Court Opinion

ID: 4636128
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Date Created: 2020-11-24 22:32:33.749141+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:58:29.489134
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                               Appellate Court                             Date: 2020.10.08
                                                                           10:05:37 -05'00'

                  People v. Johnson, 2019 IL App (1st) 153204

Appellate Court    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Respondent-
Caption            Appellee, v. ANTOINE JOHNSON, Petitioner-Appellant.

District & No.     First District, Second Division
                   No. 1-15-3204

Filed              July 25, 2019

Decision Under     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 99-CR-6463; the
Review             Hon. James B. Linn, Judge, presiding.

Judgment           Reversed and remanded.

Counsel on         James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Brian L. Josias, of State
Appeal             Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.

                   Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg,
                   Joseph Alexander, and Iris G. Ferosie, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of
                   counsel), for the People.
     Panel                        JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court, with
                                  opinion.
                                  Justice Hyman concurred in the judgment and opinion.
                                  Justice Hyman also specially concurred, with opinion.
                                  Justice Mason dissented, with opinion.

                                                    OPINION

¶1         Defendant Antoine Johnson appeals from the trial court’s dismissal of his amended
       successive postconviction petition at the second stage under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act
       (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2014)). On appeal, defendant contends that trial counsel
       was ineffective for failing to investigate and call Douglas Williams as a witness who would
       have testified Williams was present at the shooting and defendant was not a shooter. We
       reverse and remand.

¶2                                           I. BACKGROUND
¶3         Following a 2000 jury trial, defendant was convicted of first degree murder (720 ILCS
       5/9-1(a)(1) (West 1996)) and three counts of aggravated battery with a firearm (id.
       § 12-4.2(a)(1)). He was sentenced to 28 years in prison for first degree murder and 10 years in
       prison on each aggravated battery with a firearm count, to be served concurrently. We affirmed
       the trial court’s judgment on direct appeal. People v. Johnson, No. 1-00-3913 (2003)
       (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23).
¶4         Defendant’s convictions arose from a shooting that occurred on August 28, 1998, and
       resulted in the death of Patricia Bowers and injury to Larrail Wright, Mahdi Riley, and Mikki
       West. Defendant and codefendant, Robert Branch, were charged with four counts of first
       degree murder, four counts of attempt first degree murder, three counts of aggravated battery
       with a firearm, five counts of aggravated discharge of a firearm, and three counts of aggravated
       battery. 1 Before trial, defendant filed motions to suppress identification and statements and to
       quash arrest and suppress evidence. The court denied defendant’s motions.
¶5         At trial, Wright testified that, on August 28, 1998, at about 11 p.m., he was with Riley,
       “Smurf,” and “Poppie” in front of Big O’s, a liquor store located near 1469 East 67th Street. 2
       Wright heard gunshots coming from across the street, after which he felt a gunshot hit his back.
       He turned around and saw “Big Mac,” whom he identified at trial as defendant; “Pumpkin,”
       whom he identified at trial as Branch; and “Quick” shooting toward the crowd in front of Big
       O’s. 3 Defendant and Branch were standing together on the north side of the street, and Quick
       was standing on other side of the street next to a church. Defendant had a cream colored and
       shiny gun, and Branch had either a “9-millimeter or a .380” gun. Wright ran through a vacant
       lot and into a nearby house. Wright heard at least 30 gunshots. He was later taken to the
       hospital, where he received treatment for a bullet that went to his jaw. At trial, Wright testified

             1
               Defendant and Branch were tried in separate but simultaneous trials.
             2
               “Smurf” and “Poppie” are not further identified in the record.
             3
               At the time of trial, “Quick” was deceased.

                                                        -2-
       that, while he was in the hospital, he told Chicago police detective Raymond Binkowski that
       defendant was at the shooting and that he recalled telling Binkowski that defendant, Branch,
       and Quick were all shooting. Wright denied having told Binkowski that he did not see
       defendant that night at the shooting. The State showed Wright photographs of the scene of the
       shooting, and he described where he was standing when he was shot and where defendant and
       Branch were standing when he first saw them shooting. 4
¶6         Wright testified that, before the shooting, he had known defendant and Branch for about
       four or five months. On August 31, 1998, Wright viewed a lineup at the police station and
       identified defendant “[f]rom the shooting.” Wright and defendant were in different factions of
       the 67th and Blackstone gang.
¶7         Mahdi Riley testified that, on August 28, 1998, at about 11 p.m., he was in front of Big O’s
       located near 67th Street and Blackstone Avenue with Ramell Bowman, Douglas Williams, and
       Wright, who were members of the same gang. One of them said “there they go,” and Riley
       looked up and saw “Big Mack,” whom he identified at trial as defendant, and “Pumpkin,”
       whom he identified at trial as Branch, standing on the corner of 67th Street. Defendant and
       Branch were pointing handguns toward the crowd standing in front of Big O’s. Riley rode
       away on his bike and, while doing so, was shot in the back. He jumped off his bike and ran
       through a vacant lot and into a nearby house. Riley testified that he heard about 20 to 30
       gunshots that came from the corner where defendant and Branch were standing. Riley
       identified photographs of the scene of the shooting and described where defendant and Branch
       were standing when he saw defendant and Branch shooting. Before the shooting, Riley had
       known defendant for about four or five years.
¶8         Later at the hospital, Riley identified defendant in photographs as being from “[t]he
       shooting.” Riley acknowledged that, after the shooting, he only identified defendant and
       Branch as the shooters and that he told a detective he did not see Quick at the shooting. On
       October 12, 1998, Riley identified a photograph of Branch and told a detective he recognized
       him from “[t]he night of the shooting.” On that same day, Riley identified Quick in a lineup as
       one of the shooters. Riley testified that he had a conviction for unlawful use of a firearm and
       that, in previous encounters with the police, he had given false names and incorrect dates of
       birth.
¶9         Mikki West testified that, on August 28, 1998, at about 11 p.m., she greeted Bowers in
       front of Big O’s and then heard multiple gunshots coming from across the street. West felt a
       bad pain and saw that her leg was bleeding. She looked up and saw Bowers’s eyes “rolled up in
       her head” and “holes in her neck.” West went into the store, heard more gunshots, and then saw
       Bowers fall. West was shot one time in her leg.
¶ 10       Chicago police detective Ted Przepiora testified that, on August 31, 1998, Wright
       identified defendant in a lineup as one of the offenders who shot at him. On October 12, 1998,
       Riley identified Branch in a photographic array as one of the offenders who shot at him and, on
       February 11, 1999, Wright and Riley separately identified Branch in a lineup as one of the
       offenders who shot at him.

