Court Opinion

ID: 6114097
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-31 20:03:28.377171+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:27.041788
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 200459-U
                                         No. 2-20-0459
                                  Order filed January 31, 2022

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

                                             IN THE

                              APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of DeKalb County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 16-CF-706
                                       )
DAVID WALLS,                           ) Honorable
                                       ) Robbin Stuckert,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices McLaren and Jorgensen concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held: In this first-degree murder case, defense counsel did not provide ineffective
             assistance in declining to request a second-degree murder instruction. The trial
             court erred in allowing a lay witness to testify to the manner in which gun-shot
             residue can be removed, but the error was harmless. The remainder of defendant’s
             arguments challenging his conviction are forfeited. Finally, the trial court did not
             abuse its discretion in sentencing defendant to 50 years’ imprisonment. Affirmed.

¶2     The State charged defendant, age 18 at the time of the offense, with four counts of first-

degree murder in the shooting death of Debrece Shields in that defendant intended to kill, intended

to do great bodily harm, knew that his acts created the strong probability of death, and knew that

his acts created a strong probability of bodily harm. 720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1), (2) (West 2016). The
2022 IL App (2d) 200459-U

State prosecuted defendant on the theory that he was the shooter and sought a sentencing

enhancement based on the allegation that defendant personally discharged the firearm that caused

Shields’s death. A jury convicted defendant of first-degree murder, and the trial court sentenced

him to 50 years’ imprisonment, which included a 25-year enhancement for personally discharging

the firearm that caused Shields’s death.

¶3      On appeal, defendant argues that: (1) defense counsel was ineffective for failing to pursue

jury instructions on second-degree murder; (2) the trial court erred in allowing improper lay

opinion testimony, to which defense counsel objected at trial and in a posttrial motion, concerning

the manner in which gunshot residue can be removed; (3) the trial court erred in allowing improper

lay opinion testimony, to which defense counsel did not object, concerning the collection of

fingerprints and the improper narration of a surveillance video; (4) the State improperly bolstered

codefendant’s testimony during redirect examination; (5) the State made improper remarks in

opening statements and closing argument; (6) the jury instructions regarding the elements of first-

degree murder omitted the language “intends to kill” and were, therefore, plainly erroneous; and

(7) defendant’s 50-year sentence is excessive in that the trial court did not did not adequately

consider his youth, mental-health conditions, or rehabilitative potential.

¶4     For the reasons that follow, we disagree that defense counsel was ineffective. We agree

that the trial court erred in allowing a lay witness to testify to the manner in which gunshot residue

can be removed, but we determine that the error was harmless because there is no reasonable

probability that the jury would have acquitted defendant absent the error. Defendant’s remaining

challenges against his conviction are forfeited, and the errors, if any, do not amount to plain error.

Finally, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in sentencing defendant to 50 years’

imprisonment. Accordingly, we affirm.

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¶5                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶6     In its opening statement, the State introduced its theory of the case to the jury by stating:

“[W]e all know that unfortunately there are neighborhoods where illegal and violent activity are a

common occurrence, and those neighborhoods are places that we avoid going.” The State

continued that, on October 6, 2016, the parking lot of the apartment complex located at 810 and

820 Kimberly drive in DeKalb near Northern Illinois University (NIU) “became one of those

places.” The State informed the jury that defendant did not live in DeKalb. Rather, codefendant

Nico Griggs drove him and two other men to DeKalb in his tan Jeep to purchase marijuana from

Shields. Defendant went into Shield’s red car to perform the transaction and, as they both exited

the car from the driver’s side, defendant shot Shields in the back. The defense responded by

encouraging the jury to look for gaps in the State’s evidence, inconsistencies in witness testimony,

and bias in the State’s key witness, Griggs.

¶7                       A. Physical Descriptions of Shields and the Suspect

¶8     LaDonna English, Shields’s mother, testified that a photograph presented by the State

represented an accurate image of her son shortly before his death. The photograph showed Shields

to be an African American man with long dreadlocks. He was 25 years old.

¶9     The State presented two witnesses who, after hearing shots fired, saw a suspect move from

Shields’s body to the tan Jeep: Tilly-Ana Ceriser (an NIU graduate student living at the Kimberly

apartments) and Emily Cavazos (an NIU patrol officer). The State also presented a surveillance

video and still-frame photograph purporting to capture an image of the suspect (Exhibit Nos. 27

and 28, testified to by DeKalb police detective Keith Ehrke).

¶ 10   Ceriser, an NIU graduate student, testified that she lived in a second-floor unit of the

Kimberly apartments. At approximately 10:30 p.m., she had been inside her apartment talking to

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her friend on the phone. She heard a “crackling” sound, like a firecracker. She initially thought

the sound had something to do with NIU football festivities, such as a mock cannon. Then, she

heard a second firing and saw a white flash. She did not walk over to the window immediately,

but she did so within 30 seconds. She looked out and saw a man trying to get into a tannish-

colored, four-seat vehicle, shouting, “Open up the door. Open up the door.” She could not see the

man’s face or his skin color. However, she saw that he was wearing a dark-colored hoodie, red

boxers, and white pants. The man got in the tan vehicle, and it drove away. She also saw the

victim laying on the ground of the parking lot next to his car, with the car door still open. Very

shortly thereafter, the police arrived.

¶ 11    On cross-examination, Ceriser conceded that she could not be sure of the suspect’s height.

She estimated his height to be between 5 feet, 9 inches and 6 feet, 1 inch. He was “not heavyset.”

She did not see him with a weapon.

¶ 12    Cavazos, an NIU patrol officer, testified that she and Nicole Folz were on foot patrol near

the area of the shooting. She heard a “loud pop,” which she thought was either a gunshot or

fireworks. The sound came from the north, in the parking lot of the Kimberly apartments. She

noticed a red car, idling. She heard two more “loud popping sounds.” She could see flashes of

light and smoke coming from behind the red car. A group of young women who had been sitting

on the apartment stoop told Cavaso and Folz that there was a male lying on the ground on the other

side of the red car, and the young women believed that he had been shot. Cavazos and Folz began

moving toward the red car. Cavazos saw “a black male individual move from behind the red

vehicle into the direction of a *** light brown or tan SUV-style vehicle.” The tan SUV was not

in a parking space. The suspect was “running” toward the vehicle, he got inside, and the vehicle

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drove west. She was not able to take note of the suspect’s clothing or face. Her view was partially

obstructed by vehicles in the parking lot.

¶ 13   After going to the red car, Cavazos saw Shields, bleeding from his mouth and chest. He

had a faint pulse. She notified dispatch of the shooting and the tan vehicle and returned her

attention to Shields. Shields had stopped breathing, so Cavazos began chest compressions until

the DeKalb Fire Department arrived and took over.

¶ 14   Cavazos noticed that there was a bullet casing on Shields’s chest. She also saw a small

bag of cannabis and some keys. She did not see a gun anywhere near the scene.

¶ 15   On cross-examination, Cavazos testified that the suspect was African American and

appeared to have “long dreadlock-styled hair, but I wasn’t entirely sure.” Still, Cavazos agreed

that she mentioned the dreadlocks in her police report. Cavazos also testified that, unlike Ceriser,

she did not hear the suspect yell to open the door to the tan SUV. On redirect examination, Cavazos

clarified that the young women on the stoop had not given a physical description of the suspect.

In addition, Cavazos viewed the State’s Exhibit No. 26, an excerpt from the surveillance video at

the Kimberly apartments and confirmed that it accurately portrayed the parking lot area.

¶ 16   The State presented one video (Exhibit No. 27) and one still frame shot (Exhibit No. 28)

of the suspect. Exhibit Nos. 27 and 28 came from a surveillance camera at the Kimberly

apartments. DeKalb police detective Keith Ehrke viewed the surveillance video on the night of

the incident. It aided his investigation, because he was able to slow down the video:

               “When I put it in a slower speed, I was able to see two individuals coming out of

       the driver’s door, one down probably about his hands and knees with the second individual

       behind him. I was able to see the clothing description of the second individual, specifically

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       being light-colored pants, dark hooded sweatshirt and some pink or orange underwear or

       undergarments between the pants and the sweatshirt.”

The State played Exhibit No. 27, a slow-motion version of the surveillance video, for the jury. At

times, the State paused the video to question Ehrke:

               “Q. All right, sergeant, what’s happening now?

               A. The victim’s vehicle the red Nissan is pulling forward and stopping.

               Q. What do you see here?

               A. The driver’s door opening.

               Q. And what do you see here?

               A. So right there I see an individual that’s bent forward. The individual behind that

       person is wearing light-colored pants, he’s got like a dark hooded sweatshirt or shirt on. It

       might be hard to see right there but he actually has a little bit of pink or orange on the back

       underwear and his arm is extended downwards towards the first individual that’s on his

       hands and knees what appears [sic].

               Q. And so you’re saying that the person with the light-colored pants is the one

       whose arm is extended downward?

               A. That’s correct.

               Q. That’s what you’re able to determine from the video.

               A. Yes, yes.

               Q. And is it that same person you’re saying that had light-colored pink or something

       also on his clothing?

               A. Yeah. It was like light-colored pants and then there’s like a very small almost

       like a triangle section of either pink or orange but it appears to be his underwear.

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               Q. And by slowing it down you were able to see that a little bit clearer?

               A. Yes.

               (People’s Exhibit No. 27 continued to be played.)

               BY MS. COLLINS:

               Q. And what does it show that the person is doing now?

               A. It appears that they both moved to the back of the car.

               Q. What next?

               A. Again they’re out of view. You see some moving around during this part but

       you can’t really see what’s going on back there.”

Defense counsel did not object to Ehrke’s description of the video, Exhibit No. 27.

¶ 17   The State then asked Ehrke to identify a still-frame shot extracted from the video, Exhibit

No. 28. Ehrke agreed that the still-frame shot “truly and accurately depict[ed] the slower version

close-up of the video that [the jury] just watched from the DeKalb mobile cam[era].” He did not

otherwise comment on the still-frame shot. The State then sought to admit Exhibit No. 28.

Defense counsel objected: “[T]hat still photo [is] not the best evidence. They have the video.”

The trial court admitted the still-frame shot over defense counsel’s objection. This court has

viewed Exhibit No. 28. Though blurry, Exhibit No. 28 does appear to show a suspect in white

pants and a dark top, with a bright pink/orange/reddish color between the pants and top, bent over

another individual. Both individuals are outside the driver’s door of a red car.

¶ 18   During cross-examination, Ehrke agreed that he watched the surveillance video for the first

time after interviewing Ceriser. Ceriser had provided Ehrke with a description of the suspect’s

clothing. The images captured in Exhibit Nos. 27 and 28 were the only available images of the

suspect.

