Court Opinion

ID: 4398322
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-05-17 21:03:24.434532+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:49.258298
License: Public Domain

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                                Appellate Court                            Date: 2019.03.28
                                                                           09:36:07 -05'00'

                   People v. Herring, 2018 IL App (1st) 152067

Appellate Court     THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption             TIMOTHY HERRING, Defendant-Appellant.

District & No.      First District, Second Division
                    Docket No. 1-15-2067

Filed               December 11, 2018
Rehearing denied    January 11, 2019

Decision Under      Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 11-CR-197; the
Review              Hon. Mary Margaret Brosnahan, Judge, presiding.

Judgment            Affirmed.

Counsel on          James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Darrel F. Oman, of State
Appeal              Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.

                    Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg
                    and Douglas P. Harvath, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for
                    the People.

Panel               JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
                    Presiding Justice Mason and Justice Pucinski concurred in the
                    judgment and opinion.
                                              OPINION

¶1       Stephen Peters discovered that someone had broken into his mother’s garage and damaged
     his prized Ford Mustang. Stephen called the police. An evidence technician arrived to collect
     fingerprints and other evidence. While the two men stood in the alley outside the garage, they
     were shot and killed. A few days later, friends and relatives of Timothy Herring informed
     police that Herring had committed the murders. A jury convicted Herring of first degree
     murder of both men.
¶2       Herring argues (i) the State did not prove the corpus delicti of the offense due to
     insufficient evidence (Herring, however, misunderstands the corpus delicti rule), (ii) the trial
     court erred in making several evidentiary rulings (but these rulings either do not constitute an
     abuse of discretion or were harmless error), (iii) the State committed prosecutorial misconduct
     in several ways (we find, however, that none presents reversible error), (iv) his trial counsel
     was ineffective for failing to object to fingerprint evidence and cell phone location data (but
     Herring’s counsel attacked the fingerprint evidence through cross-examination and, even if the
     cell phone location data had been excluded, no reasonable probability exists that it would have
     led to an acquittal), and (v) his mandatory natural life sentence is unconstitutional (but the law
     sees Herring as an adult, not a juvenile, at the time of the murders).

¶3                                             Background
¶4       Herring moved to prevent the State from eliciting hearsay statements that Stephen had
     made to his mother before his death and her 911 call. The trial court admitted Stephen’s
     statements to Laura Peters to explain his intent to go back to the garage and admitted the 911
     call as an excited utterance to establish the chain of events and as evidence of the second set of
     gunshots. The trial court said it would consider giving a limiting instruction about Stephen’s
     statements.

¶5                                            Laura Peters
¶6       Laura’s son, Stephen, kept his 2003 Ford Mustang in the garage behind her home. In the
     early afternoon of November 26, 2010, Stephen came to her house and told her that someone
     had broken into the Mustang, he had called the police, and he was going outside to await their
     arrival. (The trial court overruled Herring’s objection to this testimony. Herring did not request
     a limiting instruction.) About 10 minutes later, Laura heard two gunshots outside. She looked
     out the back window and saw Stephen lying on the ground.
¶7       Laura called 911 and reported that Stephen had been shot. While on the phone, she heard
     two more shots. The State played a tape of the 911 call for the jury. (The trial court overruled
     Herring’s objection to the tape.) When Laura looked out the window, she saw a man pushing
     two garbage cans in front of the garage. The cans had her home address spray-painted on them.
     She described the man as dark complected; 5 feet, 8 inches; and wearing dark jeans and a dark
     hooded jacket with the hood pulled up.

¶8                                         Will Turner
¶9      Will Turner’s garage sits directly across the alley from Laura’s garage. At 1:15 p.m.,
     Turner came home with a friend and pulled into the alley. Turner saw a police car parked in the

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       alley by his garage and asked Stephen what had happened. Stephen told Turner that someone
       had broken into his mother’s garage, and he thought that person would return for the stolen
       items, which had been stashed in garbage cans next to the garage. (The trial court overruled
       Herring’s objection to this testimony.) Turner went into his house while his friend went into
       Turner’s garage. A few minutes later, the friend knocked on Turner’s door and told him that
       someone was shooting in the alley. Turner looked out and saw Stephen and a police officer
       lying on the ground. Turner told his friend to call 911. Then, Turner heard two gunshots.
       Turner did not see who fired and did not see Herring, who he knew because Herring lived
       nearby.

¶ 10                                        Rahman Muhammad
¶ 11       The first officer to arrive, Chicago police sergeant Rahman Muhammad, saw Stephen lying
       on the ground, then noticed Chicago police officer Michael Flisk and radioed that an officer
       had been shot. Officers swiftly arrived and searched for the two garbage cans that had been
       moved from the alley. They located the cans in the backyard at 8112 South Burnham, about
       eight or nine houses from Laura’s home. The cans contained wires and car stereo equipment.
       The backyard was open and accessible to anyone from the alley.

