Court Opinion

ID: 8419963
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-03 20:02:24.401924+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:48:22.729334
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U
                                         No. 2-18-0906
                                 Order filed November 3, 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 Kane County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 15-CF-1427
                                       )
SAFANDRE LINDSEY,                      ) Honorable
                                       ) John A. Barsanti,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices Schostok and Hudson concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held: (1) The evidence supported the circuit court’s finding that defendant was not
             entrapped; and (2) defendant’s Class X sentence was not statutorily authorized.
             Therefore, we affirm defendant’s convictions but vacate his sentence and remand
             for resentencing.

¶2     After a bench trial, defendant, Safandre Lindsey, was found guilty of three counts of

unlawful delivery of a controlled substance within 1000 feet of a school or park (720 ILCS

570/407(b)(1), (b)(2) (West 2014)), arising out of drug deliveries he made to an undercover police

officer on three occasions: May 22, May 25, and May 27, 2015. Defendant delivered heroin to

the undercover officer during the first two transactions and cocaine on the third. Defendant was
2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

also found guilty of one count of unlawful possession of a controlled substance (720 ILCS

570/402(c) (West 2014)) stemming from his possession of heroin at the time of his arrest for these

offenses. Based on his criminal history, the circuit court sentenced him as a Class X offender to

18 years’ imprisonment, to be followed by three years of mandatory supervised release (MSR).

For the reasons that follow, we affirm defendant’s convictions but vacate his sentence and remand

the cause for sentencing.

¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶4     We summarize the facts adduced at trial and appearing in the record. In April 2015,

defendant met a woman named Trish, who lived next door to defendant’s friend. Trish told

defendant that she “got high, too,” and she asked defendant if he wanted to come over to get high

with her. Defendant subsequently went to Trish’s house nearly every day and got high with her.

Trish asked defendant if she wanted to meet her friend, “Scott,” because she wanted defendant to

sell drugs to him. “Scott” was really Detective Chris Tucker of the Elgin police department’s

narcotics unit. Defendant declined Trish’s request, but Trish continued to ask him every time he

saw her. Defendant “told her no every time.”

¶5     Defendant testified that Trish offered to have sex with him if he would meet “Scott” and

sell drugs to him. Defendant agreed and, on May 22, 2015, they had sex. Within “like an hour”

of having sex, Trish accompanied defendant to meet Detective Tucker in the parking lot of a

grocery store in Elgin. They got into Tucker’s undercover vehicle; Trish sat in the front passenger

seat, defendant sat in the rear passenger seat, and Tucker was in the driver’s seat. A drug delivery

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

took place in Tucker’s vehicle. 1 This incident did not result in a criminal charge. Defendant

testified that he and Trish had sex “maybe five” times “within the next couple months or so.”

¶6     Later in the evening that same day, on May 22, Tucker called defendant and arranged for

defendant to sell him $80 worth of heroin. Tucker testified that defendant told him to head toward

Elgin and to call him when he got close. Tucker did so, and, during a second phone call, they

agreed to meet outside of a liquor store in Elgin. When Tucker arrived, he parked his vehicle and

placed several calls to defendant’s cell phone, but they went straight to voicemail. Defendant

called him back and explained that his calls were going to voicemail because his phone had died

due to a lot of people calling him. Defendant arrived and approached Tucker’s vehicle and entered

the front passenger seat. 2 Tucker handed defendant $80, and defendant gave him a baggie of

heroin. Tucker testified that defendant stated “It’s raw. It’s always raw with me.” Based on

Tucker’s training and experience, he understood defendant’s statement to mean that the heroin was

       1
           Detective Tucker testified that he believed defendant handed the drugs to him, but he was

uncertain. He also testified that he could not recall who he handed the money to. Defendant

testified that he did not participate in the transaction, and that it occurred between Trish and

Tucker.
       2
           Defendant testified that, when he got into Tucker’s car, Trish was already in the back

driver’s side seat. Tucker testified that Trish was “absolutely not” present in the car for that

meeting. The State called Lieutenant Christian Jensen, who testified that he was the “follow car”

for this transaction. He testified that he was 20-50 yards away from Tucker’s undercover vehicle

and never saw a woman enter Tucker’s vehicle. The only person in the car other than Tucker was

a man who got into the front passenger seat during the transaction.

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

pure heroin, as opposed to heroin that was mixed up with cutting agents. Defendant then asked

Tucker to drive him to the intersection of S. Gifford Street and Villa Street. When they arrived at

the location, defendant exited the vehicle and, according to Tucker, defendant stated that if Tucker

wanted to buy heroin in the future, that he should pick him up at that spot. Tucker testified that

defendant told him that location was his girlfriend’s house. Defendant testified that the location

was near his dealer’s house, and he had Tucker drive him there so that he could give the money

Tucker had just given him to his dealer. Tucker video recorded this transaction using a “button

camera,” which he testified worked well in low-light conditions. No audio of this transaction was

recorded. Defendant testified that he delivered drugs to Tucker “[b]ecause I do drugs and because

Trish offered to have sex with me.”

¶7     The second charged transaction occurred on May 25, 2015. Defendant called Tucker at

approximately 1:40 p.m. and asked him if he would need heroin that day. Tucker said that he did,

but that he was at work and that he would call him later that evening. Tucker obtained a “24-hour

overhear” so that he could record his phone call with defendant. Tucker called defendant back at

5:17 p.m. A recording of the call was admitted into evidence along with a transcript. During the

call, Tucker asked defendant if he was “straight,” which Tucker testified meant “do you have drugs

for sale?” Defendant replied “yeah, yeah,” and told him to meet him at Gifford and Villa in fifteen

minutes. Defendant asked Tucker, “what you wanted?” and Tucker replied “I got a bill. I got a

hundo.” Defendant replied “ok, I got you.” Tucker understood defendant’s statement to mean

that he had $100 worth of heroin to sell him. Tucker obtained a video camera from his office and

drove to the meeting spot.