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¶ 19   Finally, Ehrke testified that he used buccal swabs to obtain defendant’s and Griggs’s DNA.

Ehrke did not believe that the DNA of any other suspect was taken.

¶ 20                    B. Codefendant Nico Griggs Testifies to the Incident

¶ 21   Griggs testified that he was the driver of the tan Jeep involved in the shooting. That night,

Griggs’s friend of two years, Norris Davison, asked Griggs to drive him to several stops for the

purpose of procuring marijuana. Davison would pay Griggs in the form of gas money, and Griggs

agreed. First, Griggs picked up Davison in Chicago. Then, Griggs drove Davison to a different

location in Chicago. Davison left the car to purchase marijuana and came back with defendant,

whom Griggs had never met before. Next, Griggs drove Davison to a 7-Eleven in DeKalb. There,

Davison’s cousin, whom Griggs also had never met before and whom Griggs knew only as “Head,”

joined the group.

¶ 22   The original seating arrangement was Griggs in the driver’s seat, Davison in the front-

passenger seat, and defendant and Head in the back seats. After leaving the 7-Eleven, Griggs

drove Head to his apartment, because Head had forgotten to lock his apartment door. At Head’s

apartment, only Head left the Jeep. After Head returned to the Jeep, Griggs drove the group to a

second apartment, hoping to purchase marijuana. The group was not successful. However, in the

parking lot of the second apartment, the group switched seating arrangements.

¶ 23   The new seating arrangement was Griggs in the driver’s seat, defendant in the front-

passenger seat, and Davison and Head in the back seat. Griggs then drove to the Kimberly

apartments. Head had arranged to purchase marijuana there. Head made the arrangements over

the phone; Griggs did not know whom they were meeting. Griggs pulled into a parking space, and

he saw a red car pull into the aisle and idle. Davison and Head told defendant to get out of the car

to purchase the marijuana. Griggs saw defendant get into the red car. He heard a shot. Then, a

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2022 IL App (2d) 200459-U

few seconds later, he heard a second shot. He started the Jeep and was about to pull away when

defendant got back in the front-passenger seat of the Jeep. Griggs recounted:

               “I was going to pull off and then [Davison and Head] was like, no, don’t leave

       [defendant] and then we looked around for him, he came, hopped in. After he hopped in[,]

       I pulled out, pulled out of the parking lot. Head was giving me directions on where to go

       and as he was giving me directions they asked him what happened. He said that the guy

       tried to up a gun.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 24   Griggs repeated defendant’s words upon getting into the Jeep:

               “Q. What did he say?

               A. He said that the guy tried to up on him and he shot him.

               Q. What does—he says somebody tried to up on him, what does that mean?

               A. Tried to pull a gun on him.

               Q. Did the defendant David Walls provide any description of the gun that was

       pulled on him, that he claimed was pulled on him?

               A. Yes. He said it was big and chrome.

               Q. And just to be clear, after the defendant David Walls said that ‘He tried to up on

       me,’ he said that—David Walls said ‘I shot him?’

               A. Yes.”

¶ 25   During cross-examination, Griggs agreed that, on the date of the incident, he and Davison

both had long dreadlocks. Griggs’s dreadlocks were “long[,] somewhere down [his] back ***.”

Davison’s dreadlocks were “about the same length.” Griggs also agreed that, on the date of the

incident, he had a picture on his cellular phone of one of the two guns that the police later found

outside his Jeep, the Stalker gun. The gun belonged to Davison. Griggs had taken a picture of it,

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2022 IL App (2d) 200459-U

because he was trying to help Davison sell it. Prior to the shooting, however, Griggs was not aware

that anyone in the Jeep had a weapon.

¶ 26   Griggs addressed the change in seating arrangements that had occurred at the second

apartment complex. Davison had asked to change seats, because his foot hurt. Davison had

recently been shot in the foot, and his foot started locking up. Davison thought that the back seat

had more room, so he went to the back seat and defendant went to the front-passenger seat.

¶ 27   Griggs clarified that, although he heard two shots, he did not see anything. Griggs did not

hear defendant yell to open up the door. Defendant was able to get into the Jeep, because the doors

were unlocked.

¶ 28             C. Codefendant Nico Griggs Testifies to His Deal with the State

¶ 29   On direct examination, Griggs acknowledged that he had testified pursuant to an agreement

with the State. He had been charged with first-degree murder under an accountability theory,

which carried a sentencing range of 20 to 60 years, and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon,

which carried a sentencing range of 1 to 3 years. If Griggs testified truthfully, as determined by

the State, the State would dismiss the first-degree murder charge. At the time of his testimony,

Griggs had already pled guilty to the weapons charge and received an agreed sentence of 3 years.

¶ 30   On cross-examination, Griggs testified that, when he first spoke with the police in 2016,

he asked for an attorney. It was not until May 29, 2019, that he signed an agreement with the

State. He was represented by counsel, and his counsel also signed the agreement. He has had

conversations with the State “about [his] testimony here today.” He anticipated that he would be

released shortly after giving the instant testimony. The agreement could be voided if the State

determined that Griggs did not testify truthfully. Griggs understood that the State was trying to

convict defendant. Griggs further agreed that when he told the police that defendant shot Shields,

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Griggs knew defendant had been arrested and Davison and Head had left the scene; they were

“gone.” Griggs did not know defendant, but he knew Davison.

¶ 31   On redirect-examination, Griggs agreed that he had made a prior consistent statement to

Detective Ehrke. Specifically, on February 6, 2019, three months prior to signing an agreement

with the State, Griggs provided Ehrke with an account of the incident that was consistent with his

trial testimony.

¶ 32     D. Deputies James Eklund and Doug Brouwer Testify to Defendant’s Apprehension

¶ 33   Eklund testified that, on the date of the incident, he was employed by the DeKalb County

Sheriff’s Office as a patrol officer. At approximately 10:30 p.m., he had just come off a contract

shift at a local community college and was still in uniform and driving his patrol car when he saw

a tan Jeep, with emergency flashers blinking, on the side of Peace Road. Eklund decided to see if

the occupants of the Jeep needed help. One man, who he later determined to be Griggs, was

starting to exit the driver’s seat. Three other subjects were already outside the Jeep, standing on

the passenger side. He spoke with Griggs, who told him that their vehicle had run out of gas.

Griggs declined help and explained that two of his friends were going to get gas. While Eklund

was speaking with Griggs, two of the other subjects walked away, heading north on Peace Road.

Eklund got back in his vehicle and drove toward the other two subjects to see if they would like a

ride. The subjects were walking in a ditch beside the road. It was dark, and there were no

streetlights. Eklund could not see their faces or their clothing. He asked them if they would like

a ride. They responded, but their response was inaudible. Eklund assumed they did not want help

and kept driving. At this time, Eklund was not suspicious of the subjects.

¶ 34   After Eklund drove away, he heard through dispatch that a tan Jeep had been involved in a

DeKalb shooting. Eklund decided to return to speak to the occupants of the Jeep again. When he

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returned to the Jeep, he noticed that the two remaining occupants, Griggs and defendant, were

outside and to the north of the Jeep. Griggs and defendant were walking back toward the Jeep and

Eklund observed that Griggs wore a dark-colored shirt and dark-colored pants and had long

dreadlocks. Defendant had a dark-colored sweatshirt, white or light-colored pants, and had short

hair.

¶ 35    By this time, Deputy Marks (first name not stated) had arrived to assist Eklund. Marks

spoke with Griggs, and Eklund spoke with defendant. Both Griggs and defendant denied any

knowledge of a shooting in DeKalb. Defendant told Eklund that they had been in DeKalb to visit

a girl. Defendant provided his identification. Defendant did not make eye contact, his hands were

restless, and he was sweating “a little bit.”

¶ 36    Deputy Doug Brouwer then arrived on the scene. Brouwer informed Eklund and Marks

that he found two guns on the side of the road, a Stalker and a Beretta. He found them 10 to 15

feet from the passenger side of the Jeep. On this information, Eklund and Marks took defendant

and Griggs into custody. Eklund checked defendant for weapons and found none. He handcuffed

defendant and put him in the back of the squad car. Eklund again mentioned that defendant was

sweating: “He’s starting to sweat profusely on his forehead area”; and “He was sweating quite a

lot so I turned my air-conditioning on [in the squad car].”

¶ 37    Eklund then reviewed Exhibit Nos. 74 and 75, videos of the initial encounter and arrest.

Exhibit No. 74 showed the view from the outside of Eklund’s squad car. The video showed

Eklund’s squad car heading north on Peace Road. As Eklund approached the Jeep for the first

time, the driver of the Jeep can be seen exiting. Three other subjects can be seen on the other side

of the Jeep: “one with light-colored pants which would be [defendant] and two others that were in

dark clothing that were the ones that had walked away.” Later, the video showed the squad car

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slowing; this was the moment that Eklund spoke to the two individuals walking in the ditch. Those

individuals were not captured on film, because the camera could not turn to the side.

¶ 38     Exhibit No. 75 showed the interior of Eklund’s squad car following defendant’s arrest.

Defendant had been placed in the squad car. However, because the air conditioning was running,

defendant’s comments were inaudible. Eklund recounted that the conversation involved Eklund

checking on defendant’s comfort and “ke[eping] defendant up to speed on what [the police] were

doing, letting him know, stuff like that basically.” Defendant is visibly sweating in the squad car

video.

¶ 39     During cross-examination, Eklund agreed that, when he initially pulled over alongside the

Jeep, defendant stood the furthest back and to the rear of the Jeep as compared to the other two

subjects. He also agreed that Exhibit No. 74 shows that a person other than defendant is possibly

wearing light-colored, but not white, blue jeans. Only the person’s leg can be seen. (That person

can be seen at the same time as defendant, so it cannot be defendant.) Still, Eklund thought that

the two subjects walking in the ditch had on dark clothing. He did acknowledge that he could not

see or hear the two subjects walking in the ditch very well.

¶ 40     Last, Eklund testified that, at the time that he arrested defendant, he did not yet have a

physical description of the suspect. Brouwer, however, testified that, by the time of defendant’s

apprehension, he had received a dispatch report concerning a possible shooting and had been given

a description of the tan Jeep and “an African American with dreadlocks.”

¶ 41            E. Detective Michael Stewart Testifies to His Interview with Defendant,

                             Specifically Addressing Gun Shot Residue

¶ 42     Michael Stewart, a detective for the DeKalb Police Department (retired at the time of trial),

interviewed defendant. Defendant waived his Miranda rights on a written form time-stamped at

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1:37 a.m. on October 7, 2016. The State played a recorded, excerpted portion of Stewart’s

interview with defendant for the jury, Exhibit No. 12. Defendant can be seen fidgeting throughout

the video. He put his arms and hands inside his shirt, and Stewart asked him if he wanted a blanket.