           4
            The record on appeal does not contain the photographs. As the appellant, it is defendant’s burden
       to present a complete record on appeal. We will construe any doubts arising from the incomplete record
       against him. See People v. Smith, 406 Ill. App. 3d 879, 886 (2010).

                                                     -3-
¶ 11       Assistant State’s Attorney (ASA) Geraldine D’Souza testified that, on August 31, 1998,
       she spoke with defendant in the presence of Przepiora and a youth officer. Defendant was 16
       years old at this time. D’Souza advised defendant of his Miranda rights, and defendant agreed
       to speak. D’Souza testified to the substance of defendant’s statement to her. D’Souza testified
       that defendant stated that, on August 28, 1998, he was with “Maleeka” in the area of 1469 East
       67th Street. “Quick” and “Pumpkin,” who were also in the area, pulled out .380-caliber guns
       and started shooting at a crowd across the street. Defendant stated that two factions in the
       Gangster Disciple gang had been fighting, and there was a “war” in the area. Defendant was
       scared and felt in danger. He ran around the corner and through an alley and then came out
       behind Quick and Pumpkin, after which he pulled a .380-caliber weapon from his waistband
       and started shooting in the same direction. Defendant stated he shot the gun four times and then
       ran. On August 30, 1998, defendant disposed of the gun on 71st Street.
¶ 12       D’Souza generated a report after the interview, which defendant did not review or sign.
       Defendant’s statement was not reduced to writing, and he never reviewed or signed it. D’Souza
       testified that defendant’s statement was “preposterous.”
¶ 13       Forensic investigator Joseph Bembynista testified that, on August 29, 1998, at three
       different locations at the scene of the shooting, he recovered 9-millimeter cartridge casings in
       groups of six, seven, and eight. Cook County medical examiner Nancy Jones testified that it
       was her opinion that Bowers’s cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds and that the
       manner of death was homicide. She also recovered a fragmented medium caliber
       copper-jacketed bullet from Bowers’s calf.
¶ 14       Forensic scientist Laura Fleming testified that at least three firearms were used in the
       shooting. The bullet fragment recovered from Bowers’s body was “9-millimeter/.38 caliber,”
       meaning that it was in the “.38 caliber family” and she could not determine whether it was a
       9-millimeter caliber.
¶ 15       Fleming testified that it was fair to say that 9-millimeter ammunition could not be fired
       from a .380-caliber firearm.
¶ 16       Chicago police detective Raymond Binkowski testified for defendant. On August 29,
       1998, Binkowski interviewed Wright at the hospital when Wright was being treated for a
       gunshot injury to his face. Binkowski testified that Wright was mumbling and that he had a
       hard time understanding Wright due to the treatment he was receiving for his gunshot injury.
       Binkowski understood Wright to have said that he did not see “Big Mack” at the shooting.
       Wright also told Binkowksi that there were two shooters. Quick was a shooter, and he was not
       sure whether “Pumpkin” did any shooting.
¶ 17       Defendant presented a stipulation between the parties that Riley “had used the name of
       Abder Riley” on prior occasions.
¶ 18       In rebuttal, Przepiora testified that he interviewed Wright at the police station on August
       31, 1998. Przepiora asked Wright for the names of the individuals he saw shooting, and Wright
       told him, “Big Mack,” “Pumpkin,” and “Quick.” Przepiora asked defendant whether he was
       sure he had seen “Big Mack,” and Wright responded, “I am positive.” Wright told Przepiora
       that he told Binkowski at the hospital that “Big Mack” was a shooter.
¶ 19       The jury found defendant guilty of first degree murder and three counts of aggravated
       battery with a firearm for Wright, West, and Riley. The court denied defendant’s motion for a
       new trial and sentenced him to 30 years in prison for first degree murder and 10 years in prison

