency of the

evidence, nor raise any trial errors at the guilt and innocence phase of his trial. He only contended

that he had been denied a fair sentencing hearing because of numerous errors committed by the

trial court.

¶ 76    The supreme court considered the applicability of section 115-6 at the death penalty phase

of the proceedings and held that the trial court’s order requiring a psychiatric exam by the State’s

expert was not permitted at the sentencing hearing, rejecting the State’s argument that it should be

allowed to rebut defendant’s mitigation evidence. The court concluded that the trial judge’s order
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at the capital sentencing phase requiring defendant submit to a psychological examination by a

state expert was not authorized by statute or the rules of procedure, and the subsequent introduction

and use of the court-ordered expert testimony prejudiced defendant and entitled him to a new

capital offense sentencing hearing. Id. at 382.

¶ 77    The Lee decision is distinguishable from the instant case, as it was based upon a precise

and singular issue that is not applicable here. The supreme court in Lee was not reviewing any

issues pertaining to the defendant’s trial. It was considering only whether the trial judge’s order

was permitted at the most serious of all criminal proceedings at that time, the aggravation and

mitigation hearing under the Illinois death penalty statute. As indicated above, the supreme court

concluded that there was nothing in section 115-6 or in the discovery rules that permitted the court-

ordered psychiatric examination of a defendant in a death penalty sentencing hearing. Accordingly,

the holding in Lee has no applicability to the order entered here and does not control the outcome

of this appeal. There is nothing in Lee to suggest that the trial court’s ruling in this case was

erroneous or that the supreme court would have precluded a court-ordered psychiatric examination

under section 115-6 in a case such as the one here, where a defendant chooses to raise a mental

status defense at his criminal trial.

¶ 78    Based on the above, we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in conditioning

the defense’s presentation of Dr. Frumkin’s testimony upon the State being able to rebut

defendant’s mental status defense with their own psychological evidence.

¶ 79    Finally, defendant also challenges the bases of the State’s expert’s opinions in this case.

                “When determining the reliability of an expert witness, the trial judge is given broad

                discretion. [Citation.] Therefore, we review the trial court’s decision to admit

                evidence, including expert witness testimony, for an abuse of that discretion.
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               [Citation.] Arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable decisions by the trial court constitute

               an abuse of discretion. [Citation.]” People v. Lerma, 2014 IL App (1st) 121880,

               ¶ 35.

¶ 80   Defendant contends that the trial court committed reversible error in admitting arson

investigator Kushner’s conclusion that the fire in this case was incendiary and caused by the use

of an accelerant and open flame because that opinion “lacked a scientific basis” based on “the

relevant scientific methodology” for fire investigations and did not comport with industry

standards used in fire investigations.

¶ 81   Illinois Rule of Evidence 703 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) addresses the bases of opinion testimony

by experts and reads as follows: “The facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert

bases an opinion or inference may be those perceived by or made known to the expert at or before

the hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming opinions

or inferences upon the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence.”

                       “[T]he admission of an expert’s testimony requires the proponent to lay an

               adequate foundation establishing that the information upon which the expert bases

               his opinion is reliable. [Citations.] To lay an adequate foundation for expert

               testimony, it must be shown that the facts or data relied upon by the expert are of a

               type reasonably relied upon by [experts] in that particular field in forming opinions

               or inferences. [Citations.] It is the function of the trial court to determine whether

               the foundational requirements are met, which we review de novo. [Citation.]”

               (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Burhans, 2016 IL App (3d) 140462,

               ¶ 30.

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¶ 82   We find that the State provided sufficient evidence to show that the facts or data Kushner

relied upon were of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the field of fire investigation. “A

scientific methodology need not be universally accepted or even accepted by a majority of experts

in the field; ‘[i]nstead, it is sufficient that the underlying method used to generate an expert’s

opinion is reasonably relied upon by experts in the relevant field.’ ” People v. Rodriguez, 2018 IL

App (1st) 141379-B, ¶ 56 (quoting In re Commitment of Simons, 213 Ill. 2d 523, 530 (2004)). We

acknowledge defendant’s argument that his expert provided evidence that, at the time of trial, the

methodology Kushner allegedly relied upon was no longer considered “industry standard.”