Substantively, defendant denied being in DeKalb that evening.

¶ 43   On cross-examination, Stewart agreed that defendant was of “large build,” approximately

6 feet, 2 inches tall, with short hair. (Indeed, defendant’s arrest warrant states that he is 6 feet, 2

inches tall, and 198 pounds.) Defense counsel then questioned Stewart about the interview,

specifically asking him to address the topic of gunshot residue:

               “Q. *** [Y]ou were talking to him as though you had a lot of the answers. Would

       that be fair, it’s an investigative technique?

               A. On some things, yes.

                                                    ***

               Q. And you had told him that at that point he had already had gunshot residue. Do

       you recall that?

               A. Told him that somebody had collected a gunshot residue test from him, yes.

               Q. And that was from Mr. Walls; is that correct?

               A. Yes.

               Q. So you knew that had been done at that point?

               A. Yes.

               Q. And you did not have the results at that point; correct?

               A. No.

               Q. But you told him as soon as those results came in it would resolve all doubt;

       correct?

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              A. Yes.

              Q. And he had told you that he didn’t know anything; correct?

              A. Correct.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 44   On redirect-examination, the State returned to the topic of gunshot residue:

              “Q. Now, detective, you were asked about telling the defendant that tests would

       remove all doubt. Were you specifically saying that the gunshot residue test would remove

       all doubt?

              A. No. I was saying specifically as an investigative tool that DNA that would be

       collected could potentially remove all doubt along with GSR, gunshot residue, and other

       evidence.

              Q. And the gunshot residue test [was] administered to the defendant’s hands;

       correct?

              A. Correct.

              Q. And you didn’t know the results at the time you were interviewing the

       defendant?

              A. No.

              Q. If a person had gunshot residue on their hands and they were sweating

       excessively, would that affect the ability to collect gunshot residue from their hands?

              A. Yes.

              MR. DIXON: Objection.

              THE COURT: Overruled.

              A. (Continuing.) Yes.

              BY MS. KLEIN:

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               Q. Could a person also rubbing their hands on fabric or putting their hands in their

       pockets remove gunshot residue from their hands?

               A. Yes.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 45                 F. Detectives and Forensic Experts Testify to Defendant’s Clothing

¶ 46   The following police officers, detectives, and forensic experts testified to the evidence

recovered from defendant’s clothing: Brian Bollow, Stewart, Angel Reyes, Blake Aper, and Laurie

Lee. Bollow, a DeKalb police officer, participated in booking defendant. During booking, Bollow

removed defendant’s shoes and hoodie. This was a standard safety procedure; the laces and strings

were a safety risk. Bollow placed the shoes and hoodie in an evidence locker. On cross-

examination, Bollow agreed that he did not notice anything unusual about defendant.

¶ 47   Stewart, who had interviewed defendant, also photographed and collected defendant’s

clothing. Defendant’s shoes and hoodie had already been taken during the booking process by

Bollow. Stewart reviewed the photographs he had taken. Exhibit No. 14 showed an image of

defendant from the rear. Defendant wore his pants low; Stewart did not direct him to do so.

Defendant’s white pants and orangish underwear can be seen. Exhibit No. 15 showed a spot of

blood on his white pants near the kneecap. The spot is small and was later described by forensics

as being 1/16 of an inch.

¶ 48   Angel Reyes, a detective with the DeKalb Police Department, testified that he observed

defendant’s clothing, which had been packaged by Stewart. Reyes observed a “red dot” on the

white pants, which appeared to be blood. Reyes also observed that the front toe and the front-right

side of the inner sole of the left shoe appeared to have blood on it. The jury was shown the actual

pants and shoes as well as photographs of the same.

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¶ 49   Aper, who was accepted as an expert in the field of forensic biology, testified that he tested

defendant’s pants and shoes for blood. On the pants, he noticed several “small” reddish brown

spots. On one of the more prominent spots (still only 1/16 of an inch), Aper performed a

preliminary test to confirm that the substance was blood. He did not test each spot, because the

lab does not have the resources to do so. He also performed a preliminary test on the shoes. Upon

learning that the stains on the pants and the shoes were in fact blood stains, he extracted samples

and sent them to the lab for DNA testing.

¶ 50   Lee, who was accepted as in expert in the field of DNA analysis, performed a DNA test on

the samples extracted from defendant’s pants and shoes. The DNA from the blood stains on the

pants had two contributors. The major contributor, for whom all 24 points typically tested on the

DNA profile were found, was Shields. The minor contributor, for whom only 2 of the 24 points

typically tested on the DNA profile, was possibly defendant, i.e., “[Defendant] could not be

excluded from having contributed to the minor profile.” Nico Griggs was excluded from having

contributed to the minor profile on the pants. The DNA profile from the blood stain on the shoes

had one contributor, Shields.

¶ 51   During cross-examination, Lee agreed that she could not discern whether the source of the

minor profile was blood or saliva or a different bodily fluid. Moreover, she expected to find

portions of defendant’s profile, because the material came from his pants. “They were the person’s

pants so we would expect their profile.” She never received a DNA sample from Davison, so she

could not rule him out as a contributor to the minor profile. Lee further agreed that DNA could be

transferred from one person to another, that the DNA profile would not change if the DNA was

“shaken off” a metal object (and onto another surface), and that she did not know how the DNA

in this case got on the pants and shoes.

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¶ 52              G. Detectives and Forensic Experts Testify to Other Evidence

¶ 53   Reyes testified that he processed the crime scene. There were not big pools of blood on

the ground. He did, however, find a bullet casing on the ground outside the red car. He also found

a shell casing in the center console of the car. The State submitted photographs of other items

collected in and around the red car, which Reyes recognized. In particular, Exhibit Nos. 45 and

49 showed a set of keys, a baggie of marijuana, a swisher sweets package, and a cell phone. No

gun was found outside the car.

¶ 54   The red car was towed to the police station and processed there. Along the driver’s side

door, there were two small red drops, which appeared to be blood. These drops were not tested,

however. No gun was located in or about the vehicle.

¶ 55   Reyes also observed Shields’s autopsy. He observed Shields’s clothing being removed.

Shields had been wearing black pants and a black sweatshirt. Exhibit No. 71 shows the shirt that

Shields wore when shot. A small amount of blood circles the tear made by the bullet. No gun was

found in Shields’s clothing. Shields’s DNA was taken at the autopsy.

¶ 56   On cross-examination, Reyes testified that, when he arrived at the scene, the red car was

still running, but the doors were closed. The interior and exterior of the car were dusted for

fingerprints.

¶ 57   On redirect, Reyes testified that no fingerprints were found on the car. The State asked

Reyes why “there may not be fingerprints from a vehicle that people were obviously in.” Defense

counsel did not object to Reyes’s qualifications to answer the question, but the trial court asked

the State to lay a foundation. Before answering the question, Reyes testified that he had taken

three classes on evidence collection, which covered the retrieval of fingerprints. Reyes then

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explained that fingerprints might not be found on a dusty surface, a frequently touched surface, or

when there was not enough oil on a person’s hands.

¶ 58   On recross examination, Reyes testified that the red car had an “average” amount of dust

on it. Reyes again stated that no prints had been found, even though they had tested the car “inside

and out” to “identify anybody that would possibly [have been] in that vehicle.”

¶ 59   Erick Lambert, the property manager at the Kimberly apartments, testified that he found a

bullet the day after the shooting. He found the bullet in the stairwell to the lower apartments. He

picked it up. Upon realizing what it was, he put it back down and called the police. He found the

bullet after students had held a vigil at the apartment complex.

¶ 60   Detectives Reyes, Doug Brouwer, Josh Duehning, and Jackie Lane each testified to the

chain of custody of the two guns that were found near the tan Jeep on Peace Road. The State did

not present any evidence that the guns were tested for fingerprints.

¶ 61   Christina Davison (not related to Norris Davison), a forensic scientist specializing in

firearms identification, testified that the two fired cartridge cases that she received were fired by

the Beretta. The casing that she had received also came from the Beretta. It was impossible to tell

from which gun the bullet core came. During cross-examination, Davison agreed that she saw

nothing in the lab records to indicate that the gun had been tested for DNA or fingerprints. When

asked about gunshot residue, Davison declined to answer. She stated that gunshot residue was

outside her area of expertise. She stated that there were experts specifically tasked to analyze

gunshot residue.

¶ 62   The State then presented a stipulation regarding gunshot residue. That is, if called to testify,

DeKalb Police detective Mark Nachman would testify that he performed a gunshot residue test on

Griggs and defendant. He performed the tests on October 7, 2016, at 12:22 a.m. and at 12:30 a.m.,

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respectively, and sent the samples to the labs. Scott Rochowicz, a forensic scientist with the

Illinois State Police and, as stipulated, an expert in gunshot residue testing, performed the lab

analysis. The results as to both Griggs and defendant were:

               “The test indicated that [Griggs/Defendant] may not have discharged a firearm with

       either hand and that if [Griggs/Defendant] did discharge a firearm, then the particles of

       gunshot residue were removed by activity, were not deposited[,] or were not detected by

       the procedure.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 63                      H. Mitra Kalekar Testifies to Shields’s Autopsy

¶ 64   Mitra Kalekar, who performed Shields’s autopsy, testified that there were two gunshot

wounds; one of entrance and one of exit. The entrance wound was on the right upper back. It was

round and regular. Soot near the wound indicated that it was a contact-range firing, meaning that

the muzzle of the gun was touching Shields when the shot was fired.

¶ 65   The exit wound was on the left front chest wall. There was “a lot” of internal bleeding.

Both chest cavities were full of blood. The toxicology reports tested positive for marijuana and a

“small” amount of alcohol. The alcohol was in Shields’s urine, not his blood. Shields was not

under the influence of alcohol at the time of death.

¶ 66   During cross examination, Kalekar clarified that Shields died of single gunshot wound.

There were no other gunshot wounds. Kalekar would expect fluid to “come out” of the wound

when a person is shot at contact range. However, the muzzle of the gun would have “jammed” the

fluid. Also, the human back does not have major blood vessels. Shields’s bleeding came from the

lungs and the heart. Kalekar might have expected blood droplets on the muzzle of the gun.