                                                  -4-
       for each aggravated battery count, to be served concurrently. The court subsequently reduced
       his sentence for first degree murder to 28 years in prison. Defendant appealed, arguing,
       inter alia, that the court erred when it denied his motion to suppress statement. We affirmed,
       finding that defendant gave his statement voluntarily. People v. Johnson, No. 1-00-3913
       (2003) (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23).
¶ 20       In 2003, defendant filed an initial postconviction petition, and the trial court granted the
       State’s motion to dismiss that petition. Defendant subsequently filed a “supplemental petition”
       in 2007, and the trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss that petition. Defendant
       appealed, and we subsequently allowed defendant’s motion to dismiss the appeal (case No.
       1-08-1796).
¶ 21       In 2011, defendant filed a motion for leave to file a pro se successive postconviction
       petition. Defendant asserted actual innocence based on newly discovered evidence. He
       attached affidavits of Terrance Hilliard and Jason Nichols. In Hilliard’s affidavit, he averred he
       was present at the shooting and saw only Quick shoot at Riley. He attested that Riley told him
       that Riley had falsely identified defendant and Branch as the shooters. In Nichols’s affidavit,
       he averred that Riley had told him that Riley and Wright were going to get “even” by
       identifying defendant, Branch, and Quick as the shooters. On March 17, 2011, the court
       docketed the petition and appointed the Cook County Public Defender’s Office to represent
       him.
¶ 22       Thereafter, on January 4, 2012, defendant filed a pro se “motion for leave to proceed
       pro-se [sic] and to releave appointed counsel,” asserting that postconviction counsel informed
       him that he had contacted Nichols and Hilliard but “nothing helpful came from them” and
       arguing that postconviction counsel did not investigate the witnesses’ claims. On January 19,
       2012, postconviction counsel filed a motion under People v. Greer, 212 Ill. 2d 192 (2004),
       asserting that no useful testimony would come from Hilliard and Nichols. The trial court
       granted counsel’s motion to withdraw and allowed defendant time to file additional pro se
       pleadings or hire private counsel.
¶ 23       In March 2013, defendant filed a pro se “1st Amended Petition to Petitioner’s 1st
       Successive Petition.” He asserted actual innocence based on newly discovered evidence from
       Nichols and Hilliard and attached the same affidavits, with the addition of handwritten notes,
       that he had attached to the 2011 petition. He also argued that his statement to the police was
       unconstitutional. In April 2013, the trial court docketed the petition and appointed the Cook
       County Public Defender’s Office to represent him. The same postconviction counsel who had
       previously filed the Greer motion on the 2011 petition was assigned to defendant’s case.
¶ 24       On July 22, 2013, defendant filed a “Motion to Appoint Different Counsel.” He asserted,
       inter alia, that he could not trust postconviction counsel to provide reasonable assistance of
       counsel because “his mind is made up [a]lready.” He asserted that he requested postconviction
       counsel to see if Riley
               “would speak with him because of information from his cousin he wanted to speak with
               me about, how he falsely testified that he seen me shooting and that I shot them. When
               the fact is his motive for his testimony was revenge for a previous incident and a
               promise of leniency from the authorities.”
       He claimed that postconviction counsel told him that, “if [Riley] wanted to contact me he knew
       where to find me” and that postconviction counsel would not try to contact Riley.

                                                   -5-
¶ 25       Next to this motion in the common law record, there is an unnotarized statement from
       James Lewis and a notarized affidavit from Michael Johnson. Johnson averred that Riley told
       him that he identified Branch and defendant as the shooters because he wanted revenge. The
       record does not show that the trial court issued a ruling on defendant’s motion to appoint
       different counsel.
¶ 26       Thereafter, in April 2015, defendant, through postconviction counsel, filed an amended
       successive postconviction petition, asserting a free-standing claim of actual innocence and
       ineffective assistance of counsel based on trial counsel’s failure to investigate Douglas
       Williams as a witness. To the petition, defendant attached a notarized affidavit, signed and
       dated on January 21, 2015, from Williams, averring he was also known as “Smurf” and that, on
       the night of the shooting, he was standing at the corner of 67th Street and Blackstone Avenue
       with Riley, Wright, Raymell Brown, and a few other men. Williams averred that defendant
       was not a shooter and that he came forward in early 2014 when he found out that defendant had
       been found guilty of murder. Defendant’s notarized affidavit, signed and dated on March 11,
       2015, averred that, after he was arrested, he asked trial counsel to send an investigator to the
       scene of shooting to find witnesses, but counsel did not do so. Defendant averred that Williams
       “frequented the corner of 67th and Blackstone and could have easily been found.”
¶ 27       At the April 13, 2015, court date, postconviction counsel informed the court that the
       amended petition filed by counsel superseded defendant’s pro se petition. The State filed a
       motion to dismiss defendant’s amended successive petition. At the July 8, 2015, hearing on
       defendant’s amended successive petition, postconviction counsel informed the court that he
       had not contacted trial counsel. The court did not issue a ruling on the petition but gave counsel
       time to contact trial counsel and supplement the petition.
¶ 28       On October 1, 2015, defendant filed an affidavit from trial counsel, asserting she could not
       recall sending an investigator to search the area of the shooting for witnesses and she did not
       send an investigator to search for Williams. Williams filed another affidavit, signed and dated
       October 1, 2015, averring he was at the shooting and defendant was not one of the shooters.
       After the hearing on defendant’s amended successive petition, the trial court granted the
       State’s motion to dismiss, finding that trial counsel did not improperly represent defendant.

