Court Opinion

ID: 6342010
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-18 20:02:59.291374+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:12:32.352716
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (3d) 190283

                                Opinion filed May 18, 2022
     _____________________________________________________________________________

                                                      IN THE

                                     APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                               THIRD DISTRICT

                                                       2022

      THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF            )    Appeal from the Circuit Court
      ILLINOIS,                             )    of the 10th Judicial Circuit,
                                            )    Peoria County, Illinois.
                                            )
            Plaintiff-Appellee,             )
                                            )    Appeal No. 3-19-0283
            v.                              )    Circuit No. 16-CF-373
                                            )
                                            )
      MITCHELL DEANDRE BUSH,                )    The Honorable
                                            )    John P. Vespa,
            Defendant-Appellant.            )    Judge, presiding.
     ____________________________________________________________________________

           JUSTICE DAUGHERITY delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
           Presiding Justice O’Brien and Justice Hauptman concurred in the judgment and opinion.
     _____________________________________________________________________________

                                                    OPINION

¶1           After a bifurcated jury trial, defendant, Mitchell Deandre Bush, was found guilty of

     multiple felony offenses, including first degree felony murder (felony murder) (720 ILCS 5/9-

     1(a)(3) (West 2016)), aggravated battery with a firearm (id. § 12-3.05(e)(1)), and unlawful

     possession of a weapon by a felon (id. § 24-1.1(a)). 1 Defendant was sentenced to consecutive

     prison terms of 65 years for felony murder and 15 years for aggravated battery with a firearm

             1
              Pursuant to defendant’s request, defendant’s jury trial was bifurcated as to defendant’s unlawful
     possession of a weapon by a felon charge.
     and to a concurrent prison term of 7 years for unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon. No

     sentences were imposed on the remaining findings of guilty. Defendant appeals, arguing that

     (1) he was not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of felony murder; (2) under the facts of

     the instant case, mob action could not properly serve as the underlying felony for the felony

     murder conviction; (3) the jury verdicts were legally inconsistent; (4) he was deprived of a fair

     trial due to cumulative error; and (5) his sentences for felony murder and aggravated battery with

     a firearm were excessive. We agree with a portion of defendant’s third argument (inconsistent

     verdicts). We, therefore, affirm defendant’s convictions and sentences of felony murder and

     unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon, reverse defendant’s conviction of aggravated battery

     with a firearm, vacate the jury’s finding of guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm, and remand

     the case for a new trial on defendant’s aggravated battery with a firearm charge.

¶2                                          I. BACKGROUND

¶3          On May 17, 2016, defendant and his cousin, Henry Mayfield (Mayfield), were involved

     with several other people in a neighborhood brawl on Virden Street in Peoria, Illinois. During the

     brawl, defendant shot and killed Dwayne Jones and shot and injured Lathaniel Gulley (Gulley).

     Portions of the brawl and of the shooting were captured on two different cell phone videos. The

     following month, defendant and Mayfield were charged in a superseding indictment with one

     count of first degree murder (strong probability murder), one count of felony murder, one count

     of aggravated battery with a firearm, and two counts of mob action, arising out of the

     neighborhood brawl. In addition to the joint charges, defendant was also charged individually

     with one count of first degree murder (strong probability murder) and one count of unlawful

     possession of a weapon by a felon.

                                                      2
¶4            In November 2018, during pretrial proceedings, defendant filed a motion in limine

     seeking to admit into evidence at trial as a prior inconsistent statement a rap video that was made

     by two of the State’s witnesses, Gabriel (Gabe) Gulley and Gulley. During the video, Gabe

     described what had happened when the shooting occurred. Prior to doing so, Gabe stated on the

     video that what he was going to say was true. At a hearing on the motion held that same day, the

     State objected to defendant’s request, arguing that the video was a work of art and was not

     necessarily a prior statement. After considering the arguments of the attorneys and watching the

     video, the trial court denied defendant’s motion in limine.

¶5            In March 2019, a jury trial was held in defendant’s case. 2 The trial took five days to

     complete. During the evidence phase of the trial, several witnesses were called to testify. In

     addition, numerous exhibits were admitted into evidence, including the two cell phones videos

     that were filmed during the shooting; screenshot photographs from the two videos; photographs

     of the home where the shooting took place showing bullet strikes to the front of, and inside, the

     home; certain items of physical evidence (spent shell casings, a bullet, and a mop handle) that

     were recovered from the scene of the shooting by the police; photographs showing where those

     items of physical evidence were recovered; and the recorded police interview of defendant.

¶6            Many of the facts surrounding the shooting were either not in dispute or were captured on

     the cell phone videos. As to those facts, the evidence presented as trial established the following.

     On May 17, 2016 (the day of the shooting), an argument arose between members of Minnie

     Roberson’s family and members of Laterra Price’s family over an expensive belt that Price’s

     son, D.J., had sold to Roberson’s son, M.F., but then Price wanted returned. The belt belonged to

     Price.

              2
               Defendant’s and Mayfield’s cases were severed prior to trial.
                                                          3
¶7          Roberson lived with her children at the Virden Street home where the shooting took

     place, and Price lived a few minutes away in the same neighborhood. Roberson’s home was a

     single story, rectangular-shaped home with a front yard that was enclosed by a waist-high, chain-

     link fence that separated the front yard from the sidewalk and the street. When viewed from the

     street, the front yard sloped up from the street and sidewalk to the front of the home, the front

     door was located in about the center of the home, a small set of concrete steps led up to the front

     door, and a concrete driveway was located on the right side of the front yard. At the driveway,

     the fence recessed further into the front yard to where an opening or gate was located.

¶8          The argument over the belt escalated over the course of the day with members of Price’s

     family returning to Roberson’s home several times, a physical confrontation ensuing, and the

     police being called. During the physical confrontation, Roberson’s boyfriend, Gulley, and/or

     other members of Roberson’s family struck Tresean Dillard and Jayurion Mayfield (Jayurion),

     who were the teenaged-cousins of Price. Dillard was the son of Sharonda Brown, and Jayurion

     was the son of Mayfield and Kimberly Williams (Williams). When the police arrived after the

     first physical confrontation, they found Price, Dillard, and Jayurion standing next to Price’s car

     in the street in front of Roberson’s home, arguing with Roberson, who was standing in her front

     yard. Brown, Dillard’s mother, arrived shortly thereafter. After repeated requests by the police,

     Price and the two teenagers (Dillard and Jayurion) left the premises and went home. Brown also

     left the premises. The police talked to Price shortly thereafter, and she assured the police that she

     would not return to Roberson’s home.

¶9          While the first physical confrontation was occurring, Jayurion’s father, Mayfield, was at

     dialysis. Mayfield was on dialysis for kidney failure and had a catheter in his chest that was

     connected to his heart and his arm. Mayfield planned to spend the rest of the day after dialysis

                                                       4
       with defendant, who was Mayfield’s cousin. Jayurion’s mother, Williams, picked up Mayfield

       from dialysis and then picked up defendant. Unbeknownst to Williams and Mayfield, defendant

       was carrying a handgun that day. According to defendant, he had found the gun in his family’s

       garage and was hoping to talk to Mayfield about possibly selling the gun to make some money.

       While Williams was driving, she received a phone call from Price, who was Williams’s niece.

       Williams put the call on speaker phone. Defendant was in Williams’s car when that phone call

       took place. During the call, Price told Williams about the first physical confrontation and stated

       that Jayurion had been “jumped” by the people at Roberson’s house.

¶ 10          Williams went to Price’s home and picked up Jayurion. Once inside the vehicle, Jayurion

       told Williams and Mayfield what had happened. Defendant was still in the vehicle when that

       conversation took place. Williams drove with Mayfield, Jayurion, and defendant in her vehicle to

       Roberson’s home and parked her vehicle on the side of the street. As Williams was arriving at

       the home, two or three other cars pulled up and parked in the street. Several people got out of

       those cars, including Price, Dillard, and Brown. In total, there were about 8 to 20 people on the

       street or sidewalk in front of Roberson’s home.

¶ 11          Shortly before the cars arrived at Roberson’s home, Roberson had left with Gulley to

       pick up Gulley’s son from school. While they were out, Roberson received a phone call from her

       children about a commotion at the house and became concerned. Gulley also received a call from

       a neighbor, who told Gulley that people were gathering in front of the house. Roberson and

       Gulley dropped Gulley’s son off at Gulley’s mother’s house and picked up Gulley’s younger

       brother, Gabe, and Gulley’s friend, Jones, for additional support or protection.

¶ 12          After Roberson and Gulley returned to the home and the cars pulled up in the street, the

       members of Roberson’s family and those with them went outside to see what was going on. Two

                                                         5
       groups formed—one behind the fence in Roberson’s front yard (Roberson’s group) and the other

       on the opposite side of the fence in the street or on the sidewalk (Price’s group). Tensions

       quickly escalated as various members of the two groups shouted back and forth at each other.

       Mayfield grabbed a mop handle from Brown and went toward the gate to strike at Gulley and

       Jones. As Mayfield swung, Jones grabbed the mop handle, and he and Mayfield struggled over

       it. Defendant moved forward and fired several shots toward Roberson’s group and home. One of

       the shots struck Jones in the abdomen; another struck Gulley in the arm. Roberson’s group fled

       into the home, and Price’s group fled the area. Jones died shortly thereafter.

¶ 13           The main issues at defendant’s jury trial were whether Roberson’s or Price’s group was

       the aggressor in the brawl, whether defendant had fired the shots to protect himself and/or

       Mayfield, and whether it was legally proper for defendant to do so. On those issues, the

       underlying facts were in dispute. The State presented witness testimony to try to suggest that

       Price’s group was the aggressor and that defendant fired the gun without reason or justification.

       The testimony of those witnesses in that regard can be summarized as follows. 3

¶ 14           Roberson testified that during the earlier incident at her house that day, a confrontation

       arose between Dillard, Jayurion, and Price on one side and Roberson, Gulley, Roberson’s

       daughter, and Roberson’s daughter’s boyfriend on the other side. According to Roberson, during

       that earlier incident, Jayurion and the other boy (Dillard) started to threaten Roberson and her

       family on Roberson’s property. Roberson did not recall who took the first swing and did not see

       if any physical contact was made between anybody at that point because she was trying to

       separate people. The most contact was made between Roberson’s daughter fighting with

               3
               Gulley’s brother, Gabe, also testified for the State but generally claimed not to remember
       anything, other than that Gulley and Jones had been shot.
                                                           6
       Mayfield’s son, Jayurion. When the police came to Roberson’s home shortly thereafter, Dillard,

       Jayurion, and Price were standing outside of Price’s car in the street in front of Roberson’s home

       in an uproar. The police officer kept instructing the three of them to get back into the car and

       leave the premises. Instead of doing so, Price, Dillard, and Jayurion kept jumping in and out of

       the car, threatening and saying things outside of the vehicle, and ignoring the officer’s

       commands.

¶ 15          As the argument continued to escalate during the afternoon, Dillard’s mother, Brown,

       pulled up to Roberson’s house twice and tried to lure Roberson’s family to the street corner,

       saying to Roberson’s family, “You’re not going to call the police, right?” Roberson and her

       family did not go down to the street corner to meet with Brown. Roberson did not know Brown

       and thought that Brown was trying to lure her to the corner to be killed. An altercation had

       already started, and Roberson felt threatened. After Brown pulled up the second time, two other

       cars pulled up with at least 20 other people. Roberson was standing on the front porch of her

       home recording on her cell phone in an obvious manner what Brown and the other people were

       saying and doing. Roberson later gave her phone to the Peoria Police Department so that they

       could extract the video.

¶ 16          According to Roberson, the people that were getting out of the cars and were in the street

       had sticks, brooms, or other items in their hands and were screaming obscenities. Gulley;

       Gulley’s brother, Gabe; Jones; Jones’s brother; and all of Roberson’s children were in the

       driveway or front yard while Roberson was over by the front porch. Roberson did not see

       anyone, including her daughters, with knives, and no one in Roberson’s yard had any weapons.