¶ 67                                  I. Defendant’s Case

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¶ 68   Folz testified consistent with Cavazos that, while on foot patrol near the Kimberly

apartments, she heard one “loud pop.” She and Cavazos began walking in the direction of the

noise. Within one minute, they had walked to a view of the Kimberly apartments. Shields’s red

car was about 50 feet from them. She saw three young women on the apartment stoop. She also

saw a flash of light from behind the red car and heard two more pops. She saw a man in a crouched

position get up and run over to a tan SUV. He got in the passenger side of the SUV, and it reversed

and then drove west. She saw the man from his profile. She thought that the man had “something

about his head, either dreadlocks or a long hood.” In her report, she wrote that the suspect possibly

had long dreadlocks. She did not write anything about a hood.

¶ 69   On cross-examination, Folz agreed that she had been a relatively new officer at the time,

the area was not well-lit, and she only saw the suspect for a short time. The next day she told

Detective Brad Carls of the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office that the suspect wore either

dreadlocks or a hood. On redirect examination, Folz agreed that there were lights on the apartment

buildings surrounding the parking lot, and the lights shone down on the parking lot.

¶ 70                                  J. Closing Arguments

¶ 71   In closing, the State argued: “Now, ladies and gentleman, it has been said that the jury is

the conscience of the community. The acts that defendant performed on the unarmed Debrece

Shields that night were utterly unconscionable.” The State told the jury that the evidence showed

that defendant was the shooter, because “the person who did this had white pants on [and]

defendant was the only one in white pants.” (Emphasis added.) The State also emphasized that

the surveillance video shows the shooter wearing bright colored underwear, and defendant wore

bright colored underwear. Further, the State noted, Shield’s blood was found on defendant’s pants

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and shoes. The State also commented that there were small spots of blood in the car and on the

ground by the car.

¶ 72   Defense counsel stressed gaps in the State’s evidence and Griggs’s bias. As to gaps in the

State’s evidence, counsel noted that the NIU patrol officers, Cavazos and Folz, did not ask for the

names and contact information of the three young women standing on the apartment stoop who

may have witnessed the shooting. Counsel found it noteworthy that the State did not account for

Davison or Head in its closing argument. Cavazos and Folz believed the suspect to have

dreadlocks like Griggs and Davison. The police allowed Davison and Head to “walk away” and

did not test them for gunshot residue or other forensic evidence. On the flipside, no fingerprints

or gunshot residue connected defendant to the crime. While defendant had a small amount of

blood on his pants and shoes, defense counsel pointed to Lee’s testimony that blood and DNA can

be transferred from one person to another. Counsel further argued that Griggs was a biased witness

who did not come forward to implicate defendant until nearly three years after the shooting and

only then to his own great benefit.

¶ 73   In rebuttal, the State addressed defense counsel’s point that no gunshot residue connected

defendant to the crime:

               “Well, you saw for yourselves this defendant *** even before he was in the squad

       car fidgeting around, putting his hands in his pockets ***, and then you also saw him in

       the squad car sweating profusely with the sweat literally running down his face and his

       skin, both of which can remove gunshot particles.”

The State also argued:

               “Defense counsel just told you that we can’t tell you how the blood got onto David

       Walls’s hands. Well, we most certainly can tell you how the blood got on David Walls’s

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       hands. That blood got onto David Walls’s hands when David Walls took this gun, the

       Beretta, and put it against Debrece Shields’s back and pulled the trigger. That is how the

       blood got onto his pants.” (Emphases added.)

Finally, the State told the jury that, although this case was “real life,” in Hollywood, the murder

“would be called an execution.”

¶ 74                              K. Jury Instructions and Verdict

¶ 75   The trial court provided the jury with the Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions (IPI) Criminal

Nos. 7.01 (“Definition of First Degree Murder”) (4th ed. 2000) and 7.02 (“Issues in First Degree

Murder,” i.e., the elements instruction) (4th ed. 2000) both orally and in writing. The definition

instruction, the State’s Instruction No. 19, perfectly mirrored the language of IPI Criminal No.

7.01, providing:

               “A person commits the offense of first degree murder when he kills an individual

       if, in performing the acts which cause the death, he intends to kill or do great bodily harm

       to that individual or he knows that such acts create a strong probability of death or great

       bodily harm to that individual.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 76   However, the elements instruction, the State’s Instruction No. 20, omitted the phrase

“intended to kill,” from the second proposition in IPI Criminal No. 7.02, providing:

               “To sustain the charge of first-degree murder, the State must prove the following

       propositions:

               First Proposition: That the defendant performed the acts which caused the death of

       Debrece Shields; and

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                 Second Proposition: That when the defendant did so he intended to do great bodily

       harm to Debrece Shields or he knew that his acts created a strong probability of death or

       great bodily harm to Debrece Shields.

                 If you find from your consideration of all the evidence that each one of these

       propositions has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant

       guilty.

                 If you find from your consideration of all the evidence that any one of these

       propositions has not been proved beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant

       not guilty.” (Emphasis added.)

¶ 77   Had the elements instruction perfectly mirrored the language in the IPI Criminal No. 7.02,

the second proposition would have read:

                 “Second Proposition: That when the defendant did so, he intended to kill or do great

       bodily harm to Debrece Shields ***.” (Emphasis added.) IPI Criminal No. 7.02.

¶ 78   Next, in orally instructing the jury on the firearm enhancement, the trial court stated that,

to sustain the firearm enhancement, the State had to prove that “during the commission of the

offense of attempt first-degree murder the defendant personally discharged a firearm that

proximately caused death to another person.” (Emphasis added.) After the court dismissed the

jury, it informed the attorneys that it had misspoken, and it should not have read the word

“attempt.” The attorneys agreed that the jury would receive a written correction. In the written

instructions for the firearm enhancement, the trial court provided the jury with the correct

instructions and the court crossed out the word “attempt.” The jury found defendant guilty of first-

degree murder and of personally discharging the firearm that caused Shields’s death.

¶ 79                                   L. Posttrial Motion

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¶ 80   On April 17, 2020, defense counsel filed a written posttrial motion. He argued, inter alia,

that the trial court erred in allowing an officer (Stewart), who was not qualified as an expert, to

opine that gunshot residue could be removed by sweat. This testimony went beyond the parties’

stipulation to the expert’s (Rochowicz’s) finding regarding gunshot residue. The trial court denied

the motion.

¶ 81                                    M. Sentencing

¶ 82   The presentencing report provided that, at the time of the offense, defendant was 18 and

had just graduated from high school. He had participated in a summer jobs program and he planned

to go to community college. Defendant’s father was currently in federal prison for a drug-related

offense. Defendant described his neighborhood as “real wild” due to drugs and gun violence.

Defendant also stated that nearly one-third of his friends were involved in crime. However,

defendant himself had no criminal history, either as an adult or a juvenile. Defendant had

previously been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and attention deficit hyperactivity

disorder. He had used drugs in the past, including alcohol, cannabis, and ecstasy. Defendant

reported that, on the date of the offense, he had “smok[ed] and popp[ed] pills.” Defendant

expressed condolences to Shields’s family, stating that they must feel “disappointed, hurt,

emotional, terrible, and [feelings] words cannot describe” and stating that he “regret[ted] what

happened.”

¶ 83   At the sentencing hearing, the State requested a term of 60 years. It noted that the

sentencing range for first-degree murder was 20 to 60 years, plus a 25-to-life term for the firearm

enhancement. The State submitted the victim impact statements. It also noted that, in addition to

the information contained in the presentencing report, defendant had been named as a respondent

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in an order of protection at the time of the offense. This was relevant because it would have

precluded him from possessing a gun.

¶ 84   Defense counsel sought the minimum sentence, 45 years (20 years, plus 25 years for the

firearms enhancement). He and defendant were unaware of any order of protection. He stressed

that defendant had no criminal history and was very young, just 18, at the time of the offense. He

also noted that defendant suffered from mental-health issues and had expressed great empathy for

Shields’s family.    Finally, he asked the court to consider “some of the residual doubt” as to

defendant’s guilt.

¶ 85   Defendant made a statement in allocution, again expressing his condolences to Shields’s

family. However, defendant stated that he was innocent and that he regretted having gotten in the

car that day.

¶ 86   The trial court sentenced defendant to 50 years’ imprisonment, to be served at one hundred

percent.   The court stated that it considered “many factors.”       It remarked specifically on

defendant’s age:

                “[Defendant] at the time of this offense had just turned 18 and I have to consider

       that as well. If it had been 17 when he committed this offense, I would be looking at many

       different factors as well that the Courts have required as the years have gone by to be

       considered, so I have to look at what I have in front of me as a young man of 18 years old.”

The court noted that, even if it imposed the minimum sentence, defendant would be an older man

upon release. The court stated that it had read the presentencing report and it commented that

defendant grew up without a father. It also noted that, ordinarily, defendants standing before it

ready to be sentenced for first-degree murder have a lengthy criminal history, often “pages” “going

on and on,” and, here defendant had no criminal history. It appreciated defendant’s assertion of

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innocence, but it stated that a jury had determined otherwise. Finally, the court also observed:

“[Y]ou committed this crime and took this life for no reason at all, none that I can even fathom.”

Defendant did not file a motion to reconsider sentence. This appeal followed.

¶ 87                                     II. ANALYSIS

¶ 88   On appeal, defendant argues that: (1) defense counsel was ineffective for failing to pursue

jury instructions on second-degree murder; (2) the trial court erred in allowing improper lay

opinion testimony concerning the manner in which gunshot residue can be removed; (3) the trial

court committed plain error in allowing improper lay opinion testimony concerning the collection

of fingerprints and the narration of a surveillance video; (4) the trial court committed plain error

when it allowed the State to improperly bolster codefendant’s testimony during redirect

examination; (5) the trial court committed plain error when it allowed the State to make improper

remarks in opening statements and closing argument; (6) the jury instructions regarding the

elements of first-degree murder omitted the language “intends to kill” and were, therefore, plainly

erroneous; and (7) defendant’s 50-year sentence is excessive.

¶ 89                                A. Ineffective-Assistance Claim:

                       Declining to Request Second-Degree Murder Instructions

¶ 90   Defendant argues that defense counsel provided ineffective assistance of counsel when he

failed to request an instruction for second-degree murder. Defendant contends that the evidence

supported the instruction because Griggs testified that, immediately after the shooting, defendant

told the occupants of the tan Jeep that Shields had tried to pull a “big and chrome” gun on him.

According to defendant, Griggs’s testimony constituted the only evidence regarding the reason for

the shooting. Additionally, defendant notes that, although only two bullet casings were found at

the scene, Cavazos and Folz testified to hearing three shots. Also, although no gun was found at

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the scene, several objects that defendant may have mistaken for a gun—a lighter, a cell phone, and

a cigar package—were found near the scene. Had defense counsel requested second-degree

murder instructions, and had the jury subscribed to that theory, defendant would have been subject

to a significantly lower sentence. The sentencing range for second-degree murder is 4 to 20 years.

