Court Opinion

ID: 9955664
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-28 21:04:02.900589+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:14.261043
License: Public Domain

2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U
                                        No. 2-23-0100
                                  Order filed March 28, 2024

      NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
      except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
______________________________________________________________________________

                                            IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Lake County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 21-CF-1274
                                       )
JUAN C. GARIBAY,                       ) Honorable
                                       ) Daniel B. Shanes,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE HUTCHINSON delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices Schostok and Birkett concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held: At defendant’s murder trial, defense counsel was not ineffective for presenting alibi
             testimony that not only failed to rebut the State’s evidence, but also undercut
             defendant’s exculpatory statement to the police. Regardless of whether counsel’s
             decision was unreasonable, defendant was not prejudiced by the testimony because
             the remaining evidence overwhelmingly showed that defendant was the shooter.

¶2     Following a jury trial in the circuit court of Lake County, defendant, Juan C. Garibay, was

convicted of first degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1) (West 2020)) and aggravated battery with

a firearm (id. § 12-3.05(e)(1)) in connection with the fatal shooting of Martin Cervantes and the

nonfatal shooting of Andres Carlin. Defendant argues on appeal that his trial attorney rendered
2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U

ineffective assistance of counsel by presenting the testimony of an alibi witness who contradicted

defendant’s own exculpatory statements to police without otherwise rebutting the State’s evidence.

We affirm.

¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶4     At trial, Waukegan police officer Brian Steege testified that on August 26, 2021, at about

6:10 p.m., he was dispatched to a home at 1412 Lorraine Place in Waukegan in response to a

reported shooting. When he arrived, he observed Carlin lying in a pool of blood in the garage.

Areyls Arias was holding a rag to Carlin’s head. A video recording from Steege’s body camera

was played in court. In the recording, Carlin told Steege that defendant “started some bullshit” and

“said that he was going to come by with some dudes.” Carlin was taken by ambulance to a hospital.

Steege remained at the scene and discovered Cervantes lying in a grassy area behind the garage.

Cervantes was deceased.

¶5     Arias testified that she lived at the Lorraine Place address on the date of the shooting. She

was dating Carlin and allowed Cervantes, Carlin’s friend, to stay in her garage. She witnessed the

shooting, which occurred around 6 p.m. At the time, Cervantes was squatting by Arias’s vehicle,

putting air into one of the tires. She observed Cervantes get shot in the back. After he was shot,

Cervantes “stood up and left.”

¶6     Carlin testified that on August 25, 2021, a group—him, Arias, Cervantes, defendant, and

an unnamed woman—were gathered at the Lorraine Place address. At some point, Arias told

Carlin that she thought the other woman was flirting with him. Arias slapped Carlin, which made

defendant laugh. Carlin later gave defendant a ride home, and Cervantes rode with them. During

the ride, defendant made fun of the rift between Carlin and Arias. Cervantes told Carlin that he

should not let defendant disrespect him. Defendant then tried to punch Cervantes. Cervantes

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grabbed defendant’s hand and punched defendant in the face twice. Carlin told them to stop, and

he quickly dropped defendant off at his home in Beach Park.

¶7     Defendant later called Carlin and asked him why he did not intervene when Cervantes

punched him. Defendant continued to call Carlin repeatedly. Carlin ignored most of the calls but

answered one at about 3 p.m. the next day, August 26, 2021. During this call, defendant threatened

to beat Carlin and Cervantes when he next saw them. Afterward, Carlin went to the Lorraine Place

address. He continued to receive calls from defendant, which he mostly ignored. At some point,

he answered a call from a “[p]rivate” caller. The call was from defendant, who again threatened

Carlin. Late in the afternoon, Carlin received a call from defendant’s brother, Jaime Garibay

(Jaime).

¶8     At about 6 p.m., Carlin and Cervantes were in the garage when Carlin heard someone

screaming that an individual wearing a ski mask was approaching the driveway. Carlin saw that

the individual had the same body type as defendant and wore a “Straight Outta Compton” hat.

