Court Opinion

ID: 6345525
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-31 19:03:49.092152+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:16.960400
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U
                                       No. 2-20-0319
                                  Order filed May 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 Lee County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 13-CF-0207
                                       )
MARIANO G. ARELLANO,                   ) Honorable
                                       ) Jacquelyn D. Ackert,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices Hutchinson and Birkett concurred in the judgment.

                                           ORDER

¶1     Held: (1) Defendant’s constitutional challenge to venue provisions allowing trial for
             cannabis trafficking to occur in any county constituted a facial challenge as
             defendant claimed that the provisions’ venue criteria were arbitrary. However,
             defendant’s claim failed because he cited no authority for the constitutional
             standard he applied to the provisions. (2) Defendant’s claim that the State’s
             comments in closing argument violated his right against self-incrimination was not
             supported by any cohesive argument that the comments prejudiced him. Thus, we
             declined to reach the merits of his claim.

¶2     Defendant, Mariano G. Arellano, appeals from his convictions of cannabis trafficking (720

ILCS 550/5.1 (West 2012) (2500 grams or more of cannabis)) and conspiracy to commit cannabis

trafficking (720 ILCS 5/8-2, 550/5.1 (West 2012)). He raises two claims of error. First, he
2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

contends that his trial in Lee County violated the venue clauses of the sixth amendment of the

United States Constitution (U.S. Const. Amend. VI) and article 1, section 8 of the Illinois

Constitution of 1970 (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 8). Specifically, he argues that section 1-6(r) of the

Criminal Code of 2012 (Code) (720 ILCS 5/1-6(r) (West 2012)) and section 4(d) of the Statewide

Grand Jury Act (Act) (725 ILCS 215/4(d) (West 2012)), both of which provide that “[a] person

who commits the offense of cannabis trafficking or controlled substance trafficking may be tried

in any county,” are unconstitutional, at least as applied to him. We hold that defendant’s claim

amounts to a facial challenge to these two venue provisions and that he has not met the high burden

of demonstrating that they are unconstitutional. Second, defendant contends that the State in

closing arguments violated his rights against self-incrimination by drawing attention to his

comments to police officers that he intended not to tell them anything. As defendant fails to offer

a cohesive argument on this point, we reject it. We thus affirm.

¶3                                       I. BACKGROUND

¶4     On September 9, 2013, defendant was charged by complaint in Lee County with three

cannabis offenses: (1) cannabis trafficking; (2) unlawful possession of cannabis with intent to

deliver more than 2000 grams of cannabis but not more than 5000 grams of cannabis (720 ILCS

550/5(f) (West 2012)); and (3) unlawful possession of cannabis (720 ILCS 550/4(f) (West 2012)

(same)). These offenses all were alleged to have taken place in Lee County. On October 3, 2013,

a Lee County grand jury indicted defendant on the same offenses.

¶5     On November 18, 2013, the statewide grand jury entered a four-count indictment against

defendant. The first three counts were the same as the Lee County indictment except the offenses

were alleged to have occurred in Lee and Whiteside Counties. The fourth count charged defendant

with conspiracy to commit cannabis trafficking. This offense also was alleged to have occurred

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in Lee and Whiteside Counties. Also on November 18, 2013, the court in Lee County entered an

“Indictment Return and Order,” noting that the statewide grand jury had returned a three-count

indictment for offenses “alleged[ly] *** committed in the counties of Whiteside and Lee in

Illinois.” The court ordered that Lee County be designated as the county of venue.

¶6       On May 12, 2016, before any substantive proceedings took place, defendant moved to

dismiss the charges based on improper venue. He asserted that, according to the materials the

State provided in discovery, none of the relevant events occurred in Lee County. He relied on

section 1-6(a) of the Code for the proposition that “[c]riminal actions shall be tried in the county

where the offense was committed, except as otherwise provided by law.” 720 ILCS 5/1-6(a) (West

2012).

¶7       Defendant also moved to suppress certain evidence, including statements he made to

Detective Doug Wade of the Illinois State Police’s Blackhawk Area Task Force (Task Force).