Nonetheless, Kushner testified he used the scientific method in his investigation. Kushner testified

he used the witness’s statement in the process of gathering data, analyzing that data, and making

a determination. Kushner testified that his opinion was based on his fire scene examination,

witness information, training, and experience. Kushner also testified that in making an

investigation he uses the standards established by the NFPA, including use of the scientific

method. See supra ¶ 44 n.1.

¶ 83   Regarding the conflicting evidence as to industry standards concerning “negative corpus”

at the time of the fire and at the time of trial, defendant’s expert admitted that the determination

by the State’s fire investigators that the fire started on the rear porch and that the specific area of

origin was somewhere near the couch complied with NFPA 921 but testified that the conclusion

that the ignition source was an open flame, that an ignitable liquid was used, and that the fire was

incendiary (man-made) were not reached in compliance with industry standards because those

opinions were based solely on the negative corpus approach, and it was not based on any physical

evidence, in violation of NFPA 921 and the standards in the relevant scientific community. We

note the trial court found Kushner did rely on “some physical evidence.” Regardless, “[a]ny
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weakness in the basis of an expert’s opinion goes to the weight of the testimony; it should not

affect its admissibility if the facts, data, or opinions are reasonably relied upon by experts in the

relevant field.” People v. Lind, 307 Ill. App. 3d 727, 739 (1999). Kushner’s testimony concerning

the nature and sources of his training, his methodology, industry standards, and the evidence upon

which he relied in this case provided sufficient evidence that the underlying facts, data, and

opinions were reasonably relied upon by experts in his field. “The opposing party has the

responsibility to challenge on cross-examination the sufficiency or reliability of the expert’s

opinion” (id.), which defendant did in this case.

¶ 84   Accordingly, we conclude that there existed an adequate foundation for Kushner’s expert

opinion and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Kushner’s testimony.

¶ 85   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.

¶ 86   Affirmed.

¶ 87   PRESIDING JUSTICE HOWSE, specially concurring in part and dissenting in part:

¶ 88   I concur in that portion of the majority’s judgment the trial court did not err in admitting

Fire Marshall Kushner’s testimony in this case. I dissent from the majority’s judgment finding the

trial court did not abuse its discretion by conditioning defendant’s admission of expert testimony

concerning his mental state when he made certain statements upon an involuntary examination by

a State psychiatrist. The majority concludes that the “circumstances presented here supported a

reasonable belief by the trial judge that defendant was attempting to raise a mental status defense,

like insanity or guilty but mentally ill, therefore warranting an order of an examination by a State

expert.” Supra, ¶ 55. I disagree.

¶ 89   The majority reaches this conclusion after admitting that the trial judge simply “disagreed

with the defense’s stated purpose.” (Emphasis added.) Id. Defendant was absolutely not raising
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an insanity, guilty but mentally ill, or any other mental status defense to the offenses charged. Dr.

Frumkin’s report states the “purpose of the evaluation in part *** was to assess [defendant’s]

psychological functioning as it pertains to issues that are potentially relevant to his statements he

made regarding the offense.” His initial report concludes that defendant’s test results are consistent

with a diagnosis of Psychotic Disorder Not Otherwise Specified, Cognitive Disorder Not

Otherwise Specified, and Schizotypal Personality Disorder. When Dr. Frumkin updated his report

four years later in a letter to defendant’s attorney, he again met with defendant and reviewed the

recordings on the COH. Dr. Frumkin stated defendant’s diagnoses remained unchanged but he

updated them to DSM-V criteria. Dr. Frumkin’s letter does describe statements defendant made

about why he told Robertson defendant set the fire. However, Dr. Frumkin’s letter goes on to state

as follows:

                       “I am in no way attempting to indicate that [defendant’s] statements to Ms.