¶8     Defendant was sitting outside when Tucker pulled up. Defendant walked over and entered

the front passenger seat of the vehicle. Tucker handed him $100, and defendant asked him to drive

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

him down the street to his “boy’s crib” to get some cannabis. Tucker agreed but, before they

started driving, Tucker asked defendant if he “got it” and if they “were all good.” Defendant

replied “yeah, I got it on me.” As they drove, defendant took a bag of heroin out of his mouth and

handed it to Tucker.

¶9     While traveling to the other location, defendant told Tucker that when he gave him “four

bags” the prior week, he intended to give Tucker “six bags,” but the “girl” took two of them.

Tucker replied with, “that fucking bitch,” to which defendant stated, “that’s what I’m used to

dealing with.”

¶ 10   Defendant also brought up the subject of cocaine, which they had not previously discussed.

He stated to Tucker that he “got the hard around, too,” and that he charged $50 per gram. Tucker

testified that “hard” meant crack cocaine. Based on his training, he understood that defendant was

offering to sell him crack cocaine for $50 per gram. As they continued to drive, Tucker said that

he should have brought more money with him because he knew people in St. Charles that he could

sell it to and make money. Defendant told Tucker that he could call him and that he would “have

it ready when you get here.” Tucker asked defendant to confirm the price by asking “$50 a gram?”

to which defendant relied, “yup.”

¶ 11    When they arrived at the location to which defendant directed them, near the intersection

of Douglas Avenue and Summit Street, defendant exited the vehicle and walked toward a house

on Douglas. After a few minutes, Tucker called defendant and asked how much longer he would

be. Defendant replied that he would be right out. Defendant then returned to the vehicle, and

Tucker drove him back to Gifford and Villa. Defendant testified that he wanted to return to Gifford

and Villa so that he could “give the dealer his money.” While they drove, defendant said that he

“got soft, too,” which Tucker testified meant cocaine that is snorted rather than smoked. Tucker

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

responded, “you got fucking everything. You don’t got nobody with no ecstasy, do you?”

Defendant answered “yup,” and asked Tucker whether he “want[ed] pills or Molly.” Tucker

specified that he wanted pills, and defendant replied “[a]ll you do is call me ahead of time and I

don’t got pills, but my guy got them.” Defendant stated that Tucker should “[j]ust tell [him] ahead

of time and [that he would] have ‘em drop ‘em off to you.” Defendant testified that he did not

personally have these drugs. As they drove, defendant pointed out that they were passing a police

station. He told Tucker that he drove past the police station nearly every day to “get me some

weed.” Tucker stated that he was going to see if he could get more money and, if he could, he

would contact defendant. Tucker asked defendant if he preferred to be contacted via phone call or

text message, and defendant replied that it did not matter and that he changes his phone number

every two months. Tucker testified that it would not be unusual for a drug dealer to frequently

change his or her phone number.

¶ 12   As they continued to drive, Tucker and defendant returned to the subject of the woman

who had taken two bags of heroin from the delivery meant for Tucker. Defendant stated, “I don’t

like that shit because I pay [her] for bringing me customers though. Don’t take out of our

customer’s shit.” He then stated that he “gave her three fucking bags just for bringing you to me.”

Defendant also stated that he was “the only motherfucker out here with raw,” and that “everybody

else’s shit is all shooken up.” Defendant also told Tucker that he never sleeps and that he could

“come whenever the fuck you want.” Tucker replied that “that’s what I’m looking for,” and “if

you got hard, that’s what I’m talking about, because I could make money off that.” Defendant

then showed Tucker the bag of cannabis he had just picked up and told him to smell it because it

smelled good. They continued to talk about cannabis before Tucker dropped off defendant.

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

¶ 13    On May 27, 2015, defendant and Tucker exchanged text messages throughout the

afternoon. The first text message Tucker received from defendant that day asked what time Tucker

was coming, and Tucker replied “[p]rolly like 7.” Tucker then asked, “How much hard for $200?”

Defendant replied, “I’ll give you 4 gram.” Tucker testified that meant defendant offered to sell

him four grams of crack cocaine for $200. Tucker called defendant at 7:20 p.m., and a recording

of the phone call was admitted into evidence. During the call, Tucker told defendant that he would

be back in the area around 8:15 p.m., and defendant told him that they should meet at the same

place as last time.

¶ 14    Tucker drove to Gifford and Villa, but defendant was not there. Tucker sent a text message

to defendant stating “here,” and defendant immediately called him back and said he was in the

area of Highland Avenue and Route 31. Tucker drove to that area and picked up defendant at

Highland and McClure Avenue. Defendant instructed Tucker to drive back to Gifford and Villa.

Tucker asked defendant if he had the drugs, and he said they were “at the crib.” Defendant

explained that he was at Highland and McClure because he was receiving a breathing treatment

for his asthma. He told Tucker that he had to “run over here” because he could not breathe and

that he needs a new inhaler.

¶ 15    Defendant also stated that he did not trust “ol’ girl” now that he met Tucker, and he believed

that Trish was trying to set him up because he thought the police may have been following him. 3

Defendant stated that, two days prior, he went to the “crib” next door to Trish and asked the woman

living there to let him in because police were in the area. The woman told defendant to “just keep

        3
            At trial, defendant denied believing that Trish was trying to set him up. He stated that he

“was just making conversation” when he made those statements to Tucker.

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

walking” because Trish had called the police on her. Defendant hypothesized that Trish and the

woman next door were “having wars about who *** they’re buying their dope from and all this

shit.” Defendant also stated that he “was going to serve the bitch next door,” but that Trish called

the police on him.4 Both Tucker and defendant testified that “serving” meant delivering drugs.

Defendant also told Tucker that Trish told him to never “serve that bitch again” because the police

were outside her house. Defendant asked a “dude that was at” Trish’s house whether “ol’ girl”

called the police on Trish, but the man stated that Trish called the police on herself. Defendant

told Tucker that “when motherfuckers get high, you ain’t no telling what the fuck they do.” Tucker

commented that he was “paranoid, too” about “motherfuckers I serve,” and that he sees police cars

frequently in St. Charles, where he lived. Defendant responded that he was not “worried about no

squad car” because “these motherfuckers will never catch me.” He also stated that he “ain’t

worried about the detectives” and that he did not have a drug case since 2001.