Defendant alleged as follows. On September 9, 2013, Wade and other officers executed a search

warrant at defendant’s residence. Upon entering the residence, Wade identified himself as a police

officer and gave defendant Miranda warnings (see Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)).

Defendant immediately stated, “ ‘It all stops here.’ ” Defendant also said, “ ‘I know why you’re

here and I’m not talking.’ ” Wade continued to question defendant after he indicated his intention

to remain silent.

¶8       The motion to dismiss and the motion to suppress were heard in different phases of the

same hearing. During the suppression-motion phase, Wade testified that, on September 9, 2013,

he and other officers executed a search warrant at defendant’s home. When Wade entered the

home, he heard defendant say that “he knew why we were here and that he wasn’t talking.”

Defendant made this statement before Wade had a chance to read defendant his Miranda warnings.

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Wade did not read defendant his Miranda warnings until Wade had been in the house for about 12

minutes. Defendant then executed a Miranda waiver, after which he said, “ ‘[I]it all stops here.’ ”

Wade testified that defendant did not invoke his right to remain silent while the officers were at

his house.

¶9     During the venue-motion phase of the hearing, Wade testified on the State’s cross-

examination that the investigation of defendant started when the Task Force received a tip about

suspicious cash deposits by defendant at a bank in Dixon, which is in Lee County. When defense

counsel asked Wade on redirect examination whether he had verified the existence of the Lee

County deposits, Wade said, “We did a follow-up interview at U.S. Bank, which is, I believe, part

of Inspector Albert’s report.” On recross, Wade clarified that bank employees were interviewed

and identified defendant as having made “suspicious cash deposits” at the bank.

¶ 10   Nicholas Albert testified that, in 2013 when he was a Dixon police detective, he received

a tip about defendant’s cash deposits. Albert did not subpoena the relevant bank records.

However, when he interviewed tellers at the bank, they recognized defendant from a photograph

and said that he had “deposited money into an account that was not his.”

¶ 11   The court denied the motion to suppress statements, reasoning that the statements in

question were made either before Wade had the chance to give Miranda warnings or after

defendant waived his Miranda rights. The court also noted that defendant did not invoke his right

to remain silent.

¶ 12   The court denied the motion to dismiss for lack of venue:

       “[O]n the issue of the improper venue motion to dismiss, what I heard argument of

       statements [sic] is that there were transactions that occurred that bridged Whiteside County

       and Lee County, specifically involving Lee County on the issues of potential *** money

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        laundering, which is one of the things that the Defendant is charged with. 1 I believe US

        Bank is the bank that we’re involved with. Based on the fact that some of the transactions

        occurred in Lee County, at least arguably, I’m going to deny the Defendant’s motion to

        dismiss for improper venue.”

¶ 13    On July 8, 2016, the statewide grand jury entered a six-count superseding indictment. The

new counts were possession of a controlled substance, 1 gram or more but less than 15 grams of

cocaine, with intent to deliver (720 ILCS 570/401(c)(2) (West 2012)) and possession of a

controlled substance with intent to deliver within 1000 feet of a school (720 ILCS 570/401(c)(2).

407(b)(1) (West 2012)). The indictment alleged that both offenses occurred in Whiteside County

only.

¶ 14    On August 26, 2019, the State announced its intent to proceed on the original indictment

from the statewide grand jury and to make amendments to the language of those charges to

conform them to the language used in the superseding indictment.

¶ 15    The matter proceeded to a jury trial. In his opening statement, the prosecutor described

how postal inspectors at O’Hare International Airport (O’Hare) intercepted a package mailed to

an address in Whiteside County, wired it so that they would know when it was opened, and

arranged for a postal inspector dressed as a mail carrier to deliver the package to the address.