               Robertson were true or false. Even if [defendant] is innocent of the crime, I do not

               know whether his explanation as to why he told Ms. Robertson he did it was true

               versus some other explanation. [Defendant] is an individual who has eccentric and

               bizarre thinking, has at times a detachment from reality (although not to the extent

               he would be diagnosed as having schizophrenia), and has great difficulty processing

               emotional events. Sometimes people with serious mental disorders are not accurate

               in what they say. This may be something the trier of fact might want to consider

               when evaluating the weight to give to [defendant’s] statements to Ms. Robertson.”

               (Emphases added.)

¶ 90   The limited purpose of Dr. Frumkin’s testimony, clearly articulated to the trial court, was

to testify on the subject of defendant’s mental condition at the time defendant made the statements
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the State sought to use against him and the relationship, if any between that mental state and the

making of the statement. If Dr. Frumkin testified in a manner suggesting a mental-status defense,

as the trial court feared he might, the trial court could have revisited the matter and then either (1)

ordered defendant to submit to a psychiatric evaluation by the State or (2) instructed the jury to

disregard the testimony that went beyond the limited purpose so stated by the defense. However,

unless and until that happened, the trial court had no reasonable grounds to believe defendant was

attempting to raise a mental-status defense, no basis on which to condition the testimony, and,

therefore, abused its discretion.

¶ 91   Nor do any of the “several circumstances in which a court is required to order [a] defendant

to submit to an examination” pursuant to section 115-6 exist in this case. The majority correctly

notes that “section 5/115-6 does not preclude the State from requesting that [a] defendant submit

to a psychiatric examination, or the trial court from ordering such an examination, when a

defendant places his mental status at issue in a way not specifically delineated by that section.”

Supra, ¶ 56. This argument misses the mark, however, because the question is not whether the

trial court is precluded from issuing such an order; the question is whether the trial court is

authorized to enter such an order. This authority is not found in the trial court’s “inherent authority

or power to manage and control the proposed evidence the parties intend to present” in order to

avoid confusing the trier of fact or causing it to misinterpret the evidence. See supra, ¶ 57. Nor

is such authority granted, or needed, to ensure a “search for the truth.” See supra, ¶ 58. In the

absence of any legal authority for its order the trial court abused its discretion. People v. Patel,

2020 IL App (2d) 190532, ¶ 22 (“the reviewing court must require the exercise of discretion

consistent with the law”).

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¶ 92    Instructive of that finding, contrary to the majority’s belief, is our supreme court’s decision

in People v. Lee, 196 Ill. 2d 368 (2001). In Lee, the issue was “whether the trial court could require

that [the] defendant submit to the examination by Dr. Markos.” Id. at 380. There was no dispute

that section 115-6 did “not authorize the psychiatric examination in question” because the

defendant “informed the trial court and the State that he would not rely upon any of [the listed]

defenses at trial.” Id. at 380-81. The court also found that Illinois Supreme Court Rule 413 (eff.

July 1, 1982) did not authorize a psychiatric examination of the defendant. Id. at 381. “Pursuant

to Rule 413, a judicial officer may require that an accused submit to a reasonable physical or

medical inspection of his body. [Citation.] However, a psychiatric examination is not ‘a “medical

inspection” of the type contemplated by the rule.’ [Citation.]” Id. at 381.

¶ 93    The majority ignores the State’s argument in that appeal that “it must be afforded an

opportunity to rebut the mitigation evidence presented by [the] defendant” and that the only way

it could effectively do so was “to have its expert perform the psychiatric examination in question.”

Id. Our supreme court had already decided that where “the supreme court rules governing

discovery in criminal trials [citation] are not applicable at a death penalty hearing” the trial court’s

order “was not authorized either by statute or by rule. As such, the trial court’s order was

improper.” Id. at 382. In light of the State’s “opportunity to rebut” argument our supreme court

remained unpersuaded. The court stated it was “cognizant of the problems confronting the State.”