       The people from the street were coming up into the gate area of Roberson’s home while

       Roberson was still recording. Roberson could see that one of the men in the street had a gun on

                                                        7
       his hip. When Roberson saw the gun, she screamed to Gulley that the man had a gun. Roberson

       did not see anything get physical during the second confrontation; she was focusing on the man

       with the gun. At one point during the second confrontation, a woman got out of one of the cars

       and said that she wanted to talk to a parent. Roberson thought that the woman wanted to talk

       peace with her. Roberson did not have a chance to talk to the woman, however, because the

       shooter opened fire almost immediately.

¶ 17          On cross-examination, Roberson acknowledged that she did not call the police as the

       second incident (the shooting) was unfolding. Roberson also wavered during her testimony on

       whether she had any type of weapon during the incident, saying that to her knowledge, she did

       not; that if she did, it was not a deadly weapon; and that if it was, she was in her home and had

       the right to defend her home. Roberson could not recall if she had stuffed something inside a

       stocking and had been waving that around.

¶ 18          Gulley testified that on the day of the shooting, earlier in the afternoon, he got into an

       altercation with Dillard at Roberson’s house. During that altercation, Dillard was threatening

       Roberson, and Price was arguing back and forth about the belt. After Price and Roberson had

       finished arguing, Jayurion and Dillard started directing their comments at Gulley. Gulley asked

       Dillard (presumably) to repeat himself, and Dillard stated that they “play[ed] with guns.” Dillard

       went to say some other stuff, and a physical confrontation ensued. Gulley did not remember if he

       hit Dillard first or if Dillard hit him; Gulley just knew that Dillard was on the ground. At about

       that same time, Roberson’s children started fighting with Jayurion. The police came to

       Roberson’s house and got the situation under control. Price, Jayurion, and Dillard left, and

       Gulley and Roberson left as well to pick up Gulley’s son from school.

                                                        8
¶ 19          While Gulley and Roberson were out picking up his son, the neighbor called Gulley and

       told him that there were several people outside of the house running their mouths. Gulley did not

       want to return to the house alone, so he stopped and picked up Jones for protection. When

       Gulley, Roberson, and Jones returned to Roberson’s home, there was a car out in front of the

       house. A woman (Brown), who was irate, was yelling for Gulley to bring his “b*** a***” to the

       corner. Gulley refused. The woman left and then came back a short time later. That was when

       everything “broke loose.”

¶ 20          When the woman returned to Roberson’s house, a couple of other cars came with her. A

       lot of other people, about 13, got out of those cars. Gulley; his brother, Gabe; and Jones were

       standing in Roberson’s driveway. Gulley had stayed in front of the house after the woman had

       left to see what was going on. Neither Gulley nor Jones had any type of gun, knife, or stick.

       Upon arriving at Roberson’s house, the people in the cars got out and were running their mouths

       and saying all types of stuff. Gulley was standing there to see if anyone was planning to run up

       the driveway. Roberson was up by the house.

¶ 21          Some of the people who had showed up to the house during that second confrontation

       were Mayfield, Jayurion’s father; Jayurion; Dillard; and defendant. Gulley had never seen

       defendant before but was not really worried about him. Gulley saw that defendant had a gun but

       did not think that defendant would use it because there were too many people present. Mayfield

       swung a broomstick and tried to hit Gulley. Jones grabbed the stick and attempted to take it away

       from Mayfield. Mayfield yelled shoot, and defendant shot. Gulley took off running. Jones got hit

       by one of the bullets first, and then Gulley got shot in the arm. Gulley did not remember how

       many times defendant had fired. Everyone on Roberson’s side, including Gulley, ran for the

                                                        9
       house. When Gulley got into the house, Jones was on the floor. Gulley knew that Jones was hurt

       but did not know that Jones was dead.

¶ 22          At the time of the shooting, Gulley was about 24 years old. Dillard and Jayurion were

       teenagers, about 17 or 18. When asked why he was fighting with someone so much younger than

       him, Gulley said that Dillard looked like he was 18 and that Dillard should not have been making

       threats and talking about coming back to the house with guns and stuff. Although Gulley took

       Dillard seriously when he said that, Gulley did not call the police. Gulley also did not call the

       police after the neighbor called him and told him about the people at Roberson’s house.

¶ 23          During cross-examination, Gulley admitted that leading up to shooting, he was ready to

       fight and wanted to fight. Gulley acknowledged that he hit Dillard when Dillard made a threat

       about shooting up Roberson’s house. Gulley did not remember what was being said between the

       two groups just prior to the shooting—there were too many people present. Gulley also

       acknowledged that he had been convicted of a recent felony for cannabis and that he had a

       conviction in 2012 for failing to register as a sex offender.

¶ 24          Roberson’s neighbor, Lee Ann Russell, testified that she lived on Virden Street directly

       across from Roberson. On the day of the shooting, when Russell came home from work shortly

       after 3 p.m., she noticed that Roberson and another woman were standing in front of Roberson’s

       house, arguing back and forth. Russell went into her own home and called the police a short time

       later when things got more intense verbally outside. The first time around, the police were there

       for about 15 minutes trying to get everyone calmed down and to get people back in their cars and

       on their way. Roberson got into her car and left as well.

¶ 25          After Roberson and the police had left, the other woman kept returning to Roberson’s

       house. The woman came back three or four times and was antagonizing Roberson’s daughters.

                                                        10
       The woman would stop in front of the house and would be yelling at the house. The woman

       would leave but would then return. The next time that the woman came back, she had another

       woman with her. The two women were mad and were yelling and were rattling Roberson’s

       garbage cans and fence.

¶ 26          About 45 minutes later, Roberson returned. The woman came by again at that time or

       shortly thereafter. The woman saw that Roberson had some other people in her car so she left

       again, and Roberson and the people with her went into the house. About 10 minutes later, the

       woman returned with two carloads of people. The groups of people that came to Roberson’s

       house were yelling and screaming at everyone inside the house. Roberson and the people in her

       house stayed inside and tried to ignore them. Some of the men who had shown up began leaning

       up against the fence. They were banging the fence and shaking it and yelling at everybody in the

       house. The men had something blue or green in their hands that looked like a pool noodle and

       were shaking it onto the fence.

¶ 27          Roberson and the people in her house came outside. Roberson was filming the entire

       incident. Roberson’s group and the group in the street (Price’s group) started to yell and scream

       at each other. The group in the street was shaking the fence and exchanging words with

       Roberson’s group. It was starting to get intense again. All of a sudden, gunshots began going off.

       Russell ducked down to her kitchen floor. She did not see who was shooting.

¶ 28          Roberson’s son, M.F., testified that he was about 12 years old on the date of the shooting.

       Earlier that day, when Price, Dillard, and Jayurion came to Roberson’s house looking for the

       belt, an argument broke out between Roberson and Price. During that argument, Dillard said a

       threat or something, and Gulley “swung on him.” Later that day, just prior to the shooting, Price

       and members of her family returned to Roberson’s home. They came to Roberson’s home in two

                                                       11
       cars and were standing in the street. There were eight or nine people in Price’s group. M.F. did

       not see any member of either group (Roberson’s group or Price’s group) with any weapons. The

       two groups were arguing back and forth, until one of the male members of Price’s group tried to

       swing a broomstick at the crowd (presumably, at Roberson’s group) and missed. Five or six

       seconds later, M.F. heard gunshots, and he and most of the other people in the front yard ran into

       the house. M.F. did not know who had swung the broomstick or who had fired the shots.

¶ 29          Roberson’s other son, C.D., testified that he was about nine years old on the date of the

       shooting. When the shooting occurred, C.D. was standing on the outside stairs in front of the

       house. He did not have a gun or a knife, did not see anyone in the front yard with a gun or a

       knife, and did not see Roberson swinging any type of stick or anything. Just prior to the shooting,

       both sides were angry. There was a lot of yelling, and both sides were arguing and making

       threats back and forth. C.D. did not see anyone on his side of the fence with a weapon and did

       not remember whether anyone in Price’s group had any weapons, like brooms or anything else.

       When the shots were fired, C.D. ran into the house. There were about seven shots in total. C.D.

       did not see the person who had fired the shots.

¶ 30          Peoria police Sergeant Keith McDaniel testified that he and Detective Clint Rezac

       interviewed defendant at the police station the day after the shooting. The interview was

       recorded on audio and video. The recording was admitted into evidence without objection and

       played for the jury. During the interview, defendant’s story changed a few times. It went from

       defendant not being the shooter to defendant picking up the gun after someone had dropped it at

       the scene to the gun being defendant’s gun from home. As the interview progressed, McDaniel

       and Rezac showed defendant still photos (screenshots) that had been taken from the cell phone

       videos that the police had obtained. The photos were admitted into evidence without objection

                                                         12
       and some of the photos were shown to the jury. According to McDaniel, defendant eventually

       admitted during the police interview that he had the gun with him in Williams’s car but

       maintained throughout the interview that he was scared when the shooting took place.

¶ 31          In opposition to the State’s theory of the case, the defense presented witness testimony at

       defendant’s jury trial to try to suggest that Roberson’s group was the aggressor and that

       defendant had fired the gun to protect himself and Mayfield. The testimony of the defense

       witnesses in that regard can be summarized as follows.

¶ 32          Jayurion testified that he was about 16 years old when the shooting occurred and that

       Dillard was about 18 or 19 years old. Price was Jayurion’s cousin and was a lot older than

       Jayurion. On the day of the shooting, right before the first physical altercation took place,

       Jayurion, Dillard, and Price were walking up to Roberson’s house (presumably, to talk to them

       about the belt) when six or seven people came out of the house and began yelling and screaming

       at them. Price was eight- or nine-months pregnant at the time so Jayurion and Dillard were

       holding Price back. The people at the house began punching and kicking Jayurion and Dillard.

       Jayurion and Dillard did not fight back because there were too many people on the other side.

       Gulley was fighting Dillard, and the rest of the people from the house were fighting Jayurion.

       Jayurion did not think that he had done anything to provoke the people in the house. The

       physical fight took place in the street because the people from the house were pushing Jayurion

       and Dillard out of the yard. Eventually, the beating stopped. The police showed up, but did not

       really say or do anything about what had happened.

¶ 33          Later that day, Jayurion returned to Roberson’s home with his mother, Williams, and his

       father, Mayfield. Defendant was also with them at that time. Williams, Mayfield, and defendant

       had picked Jayurion up at Price’s house. When Jayurion got into Williams’s car, he told

                                                        13
       Williams that they had just gotten “jumped.” Price’s house was only a minute or two away from

       Roberson’s house. Jayurion and the others went to Roberson’s house in Williams’s car.

¶ 34          When they got to Roberson’s home, Jayurion saw that the people from the house had

       gotten about 10 other people to be there with them. Some of the people from the house were in

       the driveway; others were in the street. Williams got out of the car and said that she was there to

       talk to the mom. The group from the house (Roberson’s group) got loud. They had knives, bats,

       broomsticks, cans in socks, and other items, although Jayurion did not remember who

       specifically had those weapons. There was some arguing back and forth, and Roberson’s group

       was telling Jayurion’s group (Price’s group) to fight. Some of the people from Roberson’s group

       were already out in the road. Jayurion feared for his safety at that point because some of the

       members of Roberson’s group had weapons. He also feared for his mother’s and father’s safety

       as well. Jayurion did not see his father (Mayfield) fighting with anyone. Although Roberson’s

       group was trying to attack Jayurion’s father, Jayurion’s father just sat there quietly the whole

       time and did not say anything back to Roberson’s group. Jayurion did not remember anyone

       screaming out, “shoot him!” Jayurion was paying attention to himself and did not see what

       defendant was doing. Everything happened very quickly. As the arguing was going on, Jayurion

       heard shots being fired and ran back to Price’s house.