According to Carlin, defendant “used to wear that hat all the time.” Upon seeing the individual,

Carlin heard shooting and was struck in the head. He felt a burning sensation and then fainted.

¶9     Alejandra Cervantes testified that she was Cervantes’s cousin. She lived across the street

from the Lorraine Place address. At about 6 p.m. on August 26, 2021, while at home, she heard

gunshots and saw a man running toward a truck. The man “was wearing red.” She clarified that

“[s]ome item of clothing [the] person was wearing was red.”

¶ 10   Jaime testified that Maria Cazares was his and defendant’s mother. Defendant called Jaime

on August 26, 2021, and told him he got punched in the eye. Jaime admitted that defendant told

him that he was “going to fight with the guys.” Jaime denied that defendant told him he was going

to fight “the guy who beat him up.” However, the State impeached Jaime with his testimony before

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the grand jury that defendant said he was going to fight “the guy who beat him up.” Jaime

acknowledged that he traveled to the Lorraine Place address on the day of the incident. When he

arrived, the police and an ambulance were at the scene. Jaime admitted that he told a police officer,

“[m]an, I told this guy to call the police before he come over here, my brother.”

¶ 11   Waukegan detective Daniel Ramirez testified that on August 26, 2021, he visited the

hospital where Carlin had been admitted. Ramirez did not speak with Carlin, who was undergoing

surgery. Arias told Ramirez that Carlin’s phone number was (***) ***-0401. After Carlin was

discharged from the hospital, Ramirez called that number, and Carlin answered.

¶ 12   Waukegan sergeant Barrett Mays testified that on August 26, 2021, at approximately 6:11

p.m., he responded to the report of a shooting at the Lorraine Place address. Mays was advised that

defendant was a suspect. Mays learned that defendant used two cell phones, with the numbers

(***) ***-5279 and (***) ***-8502. Mays then contacted the phones’ carrier to request that it

“ping” the phones to ascertain their locations. Every 15 to 20 minutes, the carrier provided “a

location or coordinates for the device” by e-mail. At about 7:45 p.m., Mays began receiving e-

mails showing that one phone was in Summit. The phone started moving north and stopped at

1105 Park Avenue in North Chicago. The two phones were recovered from the rafters of a garage

associated with a house at that address.

¶ 13   Waukegan detective Domenic Cappelluti testified that, en route to the Park Avenue

address, he learned that defendant was at the Waukegan police department. Cappelluti returned to

the police department and encountered defendant standing in the parking lot with another officer.

Defendant said that his mother told him the police were looking for him. Defendant said he wanted

to talk to the police. Cappelluti observed that defendant had a black eye.

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¶ 14   Because defendant appeared to have been drinking, Cappelluti decided not to interview

him immediately. Defendant’s clothes were taken, and he was placed in a cell. Defendant was

wearing a pair of black sweatpants with a pair of red sweatpants underneath. Cappelluti did not

know the exact temperature that evening but recalled that he and other officers were wearing short

sleeves and no jackets.

¶ 15   Cappelluti interviewed defendant the next morning. The interview was videotaped, and the

recording was played in court. During the interview, defendant stated that his parole officer visited

him at his home in Beach Park on the day of the shootings. At some point after his parole officer

left, defendant went to a gas station to buy beer. He also went to his girlfriend’s house at about 4

p.m. to pick up his truck. Otherwise, he stayed at home. Defendant went to the police department

because his mother told him that Carlin had been “hit” and the police were looking for defendant.

¶ 16   Defendant indicated that his phone number was (***) ***-8502, but the phone was in his

mother’s name. That phone was malfunctioning; he could receive calls on it but could not place

calls from it. He sometimes used his daughter’s phone to make outgoing calls. He did not know

that phone’s number. Defendant indicated that his daughter’s phone was at home and that he had

thrown out the phone with the 8502 number.

¶ 17   Cappelluti asked defendant why he had a black eye. Defendant responded that, two days

earlier, one of Carlin’s friends punched him while they were riding in a vehicle that Carlin was

driving. Defendant denied that he had been to the Lorraine Place address on August 26, 2021.