Defendant opened the door and accepted the package from the inspector. Within a minute of

accepting the package, defendant opened it, triggering the alert to law enforcement.          The

        1
            No such charge appears in any of the charging instruments in the record. At oral

argument, the State represented that it had never filed such a charge and that the trial court was

mistaken.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

prosecutor noted that, when the officers arrived, defendant said that he did not intend to speak with

the officers:

        “The police hit the house, police Search Warrant, they knock the door open, who’s in the

        house, [defendant]. The package is right there, it’s been opened. Right away he sees the

        police and what he says is: ‘I know why you’re here,’ ‘I’m not talking.’ Later, as police

        talk to him, they want more information about the package—who sent it—what he says is:

        ‘It all stops here.’

                ***

                As police execute their warrant, go through the house, pick up evidence, they make

        small talk with [defendant], who’s polite but he’s not giving away any information.”

¶ 16    Postal inspector Kelly Gates was the first witness for the State. On September 6, 2013, she

was at O’Hare examining incoming packages for characteristics suggesting that they contained

dangerous articles or contraband. She noticed a heavy and heavily-taped Express Mail package

addressed to “Phil Garcia” in Sterling, Illinois—which is in Whiteside County. The package stood

out because it was (1) heavily taped, (2) marked with postage of $108, (3) not sent with a signature

requirement, and (4) sent from California, one of the states that permitted the cultivation and sale

of cannabis. Further, she determined that the sender’s and recipient’s names did not match the

known residents of the sending and receiving addresses. Moreover, Gates found records of similar

packages that had been sent to the same Sterling address.

¶ 17    Gates obtained a search warrant to open the package. It held a Rubbermaid container,

within which were a t-shirt and seven plastic-wrapped bundles of what appeared to be cannabis.

After the substance field-tested positive for the presence of cannabis, Gates contacted Illinois law

enforcement to arrange support for controlled delivery of the package.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

¶ 18    Postal inspectors equipped the package with a beacon to alert law enforcement officers

when the package was opened. They also added fluorescent theft-detection powder. Dressed as a

mail carrier, Gates drove the package from her officer at O’Hare to Lee County, where she met

with Wade. She then took a postal vehicle to the Sterling address. She went to the door; defendant

answered and said he was expecting a package. She asked if he had been tracking the package

online, and he said yes. (The interception of the package had delayed its delivery, and the postal

inspectors had created a false tracking record showing that it had been lost.) She asked defendant

to sign for the package, which he did. He signed as “Phil Garcia.” Within minutes after Gates

left, the beacon signaled that the package was open.

¶ 19    Wade, testified that, on September 9, 2013, he and other law enforcement officers waited

for the results of Gates’s delivery of the package. At about 12:20 p.m., the beacon alerted them

that the package was open, so they went to the delivery address to execute a search warrant that

had been issued in anticipation of the package’s opening. As Wade entered behind another officer,

defendant, who was about 10 feet from the package, said, “ ‘I know why you’re here and I’m not

talking.’ ” Wade gave defendant Miranda warnings “at some point” and then “engage[d] him in

conversation.” Wade asked him if he had any more information about the package, and he said,

“ ‘[I]t all stops here.’ ”

¶ 20    The State later questioned Wade about details of what happened when the officers made

their entry into the house:

                 “Q. And do you recall wasn’t, in fact, someone yelling [‘get down’] as you entered

        this house?

                 A. Yes, Inspector Albert.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

               Q. And[,] as he’s yelling that[,] your testimony is that [defendant] is saying, ‘I know

       why you’re here’—

               A. Yes.

               Q.—'and I’m not talking’?

               A. Yes.

                                                   ***

               Q. But he was polite with you?

               A. Yes.”

¶ 21   Gregory Popp testified that, in 2013, he was a supervisor within the postal service’s

narcotics unit. He was part of the team that entered defendant’s house after receiving a signal that

the package was opened. Using ultraviolet light, he detected on defendant’s fingertips the

fluorescent theft-detection powder that had been added to the package.

¶ 22   The State also called Todd Shaver, who, in 2013, was an Illinois State Police sergeant and

the director of the Task Force. He testified as an expert on the indicia of drug trafficking.

¶ 23   Defendant presented no evidence.