¶ 29                                           II. ANALYSIS
¶ 30       On appeal, defendant contends that he made a substantial showing that trial counsel was
       ineffective for failing to investigate or present Douglas Williams as a witness at trial. He
       asserts that Williams would have testified that he was present at the shooting and defendant
       was not one of the shooters. Defendant argues that the evidence against him was weak,
       specifically that Wright and Riley’s testimony was inconsistent and unreliable, and his
       confession was unverified and “nonsensical.” He argues that, because the State’s identification
       witnesses were unreliable, Williams’s exculpatory testimony would have likely changed the
       result of trial. Defendant requests that we remand the case for an evidentiary hearing. We note
       that defendant alleged a claim of actual innocence in his amended successive postconviction
       petition, but he does not argue this issue on appeal.
¶ 31       Under the Act, a defendant may collaterally attack a conviction by asserting that it resulted
       from a substantial denial of his or her constitutional rights. 725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West
       2012); People v. Tate, 2012 IL 112214, ¶ 8. The Act contemplates the filing of only one
       postconviction petition (People v. Pitsonbarger, 205 Ill. 2d 444, 456 (2002)), and successive

                                                   -6-
       postconviction petitions are disfavored (People v. Jones, 2017 IL App (1st) 123371, ¶ 41).
       There are three stages in the postconviction petition process. People v. Little, 335 Ill. App. 3d
1046, 1050 (2003).
¶ 32        A defendant seeking to file a successive postconviction petition must first obtain leave of
       court. People v. Edwards, 2012 IL 111711, ¶ 24. To obtain leave of court, the petition must
       state a colorable claim of actual innocence or, as relevant here, establish cause and prejudice.
       People v. Jackson, 2016 IL App (1st) 143025, ¶ 19. When, as here, the trial court grants a
       defendant leave to file a successive postconviction petition, the petition is effectively advanced
       to the second stage of postconviction proceedings. Id. ¶ 20.
¶ 33        At the second stage, the court may appoint counsel for defendant (725 ILCS 5/122-4 (West
       2014)), and counsel may amend the petition (People v. Jones, 2017 IL App (4th) 140594,
       ¶ 28). The State may file a motion to dismiss or answer the petition. People v. Harper, 2013 IL
       App (1st) 102181, ¶ 33. If the State files a motion to dismiss the petition, as here, the trial court
       must determine whether the petition and accompanying documentation make a substantial
       showing of a constitutional violation. Id. The court must take all well-pled facts that are not
       positively rebutted by the trial record as true (People v. Pendleton, 223 Ill. 2d 458, 473 (2006)).
       It is a defendant’s burden to make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation (People v.
       Shaw, 2018 IL App (1st) 152994, ¶ 19). If the petition and accompanying documentation do
       not make such a showing, the trial court dismisses the petition. People v. Edwards, 197 Ill. 2d
239, 246 (2001). If a petition is advanced to a third stage, the trial court conducts an evidentiary
       hearing. Pendleton, 223 Ill. 2d at 473. We review de novo the trial court’s dismissal of a
       postconviction petition at the second stage. People v. Snow, 2012 IL App (4th) 110415, ¶ 15.
¶ 34        Initially, we note that the State asserts that defendant failed to demonstrate cause for not
       raising his claim in an earlier proceeding and argues we should affirm on this basis.
¶ 35        Under the Act, to file a successive postconviction petition, the defendant must demonstrate
       “cause for his or her failure to bring the claim in his or her initial post-conviction proceedings
       and prejudice results from that failure.” 725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2014). Cause is
       demonstrated if a defendant identifies “an objective factor that impeded his or her ability to
       raise a specific claim during his or her initial post-conviction proceedings.” Id. Prejudice is
       established “by demonstrating that the claim not raised during his or her initial post-conviction
       proceedings so infected the trial that the resulting conviction or sentence violated due process.”
Id. The cause and prejudice standard is higher than the standard applied to an initial
       postconviction petition, where the trial court may summarily dismiss the petition at the first
       stage if it is “frivolous or patently without merit.” Jackson, 2016 IL App (1st) 143025,
       ¶¶ 18-19. A defendant must establish both cause and prejudice. People v. Sutherland, 2013 IL
       App (1st) 113072, ¶ 16. Throughout the three-stages in the postconviction process, the State
       has the “opportunity to seek dismissal of the petition on any grounds, including the defendant’s
       failure to prove cause and prejudice for not having raised the claims in the initial
       postconviction petition.” People v. Bailey, 2017 IL 121450, ¶ 26.
¶ 36        Here, the trial court advanced defendant’s amended successive postconviction petition to
       the second stage but never made a finding that defendant established cause and prejudice for
       failing to raise his claim in an earlier proceeding. In the State’s motion to dismiss defendant’s
       successive petition, it asserted that defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel and actual
       innocence claims were waived because he did not present them in his initial postconviction
       petition. In defendant’s response, he claimed that, because trial counsel failed to investigate