Id. Nonetheless, the court held “the actions of the trial court and the actions of this court must be

guided by the supreme court rules as presently written. At the time the trial court ordered [the]

defendant to submit to the psychiatric examination, such action was not authorized.” (Emphasis

added.) Id. at 382. The court thus held the trial court’s order requiring the defendant to submit to

a psychiatric examination was improper. Id. at 382-83.
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¶ 94   The majority’s basis for distinguishing Lee fails. The majority finds Lee inapplicable

because “[i]t was considering only whether the trial judge’s order was permitted at the ***

aggravation and mitigation hearing under the Illinois death penalty statute.” Supra. The majority

mistakenly relies on Lee and authorities from foreign jurisdictions addressing this legal issue in

the context of sentencing hearings. Despite the majority’s attempt to distinguish it, I find more

instructive on this issue the court’s decision in Harlacher, 262 Ill. App. 3d at 7. The majority

concludes Harlacher “does not preclude a trial judge from setting reasonable conditions on the

introduction of psychological evidence.” (Emphasis added.) Supra, ¶ 72. However, I believe the

right question is whether the trial court in this case was authorized to compel defendant to become

a witness against himself. Harlacher does not provide that authority.

¶ 95   In Harlacher, the court found that the trial court in that case “erroneously believed that if

the defendant was to bring in any evidence of mental state, then he must be subjected to a section

115-6 hearing.” (Emphasis added and in original.) In Harlacher, the Winnebago County State’s

Attorney charged the defendant with aggravated criminal sexual abuse and armed violence. Id. at

2. On appeal, the defendant argued the trial court erroneously excluded evidence that would have

permitted the jury to draw the inference that the defendant’s statement to police was involuntary.

Id. One of the defendant’s motions in liminie challenged the State’s right to have him submit to a

mental examination by the State pursuant to section 115-6 of the Code. “In the first issue on

appeal, [the] defendant assert[ed] that he was denied a fair trial when the trial court improperly

barred the defendant from presenting evidence which was pertinent to showing his statement was

not voluntarily made. The Harlacher court held that the trial court “erroneously believed that if

the defendant was to bring in any evidence of mental state, then he must be subjected to a section

115-6 hearing.” (Emphasis omitted.) Id. at 7. The Harlacher court held:
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                      “This belief by the [trial] court, that if the defendant was going to go into

               any discussion of his mental state at the time of confession, the court was permitted

               to order the defendant to be examined by the State’s psychiatrist pursuant to section

               115-6, was error. Such an examination is only required in cases in which the

               insanity defense, a plea of guilty but mentally ill at the time of the offense, or the

               defense of intoxicated or drugged condition is at issue. [Citation.] In this case,

               [the] defendant did not seek to rely on any of those defenses, but rather, he wished

               to assert that his statement to the police was not voluntary. Thus, the trial court

               abused its discretion in not permitting the defendant to introduce evidence of the

               involuntariness of his confession.” Id. at 7-8.

¶ 96   There is no consequential difference between Harlacher and this case as to the question of

whether section 115-6 applies. It does not. In this case, the State has not identified, nor have I

found, any statute or rule authorizing the trial court’s order in this case. On the contrary, the

authority the majority finds for the trial court’s order, if any exists, is restrained by the fifth

amendment to the United States Constitution. See Estelle v. Smith, 451 U.S. 454, 466 (1981)

(“[The defendant’s] future dangerousness was a critical issue at the sentencing hearing, and one

on which the State had the burden of proof ***. To meet its burden, the State used [the

defendant’s] own statements ***.” “[T]he Court of Appeals correctly concluded that the Fifth

Amendment privilege was implicated.”). The Court’s decision is Estelle does not require a similar

holding in this case because the Estelle court held the defendant’s fifth amendment rights were

violated by the admission of the psychiatrist’s testimony at the penalty phase and the defendant

“was given no indication that the compulsory examination would be used to gather evidence

necessary to decide whether, if convicted, he should be sentenced to death” and he “was not
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informed that, accordingly, he had a constitutional right not to answer the questions put to him.”