¶ 16   When they arrived at Gifford and Villa, defendant told Tucker to wait 10 minutes, because

he had to “go and cook this shit up,” and that he meant to do it earlier. Tucker stated that he would

“take it soft” because someone was waiting for him. Defendant exited the car and returned a short

time later. He handed a small bag of cocaine to Tucker and said, “shit comes back good as hell,

too, man.” Tucker questioned whether what defendant handed him was actually four grams.

Defendant stated that he forgot that Tucker wanted four grams and that he had only given him two

grams. Tucker asked defendant if he could give him $100 back, and defendant asked Tucker

whether he wanted $100 back or whether he wanted the other two grams. Tucker asked defendant

       4
           Defendant testified that Trish did not direct him to deliver drugs to the woman next door.

Also, during his testimony, defendant denied delivering drugs to Trish’s next-door neighbor.

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

if he had another two grams, and defendant answered, “Yeah, Yeah, just hold on right here. Just

hold the money. I’ll be right back.” Defendant gave the $200 back to Tucker and exited the

vehicle.   Regarding this transaction, defendant testified that he did not package the drugs

originally, and that “the dealer did it.” He testified that when he left the vehicle, he “went back in

and gave the bag back to the dealer and told him [that Tucker] wanted more, whereupon the dealer

added more drugs to the bag. Defendant returned to the vehicle with the additional drugs and

delivered them to Tucker, and they parted ways. Defendant testified that after the transaction was

completed, he “took the money back in” to his dealer. Defendant agreed that Trish did not ask

him to deliver drugs to Tucker on either May 25 or May 27, 2015.

¶ 17   Tucker testified that, on September 6, 2015, he sent text messages to defendant from a

different phone number posing as a female looking to purchase heroin. Defendant confirmed

during his testimony that he had a different phone number at the time of his arrest in September

2015 as compared to when the transactions occurred in May 2015. Tucker did not have copies of

the text messages, but he testified that defendant texted back and asked where he knew her from.

Tucker replied that they had met “through someone else.” Tucker testified that defendant “advised

that he would sell me heroin and we’d meet” near the Dairy Queen on West Chicago Street in

Elgin. That location was near Highland and McClure, which is where Tucker picked up defendant

during the May 27, 2015, transaction. Tucker testified that he texted defendant from a different

phone number and posing as a different person “because we wanted to get [defendant] out to arrest

him on the three previous deliveries.”

¶ 18   Defendant was arrested later that day, on September 6, 2015, near the Dairy Queen. Police

recovered from defendant’s person two bags of heroin, two syringe needles, and a spoon.

Defendant testified that the heroin was for personal use.

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¶ 19   At the Elgin police station, Tucker questioned defendant while wearing a balaclava ski

mask to disguise his appearance. Tucker told defendant that he was at the police station because

he “sold heroin to somebody he really shouldn’t have.” Defendant replied that he does not sell

heroin, but that he was “just a middleman.” Tucker testified that a “middleman” is akin to a broker

between the dealer and the buyer. Tucker explained that a middleman “will go and get the drugs,

get the money, and make the transaction where the other two parties don’t actually meet each

other.” Defendant told Tucker that he acted as a middleman because he is a heroin addict and, as

a result, he knows many people who sell heroin and many people who wish to purchase it. Tucker

testified that defendant told him that he gets heroin for people who are sick and in turn “makes a

little money for himself on the side” to support his own heroin addiction.

¶ 20   Defendant testified that he had never “middle-manned” any drug deals other than his

encounters with Detective Tucker. Defendant also denied packaging the drugs before delivering

them to Tucker, and he always went to Gifford and Villa to obtain the drugs, because that is where

his dealer lived. Defendant testified that he would get the drugs from his dealer, give them to

Tucker and, in turn, he would bring the money that he received from Tucker to the dealer.

¶ 21   The circuit court admitted evidence of defendant’s 2014 forgery conviction for

impeachment purposes, as well as defendant’s 1999 conviction for delivery of a controlled

substance to rebut defendant’s entrapment defense, which the State argued showed defendant’s

predisposition. The court admitted certified statements of conviction for both offenses.

¶ 22   Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion requesting the circuit court “to admonish [him] of

the new sentencing provisions set forth in 720 ILCS 570/407 and/or 720 ILCS 570/401.” He

stressed that 720 ILCS 570/407(b) was amended effective January 1, 2018, to prohibit the delivery

of a controlled substance within 500 feet of a school, public park, or church, instead of 1000 feet

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2022 IL App (2d) 180906-U

as previously provided. Defendant noted that counts 1, 3, and 4 were charged under section 407(b)

of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act (720 ILCS 570/407(b)(1), (b)(2) (West 2014), and he

stated that he was “electing to be sentenced on Count[s] 1, 3 and 4 under the amended statute.”

He argued that the amendment “affects sentencing only,” and that due process considerations

required that he be permitted to choose between the sentencing provisions. The circuit court

granted the motion, reasoning that “section 407 is a sentencing statute for 401,” such that defendant

was entitled to elect which sentencing scheme, “the old or the new 407,” under which he would be

sentenced if convicted. Count 1 was reduced from a Class X felony to a Class 1, and one of the

Class 1 deliveries was reduced to a Class 2. The State asserted that the third delivery was within

the 500 feet requirement as provided in the revised statute, so it remained a Class 1 offense.

¶ 23   Following closing arguments, the circuit court rejected defendant’s entrapment defense and

found him guilty on all counts. It found that, although Trish, the government’s confidential

informant, induced defendant to commit the offense by offering to have sex with him if he agreed

to meet and sell drugs to Tucker, defendant was predisposed to commit the offenses. The court

analyzed defendant’s predisposition by applying the nine factors we outlined in People v. Bonner,

385 Ill. App. 3d 141 (2008). It noted that defendant’s recorded conversations with Tucker

suggested no reluctance or unwillingness to commit the crime and that he complimented his own

product while denigrating the product of others. It also noted that defendant offered to sell Tucker

cocaine instead of heroin if he desired it, and that defendant showed great familiarity with drugs.