730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-30 (West 2016).

¶ 91   Defense counsel provides ineffective assistance where: (1) counsel’s performance fell

below an objective standard of reasonableness; and (2) the defendant was prejudiced as a result of

counsel’s performance in that there is a reasonable probability that the result would have been

different but for counsel’s error. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687-88 (1984). “A

reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id. at

694. Defense counsel has wide latitude in making tactical decisions and there is a presumption

that counsel’s conduct was the product of sound trial strategy. Id. at 689. As such, decisions that

involve matters of trial strategy typically will not sustain a claim of ineffective assistance. People

v. Sanchez, 2014 IL App (1st) 120514, ¶ 30.

¶ 92   “A person commits the offense of second degree murder when he or she commits the

offense of first degree murder *** and either of the following mitigating factors are present: (1) at

the time of the killing he or she is acting under a sudden and intense passion resulting from serious

provocation by the individual killed or another whom the offender endeavors to kill, but he or she

negligently or accidentally causes the death of the individual killed; or (2) at the time of the killing

he or she believes the circumstances to be such that, if they existed, would justify or exonerate the

killing ***, but his or her belief is unreasonable.” 720 ILCS 5/9-2(a) (West 2016). The second

mitigating factor, which is at issue here, has become known as “imperfect self-defense.” People

v. Jeffries, 164 Ill. 2d 104, 129 (1995).

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¶ 93   Once the State has proved the elements of first-degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt,

the defendant may prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he believed the circumstances

justified the killing, although his belief was unreasonable. 720 ILCS 5/9-2(c) (West 2016).

Second-degree murder is a not a lesser-included offense of first-degree murder, because second-

degree murder requires proof of the same elements as first-degree murder. People v. Neasom,

2017 IL App (1st) 143875, ¶ 39. Rather, second-degree murder is a lesser-mitigated offense of

first-degree murder. People v. Manning, 2018 IL 122081, ¶ 18.

¶ 94   A requested second-degree murder instruction should be given even where the evidence

supporting the theory is very slight. People v. Goods, 2016 IL App (1st) 140511, ¶ 50. Counsel

may request a second-degree murder instruction even if that theory is in conflict with other

evidence. See, e.g., People v. Everette, 141 Ill. 2d 147, 156 (1990). Assuming for the sake of

analysis that a second-degree murder instruction would have been given had defense counsel so

requested, we focus our analysis on whether defense counsel provided ineffective assistance in

declining to do so.

¶ 95   In requesting an instruction on a lesser-mitigated offense, defense counsel necessarily

decides against an all-or-nothing strategy in favor of providing the jury with a “middle way” that

could still result in a conviction. People v. Edmundson, 2018 IL App (1st) 151381, ¶ 37; People

v. DuPree, 397 Ill. App. 3d 719, 735 (2010). Defendant concedes that the decision to request an

instruction on a lesser-mitigated offense is typically one of strategy. See, e.g., Edmundson, 2018

IL App (1st) 151381, ¶ 40 (the decision to request a second-degree murder instruction belongs to

defense counsel). The decision not to request an instruction on a lesser-mitigated offense may not

be reasonable trial strategy, however, when the omitted instructions would be consistent with the

theory of defense at trial or when counsel’s decision is based on a misapprehension of the law.

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Goods, 2016 IL App (1st) 140511, ¶ 57; People v. Lemke, 349 Ill. App. 3d 391, 399 (2004).

Defendant argues that both are the case here. We disagree.

¶ 96   Defendant’s reliance on Goods, 2016 IL App (1st) 140511, is misplaced. In Goods,

defense counsel was ineffective for failing to request self-defense instructions despite pursuing a

consistent but invalid defense theory of compulsion. Id. ¶¶ 54, 57. In this case, second-degree

murder instructions would have been inconsistent with the defense theory of misidentification,

leaving the decision of whether to request the instruction squarely in the realm of trial strategy.

Indeed, we note that in certain portions of his brief, defendant concedes that second-degree murder

instructions would have been inconsistent with the defense theory of misidentification.

¶ 97   Defendant next argues that counsel’s decision to pursue an all-or-nothing strategy of

misidentification was based on a misapprehension of the law. He asserts that defense counsel did

not appear to consider that, even if the jury believed that someone else shot Shields, defendant still

could have been found guilty under a theory of accountability. Defendant discusses the factors

used to consider accountability, People v. Batchelor, 171 Ill. 2d 367, 376 (1996), and notes that

defendant was in the car used as a getaway vehicle, maintained a common association with the

other occupants of the car, failed to report the crime, misled the police as to his whereabouts, and

was found near the gun used to shoot Shields.

¶ 98   Defendant’s accountability argument is misplaced, however, because the State prosecuted

him under the theory that he was the principal shooter and never argued at trial that he could be

guilty under a theory of accountability. Indeed, a defendant cannot be convicted under an

accountability theory if the State does not pursue an accountability theory at trial. People v.

Peoples, 2015 IL App (1st) 121717, ¶ 97.

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¶ 99    Defendant argues in his reply brief that the risk of providing the jury with an instruction

inconsistent with the defense theory at trial is not so great as the State suggests. Rather, as the jury

would never be in a position to convict defendant of second-degree murder unless it had already

found him guilty of first-degree murder, there was no downside to offering the jury the lesser-

mitigated option. In support, he cites to People v. Wilmington, 2013 IL 112938, ¶ 20, where

defense counsel’s decision to request second-degree murder instructions was in conflict with the

defense theory of innocence. Specifically, defense counsel questioned the reliability of the

defendant’s statement to police and pursued a theory of innocence. Id. However, in closing, he

“briefly referenced” the second-degree murder instructions to be given and explained that,

although he believed defendant to be innocent, “if it’s anything, it’s second-degree murder.” Id.

On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court should have asked the defendant if he

personally agreed with counsel’s request to give the instruction. Id. ¶ 44. The supreme court

rejected that argument. Id. It noted that the defendant did not raise an ineffective-assistance claim,

but it nevertheless observed that counsel was able to have the jury instructed on second-degree

murder “without really arguing for it.” Id. ¶ 50.

¶ 100 Defendant fails to recognize that a holding that arguably approves of defense counsel

taking such an approach is not the same as a holding that requires defense counsel to take such an

approach. In Wilmington, the supreme court merely observed that defense counsel exercised a

strategy to have the jury instructed on second-degree murder while maintaining defendant’s

innocence. It did not hold that, in all cases, this would be the required strategy. Here, not only

would a second-degree instruction have been inconsistent with defense counsel’s theory of

misidentification, but also with the physical evidence. Though Griggs testified that defendant told

him that Shields “tried to up on him” with a “big chrome gun,” no such weapon was found at the

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scene. Defendant’s appellate theory that defendant may have mistaken other items found on the

scene—a lighter, a cell phone, or a cigar package—is speculative. Further, the close contact

shooting of Shield’s in the back is similarly inconsistent with an argument that a lighter, cell phone

or cigar package prompted the shooting. Per valid trial strategy, defense counsel focused on a

misidentification theory and elected not to pursue an inconsistent mitigated defense.

¶ 101 For these reasons, defense counsel was not ineffective for declining to request a second-

degree murder instruction.

¶ 102               B. Lay Witness Testimony: Stewart and Gunshot Residue

¶ 103 Defendant next argues that the trial court erred when it allowed Stewart to testify as to how

gunshot residue can be removed without first accepting him as an expert witness. Illinois Rule of

Evidence 701 provides that a lay witness’s testimony, opinions, and inferences are limited to those

which are “(a) rationally based on the perception of the witness, and (b) helpful to a clear

understanding of the witness’s determination of the issue, and (c) not based on scientific, technical,

or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.” Ill. R. Evid. 701 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).

In turn, Illinois Rule of Evidence 702 provides that a witness must be qualified as an expert in

order to testify to scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge that will aid the trier of fact.

Ill. R. Evid. 702 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). The admission of evidence is reviewed for an abuse of

discretion. People v. Taylor, 2011 IL 110067, ¶ 67. A trial court abuses its discretion when its

ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable, such that no reasonable person would take the view

adopted by the court. People v. Edwards, 343 Ill. App. 3d 1168, 1183 (2003). For the reasons

that follow, we agree that the trial court erred in allowing the gunshot residue testimony from a lay

witness, but we determine that the error was harmless.

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¶ 104 Testimony concerning the specific manner in which gunshot residue can be removed such

that a person who fired a gun may nevertheless test negative for gunshot residue falls under Rule

702 because it concerns scientific, specialized knowledge. The case law is replete with examples

of gunshot residue experts who have scientific training in gunshot residue. See, e.g., People v.

Allison, 236 Ill. App. 3d 175, 190-191 (1992) (a chemist with a Ph.D. who had read multiple

scientific articles on gunshot residue, had performed 60 gunshot residue tests, and had been

qualified as an expert in gunshot residue 10 to 12 times was qualified as an expert in gunshot

residue, though he had never taken a gunshot residue course); People v. Cole, 170 Ill. App. 3d 912,

928-29 (1988) (police department chemist who had performed 300 gunshot residue tests to

establish baseline levels to use as testing guidelines was qualified as an expert in gunshot residue,

though his gunshot residue course took place in a single day); see also People v. Brown, 2020 IL

App (1st) 190828, ¶ 35 (anecdotally, the gunshot residue expert who testified that gunshot residue

particles could be removed by sweat was a trace chemist); People v. Anderson, 2017 IL App (1st)

122640, ¶ 25 (a forensic scientist stated that wind, moisture, and friction from brushing up against

something were the types of activities that could prevent gunshot residue from being deposited);

and People v. Munoz, 398 Ill. App. 3d 455, 467 (2010) (anecdotally, the gunshot residue expert

who testified to, inter alia, gunshot residue transfer was a trace evidence analyst employed by the

Illinois State Police crime lab).

¶ 105 Here, as the State acknowledges, it did not seek to qualify Stewart as an expert before

eliciting his scientific testimony. Nor is this case like People v. Loggins, 2019 IL App (1st)

160482, ¶ 111, where the foundational testimony elicited from the officer at trial would have

resulted in him being accepted as an expert had the State so moved. Id. (officer’s testimony about

his training and experience in narcotics investigations would have qualified him as an expert to

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testify regarding the drug trade). Rather, this case is more like People v. Moody, 199 Ill. App. 3d

455, 462-63 (1989), where the State failed to establish that the officer was an expert in the area of

gunshot residue analysis based on the officer’s testimony that his experience was limited to the

administration of the test and he learned of the test result from others who analyzed the swabs.