Estelle, 451 U.S. at 467. Regardless, Estelle and Lynaugh, 835 F.2d at 576-77, relied upon by the

majority (supra, ¶ 62), are instructive as to how this court should look at the evidence at issue in

this case and instruct that the nature of the evidence, i.e., whether it goes to the defendant’s guilt

or innocence or the “central issue” in sentencing, is relevant to the fifth amendment inquiry. 2

¶ 97    The majority claims similar arguments “have been repeatedly rejected by courts throughout

the country.” Supra, ¶ 60. A careful examination, however, reveals that those cases involved

circumstances not present here and are, therefore, totally inapposite. In almost every case the

majority relies on the defendant is seeking to use a mental status to exculpate themselves and in

the remaining cases the courts have determined that the evidence went to a central issue in the

case. In this case, the credibility of one witness is not the “central issue” of the trial.

¶ 98    Once again the cases relied upon by the majority, including Lynaugh, do not hold that

evidence concerning the credibility of a witness is inadmissible when that evidence is expert

psychiatric testimony concerning the declarant but the State has not had the opportunity to conduct

an independent mental examination of the declarant. More importantly, none of the cases involve

evidence concerning the credibility of a witness, as does the evidence in this case, that the trial

court effectively excluded. See supra, ¶¶ 61-65, citing Buchanan, 483 U.S. at 423-24 (“ ‘where

petitioner attempted to establish at trial a mental-status defense’ “); Cheever, 571 U.S. at 93

2
        I acknowledge that in Lynaugh, 835 F.2d at 571-72, the defendant did not elicit expert psychiatric
testimony to establish his innocence of the offense charged but rather the evidence the State sought to
refute with the results of an examination by a court-appointed State psychiatrist came in at the punishment
phase in the form of testimony that the defendant was capable of rehabilitation. Nonetheless, in rejecting
the defendant’s claim the admission of the independent psychological testimony violated the fifth
amendment (id. at 577), the Lynaugh court noted that the evidence went to “the central issue at the
sentencing phase—[the defendant’s] sincerity in wanting to reform.” Id. at 576.
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(“where a defense expert examined a defendant and testified that he lacked the requisite mental

state to commit a crime”); Harris, 468 Mass. at 448-49 (evidence of mental impairment

“precluding the intent to kill”); Goff, 128 Ohio St. at 181 (“expert psychiatric testimony to establish

*** element of self-defense”); Herdman, 310 P.3d at 178-79 (expert evidence concerning mental

condition “as a defense”); and Hickson, 630 So. 2d at 176-77 (evidence “to support a claim of self-

defense”); Hess, 252 Mont. at 211 (“offered psychological evidence in her homicide defense”).

¶ 99   In Hess, the defendant relied on “the affirmative defense of ‘use of justifiable force or self-

defense under the battered woman syndrome’ ” and ultimately was convicted of mitigated

deliberate homicide. Hess, 252 Mont. at 210. The Hess court held the defendant “put her mental

state at issue when she relied upon the affirmative defense of justifiable use of force and offered

psychological evidence *** to support that defense.” Hess, 252 Mont. at 211. In Briand, 130

N.H. at 651 the defendant sought to introduce the testimony of a psychologist “to support a

potential self-defense plea or to prove provocation as it relates to the lesser-included offense of

manslaughter.” Thus, this testimony would establish a defense to the crime charged which in that

case was purposely causing death. Id. The majority fails to acknowledge that aspect of the New

Hampshire court’s decision in which the issue was solely “whether the trial court may order a

criminal defendant to submit to evaluation by a psychiatrist of the State’s choosing when she relies

on psychiatric testimony to support a defense other than insanity.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at 652.

But see Briand, 130 N.H. at 656 (fifth amendment “does not prevent the State, in the context of

this case, from examining the defendant in order to rebut evidence she presents on an issue she has

introduced”).