It stated that defendant was willing to accommodate Tucker’s needs, including offering to “cook

up” the powder cocaine, contacting Tucker to inquire whether he needed more heroin, and stating

“I got you” when Tucker stated that he had $100. Defendant also offered to make the amount right

when the Tucker complained that he was given two grams instead of four. It found that defendant

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was willing to profit from the drug sales, as supported by his statement during his interview at the

police station that he sells to people who are sick and makes a little money on the side. Regarding

defendant’s drug usage, the court noted that defendant testified that he was addicted to heroin and

that he was holding a controlled substance at the time of his arrest. In analyzing defendant’s

participation in “cutting or testing the drugs,” the court again noted that defendant was ready and

willing to “cook up” the powder cocaine into crack cocaine if the undercover officer wanted him

to. The court also found that defendant had a ready access to a supply of drugs because, within a

short period, he was able to supply the undercover officer with controlled substances in three

separate transactions, and he never stated that he was unable to deliver. Regarding defendant’s

“engagement in a course of conduct involving similar offenses,” the circuit court observed that

defendant was convicted in 1999 of the same offense, and that he bragged to the undercover officer

that the police would “never catch” him and that he changed his cell phone number every two

months. Finally, concerning the defendant’s “subsequent activities,” the circuit court reiterated

that defendant possessed narcotics at the time of his arrest, which was approximately four months

after the events that lead to the charged offenses.

¶ 24   At the sentencing hearing, the circuit court analyzed the statutory factors in mitigation and

aggravation, and it found that defendant’s criminal conduct was not induced or facilitated by

someone other than defendant.         See 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.1(a)(5) (West 2018).            The court

acknowledged that Trish was “involved in this matter,” but it stated that she “was assisting the

police in the beginning” but “not after that.” It stressed that, although defendant was induced to

perform the first transaction, that transaction “wasn’t even charged.” The court explained that

“after that [first transaction], there [were] sufficient transactions which were all on the defendant.”

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The court could not “put those on anybody but [defendant] based on the testimony and the

recordings of his conversations and what we went through further previously about entrapment.”

¶ 25   Defendant was sentenced on September 24, 2018. In imposing sentence, the court stated

that the matter was a “mandatory department of corrections case.” Based on defendant’s criminal

history, which included convictions for three Class 1 felonies for unlawful delivery of a controlled

substance stemming from an offense defendant committed when he was 17 years old, as well his

Class 2 felony conviction for aggravated domestic battery, the court determined that section 5-4.5-

95(b) of the Unified Code of Corrections (Unified Code) (730 ILCS 5-4.5-95(b) (West 2016))

required that defendant be sentenced as a Class X offender, for which the court noted had a

sentencing range of “six to 30” years’ imprisonment. Defense counsel made no argument that

defendant was not subject to Class X sentencing. As noted, the circuit court sentenced defendant

to a term of imprisonment of 18 years, to be followed by three years of MSR.

¶ 26   On October 1, 2018, defendant filed a motion to reconsider sentence arguing, pertinently,

that the circuit court failed to properly apply the mitigating factor that defendant’s criminal conduct

was induced or facilitated by another. He argued that the court should have applied this mitigating

factor in light of its prior finding that defendant was induced to perform the drug transactions. In

denying defendant’s motion to reconsider sentence, the court stated: “I believe there was

inducement at the beginning. But as time went on and because of the defendant’s behavior and

the actions of the defendant, I felt that he was no longer induced.”

¶ 27   Defendant timely filed a notice of appeal.

¶ 28                                       II. ANALYSIS

¶ 29   On appeal, defendant argues that (1) the State failed to rebut beyond a reasonable doubt his

affirmative defense that he was entrapped by a government informant to deliver controlled

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substances to the undercover officer; and (2) he was erroneously sentenced as a Class X offender

under section 5-4.5-95(b) of the Unified Code because his criminal history did not qualify him for

Class X sentencing. We address each issue in turn.

¶ 30                                 A. Entrapment Defense

¶ 31   Defendant first contends that the State’s evidence was insufficient to rebut, beyond a

reasonable doubt, his affirmative defense of entrapment. While he agrees with the circuit court’s

finding that he was induced to commit the drug offenses, he maintains that he was not predisposed

to commit the offenses.

¶ 32   A defendant who raises entrapment as an affirmative defense to a criminal charge

“necessarily admits to committing the crime, albeit because of improper government inducement.”

Bonner, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 145 (quoting People v. Rivas, 302 Ill. App. 3d 421, 432 (1998)).

Entrapment is governed by section 7-12 of the Criminal Code of 2012. It provides:

               “A person is not guilty of an offense if his or her conduct is incited or induced by a

       public officer or employee, or agent of either, for the purposes of obtaining evidence for

       the prosecution of that person. However, this Section is inapplicable if the person was pre-

       disposed to commit the offense and the public officer or employee, or agent of either,

       merely affords to that person the opportunity or facility for committing an offense.” 720

       ILCS 5/7-12 (West 2014).

¶ 33   A defendant invoking an entrapment defense must show both that (1) the State improperly

induced him or her to commit a crime, and (2) he or she was not otherwise predisposed to commit

the offense. Bonner, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 145. “For an entrapment defense to succeed, the evidence

must disclose an improper inducement on the part of the public officer or employee, and a lack of

predisposition to commit the crime on defendant’s part.” People v. Keen, 206 Ill. App. 3d 940,

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948 (1990). If the defendant presents some evidence, however slight, to support the defense of

entrapment, the burden shifts to the State to rebut the defense beyond a reasonable doubt. People

v. Anderson, 2013 IL App (2d) 111183, ¶ 60; Bonner, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 145. See also People v.

Placek, 184 Ill. 2d 370, 381 (“[o]nce a defendant presents some evidence to support an entrapment

defense, the State bears the burden to rebut the entrapment defense beyond a reasonable doubt, in

addition to proving all other elements of the crime).