Cappelluti told defendant that Carlin said defendant had shot him and his friend. Defendant denied

the accusation. Cappelluti repeatedly told defendant that he knew he had shot Carlin. Defendant

vehemently denied involvement in the shooting, insisting that Carlin was his friend. At one point,

defendant put his palms together, as if praying, and “promise[d] to God” that he did not shoot

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2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U

Carlin. When Cappelluti informed defendant his phones had been found hidden “at a girl’s house

in the garage.” defendant expressed surprise, saying, “They were hidden in a garage?” When

shown a photograph of the phones discovered at the Park Avenue address, defendant

acknowledged that they were his.

¶ 18   Defendant’s parole officer testified that he visited defendant at his home in Beach Park on

August 26, 2021. The visit lasted from about 3:30 p.m. to 3:54 p.m.

¶ 19   FBI special agent Jeremy Bauer testified that he was a member of the FBI’s Cellular

Analysis Survey Team, which investigates the historical locations of mobile devices by using

records from cell phone companies of interactions between the devices and particular cell towers.

The process establishes the general vicinity of the device at a given time. Moreover, a cell tower’s

geographical range—the area in which it will send a signal to a mobile device—is divided into

sectors. Cell phone companies maintain records of the sector where a device is located when it

interacts with a particular cell tower.

¶ 20   Bauer performed a location analysis for phones with the numbers (***) ***-5279 and (***)

***-8502, using records of numerous voice, voicemail, and data transmissions, as well as available

“timing advance” data, which enabled him to determine the phones’ approximate distance from

certain cell phone towers. According to Bauer’s testimony, the records for August 26, 2021, were

consistent with both phones being in the general vicinity of defendant’s home at 38285 North

Sheridan Road in Beach Park between 3:30 p.m. and 5:45 p.m., then traveling south until

approximately 6 p.m., and finally arriving in the general vicinity of the Lorraine Place address at

about 6:05 p.m. Bauer noted that, shortly before 6 p.m., a voice call was placed from (***) ***-

5279 to (***) ***-0401 (Carlin’s phone). The records indicated that the caller blocked the caller

ID function before making that call.

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2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U

¶ 21   Bauer testified that the records for the phone with the 8502 number showed that, at 6:14

p.m., it was located west of the Lorraine Place address. At about 8 p.m., the phone was near 7427

West 56th Street in Summit. At 8:15 p.m., the phone interacted with a cell tower in the Elmhurst

area. At about 8:30 p.m., it interacted with a tower north of Glenview. Bauer testified that the

records from approximately 9:20 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. were consistent with the phone being near the

Park Avenue address. Both phones he analyzed were registered to Maria Cazares.

¶ 22   Ximena Sanchez testified that she lived at the Park Avenue address. She was a casual

acquaintance of defendant, who was at her home on the afternoon of August 26, 2021. At some

point, she gave defendant a ride home to Beach Park. Later that night, police officers visited

Sanchez’s home. She permitted them to enter the garage. They came out with two phones. She did

not know whom the phones belonged to.

¶ 23   Carol Gudbrandsen, a cybercrime forensic analyst, examined the two phones found in the

garage at the Park Avenue address. She extracted data from the phone with the number (***) ***-

5279. Between August 25, 2021, and August 26, 2021, there were 26 calls between that phone and

a phone with the number (***) ***-0401. Among them were calls from the 5279 number at 4 p.m.

and 5:58 p.m. on August 26, 2021. In both cases, the caller blocked the caller ID function.

¶ 24   The forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on Cervantes testified that he died

from a gunshot wound to the chest.

¶ 25   The defense called William Thompson as its sole witness. He testified that on August 26,

2021, he picked up defendant at his home in Beach Park at around 4:30 p.m. They left defendant’s

residence at around 4:30 p.m. or 5 p.m. and drove to North Chicago to pick up another of

Thompson’s friends, Manuel. They arrived at Manuel’s home at around 5 p.m. or 5:15 p.m. and

then headed toward the Logan Square neighborhood in Chicago to deliver money to the mother of

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2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U

Thompson’s son. They arrived at about 6:15 p.m., and Thompson delivered the money. They were

there for about 20 minutes. They then returned to Lake County, where Thompson dropped off

Manual and defendant. Thompson then went home.