¶ 35          Williams testified that she and Henry Mayfield were Jayurion’s parents. Williams first

       saw Mayfield that day when she picked him up from dialysis, which Mayfield was on due to

       kidney failure. Mayfield had a catheter in his chest that was connected to his heart and his arm.

       After Williams picked up Mayfield from dialysis, she also stopped and picked up defendant.

       Usually after dialysis, Mayfield and defendant would go to Williams’s house and play a game.

       Mayfield would be kind of ill and would not be able to do much, except go somewhere and sit.

                                                        14
       As they were driving, Williams’s niece, Price, called Williams and told her that Jayurion had

       been “jumped on” by multiple adults and other people. Williams was trying to get to the bottom

       of the situation so she went and picked up Jayurion at Price’s house. On the way, Williams told

       Mayfield what had happened. Williams did not know if defendant was paying attention at that

       time; it was a matter between Williams and Mayfield.

¶ 36           When Jayurion got into Williams’s car, Williams asked Jayurion what had happened.

       Jayurion told Williams that multiple adults and children “jumped on” him, Dillard (who had a

       broken leg), and Price (who was pregnant). Williams asked Jayurion where the house was

       located where the incident had occurred. She then went to Roberson’s home, which was a few

       blocks over from Price’s house, and asked if she could speak to the parent. Williams was not

       going to there to fight; she was hoping to squash the situation before it turned into what it turned

       into. Williams just wanted to resolve the situation and find out why all of those adults “jump[ed]

       on” her 16-year-old child. Williams told Mayfield where she was going but did not tell

       defendant. Mayfield did not get angry at that point and agreed with Williams’s efforts to resolve

       the situation.

¶ 37           Williams and the other people in her car went to Roberson’s home and parked on the

       street next to the curb, not in the middle of the street. Williams did not call anyone on the phone

       and did not tell anyone that she was going to Roberson’s home. At some point, other cars pulled

       up with people in them that Williams knew. Williams had no idea the other people were coming

       to Roberson’s home. According to Williams, she went to Roberson’s home with peaceful

       intentions. She did not know anyone at that house or know who was going to be at the house.

       Williams was hoping to talk to a parent.

                                                        15
¶ 38          When Williams arrived and asked to speak to a parent, the mom (Roberson) came out on

       the porch with her cell phone in her hand recording and said that she was the mom. That was

       when other cars pulled up. Williams assumed that Roberson was filming because Roberson

       stated that she had this on camera. Roberson said that loudly enough for everyone to hear.

       Roberson also stated to Williams and the others that if they wanted the belt, to come take it.

       Williams was trying to be respectful of Roberson’s home and to have an adult-type chat with

       Roberson about their children fighting earlier. Williams knew some of the people in the cars that

       had pulled up, like her daughter, Jerricca Williams (Jerricca); Dillard; and Dillard’s mother,

       Brown. Williams assumed that Brown and Dillard came to Roberson’s home because the people

       from the house had “jumped on” Dillard as well.

¶ 39          Shortly after Williams got out of the car, the people on the house side of the fence

       (Roberson’s group) became very hostile. Williams stood there in disbelief, surprised by the

       reaction of Roberson’s group. Some of the people in Roberson’s group had weapons—knives,

       sticks, and something in socks. They were all in a guarded position, ready to fight. The people

       with the weapons were standing along the driveway, like a front line. Williams did not remember

       what was said. There was no indication that the people in Roberson’s group wanted to speak

       peacefully with anyone. Williams did not have any broomsticks or metal poles in her car when

       she arrived at Roberson’s home. Also, to her knowledge, she did not have a gun in her car.

       Williams did not bring defendant with her to Roberson’s home for protection. When Williams

       talked to the detectives after the shooting, she only knew that defendant had fired the gun from

       what the detectives had told her. Williams did not bring anyone to the scene to shoot anybody.

       That was not her intention.

                                                       16
¶ 40            As the incident was unfolding, there was a lot of arguing back and forth between the two

       groups. Then, gunshots went off. Williams ran away. She did not go back to her car and did not

       stick around to see what had happened. According to Williams, shortly before the shooting

       occurred, one of the guys in Roberson’s group, she thought it was the guy who had been killed,

       kept running up toward Mayfield in an aggressive manner. Williams did not remember if that

       person was saying anything. As far as Williams knew, Mayfield went to Roberson’s home with

       peaceful intentions. Mayfield took some aggressive actions because someone was trying to

       approach him and hurt him. Williams did not see who fired the gun. Everything happened so

       fast.

¶ 41            Brown testified that she was the mother of Dillard. During the afternoon of the shooting,

       Price called Brown and told her that Dillard had “got[ten] jumped” very badly. Dillard’s leg was

       already broken at the time, and he was on crutches. When Price called Brown, Price was yelling

       and screaming on the phone, so Brown went to that location. Although Brown lived just around

       the corner from Roberson’s home, she did not know Roberson and had never been to Roberson’s

       house.

¶ 42            When Brown got to the residence (shortly after the first physical confrontation), the

       police were already there. Brown spoke to the police officer but could not remember his name.

       The officer told Brown not to worry about the people in the home because they were getting

       kicked off the block anyway, that the people at the home always started trouble, and that the

       people in the home would be off the block really soon.

¶ 43            As Brown was on her way home, she got a call from Dillard telling her that the people at

       the house were sending him threatening messages and were telling him to come back to the

       residence. Brown was in her car at the time. Brown went back to Roberson’s home to see if the

                                                        17
       mother was there, but she was not. Brown did not call the police at that time because the police

       did not do anything the first time around.

¶ 44          Brown had been told that it was adults that had “jumped” the kids. Brown thought that

       the mom would have wanted to talk because the whole thing was a big misunderstanding. Dillard

       was not feeling safe, so Brown just wanted to go talk to the mom herself. Brown was hoping for

       a peaceful resolution. The mom was not there when Brown went to the home the first time, so

       Brown left and came back later. Other people were there, just not the mom. Brown did not make

       any threats to the people at the house; she just asked if the mom was there. The people at the

       house told Brown that the mom was not home but that she would be back later. According to

       Brown, the kids at the house threatened her at that time and told her that the mom was going to

       get people when the mom got back. Brown did not get out of the car; she just told the kids at the

       house to let her know when their mom returned home. The threat made Brown afraid at first, but

       she did not call the police. She was ready to talk to the mom and was expecting a different

       response from the mom. Brown did not think the mom was a threat at that time.

¶ 45          Brown went back to, or by, Roberson’s home a couple of times, but the mom was not

       home yet. Brown did not threaten the people at Roberson’s home and did not ask them to come

       down to the street corner and fight. Brown was never able to speak to the mom one-on-one. The

       last time Brown went to Roberson’s home was the incident when the shooting occurred. Brown

       was still hoping to talk to the mom at that time (before the shooting occurred), but there was

       screaming, yelling, and commotion. When Brown stopped at Roberson’s home the last time,

       Roberson was there, as was Gulley, and some other people whose names Brown did not know.

¶ 46          Brown knew Williams because Williams was her cousin. Brown did not remember

       whether Williams was there at that time but did remember that Williams was there at some point

                                                       18
       that day. Brown also did not remember if anyone was with her in her car the last time she went to

       Roberson’s home, other than Dillard. Brown did not know defendant and did not remember if

       defendant was there that day since everything happened so fast. Brown went back the last time

       because she still wanted to talk to the mom. Brown did not call anyone and did not tell anyone to

       meet her at Roberson’s home. Brown did not remember how many cars were parked in the street

       but did remember that there were other cars parked there besides hers. Dillard was in the car with

       Brown and had shown her the messages that the girl at Roberson’s home had sent him.

¶ 47          When Brown got to Roberson’s home the last time, there was a lot of screaming, yelling,

       and back and forth. The people (presumably, Roberson’s group) had knives and stuff that they

       were throwing. They also had socks with canned goods inside of them. One person had his shirt

       off and was beating his chest. It was just a lot of commotion. People were making verbal threats

       to Brown. Brown did not hear the people on her side of the fence (Price’s group) making threats.

       She heard her cousin, Williams, saying that she just wanted to talk to the mom. Brown did not

       get in her car and go away because she wanted to settle it. She felt that the police did not do

       anything at first, and she did not want the problem. Brown was scared for her safety when

       Roberson’s group started coming toward them. That was when Brown grabbed a stick (mop

       handle) from the garbage. It was all a blur for Brown after that point. Brown thought it was

       Roberson’s group that had fired the shots.

¶ 48          Brown knew that Mayfield was her cousin’s father and saw Mayfield at Roberson’s

       residence. Brown did not remember giving Mayfield the stick. Everything happened so fast.

       Everyone was screaming and yelling, and people were arguing. As the people from Roberson’s

       group were coming toward Price’s group, Brown heard shots being fired, and everyone took off.

       Brown did not remember whether she got in her car or just ran away.

                                                        19
¶ 49          During her testimony, Brown denied that she had tried to get the people from Roberson’s

       house to come down to the street corner and fight and said why would she do that when there

       were so many people on the other side. When Brown went to Roberson’s home the first time,

       some of the grown men there were threatening Brown, telling her to come back and that they had

       something for her. Brown told one of the kids at Roberson’s home to call her when their mom

       got back because she wanted to talk to the mom.

¶ 50          On cross-examination, Brown indicated that she did not call the police because she

       thought the mom was civilized to talk. Brown stated that when she told the mom to come to the

       corner and talk, the mom said, “f*** you.” Brown and the others stayed there arguing. During

       her testimony, Brown was shown a photograph in court and acknowledged that she was the

       person in the photograph holding the stick. Brown admitted that she had parked her vehicle in

       the middle of the street and said that she had done so because she had seen a lot of people there.

       When Brown heard that Dillard had been in a fight, she was more scared than angry.

¶ 51          Brown denied that she brought any sticks, poles, or weapons of any kind to the residence.

       Brown also denied that she knew that either of the other two cars were going to Roberson’s

       home. Brown was surprised to see all of those people coming to that location and to see all of the

       people in the house, especially the grown men. Brown denied that she tried to initiate a fight or

       physical confrontation with anyone at any time.

¶ 52          Jerricca testified that she was the daughter of Williams and Henry Mayfield. Shortly

       before the shooting occurred, Jerricca went to Roberson’s home because she had been told by her

       cousin, Price, that her little brother, Jayurion, had gotten “jumped on.” Jerricca rode to

       Roberson’s home in Brown’s car. Brown was another one of Jerricca’s cousins. Jerricca did not

       remember talking to her mom or dad about Jayurion getting “jumped”; she was at Price’s house.

                                                        20
       She also did not talk to defendant that day. Jerricca was upset when she heard that Jayurion had

       gotten “jumped” and wanted to see why the people at the house had “jumped” Jayurion. She was

       not going to the residence to get revenge for her brother. Jerricca knew Roberson’s daughters and

       had said hello to them at times from around the neighborhood. One of Roberson’s daughters had

       previously had a crush on Jayurion so Jerricca thought things would be peaceful when she went

       there. Jerricca’s mom, Williams, was being the peacemaker. Jerricca thought that they could

       settle the issue peacefully.

¶ 53           When Jerricca got to the altercation (the second physical confrontation) at Roberson’s

       home, Jayurion and a bunch of other people were already there, and the whole neighborhood was

       outside. There were several people in Roberson’s front yard, and a lot of yelling and screaming

       were taking place. Jerricca started yelling and screaming as well because other people were

       yelling and screaming at her. One of Roberson’s daughters was very aggressive toward Jerricca.

       Two of the people in Roberson’s group had knives, including one of Roberson’s daughters.

       Jerricca had a little plastic broomstick but did not remember where she had gotten it from. She

       had the stick, not because she was getting ready to attack the other people, but because the other

       people had knives. Jerricca threw the stick away after it bent when she hit the fence with it.