                                                     -7-
       Williams, he did not learn that Williams would be an exculpatory witness until 2014, which
       was after defendant’s direct appeal and initial postconviction petition. The trial court granted
       the State’s motion to dismiss defendant’s successive petition but made no finding on whether
       defendant established cause and prejudice.
¶ 37        Because the State can seek dismissal based on a defendant’s failure to establish cause and
       prejudice at any stage in the postconviction process, as the State did here at the second stage,
       even though the trial court advanced the petition to the second stage and made no cause and
       prejudice findings, we will review whether defendant established cause and prejudice for his
       claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and call Williams as a witness.
¶ 38        We conclude that defendant established cause and prejudice for his claim that counsel was
       ineffective for failing to investigate and present Williams as a witness at trial.
¶ 39        In Williams’s affidavit attached to defendant’s successive petition, Williams averred that
       he was at the shooting, defendant was not a shooter, and he came forward in early 2014. Thus,
       defendant could not have known until 2014, which was after he filed his direct appeal and
       initial postconviction petition, that Williams would have supported his innocence. Defendant
       could therefore not raise his claim in these earlier proceedings.
¶ 40        We acknowledge that Riley testified at trial that he was in front of the restaurant with
       Williams, Wright, and a man named Ramell Brown before the shooting; thus, Williams’s
       presence at the shooting was known. However, defendant’s affidavit attached to his successive
       petition avers that he asked trial counsel to send an investigator to the scene of the shooting to
       find witnesses, but counsel did not do so. Thus, given that defendant only knew that Williams
       was present at the shooting and did not know what Williams testimony would be until 2014
       and that defendant alleges he requested trial counsel to investigate witnesses at the scene of the
       shooting but counsel failed to do so, we find that defendant’s failure to investigate or present
       Williams as a witness at trial relates to his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, not his
       failure to raise his claim in an earlier proceeding. Thus, defendant has established cause for his
       claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate or present Williams as a
       witness.
¶ 41        Defendant has also established prejudice. Williams’s affidavit avers that he was at the
       scene of the shooting and that defendant was not a shooter. Williams’s statement that
       defendant was not the shooter contradicts the two victims, Riley and Wright, who were
       standing next to Williams at the time of the shooting and identified defendant as the shooter.
       Riley and Wright were from rival gangs and involved in gang war at the time of the shooting.
       As discussed more fully below, defendant’s trial counsel attacked Riley and Wright’s
       identification testimony at trial, and Williams’s testimony could have corroborated
       defendant’s theory that their testimony was biased and unreliable. Thus, given that Williams
       would have provided exculpatory evidence that would have contradicted Riley and Wright’s
       biased identification testimony as rival gang members, defendant has demonstrated that
       counsel’s failure to investigate and present Williams as a witness so infected the trial that the
       resulting conviction or sentence violated due process. Accordingly, defendant has established
       both cause and prejudice for his claim that counsel was ineffective for failing to call Williams
       as a witness.
¶ 42        We now address defendant’s argument that he made a substantial constitutional showing
       that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate or present Williams as a witness at
       trial. To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel as it applies to the second stage, a

                                                     -8-
       defendant must show that (1) counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) the deficient
       performance prejudiced the defendant. People v. Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d 366, 397 (1998) (citing
       Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984)). To establish deficient performance, a
       defendant must show that counsel’s performance was “objectively unreasonable under
       prevailing professional norms.” People v. Colon, 225 Ill. 2d 125, 135 (2007). The defendant
       must overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s action or inaction was the result of sound
       trial strategy. People v. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d 312, 341-42 (2007).
¶ 43        To establish prejudice, a defendant must show that there was a “ ‘reasonable probability
       that, but for counsel’s deficient performance, the result of the proceeding would have been
       different.’ ” People v. Miller, 393 Ill. App. 3d 629, 632-33 (2009) (quoting People v.
       Paleologos, 345 Ill. App. 3d 700, 706 (2003)). Defendant must satisfy both prongs.
       Sutherland, 2013 IL App (1st) 113072, ¶ 20.
¶ 44        We conclude that defendant is entitled to a third-stage evidentiary hearing regarding his
       claim that counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate or call Williams as a witness at trial.
       The decisions on what evidence to present and which witnesses to call rest with trial counsel
       and are generally immune from claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, as they are matters
       of trial strategy. People v. Ward, 187 Ill. 2d 249, 261-62 (1999). However, “counsel’s tactical
       decisions may be deemed ineffective when they result in counsel’s failure to present
       exculpatory evidence of which he is aware, including the failure to call witnesses whose
       testimony would support an otherwise uncorroborated defense.” People v. Brown, 336 Ill.
       App. 3d 711, 718 (2002).
¶ 45        Defendant argued at trial that the State’s two eyewitnesses, Riley and Wright,
       misidentified him and were not credible. In Williams’s affidavit, he averred he was at the
       shooting and defendant was not a shooter. Taking the allegations as true, as we must at the
       second stage, Williams’s allegation that defendant was not a shooter is exculpatory and
       corroborates defendant’s theory that defendant was misidentified and the State’s identification
       witnesses were not credible.
¶ 46        The record does not show a strategic reason for trial counsel’s decision not to investigate or
       present Williams as a witness. See People v. Tate, 305 Ill. App. 3d 607, 612 (1999). Although
       the State asserts that counsel could have decided that presenting Williams’s contradictory alibi
       testimony to the jury would have been strategically riskier as opposed to focusing solely on the
       unreliability of the eyewitnesses’ identification testimony, we cannot determine based on the
       record before us whether that was counsel’s reason. See id. After the trial court hears evidence
       on this issue, it will in a “better position” to review whether counsel provided effective
       assistance of counsel. See id.
¶ 47        We note that the State asserts that there is nothing in the record to show that trial counsel
       was aware of Williams or his testimony. However, at trial, there was testimony that Williams
       was at the scene of the shooting, as Riley testified he was with Williams, Wright, and Ramell
       Bowman in front of Big O’s before the shooting. Defendant’s affidavit averred that he told trial
       counsel to send an investigator to the scene of the shooting to find witnesses but counsel did
       not do so. Defendant also averred that Williams was known to frequent the corner where the
       shooting took place and that Williams could have been easily found. Trial counsel’s affidavit
       averred that she did not recall sending an investigator to search the area of the shooting for
       witnesses and she did not send an investigator to search for Williams. Thus, because we must
       take the allegations in the affidavits as true, defendant made a substantial showing that counsel