¶ 106 While it may be possible to infer from Stewart’s testimony that he, as the State puts it,

“spent decades investigating and collecting evidence from crime scenes, which would have

included incidents involving guns,” this is not enough to establish him as a gunshot residue expert.

Stewart did not testify that he was trained to administer or analyze gunshot residue testing. Unlike

the experts in Allison, Cole, Brown, Anderson, Munoz, or even the stipulated expert in the instant

case—Rochowicz—Stewart was not a chemist or trace evidence analyst working in a crime lab.

¶ 107 Moreover, contrary to the State’s assertion, defense counsel did not invite the error, and

the State certainly capitalized on it in closing argument. Under the invited-error doctrine, a

defendant cannot claim error in the admission of improper evidence where the defendant procured,

invited, or acquiesced to the admission. People v. Alvarado, 2013 IL App (3d) 120467, ¶ 11. “To

permit a defendant to use the exact ruling or action procured in the trial court as a vehicle for

reversal on appeal ‘would offend all notions of fair play’ [Citation], and ‘encourage defendants to

become duplicitous’ [Citation].” People v. Harvey, 211 Ill. 2d 368, 385 (2004).

¶ 108 To be sure, defense counsel questioned Stewart briefly and in a general manner regarding

gunshot residue. The context is as follows. During Stewart’s direct examination, the State played

an excerpt of Stewart’s interview with defendant, Exhibit No. 12. In the relatively brief substantive

portion of the interview, defendant denies all involvement in the shooting, denies knowing about

the shooting, and denies being in DeKalb that evening. In response to defendant’s denials, Stewart

informs defendant that he knew defendant had been at the scene of the shooting. He tells defendant

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that there are cameras everywhere and that officers would collect defendant’s DNA and had

performed a gunshot residue test; soon they would know the truth. Stewart told defendant that he

was giving defendant a chance to explain why the shooting occurred.

¶ 109 Concerning this excerpt from the interview, defense counsel engaged in the following

colloquy with Stewart on cross-examination:

               “Q. *** [Y]ou were talking to him as though you had a lot of the answers. Would

       that be fair, it’s an investigative technique?

               A. On some things, yes.

                                                 ***

               Q. And you had told him that at that point he had already had gunshot residue. Do

       you recall that?

               A. Told him that somebody had collected a gunshot residue test from him, yes.

               Q. And that was from Mr. Walls; is that correct?

               A. Yes.

               Q. So you knew that had been done at that point?

               A. Yes.

               Q. And you did not have the results at that point; correct?

               A. No.

               Q. But you told him as soon as those results came in it would resolve all doubt;

       correct?

               A. Yes.

               Q. And he had told you that he didn’t know anything; correct?

               A. Correct.” (Emphasis added.)

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¶ 110 Contrary to the State’s position, this line of questioning did not invite Stewart to testify to

a scientific explanation as to the absence of gunshot residue. Rather, defendant’s response to

Stewart’s comment that the test results would resolve all doubt was elicited to show the strength

of defendant’s denial. The defendant was told that, if he was the shooter, the gunshot residue test

would prove it, yet knowing this, he continued to deny all involvement.

¶ 111 Moreover, even if defense counsel’s cross-examination did somehow invite further

questioning on the general topic of gunshot residue, it was sufficient for the State to elicit on

redirect, as it did, that Stewart meant that “DNA that would be collected could potentially remove

all doubt along with GSR, gunshot residue, and other evidence.” (Emphasis added.) By continuing

further to have Stewart inform the jury that gunshot residue could be removed from a person’s

hands by sweating, rubbing one’s hands on fabric, or putting one’s hands in his pockets, the State

elicited improper scientific testimony that was not invited.

¶ 112 In considering the likely harm caused by this improper evidence, we note that the State

capitalized on Stewart’s improper testimony, stressing exhibits that showed defendant

participating in the specific activities that Stewart testified could remove gunshot residue. In

closing, the State remarked: “Well, you saw for yourselves this defendant *** even before he was

in the squad car fidgeting around, putting his hands in his pockets ***, and then you also saw him

in the squad car sweating profusely with the sweat literally running down his face and his skin,

both of which can remove gunshot particles.” In this way, Stewart’s improper testimony was not

merely cumulative to the general stipulation that gunshot residue could be removed by activity.

¶ 113 However, we nevertheless determine that the admission of Stewart’s testimony was

harmless, because we do not believe there is a reasonable probability that it affected the outcome

of the trial. The error at issue concerns the Rules of Evidence 701 and 702. An evidentiary error

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is harmless where there is no reasonable probability that the jury would have acquitted the

defendant absent the error. In re E.H., 224 Ill. 2d 172, 180 (2006) (citing People v. Nevitt, 135 Ill.

2d 423, 447 (1990)).

¶ 114 Here, without Stewart’s testimony that gunshot residue can be removed by sweating and

rubbing one’s hands in one’s pockets, the jury would have been left with a stipulation that

defendant’s gunshot residue test was negative and that gunshot residue can be removed by

“activity.” The other properly admitted evidence against defendant was strong. For example, the

evidence showed that defendant was one of the four people in the tan Jeep associated with the

shooting. The murder weapon was found within feet of the tan Jeep. Defendant was the only

person in the tan Jeep wearing white pants. Exhibit No. 28, the still-frame shot from the

surveillance video, shows that the suspect was wearing white pants, orangish underwear, and dark

top. Defendant was apprehended shortly after the shooting just outside the tan Jeep wearing white

pants, orange underwear, and a dark hoodie. Defendant had the victim’s blood on his pants and

shoes. Although the amount of blood on defendant’s pants was small, just 1/16 of an inch, Kalekar,

who performed the autopsy, explained that, when a victim is shot at contact range in the back (an

area of the body without major blood vessels), she would not expect to see a lot of blood. Kalekar

further testified that Shields bled internally. Consistent with Kalekar’s testimony that Shields’s

bleeding was internal, Reyes testified that there was not a lot of blood at the scene. Critically, the

shirt worn by Shields shows only a small amount of his blood circling the tear made by the bullet.

¶ 115 We appreciate that Griggs benefitted greatly in testifying against defendant. We also

appreciate that both Cavazos and Folz initially reported that the shooter had dreadlocks, and that

Davison, a man with dreadlocks, was allowed to walk away from the tan Jeep before any forensics

were collected from him. However, both Cavazos and Folz later hedged on their impression that

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the shooter had dreadlocks, saying that it could have been a hoodie. In actuality, Shields had

dreadlocks and defendant had short hair. Ceriser, whose visual impression was confirmed by the

still-frame shot, never reported that the shooter had dreadlocks. Additionally, Ceriser’s impression

that the shooter was as tall as 6 feet, 1 inch and “not heavyset” was consistent with defendant’s

actual frame of 6 feet, 2 inches and 198 pounds. As with all the witness testimony, deciding

whether to credit Ceriser’s testimony was within the province of the jury. See People v. Jackson,

232 Ill. 2d 246, 280-81 (2009).

¶ 116 Finally, we recognize that the forensic evidence was not as conclusive as the State might

have hoped. The gunshot residue test was, after all, negative. The gun was not tested for

fingerprints. However, we do not subscribe to defendant’s theory that the small amount of the

Shields’s blood on defendant’s pants and shoes was somehow exculpatory. That Shields’s blood

was on defendant’s pants and shoes is highly inculpatory. As we have already discussed, that

Shields himself exhibited only a small amount of external bleeding explains why the shooter would

have had only a small amount of Shields’s blood on himself, especially where, as shown by the

surveillance video, he fled immediately and did not otherwise interact with Shields’s body.

¶ 117 In short, the evidence as well as gaps in the evidence favoring defendant are speculative,

i.e., maybe a shooter other than defendant transferred what little blood came from Shields’s body

to defendant’s pants and shoe. In contrast, much of the evidence favoring conviction is certain.

Defendant was certainly one of four people in the tan Jeep when Eklund first encountered the

group. The murder weapon was located near the tan Jeep associated with both defendant and the

shooting. Defendant was certainly the only one of those four people wearing white pants. Exhibit

No. 28, the still-frame shot, certainly showed the shooter wearing the same unique constellation

of clothing as defendant, including white pants and orangish underwear. Defendant certainly had

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Shields’s blood on his pants and shoes. For these reasons, we cannot say that there is a reasonable

probability that the jury would have acquitted defendant if it had heard only that activity in

general—as opposed to perspiring or rubbing one’s hands on clothing specifically—can remove

gunshot residue.

¶ 118                       C. Lay Witness Testimony: Reyes and Ehrke

¶ 119 Defendant argues that the trial court erred when it allowed improper lay witness testimony

from Reyes regarding the collection of fingerprints and from Ehrke regarding the narration of the

surveillance video. Defendant acknowledges that these arguments, as well all of his remaining

arguments, are forfeited for failure to object at trial and in a posttrial motion. People v. Enoch,

122 Ill. 2d 176, 186 (1988). However, defendant requests that we review these arguments under

either the plain-error doctrine or as an ineffective-assistance claim. Plain error applies when: (1)

a clear or obvious error occurred and the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone

threatened to tip the scales of justice against the defendant or (2) a clear and obvious error occurred

and that error was so serious that it affected the integrity of the judicial process. People v. Herron,

215 Ill. 2d 167, 178-79 (2005). Defendant argues that prong-one plain error applies in both

instances. He also argues, in the alternative, that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to

object and to preserve the error. Again, defense counsel provides ineffective assistance where: (1)

counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness; and (2) the defendant

was prejudiced as a result of counsel’s performance in that there is a reasonable probability that

the result would have been different but for counsel’s error. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. For the

reasons that follow, we disagree.

¶ 120                               1. Reyes and Fingerprints

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¶ 121 Defendant argues that the trial court erred in allowing Reyes to testify to why there were

no fingerprints on Shields’s red car even though people had “obviously” been in it. Reyes testified

that dust or the absence of oil on a person’s fingers could negatively affect the officers’ ability to

collect fingerprints. On cross-examination, Reyes reiterated that the car was tested for fingerprints

“inside and out” because the police wanted to “identify anybody that would possibly [have been]

in that vehicle,” but no fingerprints were found. (Emphasis added.)

¶ 122 Any error here was harmless. First, unlike Stewart, who did not testify to his qualifications

to testify to gunshot residue, Reyes testified that he had taken three evidence courses covering the

retrieval of fingerprints. See, e.g., Loggins, 2019 IL App (1st) 160482, ¶ 111 (improper lay opinion

may be harmless error if the witness would have been accepted as an expert by the trial court if so

tendered). Moreover, the substance of Reyes’s testimony was not damaging to defendant’s case

such that the alleged error threatened to tip the scales of justice against defendant. The absence of

fingerprint evidence in the car does not prove defendant was not in the car, though it did allow

defendant to argue that a shooter other than defendant was in the car. Indeed, Reyes’s ultimate

conclusion that no fingerprints were recovered advantaged defendant.