       Jerricca saw that her father, Mayfield, was there, arguing with Gulley. She did not see her father

       with a pole or swinging a pole, but her attention at that time was on the girl with the knife.

¶ 54           It was a very chaotic scene. There was a lady on the porch, a guy ripping his own shirt

       off, and people being aggressive. Jerricca interpreted what the people in Roberson’s group were

       doing as an indication that they wanted to fight. She heard someone yell out, “We got guns too,”

       and threats being made. After hearing some more yelling, Jerricca heard shots being fired. She

       could not tell who was doing the shooting. Jerricca ducked and ran, and everyone scattered.

                                                        21
¶ 55          On cross-examination, after being questioned about what she had told the police

       following the shooting, Jerricca remembered that she had gone to the Virden Street address

       earlier that day as well and that a young girl had opened the window and had yelled to her that

       her mother was not home. The young girl said her mother would be back later so Jerricca left.

       Jerricca acknowledged on the witness stand that she was being aggressive when she hit

       Roberson’s fence with a pole.

¶ 56          Dillard’s testimony indicated that he was about 18 years old at the time of the shooting.

       According to Dillard, he did not get into a fight with Gulley on that day—Gulley just punched

       him. They were breaking up two females who were fighting, Price and some other woman. Price

       was Dillard’s cousin. The fight was about a belt. At that time, it was Dillard, Jayurion, and Price.

       Jayurion had said that he had gotten “jumped,” but Dillard did not see that happen. The first

       physical confrontation was a big fight with a lot of people fighting each other. Dillard did not

       remember how that fight stopped.

¶ 57          Brown was Dillard’s mother. Later in the day, Dillard went back to Roberson’s home

       with his mom, but he stayed in the car and let her talk it out with the adults. Dillard was on

       crutches at the time and was not really paying attention when the shooting occurred. He was still

       in the car and was probably on his cell phone. Dillard could hear people arguing and a lot of

       yelling but could not really hear what was being said. According to Dillard, he did not remember

       much from that day and had tried to forget it. Dillard did not know defendant and had never seen

       defendant before.

¶ 58          The 36-year-old defendant testified that on the day of the shooting, Williams and

       Mayfield picked him up at his home after Mayfield’s dialysis. Defendant was Mayfield’s cousin.

       Defendant’s plans for the evening were to smoke some weed, relax, and watch a basketball game

                                                        22
       on television with Mayfield. Defendant usually spent Tuesday and Thursday evenings with

       Mayfield after Mayfield’s dialysis session had finished for the day. Mayfield was a diabetic with

       kidney failure and had been on dialysis for about a month.

¶ 59          Defendant believed that Mayfield was in poor medical condition. Mayfield spoke to

       defendant all the time about his disease and had a catheter in his chest. About a week or two

       prior to the shooting, defendant saw Mayfield have a problem with the catheter. One of the caps

       came off, and the tube was leaking blood. The way defendant viewed Mayfield was that

       Mayfield was disabled and that he should not be involved in a physical altercation due to his

       condition. During defendant’s testimony, a photograph of Mayfield’s catheter was admitted into

       evidence without objection and was shown to the jury.

¶ 60          According to defendant, before he arrived at Roberson’s home that day, there was no

       indication that he and Mayfield were going to be involved in a physical altercation. Defendant

       had not spoken to Mayfield before Mayfield and Williams had picked him up and was merely

       following his regular routine of getting together with Mayfield after Mayfield’s dialysis session.

       Defendant had a gun on him when he got into Williams’s car but did not tell Mayfield or

       Williams. Defendant had found the gun the previous day when he was rummaging through his

       family’s garage looking for some props for a music video he was filming. Defendant planned to

       show the gun to Mayfield and was hoping that Mayfield might know someone who was willing

       to purchase the gun. The gun had no case, was a .45-caliber, and had some World War

       memorabilia on it, which defendant thought made it more valuable. Defendant did not show

       Mayfield the gun in the car because he did not want Williams to know he had a gun. Williams

       would not have allowed defendant in the car if she had known. Defendant did not hear any of the

       phone call that came into the car, was looking at his cell phone when Jayurion got in and not

                                                       23
       paying attention, and was not aware of any problems that were happening with Jayurion that day.

       Neither Williams nor Mayfield seemed upset when defendant was in the car, and there was no

       indication that anything was wrong.

¶ 61          As defendant, Williams, and the others arrived at Roberson’s home, defendant saw that

       there were some people standing outside, which, according to defendant, was not unusual.

       Defendant thought that Mayfield and Williams knew the people that were outside and assumed

       that the location was where he and Mayfield were going to relax for the evening. After defendant

       and the others got out of Williams’s car, defendant heard Williams yell that she wanted to speak

       to the mother. That was when defendant’s “alert system” went off, and defendant felt the tension

       right away. A lady on the porch with her phone out videotaping responded, “I’m the mom.”

       Defendant knew he was being videotaped at that time. The gun was on defendant’s waist, but he

       was not thinking about the gun at that moment.

¶ 62          A lot of yelling started. At first, it was just a bunch of commotion. Defendant could not

       make out what was being said because he was still 5 or 10 feet away. Defendant asked Mayfield

       what was going on. Mayfield told defendant to just go up the street, that it had nothing to do with

       defendant. Mayfield was defendant’s older cousin, and defendant usually took Mayfield’s

       advice, so he started walking up the street. Defendant did not know why Williams was trying to

       find out who the mom was and did not know that Jayurion had gotten into a fight earlier that day.

       Defendant did not hear anyone speaking about a fight while he was in Williams’s car.

¶ 63          Defendant got just past the driveway when he started hearing threats. Some of the threats

       were being made directly to him by Gulley. Defendant did not know who Gulley was at that

       time. After hearing the threats, defendant pulled out his gun so that Gulley could see it and told

       Gulley that Gulley was not going to do anything to defendant. Defendant knew that Gulley saw

                                                        24
       the gun. Gulley looked defendant straight in the eyes and stated, “f*** that gun, we got guns,

       too.” Defendant believed Gulley and felt even more afraid. Defendant was overcome by fear and

       his alertness was heightened. Defendant cocked the gun back and told Gulley, “This ain’t no toy.

       I’m not playing.” Defendant believed that Gulley saw him do that. Gulley did not respond.

¶ 64          According to defendant, the people in the driveway tried to charge. Defendant looked to

       his side to see where Mayfield was located. Mayfield was struggling with another person over a

       broomstick. Defendant thought the broomstick came from Roberson’s group because he knew

       that the people in Williams’s car did not bring any broomsticks with them to that location and he

       had not seen anyone on the street side of the fence pass a broomstick to Mayfield. Defendant was

       terrified seeing Mayfield struggling over the broomstick because he knew Mayfield’s physical

       condition. Defendant believed that Roberson’s group had guns and feared that they were ready to

       do damage to Price’s group. Members of Roberson’s group had said so and were clutching at

       their waistbands. One guy in Roberson’s group took his shirt off; another guy already had his

       shirt off. Defendant took that to mean that the people in Roberson’s group were ready to fight.

       Defendant thought that Roberson’s group was going to come out onto the street at any moment.

       Defendant also believed that Gulley had something to match defendant’s gun since Gulley did

       not care about defendant’s gun. Defendant feared that he or Mayfield could get seriously hurt or

       killed if Roberson’s group got a hold of either of them.

¶ 65          Defendant felt that he was in a lot of danger. The only people defendant knew out there

       were Mayfield, Williams, and Jayurion. Defendant saw the other two cars pull up but did not

       know anyone in those other two cars. He thought they might be a threat to him as well.

       Defendant felt that the other people behind him were also a threat, even though he did not hear

       the people behind him making any threats to him. Essentially, defendant felt that everyone out

                                                       25
       there was a threat. Defendant claimed that on the video, he could clearly be seen turning around

       looking at everyone and trying to watch his back, side, and front. Defendant was as scared for

       Mayfield as he was for himself. Defendant fired the gun when he saw that Mayfield was in a

       physical altercation and was struggling with someone else over the broomstick.

¶ 66          Defendant did not know if the first shot he fired had struck anyone. He fired a second

       shot because the people in Roberson’s group were still in a fighting stance and were acting like

       they were going to charge again. Defendant did not remember how many shots he fired in total.

       According to defendant, when he fired all of the shots, he was not aiming at a particular person

       and was not trying to hit anyone. He was just trying to get Roberson’s group to back off because

       he was scared and because he felt that firing the gun was the only option he had left. The entire

       incident happened in 30 seconds or less. Defendant fired the first shot while aiming at the ground

       and fired the remaining shots while aiming over everyone else’s heads.

¶ 67          After defendant fired the gun, he noticed that Mayfield had hit the ground so defendant

       picked Mayfield up and ran to Williams’s car. Defendant opened the passenger door and placed

       Mayfield inside. Defendant got in the driver’s side, took off, and drove to his own house. There

       was no conversation between defendant and Mayfield at that time. They were both shocked.

       Defendant got out and told Mayfield he would call him later. Mayfield left in the car. The next

       day, Mayfield and defendant were arrested.

¶ 68          On the witness stand, defendant admitted that he was not being entirely truthful with the

       police at the beginning of his interview. Rather, according to defendant, he had tried to lie to the

       police because he did not think that he had the right to defend himself and Mayfield that way.

       Defendant believed that he was in imminent danger and that the only thing that was going to get

       him out of that situation was firing the weapon, but he did not think that he had a right to do so

                                                        26
       because he was not licensed to carry a firearm. Defendant felt that firing the weapon was the last

       and only option he had left. Defendant showed Roberson’s group that he had a gun; that was his

       warning. Roberson’s group disregarded that warning and still charged. Defendant had never fired

       a gun before, did not have experience with guns, and did not believe that there was a strong

       probability of death to another person from firing the gun in the manner that he did so.

¶ 69          On cross-examination, defendant stated that he could not just get back into Williams’s

       car, even though the car was unlocked, because he was already away from the car and everything

       happened so fast. Defendant admitted that he was the only person at the scene who pulled out, or

       fired, a gun. Defendant did not see anyone else with a gun, but the people in Roberson’s group

       were clutching at their waistbands. Defendant acknowledged that Mayfield could be seen on one

       of the cell phone videos swinging the pole but denied that he saw Mayfield swing the pole when

       the incident was unfolding that day. Defendant also acknowledged that he was the person

       holding the gun in the video/screenshot and that he was pointing the gun even possibly before

       Mayfield was struggling with the pole. Defendant denied that when he pulled the gun, the people

       on the other side started to run up the driveway. According to defendant, he was just aiming at

       the ground and was not trying to hit anyone. Defendant admitted later during his testimony,

       however, that he did not point the gun at the ground and that he did not point the gun in the air or

       down the other side of the street. Defendant denied, though, that he pointed the gun at the level

       where the people were in front of him and stated that he might have pointed the gun in the

       direction of the other people but aimed it toward the ground.

¶ 70          Following the shooting, defendant drove to Joliet and threw the gun in a river because he

       did not want to get caught with the gun since he was unlicensed. According to defendant, he lied

       to the detective during the interview because he was worried he was going to get in trouble for

                                                       27
       having an unlicensed firearm, not because he shot anybody. At the time, defendant did not know

       that he had a right to defend himself or his family when he was carrying an unlicensed firearm.

       Defendant did not load the gun; the gun was already loaded, and defendant knew that it was

       loaded. Defendant had some confidence, therefore, that when he pulled the gun out and pulled

       the trigger that a bullet would come out.