¶ 24   In his closing argument, defendant contended that it was suspicious that the State presented

testimony of his statements during the raid but that no recordings of his statements existed.

¶ 25   In rebuttal, the State conceded that there were no recordings of defendant’s statements.

However, the State asserted that the officers were credible in testifying that defendant made the

statements. The State also suggested that defendant’s statements were too remarkable to forget:

               “And, by the way, how do you forget something like that? ‘I’m not talking’—let’s

       think about that for a minute. ‘I’m not talking,’ who says that? This is somebody who’s

       thought it out, this is the situation I might be in. And what does that mean, ‘I’m not

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

       talking’?    You heard what it might mean and you could kind of piece it together

       inferentially anyway. I’m not talking because I know the next question is going to be who

       delivered, who sent this. *** So he says, ‘I’m not talking,’ *** he’s protecting his source.

       This is a guy who’s committed to the life. That’s *** hard core. Police are here, ‘I’m not

       talking’; that’s hard core.”

The State repeated this argument later in rebuttal:

               “But he’s committed. ‘I know why you’re here,’ ‘I’m not talking.’ And then he

       says—he says it kind of—he says the same thing again, ‘it all stops here.’ As Todd Shaver

       explained, we’re going up a chain here, he is not going to let that happen. He throws up a

       wall; he’s hard core, that’s his job. He’s thought about this before.”

Defendant did not object to either of these arguments.

¶ 26   The jury found defendant guilty on all counts.

¶ 27   The court imposed concurrent sentences of 10 years’ imprisonment for cannabis trafficking

and 7 years’ imprisonment for conspiracy to commit cannabis trafficking.

¶ 28   Defendant filed a “Motion for New Trial or Judgment of Acquittal,” which he later

amended. His amended motion asserted, among other things, that (1) the trial court erred in

denying his motion to dismiss for improper venue and (2) he “was denied due process and a fair

trial where the State repeatedly elicited evidence that the Defendant invoked his Fifth Amendment

right to remain silent.”

¶ 29   On the venue issue, the State responded that, under section 1-6(r) of the Code (720 ILCS

5/1-6(r) (West 2012)), a “person who commits the offense of cannabis trafficking or controlled

substance trafficking may be tried in any county.” Further, it noted that section 1-6(f) of the Code

provides:

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           “If an offense is committed upon any railroad car, vehicle, watercraft or aircraft passing

           within this State, and it cannot readily be determined in which county the offense was

           committed, the offender may be tried in any county through which such railroad car,

           vehicle, watercraft or aircraft has passed.” 720 ILCS 5/1-6(f) (West 2012).

Relying on section 1-6(f), the State argued thatvenue was proper in Lee County because (1) the

aircraft that brought the cannabis over Illinois probably flew over Lee County, and (2) postal

inspector Gates drove through Lee County en route to defendant’s house. Alternatively, the State

contended that defendant waived his constitutional objections by citing only a statutory basis for

his objection. (At the hearing on the motion, the State asserted that the joinder of all the charges

was proper in the county in which the trafficking charge should be tried.)

¶ 30       Responding to defendant’s due-process assertion, the State contended that, because

defendant did not invoke his right to remain silent before making the statements in question, it was

proper for the State to comment on them.

¶ 31       After hearing argument, the court denied both motions without providing reasons.

Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal.

¶ 32                                        II. ANALYSIS

¶ 33       On appeal, defendant asserts that his convictions are improper for two reasons. First, his

trial in Lee County violated the venue clauses of the sixth amendment of the United States

Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. VI) and article 1, section 8 of the Illinois Constitution of 1970

(Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 8). Second, the State violated his rights against self-incrimination by

drawing attention to his statements that he would not talk to the police. We consider each claim

in turn.

¶ 34                                           A. Venue

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

¶ 35   Defendant argues initially that the Illinois and United States constitutions’ venue clauses

must be interpreted to require that “some act constituting part of the offense of Cannabis

Trafficking be performed in the county of trial.” Because sections 1-6(r) of the Code and 4(d) of

the Act provide that a defendant accused of cannabis trafficking or controlled substance trafficking

may be tried in any county, defendant asserts that these provisions are inconsistent with the

requirement that a defendant be tried only the county where some part of the offense was

committed. Therefore, he claims that the provisions are unconstitutional, at least as applied to

him.