¶ 12                                         Fingerprint Evidence
¶ 13       Police evidence technicians processed the contents of the garbage cans (which contained
       several items other than those from Stephen’s car). All items were dusted for fingerprints, but
       only one latent print was found, on a rearview mirror bracket. A fingerprint examiner
       determined that this fingerprint matched Herring’s left index finger. The examiner admitted
       that in writing his report, he initially gave the wrong inventory number for the mirror bracket
       but corrected his error before trial. Herring’s counsel cross-examined the fingerprint examiner
       and did not object to the mirror bracket’s admission. No fingerprint taken from Stephen’s car
       matched Herring.

¶ 14                                           Tranay Smith
¶ 15       In the late morning of November 26, Tranay Smith, an acquaintance of Herring’s, received
       a call from him. Smith was with her friend and cousin, Diamond Owens. Smith and Owens
       picked up Herring and went to Smith’s home at 83rd Street and Phillips Avenue. The three
       smoked marijuana and watched television before dropping Herring at 81st and Muskegon.
       Smith drove around the neighborhood for about a half hour and saw police officers near 80th
       and Manistee. Smith called Herring to check on him because she knew Herring was on parole.
       Herring asked Smith to pick him up in an alley at 81st and Muskegon. When she arrived,
       Herring appeared to be acting paranoid but told Smith nothing was wrong.
¶ 16       They all returned to Smith’s house. Herring began panicking and asked Smith if anyone
       else was home and whether police cars had cameras. Herring said that he had shot two people.
       Herring began cutting off his braided hair and making phone calls. He took off his jacket, and
       Smith saw there were colored wires in it. He had a black gun with a laser beam. He put the gun,
       the jacket, the wires, and braids in a bag, and then the bag into a diaper box in Smith’s closet.
       Herring told Smith not to say anything and that Tim Willis would retrieve the bag. Herring
       wanted a haircut, so Smith took him to a barbershop at 79th Street and Kingston Avenue. Later
       that night, Willis came to Smith’s home and took the bag.

                                                   -3-
¶ 17       Smith did not call the police; rather, the police took her to the station and read her the
       Miranda warnings. At first, Smith lied and said she had only wanted to buy marijuana from
       Herring; but her conscience bothered her, and she knew that Herring was in jail at that point, so
       she disclosed what Herring had told her. She was not allowed to return home until after making
       a taped statement. Smith had an unrelated felony charge pending at the time.
¶ 18       The police never recovered any of the items Herring placed in Smith’s closet.

¶ 19                                          Diamond Owens
¶ 20        Owens, Smith’s cousin, had been scheduled to testify the week before but had refused and
       was now in sheriff’s custody. On November 26, Owens was with her cousin, Smith, when
       Smith received a call from Herring, whom Owens did not know. Smith and Owens picked up
       Herring and went to Smith’s house; later, the two women drove Herring to 81st and Manistee.
       Driving around afterwards, Owens and Smith saw police in the area, and Smith called Herring.
       Smith drove to an alley near 81st and Muskegon, and Herring, who looked “very shaken and
       scared,” got in the car. On the way back to Smith’s house, their car passed the alley at 81st and
       Manistee. Owens saw a police car and two people lying on the ground.
¶ 21        At Smith’s house, Herring pulled a gun from his jacket and put the jacket and gun in a bag,
       telling them he had shot two people. The gun was gray with a red laser beam. Owens left the
       room; when she returned, she saw braids on the floor. Smith put the hair in the bag, and
       Herring asked the women to drive him to a barber. They left him at a shop at 79th and
       Kingston. Later that evening, Smith gave the bag containing the gun to someone who came to
       the house.
¶ 22        Owens’s father took her to the police station. Initially, Owens did not tell the police the
       truth, fearing her father might learn about her involvement. In a second interview, hours later,
       after police disclosed they had spoken with Smith, Owens told them what she knew.

¶ 23                                       Raynard Jackson
¶ 24       On November 26, a man came into the barbershop where Raynard Jackson worked. The
       man had braids and asked for a haircut. Jackson told the man he would need to take the braids
       out, and the man left. Jackson had not wanted to talk to the police, but he identified Herring
       from photographs. Jackson did not know Herring and saw him for a few seconds.

¶ 25                                         Tekeyina Poole
¶ 26      Tekeyina Poole, a longtime friend of Herring’s, received a call from him at 2:30 p.m.
       Shortly afterward, Herring arrived at her home. He had on a red fitted hat that Poole had never
       seen. Herring stayed for about an hour, receiving several calls. At 3:50 p.m., Herring called his
       cousin, Moesha Menzies, and asked her to come get him. When Menzies arrived, Herring left.