¶ 71           In addition to the evidence presented, during defendant’s trial, a juror issue arose that is

       relevant to one of the issues raised in this appeal. On the third day of trial, when there was still

       one alternate juror available, one of the jurors realized and told the trial court that she was related

       by marriage to Gulley and his brother, Gabe. More specifically, the juror informed the trial court

       that her daughter was married to Gulley and Gabe’s mother. Upon being questioned about the

       matter, the juror indicated that she had no preconceived opinions about Gulley, that she had

       never met Gulley, that she did not recognize Gulley’s name when the witness list was read to the

       jury, and that her knowledge of Gulley and Gabe’s mother did not affect her ability to be fair and

       impartial. 4 After the questioning was finished and the juror had gone back to the jury room, the

       trial court commented, “Does anybody want to be—my initial reaction is the same as my

       reaction now, she stays on the jury. I don’t think it’s even a close call.” The trial court asked the

       attorneys if they wanted to be heard on the matter, and both sides declined. The trial court then

       ruled that the juror would stay on the jury. Back in the courtroom but still outside the presence of

       the jury, the trial court judge stated for the record that he and the attorneys “all agree[d] that [the]

       juror should remain on the jury.”

               4
                The questions that the court and the attorneys asked the juror about this matter were generally
       targeted at the juror’s knowledge of, and relationship with, the mother and Gulley and generally did not
       mention Gulley’s brother, Gabe.
                                                           28
¶ 72           After all of the evidence had been presented, the attorneys made their closing arguments.

       The State argued that defendant was guilty of murder, aggravated battery with a firearm, and

       mob action and that defendant was not acting in self-defense when he fired the handgun. The

       defense argued that Roberson’s group was the real mob that day; that Jones, Gulley, and some of

       the other members of Roberson’s group were the ones who should have been charged with mob

       action; and that defendant fired the weapon to protect himself and Mayfield. In making those

       arguments, defense counsel acknowledged that there were other charges available to the jury if

       the jury believed that defendant had misinterpreted the situation or had overreacted, but defense

       counsel asserted to the jury that defendant had not done so. Defense counsel told the jury further

       that the jury would have to decide which group (Roberson’s or Price’s) was committing mob

       action that day and referred to Price’s group (the group to which defendant arguably belonged) at

       one point during some of those comments as “Mob B.” Defense counsel also told the jury that it

       would have to “pay close consideration” to the mob action charges because self-defense was not

       a defense to mob action.

¶ 73           Following the closing arguments, the trial court instructed the jury on the law. Pursuant to

       defendant’s request, the jury was instructed on the lesser offenses of second degree murder (as a

       lesser mitigated offense of first degree murder), involuntary manslaughter (as a lesser included

       offense of first degree murder), and reckless discharge of a firearm (as a lesser included offense

       of aggravated battery with a firearm), and also on the affirmative defense of self-defense. 5

               5
                 The State initially opposed defendant’s request to instruct the jury on involuntary manslaughter
       as a lesser included offense of first degree murder, but, after conducting additional research, the State
       informed the trial court that it believed that defendant was entitled to that instruction. After additional
       discussion, the State agreed further that by the same reasoning, defendant was also entitled to an
       instruction on reckless discharge of a firearm as a lesser included offense of aggravated battery with a
       firearm. The State prepared those lesser included offense instructions as a courtesy to defense counsel.

                                                            29
       Without objection from defendant, the wording of some of the jury instructions was changed at

       times to distinguish between defendant’s felony murder charge and his other first degree murder

       charge. 6 The felony murder charge was referred to in the instructions and the verdict forms at

       times as “First Degree Murder (Type B),” and defendant’s other first degree murder charge was

       referred to at times as “First Degree Murder (Type A).” See People v. Lefler, 2016 IL App (3d)

       140293, ¶¶ 9-12 (describing similar labels that had been used in the jury instructions in that case

       to distinguish between the defendant’s felony murder charge and his other first degree murder

       charges).

¶ 74           As for a concluding instruction, without objection from defendant, the jury was given

       Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, No. 26.01J (4th ed. 2000) (hereinafter IPI Criminal

       4th). 7 With regard to the offenses of aggravated battery with a firearm and reckless discharge of

       a firearm, the typewritten concluding instruction provided as follows:

                                “The defendant is also charged with the offense of Aggravated Battery.

                       You will receive two forms of verdict as to this charge. You will be provided with

                       both a ‘not guilty of Aggravated Battery’, and a ‘guilty of Aggravated Battery’

                       form of verdict.

                                From these two verdict forms, you should select the one verdict form that

                       reflects your verdict pertaining to the charge of [Aggravated Battery] and sign it

               6
               The initial count of first degree murder (strong probability murder) that was filed against
       defendant and Mayfield jointly was dismissed prior to trial on motion of the State.
               7
                 It appears from the record that the concluding instruction was incorrectly labeled and incorrectly
       referred to in the trial court as IPI Criminal 4th No. 26.01I, rather than IPI Criminal 4th No. 26.01J. IPI
       Criminal 4th No. 26.01I is used when a defendant is charged with first degree murder, second degree
       murder, involuntary manslaughter, and no other charges, which was not the situation in the present case.
                                                            30
                       as I have stated. You should not write at all on the other verdict form pertaining to

                       the charge of Aggravated Battery.

                                                         ***

                               The defendant is also charged with the offense of Reckless Discharge of a

                       Firearm. You will receive two forms of verdict as to this charge. You will be

                       provided with both a ‘not guilty of Reckless Discharge of a Firearm’, and a

                       ‘guilty of Reckless Discharge of a Firearm’ form of verdict.

                               From these two verdict forms, you should select the one verdict form that

                       reflects your verdict pertaining to the charge of [Reckless Discharge of a Firearm]

                       and sign it as I have stated. You should not write at all on the other verdict form

                       pertaining to the charge of Reckless Discharge of a Firearm.”

¶ 75           During its deliberations, the jury informed the trial court at various times that it had

       questions for the court to answer. One of the questions that the jury submitted to the trial court

       was whether the jury could find defendant guilty of both felony murder (first degree murder

       (type B)) and second degree murder. After discussing the matter with the attorneys, the trial

       court responded to the jury that it could find defendant guilty of both offenses.

¶ 76           Upon completing its deliberations, the jury found defendant guilty of felony murder,

       second degree murder, aggravated battery with a firearm, reckless discharge of a firearm, two

       counts of mob action, and unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon. 8 The trial court ordered

       that a presentence investigation report (PSI) be prepared on defendant for sentencing, and the

       case was scheduled for a hearing on posttrial motions. The following month, defendant filed a

               8
              As noted previously, defendant’s jury trial was bifurcated as to the unlawful possession of a
       weapon by a felon charge.
                                                          31
       motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for new trial (and a supplement to that

       motion), which the trial court later denied. Defendant did not raise the issue of inconsistent

       verdicts in either his original or supplemental posttrial motion.

¶ 77          In May 2019, the trial court held a sentencing hearing in defendant’s case. At the time of

       the sentencing hearing, the trial court had before it defendant’s PSI, two victim impact

       statements, and some letters written from jail personnel on defendant’s behalf. The PSI indicated

       that defendant was 36 years old and had graduated from high school in 2001. Defendant had

       worked sporadically for several years and, prior to being incarcerated, was self-employed as a

       video editor for music videos, commercials, promotional videos, and entertainment business. In

       his work, defendant made about $1000 per month. Defendant was unmarried and had five

       children, ranging in ages from 7 to 20. Defendant had been convicted of numerous criminal

       offenses over the course of his adult life. Defendant had one prior felony conviction for

       manufacture or delivery of cocaine in 2002. He was initially sentenced to a period of probation

       for that offense, but his probation was later terminated unsuccessfully. Defendant had also

       previously been convicted of several traffic and misdemeanor offenses, including battery in 2001

       (from a 2000 case) and 2009, possession of cannabis in 2006 and 2009, and two separate

       domestic batteries in 2010. In his prior adult offenses (including the prior felony offense),

       defendant had received probation or conditional discharge six times and had his probation or

       conditional discharge terminated unsuccessfully or revoked nearly every time.

¶ 78          As for the victim impact statements, the first victim impact statement was written and

       read by Kenisha Davis, Jones’s mother. In that statement, Davis described how devastating it

       was for her to lose her son and for Jones’s daughter (Davis’s granddaughter) to lose her father.

       According to Davis, Jones’s daughter was only four years old when Jones was killed and lost the

                                                        32
       only parent that she had ever known. The second victim impact statement was written and read

       by Nia King, Jones’s sister. In that victim impact statement, King described how she, her

       siblings, Jones’s daughter, and Jones’s fiancée had struggled trying to cope with Jones’s death.

       As with Davis, King also commented in her victim impact statement upon the significance of the

       loss of Jones to Jones’s daughter.

¶ 79          With regard to the letters in support of defendant, those have not been made part of the

       record on appeal. However, the comments that were made about those letters in the sentencing

       hearing indicate that the letters were submitted by a jail chaplain or chaplains and that the letters

       indicated that defendant had become a changed person in jail and had helped to counsel other

       inmates.

¶ 80          As for sentencing recommendations, the State recommended that the trial court sentence

       defendant to something more than the minimum sentence, which was 51 years in prison on the

       felony murder and the aggravated battery with a firearm convictions (20 years for felony murder

       with a 25 year firearm enhancement and 6 six years for aggravated battery with a firearm, with

       the sentences to run consecutively). In making that recommendation, the State commented upon

       defendant’s prior criminal history, defendant’s belief that he was a victim in the whole situation,

       and defendant’s dangerous character. Defense counsel, on the other hand, asked the trial court to

       impose only the minimum prison sentence (51 years) upon defendant. As part of his

       recommendation, defense counsel asked the trial court to consider in mitigation the fact that the

       jury found that defendant’s self-defense or defense-of-others claim was sincere but unreasonable,

       as evidenced by the jury’s finding of guilty of second degree murder. Defense counsel also

       commented that defendant had no prior history of gun violence.

¶ 81          In response to defendant’s request for the minimum sentence, the trial court stated:

                                                        33
                      “Well, if I give him 51 which is the very minimum and he’s got a prior felony

                      conviction and five failed probations, okay, what do I give a guy who would stand

                      before me convicted of these same charges who has no prior felony convictions

                      and no prior failed probation? What would I give him then if I’m giving your guy

                      the minimum?”

¶ 82          Upon the trial court’s request, defense counsel specifically addressed defendant’s

       rehabilitation potential and stated that the letters that had been written on defendant’s behalf

       showed that defendant was a changed person and that defendant could become a productive

       member of society.

¶ 83          After the attorneys had finished making their sentencing recommendations, defendant

       made a statement in allocution. Defendant told the trial court that he was sorry that Jones had

       died and that Gully had gotten shot, but that in defendant’s heart and mind, he believed that he

       was forced to react to the situation. Defendant stated that he took the actions that he did when the

       shooting occurred, not because he wanted to kill anyone, but because he felt threatened and felt

       that he did not have a choice—he was simply trying to protect his family and himself from great

       bodily harm. Defendant stated further that he lied to the police after the shooting occurred

       because he did not know better and because he was scared at the time. Defendant denied that he

       was guilty of mob action and stated that the situation leading up to the shooting was just two

       parents (presumably Williams and Mayfield) trying to keep the peace and to find out what had

       happened to their son.

¶ 84          Following defendant’s statement in allocution, the trial court announced its sentencing

       decision. The trial court sentenced defendant to consecutive prison terms of 65 years (40 years

       plus a 25-year firearm enhancement) for felony murder and 15 years for aggravated battery with

                                                        34
       a firearm and to a concurrent prison term of 7 years for unlawful possession of a weapon by a

       felon. The trial court did not impose sentences on defendant for the remaining findings of guilty.

       In making its sentencing decision, the trial court found that there were no factors in mitigation

       that applied to defendant but that there were two factors in aggravation that applied—that

       defendant had a history of criminal activity and that a sentence was necessary to deter others

       from committing the same crimes. 9 The trial court commented that defendant had minimized the

       nature of the offenses and that defendant’s version of events was contrary to what was shown in

       the cell phone videos of the incident. The trial court also noted the impact that Jones’s death had

       on Jones’s family and commented that defendant’s prospects for rehabilitation were low as

       indicated by the fact that defendant had lied to the police, had thrown the gun off of a bridge, and

       had minimized the nature of the offenses in his statement in allocution.