¶ 34   The question of whether a defendant was entrapped is one for the trier of fact. Bonner, 385

Ill. App. 3d at 145. The trier of fact’s determination of entrapment will not be set aside unless the

defendant was entrapped as a matter of law. Id. The standard on appeal that we use to review the

trier of fact’s resolution of an entrapment defense is whether, upon viewing the evidence in the

light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential

elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Day, 279 Ill. App. 3d 606, 611

(1996). See also Placek, 184 Ill. 2d at 381 (“a reviewing court must affirm where, after reviewing

the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have

found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt”).

¶ 35   The inducement prong of an entrapment defense is “met when the course of criminal

conduct for which the defendant was convicted originated in the mind of a government agent who

arbitrarily engaged in a relationship with the defendant and purposely encouraged its growth.”

Bonner, 385 Ill. App 3d at 145. As noted, the circuit court found that defendant was induced to

commit the offense, which satisfied the first prong of the entrapment defense. In making this

finding, the court relied on Bonner, which it commented had “surprisingly similar” facts to the

instant matter. In Bonner, the government’s informant “did more than furnish [the defendant] an

opportunity for illegality.” Id. There, the informant constantly solicited the defendant to sell drugs

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and the defendant repeatedly refused, but he eventually relented and agreed to sell drugs after the

informant offered him sexual favors. Id. We commented in Bonner that the promise of sexual

favors is a tactic of known efficacy and that “lesser efforts,” such as the promise of a dating

relationship, have been considered sufficient to satisfy the inducement prong. Id. (citing People

v. Day, 279 Ill. App. 3d 606, 612 (1996)).

¶ 36   Here, expressly persuaded by Bonner, the circuit court found that defendant was induced

by Trish, a government informant, to deliver controlled substances to Tucker, an undercover

officer. It noted that the State did not call Trish to testify at trial, which it found “significant”

because only she could have rebutted defendant’s assertions regarding the promise of sex in

exchange for selling controlled substances to Tucker. Again, defendant testified that he declined

Trish’s repeated requests to sell drugs to her “friend,” but he eventually relented because she

offered to have sex with him. Defendant further testified that, within approximately one hour of

having sex with Trish, they met Tucker in a nearby parking lot, where an uncharged drug delivery

took place inside Tucker’s vehicle. Defendant testified that Trish had sex with him approximately

five times over the “next couple months,” which the circuit court noted was a timeframe that

exceeded the period in which defendant delivered controlled substances to Tucker.

¶ 37   Of course, defendant, on appeal, asserts that the circuit court’s finding that he was induced

to commit the offenses was correct under Bonner. Nevertheless, defendant appears to argue that

the circuit court erred in finding that he was induced only as to the first interaction between Tucker

and defendant (which, again, was an uncharged offense) but not the subsequent, charged deliveries.

Defendant asserts that this finding runs afoul of Bonner, where we found that all of the drug

transactions were the product of the informant’s inducement, even though some transactions

occurred more than one month after the informant ceased both having sex with the defendant and

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accompanying him to the transactions, because there was “no point at which the inducement might

have lost its effect amid the cluster of transactions.” Id. at 147-49.

¶ 38   Defendant’s argument is unavailing.          The transcript of the circuit court’s ruling

demonstrates that, within the confines of defendant’s entrapment defense, the court agreed with

him that he was induced to perform the charged drug offenses. In announcing its ruling, the circuit

court stated that it found “as a matter of law that the police induced [defendant] to perform the

drug transaction,” and it further stated that defendant “was induced to deliver to the undercover”

officer. In other words, defendant prevailed on the first prong of his entrapment defense, namely

that the confidential informant induced the illegal conduct. See Anderson, 2013 IL App (2d)

111183, ¶ 60 (“[a] defendant invoking an entrapment defense must present evidence that (1) the

State induced or incited him to commit the crimes and (2) he lacked the predisposition to commit

the crimes”). Defendant’s entrapment defense failed not because there was a lack of inducement

for the charged drug offenses, but because the circuit court found defendant was predisposed to

commit the offenses.

¶ 39   The circuit court’s statements that defendant seizes upon were made during the sentencing

hearing, where the court considered the applicable aggravating and mitigating factors in the

Unified Code, including whether “defendant’s criminal conduct was induced or facilitated by

someone other than the defendant.” See 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.1(a)(5) (West 2018). In light of the

finding favorable to defendant that he was induced to commit the offenses, it is apparent that the

court’s comments had no practical effect on defendant’s entrapment defense, but instead related

only to the court’s weighing of the applicable factors in aggravation and mitigation in fashioning

an appropriate sentence. Defendant makes no argument that the court erred in weighing the factors

in mitigation. To the extent that defendant perhaps could have, but did not, argue that his sentence

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was excessive because of how the circuit court considered the mitigating factor that the criminal

conduct was induced by someone other than defendant (as he argued in his motion to reconsider

sentence), the argument is forfeited. Because the circuit court plainly agreed with defendant that

he was induced by the government’s agent to sell drugs to Tucker, we proceed to the next question

in evaluating whether he was entrapped, namely, whether defendant was predisposed to commit

the offenses. See Bonner, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 146 (once a trier of fact determines that a defendant

was induced by the government to commit the offense, the next step is to determine whether the

defendant was predisposed to commit the offense).

¶ 40   Predisposition, in the entrapment context, focuses on the defendant’s mens rea before the

exposure to government agents. People v. Lewis, 2020 IL App (2d) 170900. To sustain its burden

of proving defendant was not entrapped to commit the offense, the State was required to show he

was predisposed to commit the offense. People v. Latona, 268 Ill. App. 3d 718, 725 (1994). That

is, the State needed to show that defendant was “ready and willing to commit the crime without

persuasion and before his or her initial exposure to government agents.” People v. Ramirez, 2012

IL App (1st) 093504, ¶ 38 (quoting People v. Criss, 307 Ill. App. 3d 888, 897 (1999).

¶ 41   Defendant argues that the instant matter is analogous to Bonner, where we determined that

the defendant was induced by the informant to sell drugs and not otherwise predisposed to commit

the offenses. Although the instant matter is like Bonner, in that the defendant was induced by an

informant to sell drugs to an undercover officer with the promise of sexual favors, unlike in

Bonner, the record here readily supports the circuit court’s finding that “defendant was predisposed

to deliver controlled substances before he was induced to deliver to the undercover” officer.