                                                     -9-
       was aware of potential witnesses such as Williams, who could have possibly provided
       exculpatory testimony, and she failed to investigate them. See People v. Cleveland, 2012 IL
       App (1st) 101631, ¶ 61 (finding that the defendant made a substantial showing that his
       constitutional right was violated by defense counsel’s failure to fully investigate the possible
       testimony of exculpatory witnesses).
¶ 48       Accordingly, defendant has made a substantial constitutional showing that trial counsel
       was deficient for not investigating or presenting Williams as a witness.
¶ 49       Further, defendant has made a substantial showing that he was prejudiced because he has
       demonstrated that there was a reasonable probability that the result of trial would have been
       different had counsel investigated and presented Williams as witness at trial.
¶ 50       Wright and Riley, who were from rival gangs, both identified defendant at trial as one of
       the shooters, and defense counsel argued that they were not credible. For example, counsel
       attacked Riley’s credibility by eliciting testimony that he had previously lied to the police
       several times about his name and date of birth, he had prior felony convictions, and he and
       defendant were in rival gangs. Defense counsel introduced testimony from a detective that
       Wright told him in the hospital after the shooting that he did not see defendant at the shooting,
       and he was not sure whether Branch did any shooting. Williams’s affidavit would have
       corroborated defendant’s theory that Wright and Riley were not credible and falsely identified
       him and it would have contradicted Wright and Riley’s testimonies that identified defendant as
       a shooter. Had Williams testified at trial, counsel could have further attacked Wright and
       Riley’s reliability, credibility, and identification testimony.
¶ 51       Further, although the ASA testified that defendant admitted after the shooting that he shot
       into the crowd with Quick and Branch, trial counsel argued at trial that defendant’s statement,
       which he gave when he was 16 years old, was unreliable and “preposterous.” Further,
       defendant’s statement to the ASA was inconsistent with the forensic evidence. Defendant
       stated he used a .380-caliber weapon but the forensic investigator only testified he recovered
       9-millimeter cartridge casings at the shooting, and the forensic scientist testified that
       9-millimeter ammunition could not be fired from a .380-caliber firearm. Moreover, defendant
       stated he saw Quick and Branch pull out .380-caliber guns and that he came behind them and
       shot in the same direction. Wright however testified that defendant and Branch were standing
       together and that Quick was on the other side of the street, and Riley testified that, when he
       looked up, he saw only two shooters, defendant and Branch, at the corner shooting their guns at
       the crowd. Given the inconsistencies between defendant’s statement to the ASA and the
       evidence, had the jury found Williams’s testimony credible, Williams would have supported
       defendant’s arguments that his confession was unreliable and inconsistent.
¶ 52       Because Williams’s testimony would have supported defendant’s arguments that Riley and
       Wright’s identification testimony was unreliable and not credible and that defendant’s
       statement was unreliable and inconsistent with the evidence, there is a reasonable probability
       that the result of the trial would have been different had the jury heard Williams’s testimony
       that defendant was not a shooter. See id. ¶ 60 (finding that the defendant made a substantial
       showing that counsel’s representation was unreasonable where counsel did not call
       exculpatory witnesses, noting that, “[i]n the absence of a showing of reasonable trial strategy, a
       sufficient showing has been made that counsel’s decision prejudiced the defendant” and “[i]t
       seems clear that putting on alibi evidence before the jury would have increased the defendant’s
       chances of acquittal”).

                                                   - 10 -
¶ 53       Accordingly, defendant has made a substantial showing that his constitutional right to
       effective assistance of counsel was violated when counsel failed to investigate and present
       Williams as a witness at trial. Therefore, we reverse and remand for third-stage proceedings.
       Further, given the allegations in defendant’s pro se “motion to appoint different counsel” that
       his postconviction counsel did not investigate Riley’s cousin, who allegedly told defendant
       that Riley falsely identified defendant a trial, we also remand for the opportunity for appointed
       counsel to, if necessary, amend defendant’s successive petition.
¶ 54       Given our disposition, we need not review defendant’s alternative argument that the trial
       court erred because it failed to conduct an inquiry to ensure there was no conflict of interest in
       postconviction counsel representing him on his amended successive postconviction petition at
       the second stage.

¶ 55                                     III. CONCLUSION
¶ 56       For the reasons explained above, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court dismissing
       defendant’s amended successive postconviction petition at the second stage, and we remand
       for third-stage proceedings. 5

¶ 57       Reversed and remanded.

¶ 58       JUSTICE HYMAN, specially concurring:
¶ 59       I agree with the analysis in the lead opinion, and I join it in full. I write separately to
       emphasize that we have a duty to avoid “rigid and unreasonable adherence to formalism to the
       detriment of fairness.” O’Brien v. Meyer, 281 Ill. App. 3d 832, 839 (1996). The possibility of
       Johnson’s innocence must not be sacrificed at the expense of formalism or judicial economy.
¶ 60       Johnson has presented evidence that a witness, who trial counsel knowingly declined to
       investigate, would testify that he was not the shooter. We are not permitted to second guess the
       credibility of that evidence at this stage. People v. Sanders, 2016 IL 118123, ¶ 42 (“credibility
       is not an issue at the second stage of postconviction proceedings”). We must take this evidence
       as true and consider it in light of the additional facts that Johnson’s statement admitting guilt
       was not only inconsistent with the physical evidence but also that the two witnesses who
       identified Johnson as the shooter at trial were significantly impeached. While reasonable
       minds can disagree as to whether the particulars of the cause-and-prejudice test have been met,
       given the evidence, I choose to err on the side of allowing a full consideration of Johnson’s
       claim.
¶ 61       I agree that the cause-and-prejudice test has been satisfied, but even if I held reservations
       about it, I would be inclined to reverse. As the case stands, a real possibility exists that Johnson
       has been serving a 28-year prison sentence for a murder he did not actually commit. That
       possibility endures because trial counsel did not investigate a witness who, as far as the record
       reveals, would have been discoverable. Again, taking the affidavits as true (as we must),
       Johnson only has Williams’s affidavit because he came forward after learning of Johnson’s
       conviction. Had he not volunteered that information, Johnson would have been put to the

           5
            In response to footnote 6 in the dissent (infra ¶ 65 n.6), this matter took additional time while
       waiting for an Illinois Supreme Court decision that might have assisted in the analysis.