¶ 85           Defendant filed a motion to reconsider sentence and again asked the trial court to

       consider in mitigation the fact that the jury had found that defendant had acted with an

       unreasonable belief in the need for self-defense or defense-of-others. After considering the

       arguments of the attorneys, the trial court denied defendant’s motion. Defendant appealed.

¶ 86                                                II. ANALYSIS

¶ 87                         A. Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt of Felony Murder

¶ 88           As his first point of contention on appeal, defendant argues that he was not proven guilty

       beyond a reasonable doubt of felony murder. More specifically, defendant asserts that the

       evidence was insufficient to prove the underlying mob action charge because the evidence failed

               9
                The trial court indicated that, in sentencing defendant, it was only going to consider defendant’s
       prior misdemeanor convictions and not defendant’s prior felony conviction because the prior felony
       conviction had already been used by the State to charge defendant with unlawful possession of a weapon
       by a felon.
                                                           35
       to show that he and Mayfield were acting together or with a common plan or purpose at the time

       of the offense. On the contrary, defendant maintains, the evidence established that defendant did

       not know about the altercation that had occurred earlier in the day, whose home to which he had

       arrived, or the reason that he and the others were going to that home. In addition, defendant

       contends, the State presented no evidence that defendant participated in the altercation with

       Mayfield prior to the shooting (before defendant believed that Mayfield’s life was at risk) or that

       defendant and Mayfield had an agreement that defendant would shoot at Jones during the

       altercation. Based upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence, defendant asks that we reverse

       outright his conviction for felony murder.

¶ 89          The State argues that defendant’s felony murder conviction was proper and should be

       upheld. The State asserts that the evidence in this case was sufficient to show that defendant and

       Mayfield were acting together at the time of the offense as necessary to prove the underlying

       charge of mob action. According to the State, the witness testimony and video evidence

       presented at trial showed that defendant knew of the prior altercation and of the reason for going

       to Roberson’s home and that defendant acted with Mayfield to attack Jones and Gulley. The

       State asks, therefore, that we affirm defendant’s conviction of felony murder.

¶ 90          Pursuant to the Collins standard (People v. Collins, 106 Ill. 2d 237, 261 (1985)), a

       reviewing court faced with a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence must view the evidence

       in a light most favorable to the prosecution and determine whether any rational trier of fact could

       have found the elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Jackson, 232

       Ill. 2d 246, 280 (2009). In applying the Collins standard, the reviewing court will allow all

       reasonable inferences from the record in favor of the prosecution. People v. Bush, 214 Ill. 2d

       318, 326 (2005). The reviewing court will not retry the defendant. People v. Austin M., 2012 IL

                                                       36
       111194, ¶ 107. Determinations of witness credibility, the weight to be given testimony, and the

       reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence are responsibilities of the trier of fact, not

       the reviewing court. People v. Jimerson, 127 Ill. 2d 12, 43 (1989). Thus, the Collins standard of

       review fully recognizes that it is the trier of fact’s responsibility to fairly resolve conflicts in the

       testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate

       facts. See Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 281. That same standard of review is applied by the reviewing

       court regardless of whether the evidence is direct or circumstantial or whether defendant

       received a bench or a jury trial, and circumstantial evidence meeting that standard is sufficient to

       sustain a criminal conviction. Id.; People v. Kotlarz, 193 Ill. 2d 272, 298 (2000). In applying the

       Collins standard, a reviewing court will not reverse a defendant’s conviction unless the evidence

       is so improbable, unsatisfactory, or inconclusive that it leaves a reasonable doubt of the

       defendant’s guilt. Austin M., 2012 IL 111194, ¶ 107.

¶ 91           As noted above, defendant’s felony murder conviction in the instant case was based upon

       the underlying felony of mob action. To sustain the charge of mob action as it was filed in the

       present case, the State had to prove, among other things, that defendant acted together with one

       or more persons without authority of law (the joint-action element). See 720 ILCS 5/25-1(a)(1)

       (West 2016).The joint-action element is satisfied when the evidence presented shows joint or

       concerted action or cooperative effort—that the defendant and the other person or persons

       involved acted pursuant to an agreement or a common criminal purpose. See People v. Barnes,

       2017 IL App (1st) 142886, ¶¶ 3, 26, 38-39, 68. To establish joint action, it is not enough for the

       State to merely show that the defendant and the other person were present at the same place and

       same time and were doing the same thing, since the law does not allow guilt by association. See

                                                          37
       id. ¶¶ 38, 42. Rather, to prove the joint-action element, “an intent to join with others in a mutual

       pursuit—like the members of a gang—is typically required.” Id. ¶ 38.

¶ 92          In the present case, after reviewing the record from defendant’s jury trial, we find that the

       evidence was sufficient to prove that defendant was acting together with Mayfield (and the other

       members of Price’s group) when the underlying mob action allegedly occurred. The strongest

       evidence of defendant and Mayfield’s concerted action came from the testimony of Gulley, if the

       jury chose to believe him, wherein Gulley stated that, during the struggle over the broomstick,

       Mayfield yelled shoot and defendant fired. In addition to that evidence, the jury had before it two

       cell phone videos that showed some of the events that occurred just prior to, and during, the

       shooting. Through those videos, the jury could see and hear some of what actually took place as

       the shooting was unfolding. The jury was also presented with testimony that defendant was in the

       car when Price told Williams on speakerphone that Jayurion had been “jumped”; that defendant

       was also present in the vehicle when Jayurion told Williams and Mayfield what had happened

       during the prior altercation; and that defendant went to Roberson’s home with Williams,

       Mayfield, and Jayurion at precisely the same time that several other people connected to Price

       also went to Roberson’s home. The jury could have reasonably inferred from that evidence that

       defendant was aware of the prior altercation; that defendant was aware of Price’s group’s

       purpose for going to Roberson’s residence; and that defendant, Mayfield, and the other members

       of Price’s group had jointly gone to Roberson’s home to fight Roberson’s group or to take

       revenge for the altercation that had happened earlier that day. Defendant’s assertions to the

       contrary are not supported by the video evidence that was presented, which showed defendant

       and Mayfield actively involved in the escalating confrontation immediately prior to the shooting.

       Viewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, as we are required to do on

                                                        38
       appeal (see Jackson, 232 Ill. 2d at 280), we find that the evidence presented was sufficient to

       satisfy the joint-action element of the mob action charge. We also conclude, therefore, that

       defendant was proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of felony murder.

¶ 93                        B. Mob Action as the Underlying Felony for Felony Murder

¶ 94           As his second point of contention on appeal, defendant argues that the mob action charge

       could not properly serve as the underlying felony for the felony murder charge in this case

       because the act that formed the basis of the mob action charge—which defendant describes on

       appeal as defendant firing a series of shots into the crowd at Roberson’s home—was the direct

       and only cause of Jones’s death, was inherent in Jones’s murder, and was not committed with an

       independent felonious purpose. Defendant asks, therefore, that we reverse outright his conviction

       for felony murder.

¶ 95           The State argues that defendant’s felony murder conviction was appropriate and should

       be upheld. In support of that argument, the State asserts first that defendant forfeited this claim

       by failing to raise it in the trial court. Second, and in the alternative, the State asserts that even if

       this court reaches the merits of this issue, defendant’s argument should still be rejected because

       the acts that gave rise to the mob action charge were not inherent in the felony murder charge

       and had a separate felonious purpose. Thus, the State contends that the mob action charge was a

       legally proper underlying felony for the felony murder charge in this case. For those reasons, the

       State asks that we affirm defendant’s conviction of felony murder.

¶ 96           In response to the State’s claim of forfeiture, defendant asserts, and we agree, that the

       forfeiture rule does not apply here because defendant’s claim is considered to be a challenge to

       the sufficiency of the evidence and, as such, constitutes an exception to the forfeiture rule. See

                                                          39
       In re Dionte J., 2013 IL App (1st) 110700, ¶ 79. We, therefore, turn to the merits of defendant’s

       argument on this issue.

¶ 97          The question of whether a certain forcible felony, such as the mob action charge in the

       instant case, can properly serve as the underlying felony for a defendant’s felony murder

       conviction is a question of law that is subject to a de novo standard of review on appeal. People

       v. Davison, 236 Ill. 2d 232, 239 (2010).The purpose behind the felony murder statute is to deter

       the commission of forcible felonies and to limit the violence that accompanies such offenses by

       subjecting anyone who commits a forcible felony to a first degree murder charge if another

       person is killed during the commission of that offense. Id.; People v. Dennis, 181 Ill. 2d 87, 105

       (1998). However, because the offense of felony murder is unique in that it does not require the

       State to prove an intentional or knowing killing, unlike other forms of first degree murder, our

       supreme court has repeatedly expressed concern that a felony murder charge could, in effect,

       improperly allow the State to both eliminate the offense of second degree murder and to avoid

       the burden of having to prove an intentional or knowing killing as generally required for a first

       degree murder conviction, given that many murders are accompanied by the same underlying

       forcible felonies. See, e.g., Davison, 236 Ill. 2d at 239-40. Our supreme court has held, therefore,

       that when the acts constituting a forcible felony arise from and are inherent in the act of murder

       itself, those acts cannot also serve as the underlying felony for a felony murder charge. See id. at

       240; People v. Morgan, 197 Ill. 2d 404, 447 (2001); Dionte J., 2013 IL App (1st) 110700, ¶ 71.

       Rather, in order to properly support a charge of felony murder, the underlying felony must have

       an independent felonious purpose—a purpose or motivation that is independent and apart from

       the killing itself. Davison, 236 Ill. 2d at 243-44; Dionte J., 2013 IL App (1st) 110700, ¶ 79;

       People v. Colbert, 2013 IL App (1st) 112935, ¶ 13. In determining whether an independent

                                                        40
       felonious purpose exists, the factual context surrounding the killing is of crucial importance. See

       Colbert, 2013 IL App (1st) 112935, ¶ 14.

¶ 98          In the instant case, after considering the legal principles set forth above and the factual

       context of the killing, we find that the acts that gave rise to the mob action charge were

       independent from, and involved a different felonious purpose than, the acts that resulted in

       Jones’s death. The mob action offense was completed in this case when defendant, Mayfield, and

       the other members of Price’s group went to Roberson’s residence to fight Roberson’s group and

       then started carrying out that common purpose using force or violence, such as when Mayfield

       swung at Jones and Gulley with the broomstick. That conduct was not inherent in the shooting

       that occurred immediately thereafter and involved a different felonious purpose. See id. ¶¶ 15-16

       (finding that the acts that formed the basis of the defendant’s mob action charge—the defendant

       taking part in a street brawl in an effort to physically intimidate and harass fellow students from

       a rival neighborhood—were independent from, and involved a different felonious purpose than,

       the acts that resulted in the murder victim’s death—the defendant and several of his codefendants

       striking the murder victim multiple times during the same street brawl); People v. Tamayo, 2012

       IL App (3d) 100361, ¶ 27 (finding that the acts that formed the basis of the defendant’s mob

       action charge—the defendant beating up the murder victim’s friend during a group fight—were

       independent from, and involved a different felonious purpose than, the acts that resulted in the

       murder victim’s death—the defendant’s cohort beating up the murder victim during the same

       group fight). We, therefore, conclude that under the facts of the present case, the mob action

       charge could properly serve as the underlying felony for defendant’s felony murder conviction.

       Davison, 236 Ill. 2d at 243-44; Dionte J., 2013 IL App (1st) 110700, ¶ 79; Colbert, 2013 IL App

                                                        41
        (1st) 112935, ¶¶ 15-16; Tamayo, 2012 IL App (3d) 100361, ¶ 27. Accordingly, we affirm

        defendant’s felony murder conviction.