¶ 100 In Ostrander, 441 Mass. at 344, although the expert’s testimony went to the voluntariness

of the defendant’s waiver of his Miranda rights (Ostrander, 441 Mass. at 352), the decision is not
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persuasive in this case for two reasons. First, the decisions on which it is based held, according to

the Ostrander court itself, that the “reasoning underlying [those cases was that] where a defendant

places at issue his mental state at a critical time, the jury should have the benefit of countervailing

expert views.” (Emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 353. In the cases

on which Ostrander is based, the defendant offered psychiatric testimony to support a defense of

lack of criminal responsibility, mental impairment to negate the mens rea of the charged crime,

and an inability to premeditate or form a specific intent to kill. See id. at 352-53 (and cases cited

therein).

¶ 101 The defendant in this case is not seeking to admit the psychiatric testimony to negate an

element of the offense. Rather, in this case defendant only seeks to offer testimony that affects the

credibility of a witness’s statements which in this case are coincidentally defendant’s own

statements. True, in Ostrander the court rejected a similar argument: that the cases and their

“progeny apply only to situations where the working of a defendant’s mind at the time of the

offense is at issue, but are inapposite in situations involving the defendant’s mental condition at

the time of his confession.” Id. at 353-54. However, the court rejected that argument because in

that case “the challenged mental state [did] not concern a collateral issue, but rather a defense set

forth by the defendant.” Id. at 354.

¶ 102 As to the question of fairness to the State in that situation as impacting the defendant’s

argument in Ostrander, something with which the majority is also concerned in this case (see

supra, ¶ 62), the Ostrander court found it would be fundamentally unfair to permit “a one-sided

presentation of expert evidence” to the trier of fact, which “must find that the confession was

voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Emphasis added.) Id. Here, however, the trier of fact is

not being asked to determine the admissibility of any evidence based on psychiatric testimony or
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to decide any issues based on psychiatric evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. Defendant is

simply offering evidence that goes to his own credibility as a witness.

¶ 103 Ostrander simply provides no support for holding that evidence concerning the credibility

of a witness is inadmissible when that evidence is expert psychiatric testimony concerning the

declarant but the State has not had the opportunity to conduct an independent mental examination

of the declarant.

¶ 104 While the trial court lacked authority for its order, “[i]t is well established under Illinois

law ‘evidence of a witness’ mental condition is admissible to the extent it bears upon the credibility

of the witness’ testimony.’ [Citations.]” People v. Viramontes, 2017 IL App (1st) 142085, ¶ 79.

Our supreme court’s decision in People v. Becker, 239 Ill. 2d 215, 236 (2010), also relied upon by

the majority, is both not controlling of the outcome in this case and actually supports the admission

of Dr. Frumkin’s actual proposed testimony. The case is not controlling because Dr. Frumkin had

not, and there was no indication he would, “comment directly on the credibility of another

witness,” which would be “improper.” Becker, 239 Ill. 2d at 236. The case supports admission

of Dr. Frumkin’s testimony because in that case our supreme court held the defendant was

permitted to apprise the jury of the circumstances surrounding certain statements through non-

expert witnesses but, unlike Becker, in this case the “circumstances” are not within “the ken of the

average juror” (id. at 237) and thus expert testimony is appropriate. Any party may attack the

credibility of any witness. People v. Evans, 2016 IL App (3d) 140120, ¶ 30 (citing Illinois Rule

of Evidence 607 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). A defendant is subject to impeachment just as any other

witness. People v. Clark, 9 Ill. App. 3d 998, 1003 (1973). Moreover, even with a voluntary

confession,

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               “a defendant may still present evidence to the jury that affects its credibility or

               weight, or that challenges its reliability or truth. [Citations.] The jury’s credibility

               inquiry will often turn on largely the same evidence as the judge’s voluntariness

               inquiry, but the two are nonetheless ‘separate inquires’; and the latter, a factual

               matter, is ‘exclusively for the jury to assess.’ Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683, 688

               (1986).” People v. James, 2017 IL App (1st) 143391, ¶¶ 129-130.