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       herculean task of conducting an independent investigation from prison. While not a
       post-conviction case, our supreme court has spelled out the pertinent interests: “We deal with
       probabilities, not certainties; we deal with risks and threats to the defendant’s rights. When
       there is error in a close case, we choose to err on the side of fairness, so as not to convict an
       innocent person.” People v. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d 167, 193 (2005).
¶ 62       The dissent misunderstands the point of my separate writing. The majority opinion holds
       that Johnson has satisfied cause and prejudice. I wrote to emphasize that not only is this result
       legally correct but also prudent. Of course, precedent limits our decisionmaking but “within
       the boundaries set by the text and precedent, judgments of fairness and policy are appropriate.”
       David A. Strauss, Common Law Constitutional Interpretation, 63 U. Chi. L. Rev. 877, 901
       (1996). Philosophical discussions about whether considerations of fairness are “subjective” or
       “objective” can await another day. Here, remanding for a hearing advances both objective
       fairness (Johnson’s claim satisfies cause and prejudice) and subjective fairness (the right thing
       to do considering what is on the line). In this context, I refer to Johnson’s claim of innocence,
       not as a postconviction legal term of art, but as a factual reality presented by his petition. At
       this stage, we must accept Williams’s affidavit as true; accordingly, we must accept that
       Johnson did not shoot a gun on the day of the offense. If that turns out to be true after a hearing,
       he would be, in a literal sense, innocent of the crime for which he sits in prison.
¶ 63       Our decision gives the State the benefit of consideration of all of its arguments, while at the
       same time giving Johnson an opportunity to prove a claim that calls into question the
       soundness of his conviction. Given the stakes, fairness impels this result.

¶ 64       JUSTICE MASON, dissenting:
¶ 65       I respectfully dissent from the majority’s determination that Johnson has met the
       cause-and-prejudice test. Because the witness he now claims would testify that he was not one
       of the shooters was known to him at the time of his trial in 2000, no factor “external to the
       defense” precluded him from raising this claim earlier. Therefore, he cannot establish cause for
       his failure to raise his ineffective assistance claim in his first postconviction petition. See
       People v. Davis, 2014 IL 115595, ¶ 14 (“ ‘Cause’ refers to some objective factor external to the
       defense that impeded counsel’s efforts to raise the claim in an earlier proceeding.”). 6
¶ 66       Johnson has elected not to pursue his original claim of actual innocence on appeal, and so,
       as I discuss below, under numerous authorities from our supreme court, he was required to
       satisfy the cause-and-prejudice test to demonstrate why he was unable to raise his claim
       regarding Williams’ testimony in his initial postconviction petition. Thus, the special
       concurrence’s pronouncement that “[t]he possibility of Johnson’s innocence must not be
       sacrificed at the expense of formalism or judicial economy” (supra ¶ 59) both misses the point,
       because this is not an actual innocence case, and improperly relies on the concurring justice’s

           6
            I must comment on the age of this appeal. The reply brief was filed on November 20, 2018. I
       received the majority’s order on July 18, 2019, scarcely one week before my planned retirement. The
       author has known for months of my plan to leave the court on July 26 and has also known since
       February 2019 of my position that this case should be affirmed. Having communicated that position to
       the author and because no further delay in the disposition of this case is tolerable, I file this dissent
       without having been afforded the opportunity to conduct as thorough a review of the more than
       1300-page record as I typically would have undertaken.

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       subjective views of what is “fair” as a basis to reverse—a practice that cannot be squared with
       the authorities from our supreme court that we are bound to follow.
¶ 67        That said, it is obvious that Johnson cannot show cause for his failure to pursue an
       ineffective assistance claim based on his lawyer’s failure to interview a witness whose identity
       was known at the time of his trial in 2000, over a decade before his successive postconviction
       petition was filed.
¶ 68        “[A] defendant faces immense procedural default hurdles when bringing a successive
       postconviction petition. Because successive petitions impede the finality of criminal litigation,
       these hurdles are lowered only in very limited circumstances. [Citation.] One such basis for
       relaxing the bar against successive postconviction petitions is where a petitioner can establish
       ‘cause and prejudice’ for the failure to raise the claim earlier. *** ‘Cause’ refers to some
       objective factor external to the defense that impeded counsel’s efforts to raise the claim in an
       earlier proceeding. ‘Prejudice’ refers to a claimed constitutional error that so infected the entire
       trial that the resulting conviction or sentence violates due process. 725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West
       2012) [citations]. Both prongs must be satisfied for the defendant to prevail.” Id.
¶ 69        First-stage postconviction petition standards do not apply to successive postconviction
       petitions. People v. Smith, 2014 IL 115946, ¶ 35. Consistent with our supreme court’s holdings
       in People v. Tidwell, 236 Ill. 2d 150 (2010), People v. Pistonbarger, 205 Ill. 2d 444 (2002), and
       People v. Edwards, 197 Ill. 2d 239 (2001), leave of court to file a successive postconviction
       petition should be denied when it is clear, from a review of the successive petition and the
       documentation submitted by the petitioner, that the claims alleged by the petitioner fail as a
       matter of law or where the successive petition with supporting documentation is insufficient to
       justify further proceedings.
¶ 70        Johnson’s initial postconviction petition was filed in 2003. After counsel was appointed, a
       supplemental petition was filed on December 20, 2007. In the supplemental petition,
       postconviction counsel raised an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim based on
       counsel’s failure to (i) allow Johnson to testify in his own defense and (ii) argue in closing that
       Johnson should be convicted of second degree murder because his conduct was, according to
       his inculpatory statement following his arrest, prompted by fear of rival gang members. 7 (The
       majority does not even mention this dispositive fact.) No claim based on counsel’s failure to
       investigate Williams was raised. But at Johnson’s trial, Riley identified Williams as one of the
       people present at the time of the shooting. Accordingly, by the time he filed his initial
       postconviction petition in 2003, and certainly by the time his appointed counsel filed the
       supplemental petition in 2007, Johnson knew that Williams was not called as a witness, and he
       had the opportunity to ascertain from his defense counsel that she had not investigated what he
       would say, as she admitted during the course of these proceedings. Accordingly, nothing
       prevented Johnson from raising this claim in his initial petition. Further, because he was
       represented by counsel after the petition passed to second stage, nothing prevented
       postconviction counsel, who did claim trial counsel was ineffective for a number of reasons,