¶ 36   The State, in response, argues (among other things) that, in People v. Bochenek, 2021 IL

125889, ¶ 19—decided shortly before defendant filed his opening brief—our supreme court

explicitly rejected the view that venue is proper only in the county where some part of the offense

was committed. In Bochenek, the court upheld the constitutionality of a venue provision (720

ILCS 5/1-6(t)(3) (West 2016)) allowing trial for identity theft to occur in the county where the

victim resides. Bochenek, 2021 IL 125889, ¶ 9.

¶ 37   In reply, defendant narrows his argument. He concedes that special venue provisions such

as the provision in Bochenek need not require the accused to have committed an act in the county

of trial. However, he argues that the special venue provision in section 4(d) of the Act—a “person

who commits the offense of cannabis trafficking *** may be tried in any county”—remains

constitutionally infirm under the standard in Bochenek because it requires “no nexus between the

offense conduct or harm, and the county in which the State seeks to prosecute.” (Defendant does

not address how Bochenek applies to the State’s claim in the trial court that venue was proper

under section 1-6(r) of the Code, which, as noted, is identical to section 4(d) of the Act.)

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2022 IL App (2d) 200319-U

¶ 38    Defendant’s argument is strikingly insufficient. He has mounted what we will show is a

facial constitutional challenge to sections 1-6(r) of the Code and 4(d) of the Act, without admitting

that he is doing so. More importantly, he cites no authority for the constitutional standard by which

he would have us judge the “any county” cannabis trafficking provisions.

¶ 39    A challenge to the constitutionality of a statute is a facial challenge only if the challenge

implies that “there is no set of circumstances under which the statute would be valid.” Bochenek,

2021 IL 125889, ¶ 10. At first blush, that formulation might seem to imply that the “any county”

provisions are not subject to facial challenges, as sometimes a county of trial selected under an

“any county” provision might be a proper venue for another reason. However, as Bochenek shows,

a challenge to a special venue provision is a facial challenge not when it asserts that the provision

can never produce the correct result, but when it asserts that it is never proper to apply the provision

to determine venue.

¶ 40    The Bochenek court treated the defendant’s challenge to section 1-6(t)(3) of the Code—

which allows trial for identity theft to occur in the county where the victim resides—as a facial

challenge despite the possibility that the county of a victim’s residence might be, for instance, the

county in which the offender committed most of the acts. The defendant’s contention was not that

application of section 1-6(t)(3) could never produce proper venue, but that the provision

“conflict[ed] with the constitution because no aspect of the crime of identity theft is connected to

the location of the victim’s residence,” and that “such a location is therefore arbitrary in relation

to the offense.” (Emphasis added.) Bochenek, 2021 IL 125889, ¶ 15. Defendant’s claim here is,

similarly, that the “any county” provisions of sections 1-6(r) of the Code and 4(d) of the Act are

arbitrary in relation to the offense of cannabis trafficking. Thus, his claim, like the claim in

Bochenek, is a facial challenge.

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¶ 41   Defendant requests that we “construe[ ]” the relevant provisions to conform to his theory

of constitutional venue. This makes his argument appear more modest than it is. Although a court

has “an obligation to construe [a challenged] statute in a manner which upholds its

constitutionality, if such a construction is reasonably possible” (In re Parentage of John M., 212

Ill. 2d 253, 266 (2004)), the construction that defendant suggests is not reasonably possible for the

“any county” cannabis trafficking provisions: sections 1-6(r) of the Code and 4(d) of the Act are

utterly unambiguous: “[a] person who commits the offense of cannabis trafficking *** may be

tried in any county.” 720 ILCS 5/1-6(r) (West 2012)); 725 ILCS 215/4(d) (West 2012). We cannot

construe this to mean that “a person who commits the offense of cannabis trafficking may be tried

in any county in which some act constituting part of the offense was performed.” Such a limitation

undoes the plain meaning the legislature gave these sections. No rule of construction authorizes a

reviewing court “to declare that the legislature did not mean what the plain language of the statute

imports”; moreover, no court “may *** rewrite a statute to add provisions or limitations the

legislature did not include.”     Illinois State Treasurer v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation

Commission, 2015 IL 117418, ¶ 28.          Thus, despite defendant’s suggestion that we may

“construe[ ]” the “any county” provisions to include additional requirements, his challenge

remains a facial challenge.