¶ 99                                      C. Legally Inconsistent Verdicts

¶ 100          As his third point of contention on appeal, defendant argues that his convictions (and,

        presumably, the jury’s findings of guilty) must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial

        because of inconsistent verdicts. More specifically, defendant asserts that (1) the jury’s finding

        of guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm was legally inconsistent with its findings of guilty of

        felony murder and aggravated battery with a firearm because all three of the offenses were based

        upon the same continuous conduct of defendant firing the gun but involved mutually inconsistent

        mental states (reckless versus knowing conduct) and (2) the jury’s finding of guilty of second

        degree murder was legally inconsistent with its finding of guilty of felony murder because the

        single murder in this case could not have been both mitigated (second degree murder) and

        unmitigated (felony murder). Defendant asserts further that upon receiving the inconsistent

        verdicts, the trial court should have given the jury additional instructions and ordered the jury to

        continue deliberating to resolve the inconsistency (if the jury had not already been discharged

        when the mistake was discovered) or ordered a new trial (if the jury had already been

        discharged). Instead, according to defendant, the trial court usurped the jury’s function by

        choosing which findings of guilty to enter judgment and impose sentence upon. For those

        reasons, defendant asks that we reverse all of his convictions (and, presumably, all of the jury’s

        findings of guilty) and that we remand this case for a new trial.

¶ 101          The State argues that the jury’s verdicts were proper and should be upheld. In support of

        that argument, the State asserts first that defendant forfeited this claim by failing to properly

        preserve it in the trial court and by acquiescing in the jury’s verdicts. Second, and in the

                                                         42
        alternative, the State asserts that even if this court chooses to reach the merits of this issue,

        defendant’s argument should still be rejected because the jury’s verdicts were not legally

        inconsistent. More specifically in that regard, the State contends that (1) the jury’s finding of

        guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm was not legally inconsistent with its finding of guilty of

        felony murder and aggravated battery with a firearm, despite the different mental states involved,

        because the jury’s findings of guilty pertained to multiple shots and multiple victims and (2) the

        jury’s finding of guilty of second degree murder was not legally inconsistent with its finding of

        guilty of felony murder because felony murder does not require the mental state necessary for

        murder and because the mitigating factors for second degree murder have no effect on the felony

        murder charge. In addition, according to the State, the jury instructions in this case were

        specifically tailored to prevent the jury from reaching legally inconsistent verdicts. For all of the

        reasons set forth, therefore, the State asks that we affirm defendant’s convictions.

¶ 102           In response to the State’s claim of forfeiture, defendant asserts, and we agree, that even if

        this issue has been forfeited, second prong plain error review would apply (assuming that an

        error had occurred) because this issue involves a claim of legally inconsistent verdicts. See

        People v. Ousley, 297 Ill. App. 3d 758, 764 (1998) (recognizing that a potentially forfeited claim

        of legally inconsistent verdicts should be reviewed under the plain error doctrine). In addition,

        despite the State’s request, we decline to apply the concept of acquiescence here because our

        supreme court has placed the duty to take the necessary steps to prevent or cure legally

        inconsistent verdicts upon the trial court, rather than upon the potentially aggrieved party. See

        People v. Carter, 193 Ill. App. 3d 529, 533-34 (1990) (rejecting a similar argument by the State).

¶ 103           Turning to the merits of defendant’s argument on this issue, we are mindful of the

        following legal principles that apply in analyzing claims of inconsistent verdicts. The

                                                          43
        determination of whether verdicts are legally inconsistent is a question of law that is subject to a

        de novo standard of review on appeal. People v. Price, 221 Ill. 2d 182, 189 (2006). Verdicts are

        legally inconsistent when an essential element of each crime must, by the very nature of the

        verdicts, have been found to exist and to not exist, even though the offenses arise out the same

        set of facts. Id. at 188; Lefler, 2016 IL App (3d) 140293, ¶ 20. Of potential relevance to this

        appeal, courts have found verdicts to be legally inconsistent in situations where (1) the offenses

        at issue involved mutually inconsistent mental states and the jury found that both mental states

        existed (see, e.g., Price, 221 Ill. 2d at 188-89); or (2) the jury determined that a single murder

        was both mitigated for the purpose of a second degree murder charge and unmitigated for the

        purpose of a first degree murder charge (see, e.g., People v. Porter, 168 Ill. 2d 201, 214 (1995)).

¶ 104           When a jury returns legally inconsistent guilty verdicts, the trial court may not attempt to

        correct the problem by merely entering judgment on one or more of the verdicts and vacating the

        other verdicts. Id. To do so would be to usurp the jury’s function to determine innocence or guilt.

        Id. Instead, the trial court must give the jury additional instructions and send the jury back for

        further deliberations to resolve the inconsistency. Id. If the trial court fails to do so, the

        inconsistent verdicts must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial on those charges.

        People v. Mitchell, 238 Ill. App. 3d 1055, 1060 (1992) (interpreting the Illinois Supreme Court’s

        case-law statement that the remedy for inconsistent verdicts is a retrial on all counts as meaning a

        retrial on all inconsistent counts); see People v. Fornear, 176 Ill. 2d 523, 535 (1997) (leaving the

        one conviction in place that the defendant did not contest and reversing and remanding the other

        convictions for a new trial where some of the jury’s verdicts were legally inconsistent).

¶ 105           In the present case, after reviewing the record and considering the jury’s verdicts, we find

        that the jury’s verdict of guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm (referred to herein more simply

                                                           44
at times as reckless discharge) was legally inconsistent with the jury’s verdict of guilty of

aggravated battery with a firearm (referred to herein more simply at times as aggravated

battery). 10 There is no dispute in this appeal that the reckless discharge offense and the

aggravated battery offense involved mutually inconsistent mental states. Both charges pertained

to defendant’s act of shooting Gulley. For reckless discharge, the jury had to find that defendant

had acted recklessly when he shot Gulley, and, for aggravated battery, the jury had to find that

defendant had acted knowingly when he shot Gulley. In addition, it is clear from the jury

instruction conference that defendant’s request, and the intention of the parties, was that the jury

would be instructed on reckless discharge of a firearm as a lesser included offense of the

aggravated battery with a firearm charge. However, the jury instructions in this case were

incorrect, and the jury was not instructed that it had to view the two offenses (aggravated battery

and reckless discharge) as a greater and lesser offense. As the committee note to IPI Criminal 4th

No. 26.01J indicates, the language for greater and lesser offenses must be used, instead of the

language contained in the instruction, when the jury is to be instructed on a lesser included

offense, such as the reckless discharge offense in the present case. See IPI Criminal 4th No.

26.01J, Committee Note. The jury was never informed in this case by either the jury instructions

or the parties’ closing arguments that reckless discharge was a lesser included offense of

aggravated battery and that it could only find defendant guilty of one of those charges but not

both. See People v. Washington, 2019 IL App (1st) 161742, ¶ 29 (describing a similar error that

had taken place in that case). Although the State presents a scenario on appeal where, because of

        10
          Although defendant has grouped the felony murder charge with the aggravated battery with a
firearm charge in his argument on this issue, the felony murder charge did not pertain to defendant’s
shooting of Gulley, as the aggravated battery with a firearm charge and reckless discharge of a firearm
charge did, and was not advanced by defendant as a lesser included offense of the felony murder charge.
We, therefore, will only address whether the verdicts of guilty of aggravated battery with a firearm and
reckless discharge of a firearm were legally inconsistent.
                                                   45
the multiple victims involved and the multiple shots fired at the victims and at Roberson’s home,

the jury might have been able to find defendant guilty of both offenses without returning legally

inconsistent verdicts (see People v. Spears, 112 Ill. 2d 396, 405 (1986) (recognizing that where a

claim of inconsistent guilty verdicts involves multiple shots or multiple victims, the question for

the reviewing court is whether the trier of fact could rationally find separable acts accompanied

by mental states to support all of the verdicts as legally consistent)), that was not the manner in

which the parties had intended for the jury to consider the reckless discharge offense. We,

therefore, conclude that the jury’s finding of guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm was legally

inconsistent with the jury’s finding of guilty of aggravated battery with a fireman. See Price, 221

Ill. 2d at 188-89. Accordingly, we reverse defendant’s conviction of aggravated battery with a

firearm, vacate the jury’s finding of guilty of reckless discharge of a firearm, and remand this

case for a new trial on defendant’s aggravated battery with a firearm charge. See Mitchell, 238

Ill. App. 3d at 1060; Fornear, 176 Ill. 2d at 535. At the new trial, defendant will be free to again

ask for a lesser included offense instruction of reckless discharge of a firearm if the

circumstances warrant, and the trial court will have to make a ruling on that request based upon

the evidence presented. We have thoroughly reviewed the evidence in this case and find that the

evidence presented at defendant’s trial was sufficient to prove both charges (aggravated battery

with a firearm and reckless discharge of a firearm) beyond a reasonable doubt and that a retrial

on those charges (a possible retrial as to reckless discharge) will not raise double jeopardy

concerns. See People v. Drake, 2019 IL 123734, ¶¶ 20-21 (indicating that double jeopardy does

not bar a retrial when a conviction has been overturned because of an error in the trial

proceedings, unless the evidence introduced at the initial trial was insufficient to sustain the

conviction).

                                                 46
¶ 106           As for defendant’s remaining claim on this issue—that the jury’s verdicts finding him

        guilty of second degree murder and felony murder were also legally inconsistent—this court

        previously resolved that exact issue in the Lefler case cited above and found that guilty verdicts

        of both second degree and felony murder were not legally inconsistent verdicts because the

        factors that apply to mitigate first degree murder down to second degree murder were not

        applicable to a felony murder charge. See Lefler, 2016 IL App (3d) 140293, ¶¶ 20, 26. We,

        therefore, reject that portion of defendant’s argument on this issue.

¶ 107                                            D. Cumulative Error

¶ 108           As his fourth point of contention on appeal, defendant argues that he was deprived of a

        fair trial due to the cumulative effect of the following trial errors: (1) the trial court received

        inconsistent verdicts that it failed to clarify and sentenced defendant on the more culpable

        offenses (previous issue); (2) the trial court refused to allow defendant to present Gabe’s rap

        video as a prior inconsistent statement; (3) the trial court and defense counsel allowed a juror to

        remain on the jury after learning that the juror was related to one of the victims, even though an

        alternate juror was available; and (4) defense counsel provided ineffective assistance when,

        contrary to defense counsel’s theory of the case, defense counsel told the jury in closing

        argument that self-defense was not a defense to mob action and implied to the jury that defendant

        was a member of one of the mobs. According to defendant, the above-listed errors created a

        pervasive pattern of unfair prejudice at defendant’s trial such that it cannot be said that

        defendant’s trial was fundamentally fair. For that reason, defendant asks that we reverse his

        convictions and remand this case for a new trial.

¶ 109           The State argues that defendant was not deprived of a fair trial and that defendant’s

        convictions should be upheld. In support of that argument, the State asserts that none of the

                                                           47
        matters referred to by defendant constituted error in this case. More specifically, the State

        contends that (1) the jury’s verdicts were not legally inconsistent; (2) the trial court did not abuse

        its discretion in denying defendant’s request to admit Gabe’s rap video; (3) the juror that

        defendant challenges did not suffer from a disqualifying bias and any error that otherwise

        occurred was invited by defendant; and (4) the actions of defense counsel of which defendant

        complains were generally matters of trial strategy and did not constitute ineffective assistance of

        counsel. For that reason, the State asks that we reject defendant’s claim of cumulative error and

        affirm defendant’s convictions.