¶ 27                                     Moesha Menzies
¶ 28      Menzies, another cousin of Herring’s, lived down the street from Herring. She knew
       Stephen (nicknamed “Sweet Pea”) because he parked his Mustang in a garage across the alley.
       At 3:00 p.m. on November 26, she learned about the shooting from a Facebook message and
       wondered if Herring might be responsible. During the summer, Herring had told her that he
       wanted to take the Mustang’s speakers. Herring called and asked her to meet him at 80th and

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       Saginaw. As Menzies and Herring walked home, she asked him what was going on, and “he
       told me he did it. *** he just told me he shot them.” Herring did not say who he shot or explain
       his actions. Herring told her that the victims told him that they had obtained fingerprints from
       the car and the prints would provide whatever they needed to know. Herring told her that he
       shot both men twice and ran.
¶ 29       Menzies was impeached with her videotaped statement to an assistant state’s attorney, in
       which she gave additional details. She had been told by Herring that the two men were “Sweet
       Pea and a guy in a uniform” and “he seen the two guys while he was in the gangway and he
       seen them taking fingerprints.” Menzies also said that Herring told her he walked up and told
       Stephen that he knew who had stolen his speakers. Herring turned his back and pulled out his
       gun, turned around, shot, and ran down the alley; he came back and saw Stephen still moving.
       He shot both men again.
¶ 30       After this conversation, Menzies called her sister, Ebony Garrett, and the two went for a
       walk. She told her sister what Herring had said, and Ebony was shocked. Later, police picked
       up Menzies, and took her to an interrogation room. Menzies at first told police she knew
       nothing, but the police told her that Ebony said Menzies did know, and threatened Menzies
       with a lie detector test. Menzies gave a recorded statement after learning her sister had talked to
       the police. Before being released, Menzies made a statement. She testified before the grand
       jury the next day. Menzies obtained her own attorney because, she claimed, the police and the
       state’s attorney were hounding her. The State impeached her with her grand jury testimony, in
       which she reported good treatment and denied threats.

¶ 31                                             Ebony Garrett
¶ 32       Ebony, Menzies’s sister, knew Stephen from the neighborhood and learned of the shooting
       on November 26. She denied talking to Menzies about the shooting. She was currently in jail
       for failing to appear to testify. She denied she planned to collect a reward for testifying.
       Nothing in the record indicates that a reward was paid.
¶ 33       The State tried to impeach Ebony with her previous statements to the police and the grand
       jury. The trial court ruled that her statement to the police was admissible only as impeachment
       evidence but her grand jury testimony could be admitted as substantive evidence since it was
       given under oath at a proceeding. Before playing the video of her statement to police, the trial
       court instructed the jury that “whatever Moesha Menzies told [Ebony] Garrett who is now on
       the screen, that is not being offered for the truth of the matter asserted. It’s simply being
       offered to impeach [Ebony] Garrett’s testimony. And as you recall yesterday, she said ‘I don’t
       recall’ to the majority of the questions. So it’s for impeachment purposes only.”
¶ 34       The State repeatedly impeached Ebony with her statement to the police and her grand jury
       testimony. In the statement and testimony, she admitted she spoke to Menzies after Menzies
       had learned from Herring that he killed two men. She was told by Menzies that Herring was
       trying to take Stephen’s speakers when Stephen and a police officer arrived and Herring shot
       them to avoid returning to prison. Herring shot Stephen in the head and left, then came back
       and saw Stephen still moving and shot the victims again. Herring gave the gun to a girl who
       picked him up. After hearing this story, Ebony used her mother’s phone to call Herring and
       asked if it was true. He acknowledged that it was. Ebony asked why he shot the men; Herring
       said he did not want to return to prison.

                                                    -5-
¶ 35       Late on November 26, or early the next morning, Melvin Johnson (who was dating
       Ebony’s sister, Ashley Garrett) asked Ebony if she knew anything about the shooting. She told
       him she knew who did it. The next morning, Johnson brought her a flyer offering a $10,000
       reward for information on the shooting. Ebony told her sister and Johnson what she heard from
       Menzies. Ashley wanted to turn Herring in, but Ebony did not because one of her friends had
       been murdered earlier in the year and the police had not investigated or offered a reward to
       solve that crime. Ashley called the number on the flyer and confirmed the reward. She
       arranged a meeting, and left with Johnson. Later, police came to talk to Ebony, and she gave a
       statement knowing her sister had done so.

¶ 36                                           Melvin Johnson
¶ 37       Johnson testified that he lived at 81st and Manistee with his girlfriend, Ashley Garrett, and
       knew of Herring. Johnson had not shown up for his original scheduled testimony and had a
       contempt charge pending. According to Johnson, on the night of November 26, he was at
       Ashley’s house when Ebony told them about the shooting. Ebony was timid and scared.
¶ 38       The next day, Johnson saw a flyer offering the reward for information about the shooting.
       He discussed it with the Garrett sisters, and Ashley called the phone number on the flyer to
       arrange a meeting. Johnson and Ashley went to the police station and gave a statement.
       Johnson was told that the reward could be as high as $20,000. They originally planned not to
       bring Ebony into it. Her role, however, came out during his interview. Johnson remained at the
       station for 12 hours and did not want anyone to know that he had helped the police.