¶ 42   Courts have identified several factors that are relevant in assessing predisposition in drug

cases. They are: (1) the defendant’s initial reluctance or willingness to commit the crime; (2) the

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defendant’s familiarity with drugs; (3) the defendant's willingness to accommodate the needs of

drug users; (4) the defendant's willingness to profit from the offense; (5) the defendant’s current

or prior drug use; (6) the defendant’s participation in cutting or testing the drugs; (7) the

defendant’s ready access to a supply of drugs; (8) the defendant’s engagement in a course of

conduct involving similar offenses; and (9) the defendant’s subsequent activities. Bonner, 385 Ill.

App. 3d at 146.

¶ 43   Applying these factors, and while viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the

State, we conclude that a rational trier of fact could have found that the State rebutted defendant’s

entrapment defense beyond a reasonable doubt. Only the first identified factor in assessing

predisposition, defendant’s initial reluctance or willingness to commit the offense, favors him. In

evaluating this factor, the circuit court explained that the recorded conversations between

defendant and Tucker did not demonstrate any reluctance on defendant’s part to commit the

offense. Defendant correctly notes that the court’s comments focus on the wrong timeframe.

Again, predisposition involves an analysis of whether defendant was “ready and willing to commit

the crime without persuasion and before his or her initial exposure to government agents.”

(Emphasis added.) Id. When defendant’s interactions with Tucker were recorded by police,

defendant already had extensive dealings with Trish, the confidential informant, who, as the circuit

court found, induced defendant to commit the offenses.

¶ 44   Defendant’s unrebutted testimony was that, beginning in April 2015, he and Trish got high

together nearly every day, and she asked him to sell drugs to Tucker every time they were together.

Defendant agreed to sell drugs to Tucker only after Trish offered to, and in fact did, have sex with

him. Defendant’s subsequent lack of reluctance to deliver controlled substances in the recorded

conversations with Tucker—which all occurred after the inducement—were irrelevant to

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defendant’s predisposition to commit the offenses. See Lewis, 2020 IL App (2d) 170900, ¶¶ 38-

39 (predisposition in the entrapment context is narrower than the common understanding of

predisposition because it focuses on the period before defendant’s initial exposure to government

agents). This timeline demonstrates that the circuit court should have found this factor favored

defendant, especially in light of the State’s failure to call Trish as a witness. See Bonner, 385 Ill.

App. 3d at 146 (defendant was not predisposed where, among other factors, he was initially

unwilling to sell drugs but became willing only after the informant, who was not called to testify,

initiated a sexual relationship with him).

¶ 45   The other factors, however, all weigh against defendant. Defendant’s familiarity with

drugs is apparent, as is his extensive history of drug use. On appeal, defendant concedes his

familiarity with drugs and that he is addicted to them. He argues that the basis of his drug

knowledge is his approximate 25-year use of drugs, such as heroin, cocaine, and cannabis, rather

than a history of selling drugs. He notes that the defendant in Bonner was “an admitted addict,”

similar to the instant case, yet we still found the defendant in Bonner to not be predisposed. Here,

while it is true that defendant testified to his long history of drug use, the recordings of the various

drug transactions demonstrate that defendant was active in the narcotics trade for some time prior

to meeting the informant. For example, in the May 25, 2015, recording, defendant lamented to

Tucker that he intended to deliver six bags of heroin, but that the “girl” took two of them.

Defendant stated that he did not “like that shit because I pay [her] for bringing me customers

though. Don’t take out of our customer’s shit.” Defendant complained to Tucker that “that’s what

I’m used to dealing with.” Defendant also stated that he “gave her three fucking bags just for

brining [Tucker] to me.” Defendant told Tucker that he “was going to serve the bitch next door,”

meaning deliver drugs, but that Trish told him to never “serve that bitch again.” Defendant’s own

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words, including the methods in which he acquires new “customers,” what he was “used to dealing

with,” and that he was told to never serve Trish’s neighbor again, readily demonstrate that he was

previously engaged in a course of conduct involving similar offenses. Defendant also had

knowledge of methods to evade police detection, in that he concealed the baggie containing heroin

in his mouth before delivering it to Tucker on May 25, changed his phone number every two

months, and boasted that the police “will never catch me.”

¶ 46   Defendant likewise showed willingness to profit from the offenses. Upon his questioning

at the police station, defendant stated that he obtains heroin for people who are sick, and, in the

process, he makes “a little money” on the side, which he used to help support his own heroin habit.

In contrast, in Bonner, there was no evidence that the defendant profited from any transactions

other than keeping for himself some of the cocaine that he was supposed to give to the undercover

officer. Bonner, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 147.

¶ 47   Defendant also accommodated the needs of Detective Tucker, who was posing as a drug

user, repeatedly throughout the charged drug transactions. On the evening of May 22, 2015, after

defendant handed Tucker a bag of heroin, defendant stated “[i]t’s raw. It’s always raw with me,”

which Tucker testified meant that the heroin was pure. As found by the circuit court, defendant

complimented his product while denigrating the product of others, in that he told Tucker that he

was “the only mother fucker out here with raw” and that “everybody else’s shit is all shooken up.”

Defendant’s statements are reasonably interpreted to mean that he was telling Tucker to only

purchase drugs from him because he had superior product.