¶ 123                               2. Ehrke and Exhibit No. 27

¶ 124 Defendant also argues that the trial court erred in allowing Ehrke to narrate the events

shown on Exhibit No. 27, the surveillance video. Under the silent-witness theory, a surveillance

video may be introduced as substantive evidence so long as a proper foundation is laid. People v.

Sykes, 2012 IL App (4th) 111110, ¶ 34. The evidence speaks for itself. Id. As the State concedes,

a lay witness, such as Ehrke, should not testify to a matter of which he has no personal knowledge

when the jury can just as easily draw its own inferences and conclusions. Freeding-Skokie Roll-

Off Service Inc. v. Hamilton, 108 Ill. 2d 217, 221 (1985). In Sykes, for example, the court

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determined that it was error to let the store’s loss prevention manager testify that the surveillance

video depicted the defendant removing money from the cash register. Sykes, 2012 IL App (4th)

111110, ¶ 42. Instead, since the video was less than three minutes long (and there were no

efficiency issues in having the jury watch the entire video), the defendant was the only person

depicted in the video, and the only question was whether defendant removed money from the cash

register, the store manager invaded the province of the jury when he told it that the video showed

defendant removing money from the cash register. Id.

¶ 125 Here, Ehrke informed the jury that, as part of his investigation, he watched the surveillance

video in slow motion. Ehrke told the jury that the video showed a suspect in light-colored pants

and orangish underwear, which was similar to the clothing defendant was apprehended in. The

jury also watched the video in slow motion. We agree with defendant that Ehrke had no personal

knowledge of the suspect’s clothing. He did not witness the crime. While Ehrke should have let

the jury decide whether the video showed a suspect in light or white pants and orangish underwear,

we determine defendant was not prejudiced. Exhibit No. 28, the still-frame shot from the video,

which defendant does not challenge on appeal, shows the suspect in white pants and orangish

underwear. While it might have been unfair to tell a jury that the moving image they saw was of

a man in a certain color of clothing, Ehrke did not similarly narrate for the jury that the static, still-

frame shot created from that same video showed a suspect in white pants and orangish underwear.

Considering Exhibit Nos. 27 and 28 together, Ehrke’s commentary did not amount to plain error

and counsel was not ineffective for failing to object.

¶ 126                      D. Allegedly Improper Comments by the State

¶ 127 Defendant argues that the State committed “prosecutorial misconduct” by misstating the

evidence and using inflammatory remarks to pit the jury against defendant during opening

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statements and closing arguments. Our supreme court has alternatively held that whether a

prosecutor’s misstatements and improper remarks denied defendant of a fair trial is reviewed for

an abuse of discretion (People v. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d 99, 128 (2000)) and de novo (People v. Wheeler,

226 Ill. 2d 92, 121 (2007)). Defendant acknowledges that defense counsel did not object to the

statements and, thus, the claim is forfeited. He requests, however, that we review the error under

the plain-error doctrine or as an ineffective assistance claim. Under either of these analytic

frameworks, and notwithstanding which standard of review we apply, we conclude that defendant

received a fair trial.

¶ 128 It is improper to misstate the evidence or argue facts not in evidence. People v. Green,

2017 IL App (1st) 152513, ¶ 77. Defendant argues that the State misstated the evidence in at least

three instances. First, defendant complains that, in closing argument, the State asserted that, as

captured in the surveillance video, the shooter was wearing white pants and “defendant was the

only one in white pants.” (Emphasis added.) Defendant contends that this is not true, because

Eklund’s squad-car video, Exhibit No. 74, shows that one other person in the tan Jeep wore light

colored pants. Additionally, one of the Kimberly apartment surveillance videos, Exhibit No. 26,

shows one, and possibly two, person or persons in the vicinity wearing white pants.

¶ 129 Though the State’s assertion that defendant was the only one in white pants was highly

incriminating, we disagree that the State misstated the evidence on this point. The person depicted

in the squad-car video, Exhibit No. 74, appears to be wearing light colored pants, but no reasonable

person would say they were white. They appear rather to be ordinary blue jeans. While the person

or persons depicted in one of the Kimberly apartment surveillance videos may be wearing white

pants, it is clear that neither of these persons are the shooter and we do not believe that the jury

would have been confused on this point. One of these persons exits the apartment complex alone,

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puts a garbage bag in the Dumpster, gets in his car, and drives away. The other person exits the

apartment complex to wave down police. In context, when the State asserted that defendant was

the only one wearing white pants, the State meant that defendant was the only one in the tan Jeep

wearing white pants. This was not a misstatement.

¶ 130 Second, defendant complains that the State referred to spots of blood on the ground of the

crime scene, when the red stains were not, in fact, chemically tested. However, it was reasonable

to infer from the evidence that the red stains found near the victim’s body were blood when the

victim was known to have been shot. See, e.g., People v. Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d 173, 212 (2009)

(State may argue reasonable inferences that are based on the evidence). It was also reasonable to

infer from the evidence that the shooter stepped on the red substance on the ground and got it on

his shoe. Accordingly, it follows that the State’s argument was entirely proper that the shooter

was defendant because the substance on defendant’s shoe was the victim’s blood.

¶ 131 Third, defendant argues that the State misstated the evidence when it stated that defendant

had “blood on his hands.” In fact, defendant did not have anything on his hands. The State

contends on appeal that it had merely used a figure of speech. Arguably, such a figure of speech

is problematic in a case where a shooter’s identity is at issue and defendant’s hands were indeed

examined without success for forensic evidence. In any event, in our view, the transcripts read as

though the State inadvertently misspoke rather than purposefully misstated the evidence; the State

immediately corrected itself to reference blood on defendant’s pants, as opposed to his hands; and

the State’s comment did not affect the fairness of defendant’s trial.

¶ 132 Next, defendant complains that the State resorted to inflammatory and prejudicial remarks

that created an “us versus them” dynamic between the jurors and defendant in opening statements

and closing arguments. Specifically, the State informed the jury, in its opening statement that

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“there are neighborhoods [and] places that we avoid going,” that the 800 block of Kimberly Drive

in Dekalb “became one of those places.” The State also told the jury, in its closing argument, that

the jury was the “conscience of the community,” that defendant committed an “unconscionable

act,” and that the shooting was an “execution.”

¶ 133 We recognize that the State must be careful to focus the jury’s attention on the legal issues

at hand and should not resort to inflammatory or prejudicial remarks. People v. Stevens, 2018 IL

App (4th) 160138, ¶ 64. However, on balance, allegedly inflammatory remarks do not warrant

reversal unless they were the result of deliberate misconduct or subjected defendant to substantial

prejudice. People v. Smith, 141 Ill. 2d 40, 63 (1990). Moreover, here, we are examining the State’s

comments for plain error and must consider whether the evidence was so closely balanced that any

of these remarks tipped the scales of justice against defendant. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d at 178-79.

¶ 134 In this case, there were legitimate reasons for the State to reference the neighborhood in

which the crime took place—it believed the evidence would show that defendant came to an

apartment complex near a college campus to buy drugs. And, as we have already discussed, the

evidence was not closely balanced. As such, even assuming for the sake of analysis that the

comment referring to the shooting as an execution was ill-advised, the comments taken together

were not of such an inflammatory character as to affect the outcome of defendant’s trial.

¶ 135                       E. Griggs’s Prior Consistent Statement

¶ 136 Defendant argues that the State improperly bolstered Griggs’s testimony during redirect

examination. Specifically, the State elicited a prior consistent statement that, although Griggs

entered into his agreement with the State in May 2019, he first implicated defendant as the shooter

in February 2019. Defendant acknowledges that he did not object at trial and the argument is,

therefore, forfeited. He again asks that we review the error under the plain-error doctrine or as an

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ineffective-assistance claim. We again determine that, under either of these frameworks, there

was no reversible error, certainly no plain error, and defendant did not suffer the requisite

prejudice.

¶ 137 Prior consistent statements are not admissible on direct examination, because they unfairly

bolster a witness’s credibility. People v. Terry, 312 Ill. App. 3d 984, 995 (2000). A trier of fact

is more likely to believe something that is repeated. Id. However, a prior consistent statement is

admissible to rebut the inference that the witness was motivated to testify falsely, so long as the

motive did not exist at the time of the prior consistent statement. People v. Lambert, 288 Ill. App.

3d 450, 453 (1997).

¶ 138 Here, the parties dispute when a witness’s motive to curry favor with the State comes into

existence such that the witness can be said to have had the same motive at the time he made the

prior consistent statement that he had when he testified at trial. Defendant, citing two cases from

the First District, argues that motive may arise as soon as the witness knows that he is a suspect in

the case. See, e.g., Terry, 312 Ill. App. 3d at 995 (because the witness had a motive to give

misinformation when first interviewed by police as a potential suspect, his prior consistent

statement from that interview could not be offered to rebut the inference that he was motivated to

testify falsely at trial); People v. Grisset, 288 Ill. App. 3d 620, 627 (1997) (because the defendant

had a motive to fabricate a claim of self-defense at the time of his arrest, a prior consistent

statement from that time could not be used to rebut the inference that he was motivated to testify

falsely at trial).

¶ 139 However, as noted by the State, our supreme court has affirmed evidentiary rulings to the

contrary. In People v. Powell, 53 Ill. 2d 465, 475 (1973), for example, the supreme court

determined that a codefendant’s prior consistent statement was admissible to rebut the inference

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that the codefendant testified falsely to secure a lenient sentence. In that case, the codefendant

made the prior consistent statement after the murder weapon had been found in his car but before

the State had made any offer of leniency. Id. at 469-470. Since then, this court has followed suit.

In Lambert, 288 Ill. App. 3d at 456, this court determined that a prior consistent written statement

to police was admissible to rebut the inference that the codefendant testified falsely in exchange

for leniency. In that case, two officers affirmatively testified that no deal was made with the

codefendant in exchange for the initial written statement. Id. at 452.

¶ 140 Here, on cross-examination, defense counsel elicited the inference that Griggs falsely

implicated defendant to secure the dismissal of his first-degree murder charge. The State was

permitted to rebut this inference. Per Powell and Lambert, any general motive that Griggs may

have had to curry favor with the State in February 2019 is not necessarily the “same motive” that

Griggs had in May 2019 and at trial when he had been offered leniency. There was no indication

in the record that an offer of leniency had been made at the time that Griggs gave his February

2019 statement. As such, we cannot say that, had defendant objected, the trial court would have

abused its discretion in admitting the statement. Rather, the weight to be given to the statement

and to Griggs’s testimony at trial would be for the jury to determine.