¶ 39                                         Ashley Garrett
¶ 40       On November 26, Ashley saw the shooting on the news. Later that night, she spoke to
       Johnson about what her sister had told him. The next day, Johnson brought the reward flyer to
       Ashley, and they discussed it with Ebony. Ashley called the police, then she and Johnson went
       to the police station. She spent many hours in the interrogation room before giving a video
       statement. She denied needing the reward money and did not remember calling to confirm the
       amount. The State impeached her with an earlier statement in which she said that, before
       providing information, she confirmed the reward.

¶ 41                                         Cassandra Riddley
¶ 42       Cassandra Riddley had briefly dated Herring that summer, reconnecting with him in
       November. On November 26, the two talked and Riddley began driving to Herring’s home,
       only to be stymied by police presence in the area. Riddley parked and walked there. Riddley
       asked Herring what happened. Herring admitted to killing two police officers but not why.
       Herring wore a skullcap and told Riddley he had cut his hair. Riddley left but texted Herring at
       6:30 p.m. to ask “what about the clothes?” Herring replied, “gone.” On November 30, police
       visited Riddley. At first she denied she knew anything, but the police accused her of lying and
       took her to the station for several hours of interrogation. She was scared and did not want to be
       charged. After the police told her they had phone records showing she spoke with Herring on
       November 26, Riddley told them what she knew.

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¶ 43                                        Cell Phone Evidence
¶ 44       Detective Timothy Murphy, while investigating the case, obtained Herring’s cell phone
       number. Murphy made an “exigent circumstances” request to Sprint for Herring’s cell phone
       records. Murphy did not get a warrant. Murphy compiled a list of people linked to Herring’s
       phone number (including Ashley, Ebony, Johnson, Menzies, and Poole). Later that evening,
       after an arrest warrant had been issued for Herring’s parole violation, Murphy acquired a
       warrant to search Herring’s residence and seized his phone and computer. The State also
       received cell site location information showing the location of Herring’s cell phone over the
       course of the previous days, but the record does not indicate whether the police received this
       information under the “exigent circumstances” request or from Herring’s phone.
¶ 45       The State submitted Herring’s phone records, showing every incoming and outgoing call
       and text message, including duration, around the time of the shooting. The records included
       phone numbers linked to Ebony, Menzies, Owens, Poole, Riddley, Smith, and Willis. Most
       calls were short. And the records did not reveal if Herring was using his phone or had
       conversed, left a message, or hung up.
¶ 46       The phone records also showed which cell phone towers connected with Herring’s phone.
       An Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent testified that, though he was unable to pinpoint
       the specific address of Herring’s phone during this time, the cell phone tower records showed
       Herring in the vicinity of the shooting when it occurred. The agent admitted, however, this also
       accorded with Herring’s phone being at his own home, which was near the crime scene.
       Herring’s counsel did not object to this testimony.

¶ 47                                    Herring’s Behavior in Custody
¶ 48        Herring was taken to the police station on the afternoon of November 27 and placed in an
       interview room. Detective James Carlassare testified that he saw Herring stand on a bench in
       the interview room and try to push up the ceiling tiles and climb into the ceiling. Carlassare
       cuffed Herring to the wall. The State moved to admit a 15-minute video showing Herring
       pushing up the ceiling tiles, arguing that it showed consciousness of guilt. The defense
       objected, arguing that though the State had tendered a videotape of Herring’s entire stay in the
       interview room, it had not disclosed its intention to show this particular portion. The trial court
       overruled the objection, holding that since the State had given the defense the entire tape in
       discovery, it need not disclose its intent to use any specific portion. Detective Carlassare
       admitted that, at the time Herring pushed up the ceiling tiles, Herring had been in the interview
       room for 27 hours; Herring knew he was being taped because he waved at the video camera.
       Herring was never charged with attempted escape.
¶ 49        In addition, the State submitted recordings of Herring’s phone calls from the Cook County
       jail. In them, Herring speculated that he would be acquitted should Smith not testify against
       Willis, and that he knew the police had not found the gun. (The State did not present a
       transcript of the calls to the trial court or jury.)
¶ 50        The trial court instructed the jury that “any evidence that was received for a limited purpose
       should not be considered by you for any other purpose.” The trial court also instructed the jury
       that a witness could be challenged with a prior inconsistent statement, and this statement could
       be considered as substantive evidence if made under oath.

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¶ 51                                         Closing Argument
¶ 52       The State noted Stephen’s hearsay statements and played the tape of Laura’s 911 call for a
       second time. In rebuttal, the State argued that Laura “has suffered enough,” and that “the Peters
       family does not need his executioner to speak for him. That’s beyond belief. That’s
       disgusting.” In response to defense argument that State witnesses had implicated Herring to
       receive a reward, the State argued “So now the grand jury, the individual grand jurors, are part
       of the conspiracy as well.” The defense attorney objected, but the State continued “that’s nuts.”
       The objection was sustained, but the State continued “that’s beyond nuts.” In discussing
       Herring’s friends and family who had implicated him, the State argued that they initially lied to
       the police for “self preservation,” asking how they could “be safe from [Herring].”
¶ 53       The jury convicted Herring of both first degree murder and burglary. The trial court denied
       Herring’s motion for a new trial, which argued (i) the evidence did not prove him guilty
       beyond a reasonable doubt, (ii) the trial court erred in admitting hearsay testimony from
       Stephen and his mother, and (iii) the State’s closing argument was improper. Because Herring
       had been convicted of first degree murder of two victims, the trial court sentenced him to a
       mandatory term of natural life imprisonment. The trial court noted that it would have given
       Herring a severe sentence even if the natural life sentence had not been mandated. The trial
       court denied Herring’s motion to reconsider his sentence.