¶ 48   Defendant also accommodated Tucker’s needs by initiating contact with him three days

later, on May 25, to inquire whether he needed more heroin. Defendant confirmed that he had

$100 worth of heroin for sale, and he also offered to sell Tucker “hard” for $50 per gram, which

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Tucker testified meant crack cocaine, as well as “soft,” meaning cocaine that is snorted. When

Tucker commented that he should have brought more money and that defendant “had everything,”

defendant told Tucker that “all you gotta do is call me” and that he would “have it ready when you

get here.” He also told Tucker that he “never sleep[s]” and that Tucker could “come whenever the

fuck you want.” These comments also support the circuit court’s finding that defendant had ready

access to a supply of drugs, because defendant stated that he was able to accommodate a drug sale

“whenever” Tucker needed, including during the overnight hours, because defendant “never

sleep[s].” Defendant’s access to a ready supply of drugs was confirmed by the fact that he was

able to supply Tucker with drugs on at least three occasions within a six-day period. He never told

Tucker that he was unable to deliver, and he never stated that he needed to check with a supplier

to see if the drugs Tucker wanted were available. During the May 25 transaction, Tucker stated

that he had “a hundo,” and defendant replied, without hesitation, “ok, I got you.” The only time

defendant stated that he did not possess a particular kind of drug for sale was when Tucker asked

if he had ecstasy. Defendant responded, “I don’t got pills, but my guy got them.” Importantly,

defendant did not tell Tucker that he would acquire the pills from his supplier to deliver to Tucker,

but he instead stated that he could “have ‘em drop ‘em off to you,” which undercuts his argument

that he was “just a middleman” tasked with couriering drugs and money between the buyer and

seller. Additionally, on May 27, Tucker asked defendant, “How much hard for $200?” and

defendant quickly replied, “I’ll give you 4 gram.” In contrast, in Bonner, the defendant had to

“check on” whether he could obtain the drugs the undercover officer requested before nearly every

transaction. Id. at 142-143.

¶ 49   Defendant argues that the May 27 transaction showed that delivering drugs to Tucker was

not defendant’s top priority because he was not at the meeting spot when Tucker arrived, he failed

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to “cook up” the cocaine prior to their meeting, and he forgot that Tucker had requested four grams

of cocaine instead of two. He compares these circumstances to Bonner, where we stated that the

defendant showed “indifference [to the undercover officer’s] business,” and a “lack of discipline

and devotion to the trade.” Id. at 146-47. Defendant asserts that these circumstances “arguably

show[] that [defendant] did not prioritize the drug sale.” We view defendant’s argument in this

regard as a request to reweigh the evidence, which we decline to do. In addressing the question of

the sufficiency of the evidence, it is not our role to reweigh the evidence. People v. Hendricks,

325 Ill. App. 3d 1097, 1110 (2001). Rather, the relevant question is whether, upon reviewing the

evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found the

essential elements of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Day, 279 Ill. App. 3d at 611.

That the circuit court could have weighed the evidence differently or focused on some aspects of

the transactions over others in analyzing defendant’s predisposition does not support defendant’s

argument that it ruled irrationally.

¶ 50   The fundamental aspects of the May 27 transaction demonstrated defendant’s willingness

to accommodate Tucker’s needs. When they met for the transaction, defendant handed Tucker a

small bag of cocaine. Tucker questioned whether it was actually four grams, and defendant stated

that he had forgotten that he wanted four grams and had given him just two grams by mistake.

Tucker asked for $100 back, and defendant asked him if he wanted his money back or whether he

wanted the other two grams. When Tucker inquired whether defendant actually had to two

additional grams to sell him, defendant answered in the affirmative, told Tucker to hold the money

and to wait there because he would return with the additional two grams. As found by the circuit

court, defendant was willing to, and in fact did, make the amount right when Tucker complained

that the delivery was light. Defendant was willing to remedy the problem, unlike the defendant in

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Bonner, where he delivered a $100 bag of cocaine to the undercover officer even though he

requested two $50 bags, and he told the officer to separate the bags himself. Id. at 142, 147.

¶ 51   Defendant testified that he never weighed or packaged the drugs that he sold to Tucker and

that, when he went back to “the crib” to get the additional two grams for the May 27 transaction,

it was his dealer who added more cocaine to the bag. Even if the circuit court found defendant’s

testimony credible in this regard, defendant unequivocally offered to “go and cook this [powder

cocaine] up” for Tucker, which demonstrated that defendant was ready and willing to prepare the

drugs for sale. Defendant would have done so had Tucker not told him that he would “take it soft”

because he was in a rush. As noted, defendant also stated that “[i]t’s raw. It’s always raw with

me,” which demonstrates that defendant took pride in ensuring that the drugs he sold were of

superior quality. Defendant was also previously convicted of the same offense, albeit committed

when he was 17 years old, and defendant possessed controlled substances at the time of his arrest,

which shows that he had engaged in a course of conduct involving similar offenses and that his

subsequent activities likewise involved controlled substances. On balance, these factors weigh

heavily against defendant, and we decline to disturb defendant’s conviction in light of the

overwhelming evidence of his predisposition to commit the offenses.

¶ 52                                 B. Class X Sentencing

¶ 53   Defendant next argues that the circuit court erred in sentencing him as a Class X offender

for the Class 1 felony of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance pursuant to the recidivism

provision in section 5-4.5-95(b) of the Unified Code (730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-95(b) (West 2016)). He

acknowledges that he failed to preserve this issue for appeal but argues that we should review the

issue for plain error. A reviewing court may review an unpreserved error in two circumstances:

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       “(1) where a clear or obvious error occurred and the evidence is so closely balanced that

       the error alone threatened to tip the scales of justice against the defendant, regardless of the

       seriousness of the error and (2) where a clear or obvious error occurred and that error is so

       serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial and challenged the integrity of

       the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence.” People v. Stewart, 2022

       IL 126116, ¶ 11 (quoting People v. Belknap, 2014 IL 117094, ¶ 48).

We agree with defendant that we may reach the propriety of his Class X sentence, notwithstanding

his failure to preserve the claim, under the second prong of the plain-error doctrine. Stewart, 2022

IL 126116, ¶ 12 (the imposition of an unauthorized sentence affects a defendant’s substantial rights

and is reviewable as second-prong plain error). We now turn to the merits.

¶ 54   When defendant committed the offenses, section 5-4.5-95(b) of the Unified Code provided:

               “When a defendant, over the age of 21 years, is convicted of a Class 1 or Class 2

       felony, after having twice been convicted in any state or federal court of an offense that

       contains the same elements as an offense now (the date the Class 1 or Class 2 felony was

       committed) classified in Illinois as a Class 2 or greater Class felony and those charges are

       separately brought and tried and arise out of different series of acts, that defendant shall be

       sentenced as a Class X offender. This subsection does not apply unless:

               (1)     The first felony was committed after February 1, 1978 (the effective date of

       Public Act 80-1099);

               (2)     The second felony was committed after conviction on the first; and

               (3)     The third felony was committed after conviction on the second.” Id.