¶ 105 To get around the fact defendant was not raising a defense to the offenses charged based

on a mental status but rather only trying to “controvert the State’s proof” that his statements on the

COH are reliable, the majority first mischaracterizes the record by asserting, repeatedly, that this

case involves a “mental status defense that defendant intended to raise” and leaning on the trial

court’s subjective view “that what the defense was attempting to do was to raise an insanity

defense.” I note that had not happened, and thus no authority existed for the trial court to order

defendant to undergo a psychiatric examination by the State. Section 115-6 of the Code of

Criminal Procedure (725 ILCS 5/115-6 (West 2014)) provides as follows:

                       “If the defendant has given notice that he may rely upon the defense of

               insanity as defined in Section 6-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or the defendant

               indicates that he intends to plead guilty but mentally ill or the defense of intoxicated

               or drugged condition as defined in Section 6-3 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or if

               the facts and circumstances of the case justify a reasonable belief that the aforesaid

               defenses may be raised, the Court shall, on motion of the State, order the defendant

               to submit to examination by at least one clinical psychologist or psychiatrist, to be

               named by the prosecuting attorney.” 725 ILCS 5/115-6 (West 2018).

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¶ 106 The circumstances of this case lie outside this rule.            The defense expressly stated,

repeatedly, that it was not and would not raise an insanity defense. The majority has pointed to no

facts to contradict those statements. Moreover, the majority’s reliance on the contents of Dr.

Frumkin’s report is misplaced. While the “report” does opine that defendant suffers from three

mental disorders the report also states “people with serious mental disorders are not accurate in

what they say.” The defense sought to admit evidence of defendant’s mental disorders for the

limited purpose of demonstrating that defendant may be a person who is not accurate in what he

says—testimony that is perfectly permissible (Viramontes, 2017 IL App (1st) 142085, ¶ 79) and

something that no court (cited by the majority) has held triggers a reciprocal right in the State to

an independent mental examination which is otherwise protected against by the fifth amendment

to the United States constitution. See supra (and cases cited therein); Buchanan, 483 U.S. at 421.

¶ 107 If one circumstance changed, i.e. if defendant even hinted 3 at an insanity defense to the

crime—rather than to the reliability of his statements—then so would the other, i.e. the trial court

would be authorized to order defendant to undergo an evaluation by the State. In this case, if the

defense does establish that defendant is a person who sometimes is “not accurate in what [he]

say[s]” and that the jury should consider that “when evaluating the weight to give to [defendant’s]

statements to *** Robertson,” (see infra) he will not have established a defense that exonerates

him. Rather, that evidence, if accepted and credited by the jury, would be weighed next to the

3
         I mean this literally. Section 115-6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (725 ILCS 5/115-6 (West
2014)) provides that if the facts and circumstances of the case justify a reasonable belief an insanity
defense may be raised, the trial court shall, on motion, order the defendant to submit to examination. I
simply do not believe the facts and circumstances justify that belief at this time, based on defense
counsel’s clear, consistent, and unequivocal statements to the contrary. Nor I note, does the majority
point to anything to suggest defense counsel was lying other than the trial court’s own conclusory
speculations.
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facts, circumstances, and substance of defendant’s statements on the COH and all of the State’s

other evidence when the jury determines defendant’s guilt. If at any time defendant exceeded the

bounds of the limited purpose for which the expert testimony is clearly admissible, then the trial

court is free to take corrective actions.

¶ 108 Given the indisputable admissibility of the proffered evidence for the limited purpose of

using that evidence to attack defendant’s credibility as a witness against himself, then, pursuant to

Illinois Supreme Court Rule 413(c) (eff. Jul. 1, 1982), the defense was correct when it argued

below that it was only required to turn over defendant’s psychiatrist’s report to the State. Rule

413(c) reads as follows:

                        “Subject to constitutional limitations, the trial court shall, on written

                motion, require that the State be informed of, and permitted to inspect and copy or

                photograph, any reports or results, or testimony relative thereto, of physical or

                mental examinations or of scientific tests, experiments or comparisons, or any other

                reports or statements of experts which defense counsel has in his possession or

                control, including a statement of the qualifications of such experts, except that those

                portions of reports containing statements made by the defendant may be withheld

                if defense counsel does not intend to use any of the material contained in the report

                at a hearing or trial.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 413(c) (eff. Jul. 1, 1982). 4