¶ 54                                              Analysis
¶ 55                        The State Did Not Violate the Corpus Delicti Rule
¶ 56       Herring first argues that his confession is inadmissible because the State failed to establish
       the corpus delicti of the crime with independent evidence. Essentially, Herring asserts that the
       State did not have evidence of his guilt other than his statements to his friends that he had
       committed the crime. Herring both misapplies the rule and discounts the other evidence
       tending to corroborate his guilt.
¶ 57       The “corpus delicti” of an offense “is simply the commission of a crime.” People v. Lara,
       2012 IL 112370, ¶ 17. It is one of the propositions the State must prove beyond a reasonable
       doubt. Id. To prove the corpus delicti, the State must provide evidence independent of a
       defendant’s confession. Id.
¶ 58       The corpus delicti rule exists because we generally mistrust out-of-court confessions,
       knowing that these statements can be coerced or otherwise unreliable. Id. ¶ 19. We do not want
       a defendant to be convicted of a nonexistent crime. This rule would apply to a murder case
       where there is no body or a question as to whether the deceased had been murdered as opposed
       to dying from natural causes. Stephen and Flisk were murdered. This was easily proved
       through the testimony of eyewitnesses who heard two sets of gunshots and saw the bodies,
       along with the medical evidence that both men died of gunshot wounds.
¶ 59       The State also needed to prove that Herring committed the crime. A challenge to the
       sufficiency of the evidence involves, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
       the prosecution, whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
       the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Campbell, 146 Ill. 2d 363, 374 (1992). As a
       reviewing court, we will not substitute our judgment for that of the trier of fact on questions
       concerning the weight of the evidence or witness credibility. Id. at 375. We will reverse a

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       criminal conviction, however, should the evidence be so unreasonable, improbable, or
       unsatisfactory as to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt. Id.
¶ 60       Beyond Herring’s statements (both by phone and in person to friends and family
       members), Herring’s guilt was corroborated by (i) phone records showing his calls to and from
       various friends and family, (ii) his fingerprint on an item in the garbage can taken from the
       scene and abandoned a few houses away, (iii) his cell phone’s presence near the crime scene
       during the time it was committed, and (iv) Menzies’s testimony that Herring had told her he
       wanted to take the Mustang’s speakers. The record, taken as a whole and viewed in the light
       most favorable to the State, presents enough evidence for a rational trier of fact to find beyond
       a reasonable doubt that Herring committed the crime.

¶ 61                                      Evidentiary Rulings
¶ 62       Next, Herring takes issue with several evidentiary rulings. We review the admission of
       evidence for an abuse of discretion. People v. Maldonado, 402 Ill. App. 3d 411, 416 (2010).
       We will find an abuse of discretion only if the trial court’s ruling is “arbitrary, fanciful,
       unreasonable, or where no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the trial court.”
       (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.

¶ 63                                       Hearsay—Stephen Peters
¶ 64       Herring argues that several statements from Stephen should not have been admitted.
       Specifically, that his car had been burgled and that he was going to the alley to wait for the
       police and for the burglar to return to claim the items in the garbage cans. Hearsay refers to an
       out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. People v. Sangster,
       2014 IL App (1st) 113457, ¶ 60. But Stephen’s statements were admitted under the
       “state-of-mind” exception to the hearsay rule, for statements in which the declarant (Stephen)
       is unavailable to testify, there is a reasonable probability that the hearsay statement is truthful,
       and the statement is relevant to a material issue. People v. Caffey, 205 Ill. 2d 52, 91 (2001).
¶ 65       Herring argues that it was not necessary to explain Stephen’s presence in the alley. But he
       cites no case holding that these statements do not qualify under the “state of mind” exception.
       The State need not use (or refrain from using) any particular piece of evidence to explain
       Stephen’s actions.
¶ 66       Actually, Herring takes issue not so much with admissibility but with the State
       extrapolating that the person who burgled the Mustang must be the same person who shot
       Stephen and Flisk. This was a logical inference: that Stephen and Flisk, who were attempting
       to find out who burgled the Mustang, were shot by the person trying to escape culpability for
       the burglary. It also derives support from (i) Laura’s testimony that she saw someone pushing
       the garbage cans right after the murders and (ii) the car’s equipment being found in the same
       garbage cans abandoned a few houses away. The State may encourage the jury to make
       reasonable inferences. See People v. Frazier, 2016 IL App (1st) 140911, ¶ 11 (trier of fact’s
       responsibility to weigh evidence and draw reasonable inferences from evidence).