¶ 141 In addition, we certainly cannot say that a plain error occurred or that counsel’s failure to

object amounted to ineffective assistance. Even an improperly admitted prior consistent statement

cannot be considered plain error when the State references only the existence of the prior consistent

statement and does not attempt to use it substantively. See, e.g., People v. Crayton, 175 Ill. App.

3d 932, 949 (1988). Here, as in Crayton, the State merely referenced the existence of the February

2019 statement. It did not attempt to read the contents to the jury, use it substantively, or stress it

in closing argument. Cf. Terry, 312 Ill. App. 3d at 996 (error in admitting the prior consistent

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statement was exacerbated where the State stressed it in closing); Lambert, 288 Ill. App. 3d at 457

(prior consistent statement was admissible for rehabilitative purposes but could not be used

substantively). Thus, even if the jury had been informed of the February 2019 statement in error,

and we do not believe it was, defendant did not suffer the requisite prejudice.

¶ 142                          F. Jury Instruction Nos. 19 and 20

¶ 143   Defendant argues that he was deprived of a fair trial when, in Instruction No. 20, the trial

court deviated from the language contained in the standard IPI Criminal No. 7.02 elements

instruction for first-degree murder, by omitting the phrase “intended to kill” from the second

proposition. Defendant acknowledges that the trial court properly instructed the jury in Instruction

No. 19 when it gave the jury the standard IPI Criminal No. 7.01 definition instruction for first

degree murder, which included the phrase “intends to kill.” Defendant contends, however, that

the discrepancy between Instruction Nos. 19 and 20 “created an irreconcilable conflict,” left the

jury uninformed of each of the four ways that defendant had been charged, and otherwise confused

the jury. Defendant also acknowledges that defense counsel did not object to the instructions and,

thus, the claim is forfeited. He urges, however, that we review the error under the plain-error

doctrine or as an ineffective assistance claim. We disagree that any discrepancy in the instructions

confused the jury or otherwise prejudiced defendant and, so, we decline to do so.

¶ 144 The purpose of jury instructions is to provide the jury with the correct statement of law

which it should apply to the evidence to reach a proper verdict. People v. Parker, 223 Ill. 2d 494,

500 (2006). The reviewing court must determine whether the instructions, taken as a whole, fairly

and comprehensively apprise the jury of the relevant legal principles. Id. at 501. “It is sufficient

if the series of instructions, considered as a whole, fully and fairly announce the law applicable to

the respective theories of the [State] and the defense.” People v. Kolep, 29 Ill. 2d 116, 125 (1963).

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Jury instructions are generally reviewed for an abuse of discretion. People v. Green, 2017 IL App

(1st) 152513, ¶ 61. However, the question of whether an instruction or set of instructions correctly

conveyed the law is reviewed de novo. Id.

¶ 145 We determine that Instruction Nos. 19 and 20, construed together as part of the larger body

of instructions, correctly informed the jury of the law. The law provides: “A person who kills an

individual without lawful justification commits first degree murder if, in performing the acts which

cause the death: (1) he or she either intends to kill or do great bodily harm to that individual or

another, or knows that such acts will cause death to that individual or another; or (2) he or she

knows that such acts create a strong probability of death or great bodily harm to that individual or

another.” 720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1), (2) (West 2016). All of this information was conveyed in

Instruction No. 19. Contrary to defendant’s position, Instruction No. 20, which provides that, to

sustain the charge of first-degree murder, the State must prove that defendant “intended to do great

bodily harm,” does not conflict with Instruction No. 19, which provides that a person commits first

degree murder if he “intends to kill or do great bodily harm.”

¶ 146 We also reject defendant’s argument that Instruction Nos. 19 and 20 failed to inform the

jury of each of the four ways defendant had been charged. We agree that jury instructions should

confine the jury’s attention to the theories that the State sought to prove. People v. Elhert, 274 Ill.

App. 3d 1026, 1037-38 (1995). Here, defendant was informed, through the charging instrument,

discovery process, and pretrial proceedings, that that he would have to defend against the

allegation that he committed the offense set forth in section 9-1(a)(1), (2), in that he shot Shields.

The jury instructions confined the jury’s attention to that theory.

¶ 147 Finally, we reject defendant’s argument that the jury was likely confused by the

instructions. As already discussed, the instructions accurately informed the jury of the law.

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Defendant points to the trial court’s misstatement when orally instructing the jury that, to sustain

the firearm enhancement, the State had to prove that “during the commission of the offense of

attempt first-degree murder the defendant personally discharged a firearm that proximately caused

death to another person.” (Emphasis added.) However, as noted, the trial court corrected this

misstatement in its written instructions to the jury, an approach to which the attorneys for both

sides acquiesced. See People v. Mescall, 379 Ill. App. 3d 670, 677 (2008) (defendant cannot

complain of an error in instructions to which he acquiesced). No trial unfolds perfectly and there

is no indication that this misstatement, which the trial court promptly corrected, combined with

the discrepancy between Instruction Nos. 19 and 20, somehow rendered the instructions

“conflicting and confusing *** as a whole.”

¶ 148                                     G. Sentencing

¶ 149 Defendant argues that his 50-year sentence was excessive. Defendant acknowledges that

he did not file a motion to reconsider sentence and, thus, his claim is forfeited. See People v.

Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d 539, 545 (2010). He argues, however, that his claim should be reviewed under

the plain-error doctrine or as an ineffective assistance claim. We find no error and, therefore, we

decline to do so.

¶ 150 First, defendant hints at but does not develop an argument pursuant to Miller v. Alabama,

567 U.S. 460 (2012), and People v. Buffer, 2019 IL 122327. Defendant recounts that, when

sentencing a juvenile, the supreme court has held that a 40-year sentence constitutes a de facto life

sentence. Buffer, 2019 IL 122327, ¶ 40 (“In determining when a juvenile defendant’s prison term

is long enough to be considered de facto life without parole, we choose to draw a line at 40 years”).

Also, when sentencing a juvenile, the trial court must consider a set of factors codified in section

5-4.5-105 of the Unified Code of Corrections. 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-105 (West 2016). These factors

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include the person’s age, impetuousness, and maturity at the time of the offense, including the

ability to consider risks and consequences and the presence of cognitive or developmental

disabilities. Id. Upon consideration of these factors, the trial court may decline to impose any

applicable sentencing enhancement. Id.

¶ 151 Defendant acknowledges that he was not a juvenile at the time of the offense. He does not

argue that the trial court should have declined to impose the firearms enhancement. Neither does

he argue that the trial court should have imposed a sentence of less than the minimum 45 years,

which qualifies as a de facto life sentence under Buffer. Indeed, this court has determined that

Miller does not apply to sentences imposed on a defendant who was at least 18 at the time of the

offense. People v. LaPointe, 2018 IL App (2d) 160903, ¶ 47. Defendant appears to argue that his

sentence was unconstitutional as applied, but he does not use that terminology. To argue that a

sentence is unconstitutional as applied, a defendant must have developed “an adequate factual

record, that [his] own specific characteristics were so like those of a juvenile that imposition of a

life sentence absent the safeguards established in Miller was ‘cruel, degrading, or so wholly

disproportionate to the offense that it shocks the moral sense of the community.’ ” (Emphasis

added.) People v. Daniels, 2020 IL App (1st) 171738, ¶ 25.

¶ 152 Here, defendant has not developed a record to show that his own specific characteristics

were like those of a juvenile other than to argue, generally, that the crime itself appeared to be an

act of impetuosity. Defendant argues: “[Defendant] seems to have been caught up in a situation

brought on by his peers’ collective decision to seek marijuana in an unfamiliar location and after

consuming drugs and alcohol.” This is insufficient to bring an as-applied Miller challenge. See,

e.g., People v. Harris, 2018 IL 121932, ¶¶ 45-46 (where the record is inadequate to address how

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Miller applies to an 18-year-old defendant’s circumstances, an unconstitutional as-applied

challenge is premature).

¶ 153 Distilled, defendant’s argument is merely that the trial court failed to consider his mental-

health condition, youth, and rehabilitative potential. This is not a constitutional challenge under

Miller but, rather, simply an argument that the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing

defendant. See, e.g., LaPointe, 2018 IL App (2d) 160903, ¶¶ 61-63. This argument also fails.

¶ 154 In sentencing a defendant, the trial court must consider a defendant’s rehabilitative

potential, the seriousness of the offense, and the protection of the public. People v. Young, 124 Ill.

2d 147, 156 (1988). The trial court has great discretion to sentence a defendant within the statutory

range and must consider the unique circumstances of the defendant and the offense. People v.

Fern, 189 Ill. 2d 48, 53 (1999). A sentence within the statutory limits will not be considered an

abuse of discretion unless it is manifestly disproportionate to the nature of the offense. People v.

Stacey, 193 Ill. 2d 203, 210 (2000).

¶ 155 Defendant recounts the facts and circumstances set forth in his presentencing report, as

described in the background section of this disposition. Briefly, these include being raised without

a father, being raised in a violent neighborhood, the absence of a criminal history, youth, and

mental-health and drug-abuse issues. Defendant notes that mental-health conditions and addiction

are significant mitigating factors, see, e.g., People v. Young, 250 Ill. App. 3d 55, 65-66 (1993), and

he contends that the trial court did not consider these factors.

¶ 156 We disagree. A trial court is not required to mention every mitigating factor and the weight

assigned to each factor. People v. Halerewicz, 2013 IL App (4th) 120388, ¶ 43. There is a

presumption that the trial court has considered all the relevant mitigating and aggravating factors,

and that presumption will not be overcome absent explicit evidence in the record. Id. Here, the

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court stated that it had read the presentence report. This statement supports the presumption that

the court it considered defendant’s mental-health history and drug-abuse issues.

¶ 157 Moreover, the trial court here made clear that it considered defendant’s youth and future

life upon release. It stated:

                “[Defendant] at the time of this offense had just turned 18 and I have to consider

        that as well. If it had been 17 when he committed this offense, I would be looking at many

        different factors as well that the Courts have required as the years have gone by to be

        considered, so I have to look at what I have in front of me as a young man of 18 years old.”

It also commented that, even if it issued the minimum sentence of 45 years, defendant would be

an older man upon release.

¶ 158 Finally, the court considered that defendant had no criminal history, going so far as to

remark that this was unusual in a first-degree murder case. Thus, contrary to defendant’s position,

it cannot be said that the trial court failed to consider his youth, mental-health conditions, or

rehabilitative potential. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in sentencing defendant to 50

years’ imprisonment.

¶ 159                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 160 For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

¶ 161 Affirmed.

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