           7
            In a hearing on the petition, Johnson’s postconviction counsel admitted that his trial counsel “did a
       great job” and the trial court aptly noted that the argument postconviction counsel contended should
       have been raised—that Johnson fired while acting in self-defense—would have conflicted with the
       defense Johnson did raise at trial, i.e., that he was not one of the shooters and other witnesses implicated
       him to exact revenge during a gang war.

                                                       - 13 -
       from including this issue in the petition. Clearly, if, as Johnson now contends, his trial lawyer
       was ineffective for failing to investigate this witness, Johnson had available to him the
       information necessary to include that claim in his initial or supplemental postconviction
       petition.
¶ 71       Davis presented analogous circumstances. There, defendant was convicted in 1993 for
       murders committed as a 14-year old. He filed his first postconviction petition in 1996. He
       thereafter filed additional petitions in 1998 and 2002. In an application for leave to file a
       successive petition in 2011, he attached an affidavit from a witness, Lamont Baxter, notarized
       in 2010, who claimed, contrary to his grand jury testimony, that he did not see defendant with
       a gun or hear him say anything about plans to kill everyone at the scene. In his 2011 petition,
       defendant claimed his counsel was ineffective for failing to present Baxter’s testimony at his
       juvenile transfer hearing. Upholding the dismissal of this claim, our supreme court noted that,
       in earlier petitions, defendant had raised ineffective assistance claims. Like Johnson here, the
       defendant in Davis claimed that his lawyer’s deficient representation was not discovered until
       his current postconviction counsel spoke to Baxter in 2010. Rejecting this argument, the
       supreme court stated:
                “Defendant fails to explain why he was unable to discover this allegedly new evidence
                earlier, or raise this or a similar claim in any of his earlier postconviction proceedings.
                A defendant is not permitted to develop the evidentiary basis for a claim [of ineffective
                assistance] in a piecemeal fashion in successive postconviction petitions, as defendant
                has attempted to do here. [Citation.]
                    *** Baxter’s affidavit testimony is not of such character that it could not have been
                discovered earlier by the exercise of due diligence.” (Emphases in original.) Davis,
                2014 IL 115595, ¶¶ 55-56.
¶ 72       The same analysis applies here and mandates affirmance. Williams’s affidavit establishes
       this beyond argument when he states: “I had not know[n] that Antoine Johnson had been found
       guilty of murder in connection with these events. *** When I did find out, in early 2014, I
       immediately offered assistance.” (Emphasis added.) Because Williams was willing to
       “immediately” offer assistance upon learning of Johnson’s conviction, it is obvious that if he
       had learned of that conviction in 2003, when Johnson’s initial postconviction petition was
       filed, or in 2007, when the supplemental petition was filed, he would have offered assistance
       then as well. No factor external to the defense prevented Johnson from raising this claim
       earlier, and in the words of our supreme court, “[Williams’s] affidavit testimony is not of such
       character that it could not have been discovered earlier by the exercise of due diligence.” Id.
       ¶ 56. Because Johnson failed to exercise due diligence in obtaining this evidence, he cannot
       show cause. Further, because Johnson cannot establish cause for his failure to raise this claim
       in his 2003 postconviction petition or in his 2007 supplemental petition, we need not consider
       whether he has established prejudice. Cf. Smith, 2014 IL 115946, ¶ 37 (in considering issue of
       whether defendant was properly denied leave to file successive postconviction petition,
       declining to address cause where defendant failed to show prejudice).
¶ 73       Directing the circuit court to conduct a third stage evidentiary hearing countermands the
       statutory bar on Johnson’s ineffective assistance claim. See 725 ILCS 5/122-3 (West 2010)
       (“Any claim of substantial denial of constitutional rights not raised in the original or an
       amended petition is waived.”); see also Pitsonbarger, 205 Ill. 2d at 458 (“In the context of a
       successive post-conviction petition, *** the procedural bar of waiver is not merely a principle

                                                    - 14 -
of judicial administration; it is an express requirement of the statute.”). By failing to include
this claim in his initial or supplemental postconviction petition, Johnson has forfeited the
ability to pursue it in a successive petition, and the dismissal of that petition should be
affirmed.

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