¶ 67                                      Hearsay—911 Call
¶ 68      Herring also argues that the 911 tape of Laura’s call to police was inadmissible hearsay.
       The trial court admitted the tape under the “excited utterance” or “spontaneous declaration”

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       exception to the hearsay rule. To be admissible, there must be (i) an incident sufficiently
       startling to produce a spontaneous statement, (ii) no time for the declarant to fabricate the
       statement, and (iii) the statement must relate to the circumstances of the incident. People v.
       Sutton, 233 Ill. 2d 89, 107 (2009). We consider the totality of the circumstances, including (i)
       the time passed between the event and the utterance, (ii) the nature of the event, (iii) the
       declarant’s mental and physical condition, and (iv) whether the statement is self-interested.
       People v. Perkins, 2018 IL App (1st) 133981, ¶ 68.
¶ 69       Under this test, the 911 call qualifies. Hearing gunshots and seeing her son’s body on the
       ground manifests “startling” so that Laura would speak spontaneously to the 911 operator.
       Little time passed between Laura hearing the first shots and calling 911, and she heard more
       shots while on the phone. There was no time for her to fabricate. And the 911 call related
       wholly to the circumstances of the shooting. Herring seems to argue that the 911 call was too
       prejudicial for admission, but the court weighs the probative value of the evidence against the
       risk of unfair prejudice. People v. Roman, 2013 IL App (1st) 110882, ¶ 23. We find no abuse of
       discretion. Id.

¶ 70                 Double Hearsay—Prior Inconsistent Statements of Ebony Garrett
¶ 71        Herring argues error in admitting that Ebony had told police and prosecutors of Menzies
       telling her of Herring’s confession. Herring argues that this evidence (admitted as both
       impeachment and substantively) constitutes inadmissible double hearsay.
¶ 72        This evidence presented a convoluted transmission of information: from Herring to
       Menzies, from Menzies to Ebony, and from Ebony to the police and grand jury. The last step
       was admissible as Ebony’s prior inconsistent statement. See Sangster, 2014 IL App (1st)
113457, ¶¶ 60-62. The problem arises at the middle step: Menzies’s statements to Ebony. The
       State offers no argument as to how those statements were not hearsay or were not offered for
       the truth of the matter asserted (that Herring killed Stephen and Flisk). Instead, the State seems
       to argue that the presence of the prior inconsistent statement at the end of the chain renders the
       intermediate steps nonhearsay as well. The State cites People v. McLaurin, 2015 IL App (1st)
131362, but McLaurin is inapposite. There, the witness had earlier testified that he heard an
       unknown person accuse the defendant, and the defendant laughed. Id. ¶ 46. So, there was no
       “double hearsay” problem: the witness heard this interaction directly—unlike Ebony, who
       heard about Herring’s admission afterwards, through Menzies.
¶ 73        Nonetheless, the inculpatory value of Ebony’s testimony about this conversation was that
       Herring had confessed to Menzies—and before Ebony testified, the jury heard this directly
       from Menzies. So Ebony’s testimony on this point was cumulative as well as not terribly
       helpful since the State had the use of her prior statements. We find any error harmless. See
       People v. Lindsey, 2016 IL App (1st) 141067, ¶ 21 (under harmless error analysis, State must
       prove beyond reasonable doubt that result would have been same without error).

¶ 74                                     Limiting Instructions
¶ 75       Herring next argues (in a cursory fashion) the inadequacy of the trial court’s limiting
       instructions regarding hearsay evidence. He limits his argument to Stephen’s statements and
       the impeachment evidence, so we will too.

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¶ 76        Jury instructions must explain the correct principles of law that apply to the evidence, and
       not be misleading or confusing. People v. Valadovinos, 2014 IL App (1st) 130076, ¶ 23. When
       a jury does not receive proper guidance through instructions, it cannot perform its
       constitutional functions, violating the defendant’s right to a fair trial. Id. To warrant reversal, a
       defendant must show that the claimed instructional error “ ‘creates a serious risk that the jurors
       incorrectly convicted the defendant because they did not understand the applicable law, so as
       to severely threaten the fairness of the trial.’ ” People v. Durr, 215 Ill. 2d 283, 299 (2005)
       (quoting People v. Hopp, 209 Ill. 2d 1, 8 (2004)).
¶ 77        When ruling on the admissibility of Stephen’s statements, the trial court said it would
       consider issuing a limiting instruction. But Herring did not request one, though he did object to
       its admission. So he forfeited this argument. See People v. Enoch, 122 Ill. 2d 176, 186 (1988).
       He does not argue that this forfeiture should be overlooked under the plain error doctrine.
¶ 78        As to the impeachment evidence, the trial court told the jury that Ebony’s prior inconsistent
       statements were being offered to impeach her. Later, before deliberations, the trial court gave
       Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, No. 3.11 (4th ed. 2000), which discusses
       impeachment and the substantive use of prior inconsistent statements given under oath.
       Herring did not object to this instruction or argue that it did not sufficiently explain hearsay or
       the distinction between impeachment and substantive evidence. People v. Miller, 363 Ill. App.
3d 67, 76-77 (2005). And there is a strong presumption that jurors follow trial court
       instructions. People v. Gonzalez, 379 Ill. App. 3d 941, 954-55 (2008). We find no error.