4
         The Buchanan court held that “if a defendant *** presents psychiatric evidence, then, at the very
least, the prosecution may rebut this presentation with evidence from the reports of the examination that
the defendant requested.” (Emphasis added.) Buchanan, 483 U.S. at 422-23. That holding provides
additional support for my conclusion that that Rule 413 controls and defendant was only required to turn
over defendant’s psychiatrist’s report to the State.
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¶ 109 Rule 413(c) does not require a defendant to submit to a psychological exam. The trial

court’s order to defendant to submit to an examination by the State’s expert was not authorized by

statute or rule and was, therefore, improper. Lee, 196 Ill. 2d at 382, Harlacher, 262 Ill. App. 3d at

7-8.

¶ 110 The trial court thus erred when it required defendant to submit to an in-person mental

evaluation by the State’s expert which it lacked legal authority to make. That error was not

harmless. Evidentiary errors are harmless where there is no reasonable probability the jury would

have acquitted absent the error. People v. Stull, 2014 IL App (4th) 120704, ¶ 104. See also People

v. Littleton, 2014 IL App (1st) 121950, ¶ 65, citing People v. Nevitt, 135 Ill. 2d 423, 447 (1990).

The remedy for an evidentiary error that is not harmless is reversal. Id. In this case, I cannot say

the exclusion of evidence bearing on the credibility of defendant’s statements was harmless beyond

a reasonable doubt. Absent the psychiatrist’s testimony defendant was left with nothing to defend

his statements other than testimony by Myers. Myers’ attempts at exculpating defendant were

heavily impeached, making it appear that Myers’ testimony was concocted, weakening the

defense. See, e.g., People v. Hudson, 157 Ill. 2d 401, 444 (1993) (“challenging the credibility of

a defendant and his theory of defense is proper in closing argument when there is evidence

justifying the challenge”), People v. Manley, 222 Ill. App. 3d 896, 911 (1991) (“it was within the

bounds of permissible argument for the prosecutor to challenge the veracity of the defendant’s trial

testimony”). The State did, in fact, argue in rebuttal as follows:

                       “[W]hat did Larry Myers tell you yesterday? What did he want you to

               believe to help out this guy? [The trial court overruled defendant’s objection to the

               State’s argument.] What did he tell you? He told you a lot of things, but did any

               of them make any sense? *** He wanted you to believe that [Robertson] started
                                               - 53 -
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                the fire. Why? Well, he is an old man with a broken heart who is still pining for

                her first of all. And he can’t believe she wore a wire.”

¶ 111 There is a reasonable probability that, had defendant’s expert testified, defendant would

not have called Myers at all. The jury would have been left with defendant’s other statements,

particularly to Robertson, which, especially absent the damage caused by Myers’ testimony, the

jury could have reasonably determined were not credible or reliable due to defendant’s mental

state. Thus, had the psychiatrist’s testimony been admitted there is a reasonable probability the

jury would have acquitted defendant. Accordingly, defendant’s conviction should be reversed and,

because the evidence is sufficient to sustain defendant’s conviction for the offenses charged 5, the

cause should be remanded for a new trial.

5
         “[R]etrial is permitted even though evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict once erroneously
admitted evidence has been discounted, and for purposes of double jeopardy all evidence submitted at the
original trial may be considered when determining the sufficiency of the evidence.” People v. Olivera,
164 Ill. 2d 382, 393 (1995).
                                                  - 54 -
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                                  No. 1-17-0500

Cite as:                 People v. Comier, 2020 IL App (1st) 170500

Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 10-CR-
                         6406(02); the Hon. Geary W. Kull, Judge, presiding.

Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Lauren A. Bauser, of State
for                      Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
Appellant:

Attorneys                Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J.
for                      Spellberg and Christine Cook, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of
Appellee:                counsel), for the People.

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