¶ 42   “A party raising a facial challenge to a statute faces a particularly heavy burden.”

Bochenek, 2021 IL 125889, ¶ 10. “Statutes are presumed constitutional, and to rebut that

presumption, the party challenging a statute’s constitutionality has the burden of establishing a

clear violation.” Bochenek, 2021 IL 125889, ¶ 10.

¶ 43   The cases defendant cites do not come close to satisfying this heavy burden. Indeed,

defendant fails to cite any authority that addresses the constitutional minimum standards for proper

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venue. Defendant cites People v. Hagen, 145 Ill. 2d 287, 301 (1991), for the proposition that, to

determine where an offense occurred for purposes of venue, a court must determine where the acts

which constitute the offense occurred. In so holding, the Hagen court was addressing a particular

statutory venue requirement, not a constitutional standard. Thus, Hagen is inapposite regardless

of the effect of Bochenek. Defendant’s citations of People v. Caballero, 237 Ill. App. 3d 797, 803-

04 (1992), and People v. Barraza, 253 Ill. App. 3d 850, 853-55 (1993), suffer from the same defect;

both cases discuss only statutory venue requirements. These cases cannot support a claim that the

venue statutes at issue here are unconstitutional.

¶ 44                                   B. Self-Incrimination

¶ 45   Defendant contends that the State’s closing arguments violated his rights under the self-

incrimination clause of the fifth amendment of the United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend

V) when the State commented on his assertions of his right to remain silent. He further suggests

that the State made comments that implied that defendant bore some burden of proof. Defendant,

however, has failed to affirmatively show any error in the State’s closing arguments.

               “The standard of review applied to a prosecutor’s closing argument is similar to the

       standard used in deciding whether a prosecutor committed plain error. [Citations.] A

       reviewing court will find reversible error only if the defendant demonstrates that the

       remarks were improper and that they were so prejudicial that real justice was denied or the

       verdict resulted from the error.” People v. Jackson, 2020 IL 124112, ¶ 83.

¶ 46   “This court is entitled to have issues clearly defined with pertinent authority cited and

cohesive arguments presented, and it is not a repository into which an appellant may foist the

burden of argument and research.” (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) People v.

Rosalez, 2021 IL App (2d) 200086, ¶ 170. Often, when we invoke this principle, the appellant has

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wholly neglected an issue. However, it applies equally to less blatant failures that nevertheless

would require us to provide the analysis necessary to decide the case.

¶ 47   Here, were we to address defendant’s claim on its merits, we would have to decide—

without aid from defendant—whether he suffered prejudice from the contested comments. This

would require us to address how closely balanced the evidence was and what effect the State’s

comments would have had on that balance. We could provide such an analysis, but that would

make us defendant’s advocate, which is not our proper role. As cases such as People v. Rodriguez,

336 Ill. App. 3d 1, 14 (2002), state: a reviewing court should refrain from addressing unbriefed

issues when doing so “would have the effect of transforming [the] court’s role from that of jurist

to advocate”. The same principle applies when an appellant, despite briefing an issue, has failed

to supply the necessary analysis. As Rodriguez pointed out, when a reviewing court makes an

argument on an appellant’s behalf, it must also guess how the appellee would have responded.

Thus. the result is likely to be unjust. Rodriguez, 336 Ill. App. 3d at 14. Here, we avoid that pitfall

by declining to address the merits.

¶ 48                                     III. CONCLUSION

¶ 49   For the reason stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lee County.

¶ 50   Affirmed.

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