¶ 110           The determination of whether the cumulative effect of various trial errors warrants a

        reversal in a criminal case depends upon the reviewing court’s evaluation of the individual

        errors. See People v. Doyle, 328 Ill. App. 3d 1, 15 (2002). A defendant in a criminal case,

        whether guilty or innocent, is entitled to a fair, orderly, and impartial trial conducted according to

        the law. See U.S. Const., amend. XIV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 2; People v. Bull, 185 Ill. 2d 179,

        214 (1998). It must be remembered, however, that no trial is perfect, and that a defendant in a

        criminal case is entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one. Bull, 185 Ill. 2d at 214. That being said,

        it has been recognized that a situation may arise where a criminal defendant has been deprived of

        a fair trial, not by any individual error alone, but by the cumulative effect of the trial errors that

        occurred. See, e.g., People v. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d 99, 138-40 (2000); People v. Speight, 153 Ill. 2d

        365, 376 (1992); People v. Jones, 2019 IL App (3d) 160268, ¶ 50. When such cumulative trial

        error occurs, due process and fundamental fairness may require that the defendant’s conviction

        be reversed and the case be remanded for a new trial, even when defendant’s guilt is

        overwhelming. See Jones, 2019 IL App (3d) 160268, ¶ 50; People v. Fultz, 2012 IL App (2d)

        101101, ¶ 54.

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¶ 111          In the present case, after reviewing defendant’s individual claims of error and the effect

        of any error that occurred on defendant’s trial as a whole, we find that defendant was not

        deprived of a fair trial. As for defendant’s first claim of error under this issue—inconsistent

        verdicts—we have already determined, as indicated above, that two of the guilty verdicts

        returned by the jury were legally inconsistent. We have reversed and vacated those verdicts and

        have remanded the greater of the two offenses for a new trial. We do not believe, however, that

        defendant’s claim of inconsistent verdicts would otherwise contribute to his claim of cumulative

        error and defendant does not provide any additional explanation in that regard. We, therefore,

        will not address defendant’s claim of inconsistent verdicts any further under this particular issue.

¶ 112          With regard to defendant’s second claim of error under this issue—the denial of

        defendant’s request to admit Gabe’s rap video—we note that the trial court’s ruling on the

        admissibility of evidence will generally not be reversed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.

        See People v. Pikes, 2013 IL 115171, ¶ 12; People v. Illgen, 145 Ill. 2d 353, 364 (1991). The

        threshold for finding an abuse of discretion is high one and will not be overcome unless it can be

        said that the trial court’s ruling was arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable or that no reasonable

        person would have taken the view adopted by the trial court. See In re Leona W., 228 Ill. 2d 439,

        460 (2008); People v. Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d 159, 182 (2003). Considering that standard of review

        and the evidence before the court on this matter, we cannot find that the trial court erred in

        denying defendant’s request to admit the rap video. As the State correctly notes, the rap video

        was made solely for entertainment purposes and was not akin to a prior statement by the witness.

¶ 113          As for defendant’s third claim of error under this issue—juror bias—we are not

        persuaded by defendant’s argument. Contrary to defendant’s assertion on appeal, the juror in this

        case did not suffer from an implied bias. See People v. Cole, 54 Ill. 2d 401, 413 (1973)

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        (recognizing that implied bias generally arises when a certain relationship exists between a juror

        and a party to the litigation which is so direct that it is presumed that the juror will be biased and,

        therefore, disqualified); People v. Tondini, 2019 IL App (3d) 170370, ¶¶ 17-19 (same). Indeed,

        there is no claim here that the juror was related to any of the parties. See Tondini, 2019 IL App

        (3d) 170370, ¶ 19 (stating that Illinois courts have defined a party as one who has a right to

        control the proceedings, to pursue a defense, to call and cross-examine witnesses, and to appeal

        from the decision). Nor is there any indication in this case that the juror was suffering from a

        disqualifying state of mind that would give rise to a claim of actual bias. See Cole, 54 Ill. 2d at

        413 (recognizing that claims of actual bias are based upon a juror’s state of mind—where a juror

        or potential juror’s state of mind is such that a party will not receive a fair and impartial trial with

        that person on the jury); Tondini, 2019 IL App (3d) 170370, ¶¶ 17-18 (same). Although the juror

        in this case was related by marriage to Gulley (one of the victims/witnesses), she did not know

        Gulley and had never spoken to him. Defendant’s mere speculation on appeal is not sufficient to

        establish a claim of juror bias, especially in light of the juror’s unequivocal statement upon

        inquiry by the trial court that her relationship to Gulley and Gabe’s mother would not affect her

        ability to be fair and impartial. See Cole, 54 Ill. 2d at 415. In addition, because the juror did not

        have a disqualifying bias, defense counsel in this case cannot be considered ineffective for

        failing to seek to have the juror removed from the jury. See People v. Edwards, 195 Ill. 2d 142,

        165 (2001) (stating that defense counsel cannot be considered ineffective for failing to make or

        pursue meritless objections).

¶ 114           Finally, with regard to defendant’s fourth claim under this issue—defendant’s other

        assertions of ineffective assistance of trial counsel—we do not agree with defendant’s assertions.

        Defense counsel spent the majority of his closing argument trying to convince the jury that the

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real mob at the scene of the shooting that day was Roberson’s group and not Price’s group or

defendant. That defense counsel may have referred to Price’s group at one point as “Mob B,”

either because he wanted to emphasize to the jury that there were two groups at the scene of the

shooting (not just Price’s group) or because he misspoke, does not give rise to a claim of

ineffective assistance of counsel. See People v. Patterson, 217 Ill. 2d 407, 441 (2005)

(recognizing that matters of trial strategy will generally not support a claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel); People v. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d 312, 355-56 (2007) (indicating that matters of

trial strategy will generally not support a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, even if

defense counsel made a mistake in trial strategy or tactics or made an error in judgment); People

v. Cloyd, 152 Ill. App. 3d 50, 57 (1987) (stating that in reviewing a claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel, a court must consider defense counsel’s performance as a whole and not

merely focus upon isolated incidents of conduct). Nor do we find that defense counsel was

ineffective for telling the jury that self-defense was not a defense to the mob action charges in

this case. Defense counsel was merely repeating a portion of the jury instructions that the jury

was going to be given, and his statement in that regard was consistent with Illinois law and the

facts of the instant case. See 720 ILCS 5/7-4(a) (West 2016) (indicating that self-defense is not

available to a person who is attempting to commit, committing, or escaping after the commission

of, a forcible felony); People v. Gates, 47 Ill. App. 3d 109, 115 (1977) (pointing out that a claim

of self-defense is not available to a person who is participating in a forcible felony); IPI Criminal

4th No. 24-25.10 (providing that a person is not justified in the use of force if he is committing a

forcible felony). Because we have found that none of the matters cited by defendant under this

issue constituted error, except for defendant’s claim of inconsistent verdicts, which was

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        addressed in the previous section, we reject defendant’s claim of cumulative error. See Jones,

        2019 IL App (3d) 160268, ¶ 50; Fultz, 2012 IL App (2d) 101101, ¶ 54.

¶ 115                                          E. Excessive Sentence

¶ 116          As his fifth and final contention on appeal, defendant argues that his sentences for felony

        murder and aggravated battery with a firearm were excessive. We have already determined that

        defendant’s conviction of aggravated battery with a firearm must be reversed and remanded for a

        new trial as indicated above (inconsistent verdicts). We, therefore, consider only whether

        defendant’s sentence for felony murder was excessive. As to the sentence for that offense,

        defendant asserts that the trial court committed an abuse of discretion when it discounted or

        failed to consider at sentencing certain mitigating evidence, most notably, the fact that the jury

        found defendant’s conduct was mitigated by defendant’s sincere but unreasonable belief that he

        needed to fire the weapon to protect himself and/or Mayfield. Defendant asserts further that in

        determining the appropriate sentence, the trial court failed to properly balance the retributive and

        rehabilitative purposes of its punishment. For those reasons, defendant asks that we either reduce

        his sentence for felony murder or that we remand this case for resentencing on defendant’s

        felony murder conviction.

¶ 117          The State argues that the trial court’s sentencing decision was proper and should be

        upheld. The State asserts that (1) the trial court correctly found that there were no factors in

        mitigation that applied to defendant and (2) the trial court’s sentencing decision was justified

        based upon the circumstances of the shooting, defendant’s prior criminal history, and defendant’s

        history of failing to successfully complete his prior terms of probation or conditional discharge.

        The State asks, therefore, that we affirm defendant’s sentence for felony murder.

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¶ 118          The trial court is charged with the difficult task of fashioning a sentence that strikes an

        appropriate balance between the protection of society and the rehabilitation of the defendant.

        People v. Cox, 82 Ill. 2d 268, 280 (1980). On appeal, the trial court’s sentencing decision will

        not be reversed, absent an abuse of discretion. People v. Streit, 142 Ill. 2d 13, 19 (1991). The

        trial court’s sentencing decision is entitled to great deference and weight on appeal because the

        trial court is in a far better position than the reviewing court to fashion an appropriate sentence

        since the trial court can make a reasoned judgment based upon firsthand consideration of such

        factors as the defendant’s credibility, demeanor, general moral character, mentality, social

        environment, habits, and age; whereas the reviewing court has to rely entirely on the record. Id.

        Although the reviewing court may reduce a sentence where an abuse of discretion has occurred

        (Ill. S. Ct. R. 615(b)(4) (eff. Jan. 1, 1967)), in reviewing the propriety of the sentence, the

        reviewing court should proceed with great caution and care and must not substitute its judgment

        for that of the trial court merely because the reviewing court would have weighed the factors

        differently (Streit, 142 Ill. 2d at 19). It is presumed that the trial court considered any mitigating

        evidence, absent some indication in the record to the contrary. People v. Franks, 292 Ill. App. 3d

        776, 779 (1997).

¶ 119          In the instant case, after reviewing the record before us, including the record for the

        sentencing hearing, we find that the trial court’s sentencing decision was proper. In determining

        the appropriate sentence to impose upon defendant for the offense of felony murder, the trial

        court considered, among other things, the circumstances of the offense, the PSI, and the potential

        factors in aggravation and mitigation. As the trial court’s comments indicated, defendant in this

        case committed a senseless act of violence and, in doing so, killed one person and injured

        another. Defendant had a prior criminal history, including prior crimes of violence, and was

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        subject to a mandatory sentencing add-on of 25 years because of the personal discharge of a

        firearm that resulted in death. See 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(d)(iii) (West 2016). In the past,

        defendant had repeatedly failed to successfully complete his prior terms of probation and

        conditional discharge, and the trial court specifically found, based upon that fact and some of the

        facts of the shooting, that defendant’s likelihood of rehabilitation was low. Although defendant

        asserts that the trial court should have considered as a mitigating factor the jury’s determination

        that defendant had acted with an unreasonable belief in the need for self-defense or defense-of-

        others, we do not agree with that assertion and note that this court specifically rejected a similar

        argument in Lefler. See Lefler, 2016 IL App (3d) 140293, ¶ 31 (indicating that the appellate

        court was aware of no authority that would suggest that a sentencing judge was bound to apply a

        statutory mitigating factor that was implicated by the jury’s verdict). We, therefore, find that the

        trial court did not commit an abuse of discretion in sentencing defendant. Accordingly, we affirm

        defendant’s sentence for felony murder.

¶ 120                                           III. CONCLUSION

¶ 121          For the foregoing reasons, we affirm defendant’s convictions and sentences for felony

        murder and unlawful possession of a weapon by a felon, we reverse defendant’s conviction of

        aggravated battery with a firearm, we vacate the jury’s finding of guilty of reckless discharge of

        a firearm, and we remand this case for a new trial on defendant’s aggravated battery with a

        firearm charge.

¶ 122          Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and vacated in part; cause remanded.

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                                  No. 3-19-0283

Cite as:                 People v. Bush, 2022 IL App (3d) 190283

Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Peoria County, No. 16-CF-373;
                         the Hon. John P. Vespa, Judge, presiding.

Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Thomas A. Karalis, and Amber Hopkins-Reed,
for                      of State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Ottawa, for appellant.
Appellant:

Attorneys                Jodi Hoos, State’s Attorney, of Peoria (Patrick Delfino, Thomas D.
for                      Arado, and Nicholas A. Atwood, of State’s Attorneys Appellate
Appellee:                Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.

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