¶ 79                                     Prosecutorial Misconduct
¶ 80       Herring next argues that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct in several ways. We
       reject each of these contentions.
¶ 81       Many of Herring’s arguments concern statements made in the State’s opening or closing
       arguments. Prosecutors have wide latitude, and may comment on evidence and any fair
       inferences from that evidence. People v. Sandifer, 2016 IL App (1st) 133397, ¶ 53. We view
       the closing argument in its entirety, and any challenged remarks in context. Id. Closing
       argument must serve a purpose other than inflaming the jury’s emotions. People v. Wheeler,
       226 Ill. 2d 92, 128 (2007). But even if the prosecutor’s comment was outside the bounds of
       propriety, we will not overturn a guilty verdict, unless the improper comment constitutes a
       “material factor” in conviction. Sandifer, 2016 IL App (1st) 133397, ¶ 53; see also People v.
       Thompson, 2015 IL App (1st) 122265, ¶ 36 (reversal warranted when remark caused
       “substantial prejudice”).

¶ 82                                      Use of Hearsay Evidence
¶ 83       Herring argues that the State used hearsay evidence of Stephen’s statements and Laura’s
       911 call in the opening and closing. Even if these arguments had been properly preserved, they
       are unpersuasive. The evidence was properly admitted as exceptions to the hearsay rule, and it
       is not error for the State to rely on properly admitted evidence or the inferences to be drawn
       from that evidence. People v. Hubner, 2013 IL App (4th) 120137, ¶¶ 24-27 (collecting cases).

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¶ 84                                     Witnesses’ Fear of Herring
¶ 85        Herring argues that the State improperly argued that State witnesses were afraid of
       Herring. It is improper for the prosecution to argue that a defendant threatened or intimidated a
       witness unless there is evidence to support it. People v. Cox, 377 Ill. App. 3d 690, 707 (2007).
       The State did not expressly or impliedly argue that Herring threatened these witnesses, and we
       find no error in the State’s suggestion that certain witnesses were reluctant to implicate
       Herring. The prosecution never suggested that the witnesses’ recalcitrance was due to Herring
       threatening or intimidating them, even though four of them had pending contempt petitions for
       failing to appear at trial. In any event, viewed in the context of the entire argument, nothing
       demonstrates this isolated comment was a “material factor” in Herring’s conviction. Sandifer,
       2016 IL App (1st) 133397, ¶ 53.

¶ 86                                      Laura Peters’s Suffering
¶ 87       Next, Herring argues that the State’s closing argument improperly emphasized Laura’s
       suffering. “[M]ere mention” of a victim’s family does not entitle a defendant to a new trial.
       People v. Jones, 2011 IL App (1st) 092529, ¶ 33. To be reversible, the evidence must cause the
       jury to believe it is “material.” People v. Harris, 225 Ill. 2d 1, 31 (2007). The State reminded
       the jury of Laura’s suffering, but never suggested that her pain inculpated Herring. We find no
       error.

¶ 88                                    “Disgusting” and “Nuts”
¶ 89        Herring argues that the State’s closing argument improperly characterized the defense
       argument as “disgusting” and “nuts.” The State may challenge the credibility of the defense’s
       theory if evidence supports that challenge but should not suggest that defense counsel lied or
       suborned perjury. People v. Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d 173, 207 (2009). The State did criticize the
       defense theory but without ridiculing defense counsel personally. See People v. Robinson, 391
Ill. App. 3d 822, 840-41 (2009) (collecting cases upholding convictions where State termed
       defendant’s theory “ridiculous,” “preposterous,” or “a joke”). Besides, the trial court sustained
       defense counsel’s objection to the State characterizing defendant’s theory as “nuts.”

¶ 90                                      Intent to Use Videotape
¶ 91       Finally, in the most cursory manner, Herring argues that the State “sandbagged” the
       defense by not disclosing its intention to play 15 minutes of a 27-hour-long video of Herring in
       the interrogation room. Herring does not complain that the State violated discovery rules.
       Indeed, he admits the State disclosed the entire tape and that he litigated a motion in limine to
       bar other portions. Nor does Herring complain that he was unaware of Detective Carlassare as
       a potential witness. The rules of discovery force the State to reveal its evidence. Ill. S. Ct. R.
       412 (eff. Oct. 1, 1971). The State need not preview trial strategy. That the defense may have
       overlooked the inculpatory nature of this portion of the video in no way suggests misconduct.