¶ 55   Defendant argues that his Class 1 felony conviction in 1999 for unlawful delivery of a

controlled substance did not qualify as a prior conviction for purposes of section 5-4.5-95(b) of

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the Unified Code because he committed that offense when he was 17 years old. Pointing to

amendments in the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (Juvenile Court Act) (705 ILCS 405/1-1 et seq

(West 2016)), he maintains that, if he had committed that offense as a 17-year-old in May 2015

(the date of the instant offenses), the case would have proceeded through the juvenile court and

resulted in a juvenile adjudication rather than a criminal conviction. See People v. Williams, 2021

IL App (1st) 191615, ¶ 25 (observing that the legislature amended the Juvenile Court Act in 2014

to provide that, with certain exceptions, no minor who was under the age of 18 at the time of the

alleged offense may be prosecuted under Illinois’ criminal laws); 705 ILCS 405/5-120 (“Except

as provided in Sections 5-125, 5-130, 5-805, and 5-810 of this Article, no minor who was under

18 years of age at the time of the alleged offense may be prosecuted under the criminal laws of

this State”). Defendant notes that, pursuant to our supreme court’s holding in People v. Taylor,

221 Ill. 2d 157, 176-78, a juvenile adjudication is not a conviction under Illinois law. He argues

that section 5-4.5-95(b) is “specifically limited *** to ‘prior convictions,’ ” and that the legislature

did not include prior juvenile adjudications as qualifying prior offenses. Thus, according to

defendant, his 1999 conviction for unlawful delivery of a controlled substance is not an offense

“now classified” (meaning May 2015, the date of the offenses) as a Class 2 or greater felony, such

that it should not have been used as a predicate offense to make him subject to Class X sentencing

under section 5-4.5-95(b). In support, defendant relies extensively on the First District’s decision

in People v. Miles, 2020 IL App (1st) 180736, ¶ 11, which directly supports his position. There,

the First District held that a prior conviction is not a qualifying offense for Class X sentencing if

those proceedings would have been resolved through juvenile delinquency proceedings if

committed on the date of the present offense.

¶ 56   Conversely, the State relies on People v. Reed, 2020 IL App (4th) 180533, ¶ 25, where the

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Fourth District expressly disagreed with Miles and held that a prior conviction of a juvenile in

adult court is a qualifying offense for purposes of Class X sentencing. The State urges us to adopt

the reasoning utilized in Reed, namely that: (1) juvenile courts do not have exclusive jurisdiction

over juveniles, (2) section 5-4.5-95(b) did not suggest that criminal convictions imposed on minors

should be considered juvenile adjudications, and (3) the Miles court’s interpretation would require

courts to examine the elements of the prior offense (as required in section 5-4.5-95(b)), as well as

“the defendant’s age when he committed the earlier offense, regardless of whether the defendant’s

age was an element of the offense.” Reed, 2020 IL App (4th) 180533, ¶¶ 24-27.

¶ 57   Based on this split of authority, on our own motion, we entered an order on March 10,

2022, holding the instant appeal in abeyance pending the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in

People v. Stewart, 2020 IL App (1st) 180014-U, which we anticipated would resolve the conflict.

The supreme court entered its decision in People v. Stewart, 2022 IL 126116, on October 20, 2022,

and it directly supports defendant’s position.

¶ 58   In Stewart, the supreme court framed the issue as “whether the legislature intended a prior

felony conviction to be a qualifying offense for Class X sentencing if the same offense would have

resulted in a juvenile adjudication had it been committed on the date of the present offense.” Id.

¶ 16. The court answered this question in the negative. It explained that “[l]legislation enacted

after the appellate court rendered its conflicting decisions in Miles and Reed clarified that the

General Assembly did not intend for convictions of juveniles in adult court to be considered

qualifying offenses for Class X sentencing.” Id. ¶ 18. In support, the court relied on the General

Assembly’s recent amendment of section 5-4.5-95(b) of the Unified Code by virtue of Public Act

101-652 (eff. July 1, 2021). Pertinently, the amendment added subpart (4) to section 5-4.5-95(b),

which provides that the first qualifying offense for Class X sentencing must have been “committed

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when the person was 21 years of age or older.” Id. ¶ 19 (citing Pub. Act 101-652 (eff. July 1,

2021)). Based on the split of authority between the First and Fourth Districts, coupled with the

“silence in the previous version of the statute on this issue,” the Stewart court further determined

that the amendment was intended to clarify the statute’s original meaning, rather than effect a

substantive change in the law. Stewart, 2022 IL 126116, ¶¶ 20-22.

¶ 59      In this case, the circuit court sentenced defendant as a Class X offender under section 5-

4.5-95(b) of the Unified Code based on his two prior felony convictions—one of which was his

Class 1 felony conviction in 1999 for delivery of a controlled substance. The presentence

investigation report confirms that defendant committed that offense when he was a 17-year-old

juvenile. Had he committed that offense in Illinois under the laws in effect in May 2015 (the date

of the instant offense), it would have resulted in a juvenile adjudication rather than a Class 1 felony

conviction, such that it is not “an offense now *** classified in Illinois as a Class 2 or greater”

felony.     Pursuant to Stewart (which effectively forecloses the State’s reliance on Reed),

defendant’s 1999 conviction is not a qualifying offense for purposes of Class X sentencing—even

under the previous version of section 5-4.5-95(b), and the court therefore erred in sentencing

defendant as a Class X offender. We vacate defendant’s Class X sentence and remand for

resentencing as a Class 1 offender.

¶ 60                                     III. CONCLUSION

¶ 61      For the above stated reasons, we affirm defendant’s convictions but vacate his sentence

and remand the cause to the circuit court for resentencing.

¶ 62      Affirmed in part and vacated in part.

¶ 63      Cause remanded.

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