¶ 92                              Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
¶ 93      Herring next argues that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance, which requires
       analysis under the two-prong standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668
       (1984). See also People v. Albanese, 104 Ill. 2d 504, 525 (1984) (adopting Strickland

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        standard). A defendant must show that counsel’s representation was deficient—that it fell
        below an objective standard of reasonableness. People v. Sharp, 2015 IL App (1st) 130438,
        ¶ 100. The defendant also must show prejudice—a reasonable probability that, but for the
        deficiency, the result of the proceeding would have been different. Id. We apply a strong
        presumption that counsel acted reasonably. Id. ¶ 102.

¶ 94                                 Admission of Fingerprint Evidence
¶ 95        Herring argues that his counsel erred in not objecting on foundation grounds to the
        admission of expert testimony regarding the fingerprint recovered from the mirror bracket,
        later identified as Herring’s. To admit an object into evidence, a party must lay an adequate
        foundation: either through identification by witnesses or a chain of custody. People v. Woods,
        214 Ill. 2d 455, 466 (2005). Herring takes issue with the final step in that chain—when the
        fingerprint expert examined the mirror bracket and other items from the garbage. But the
        “chain of custody” need not be perfect for admission. People v. Alsup, 241 Ill. 2d 266, 275
        (2011).
¶ 96        There appears the police fingerprint examiner mislabeled and then corrected items from
        the garbage. The mistake went to the weight, not the admissibility, of the evidence. Moreover,
        Herring’s counsel tried to exploit that confusion during lengthy cross-examination. This
        indicates that counsel recognized the import of the fingerprint evidence and tried to take
        advantage of error. Whether and when to object involves trial strategy; we are highly
        deferential to trial counsel in these situations. People v. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d 312, 344 (2007).
        Trial counsel decided to attack this point through cross-examination rather than try to exclude
        the evidence. We find no deficient performance. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697 (need not
        address both Strickland prongs when party makes insufficient showing of one prong).

¶ 97                                        Cell Phone Location Data
¶ 98        Herring next argues ineffectiveness of trial counsel for failing to move to suppress the
        “location data” from Herring’s cell phone. The FBI agent analyzed and testified to the location
        data at trial. (Herring does not take issue with the State’s use of Herring’s other phone records,
        which showed the outgoing and incoming phone numbers.) According to Herring, acquiring
        this location data required a warrant supported by probable cause, and the State did not get a
        warrant. Instead, the State used the “exigency” exception to the warrant requirement. The
        State, for its part, is unable to clarify whether it obtained the location data through the exigent
        circumstances request or under the warrant later obtained to seize Herring’s cell phone.
¶ 99        Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court held that location data (unlike phone records showing
        incoming and outgoing calls) constitutes a “search” requiring a warrant supported by probable
        cause. Carpenter v. United States, 585 U.S. ___, ___, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2221 (2018). Herring
        argues that trial counsel should have used Carpenter to suppress the location data.
¶ 100       Regardless of Carpenter’s applicability, which the State contests, Herring’s claim fails
        under the prejudice prong of the Strickland standard. Even if the trial court had suppressed the
        location data, the outcome remains the same—the evidence was unimportant. The FBI agent
        testified that the location data showed Herring’s cell phone connecting to cell phone towers in
        the neighborhood of the murders but admitted this also fits with Herring minding his own
        business at home since Herring lived near the crime scene. Had Herring presented an alibi
        defense, say he had been across town when the murders occurred, then the agent’s evidence

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        would have been meaningful. As it stands, Herring has not shown a reasonable probability of a
        different outcome had the location data been suppressed, so we reject the claim.

¶ 101                        Constitutionality of Mandatory Natural Life Sentence
¶ 102        Finally, Herring argues that his natural life sentence (mandatorily imposed because he
        killed two victims) violates both the state and federal constitutions because its mandatory
        nature prevents the trial court from taking his age (19 years old) into account as mitigating
        evidence.
¶ 103        Herring can find no protection in the federal constitution. The United States Supreme
        Court has held that the eighth amendment protects juvenile offenders from capital punishment
        or mandatory life imprisonment without parole. Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 578-79
        (2005); Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48, 82 (2010); Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460, 489
        (2012). These holdings were grounded in the Court’s concern, based on scientific research
        about adolescent brain development, lack of maturity, vulnerability to bad influences, and
        responsiveness to rehabilitation. Roper, 543 U.S. at 570. But the Court drew a line at the age of
        18 years; while it acknowledged that the line was arbitrary, it “must be drawn.” Id. at 574.
        Herring falls on the adult side of that line; the eighth amendment does not protect him from a
        life sentence and we reject any challenge on this ground.
¶ 104        As for Illinois law, in the wake of People v. Harris, 2018 IL 121932, involving an
        18-year-old convicted of murder and attempted murder, this appeal is not an appropriate
        vehicle to consider his sentence. As in Harris, an as-applied constitutional challenge was not
        raised in the trial court, no evidentiary record exists to base Herring’s constitutional claim, and
        the trial court made no findings of fact regarding his circumstances. Id. ¶ 40. Accordingly, we
        are unable to consider Herring’s claim.

¶ 105      Affirmed.

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