¶ 26   Thompson saw defendant again at about 10 p.m. Defendant asked Thompson to take him

to the county jail. Defendant said that the police were looking for him. On the way, they stopped

at a liquor store, where they bought four small bottles of tequila. Thompson took two bottles,

defendant took two, and they “took the shots.” Thompson then drove defendant to the county jail.

¶ 27   After defendant was convicted and sentenced, he filed this timely appeal.

¶ 28                                      II. ANALYSIS

¶ 29   Defendant argues that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by offering Thompson’s

testimony, which failed to rebut the State’s evidence and was also thoroughly inconsistent with

defendant’s statement to police. Our supreme court has recently summarized the principles

governing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel:

               “It is well settled that a criminal defendant has the right to the effective assistance

       of counsel under both the United States Constitution and the Illinois Constitution.

       [Citations.] This court has adopted the standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466

       U.S. 668 (1984), to judge a defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. [Citation.]

       Accordingly, to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must

       show that his attorney’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness

       and that a reasonable probability exists that, but for counsel’s errors, the result of the

       proceeding would have been different. [Citation.] A defendant’s failure to satisfy either

       prong of the Strickland standard precludes a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel.

       [Citation.]

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               To establish deficient performance, a defendant must prove that counsel’s

       performance, judged by an objective standard of competence under prevailing professional

       norms, was so deficient that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed by

       the sixth amendment. [Citation.] A defendant must overcome the strong presumption that

       counsel’s challenged action or inaction was the product of sound trial strategy. [Citation.]

       In evaluating an attorney’s performance for purposes of an ineffective assistance of counsel

       claim, that performance must be evaluated from counsel’s perspective at the time the

       contested action was taken. [Citation.]” People v. Webb, 2023 IL 128957, ¶¶ 21-22.

¶ 30   Under the Strickland standard, prejudice exists when “the probability that counsel’s errors

changed the outcome of the case is sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.) People v. McCarter, 385 Ill. App. 3d 919, 935 (2008). “The probability

of a different outcome need not exceed 50%, but we do not consider the alleged deficiency in

isolation; instead, we look at the totality of the evidence to determine the impact of the missing

evidence on the factfinder’s ‘overall picture of events.’ ” People v. Gavin, 2021 IL App (1st)

182085, ¶ 44 (quoting McCarter, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 936).

¶ 31   Defendant argues that “presenting William Thompson’s testimony, *** was objectively

unreasonable, and served only to undermine [defendant’s] credibility in an already closely

balanced case.” Relying on People v. Barr, 200 Ill. App. 3d 1077 (1990), defendant makes the

broad assertion that “[i]t has long been understood that counsel performs unreasonably by

presenting witnesses who contradict the defendant’s version of events regarding his conduct at the

time of the crime.” Barr merely held that the defendant could not demonstrate that his attorney’s

failure to interview alibi witnesses affected the case’s outcome, where the witnesses would actually

have contradicted the defendant’s testimony at trial. Id. at 1081. Although the Barr court

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recognized that “it could well be argued” (id.) that counsel would have been incompetent had he

called the alibi witnesses, the court did not definitively decide the question.

¶ 32   Regardless of whether counsel’s decision to call Thompson as a witness (thereby

contradicting defendant’s statement to police) was unreasonable, it caused no prejudice within the

meaning of Strickland. Defendant’s theory of prejudice begins with the proposition that before

Thompson testified, “the evidence was[,] at the very least, closely balanced” and “[the] case was

a credibility contest between the State’s evidence and [defendant’s] statement.” The argument is

unpersuasive.

¶ 33   The only issue at trial was the identity of the individual who shot Cervantes and Carlin.

Although the perpetrator wore a ski mask, Carlin testified that the perpetrator had the same body

type as defendant and wore the type of hat that defendant used to wear “all the time.” Moreover,

the State presented overwhelming circumstantial evidence establishing that defendant was the

perpetrator. Defendant had a motive to retaliate against Cervantes, who had punched him the prior

day, and against Carlin, who, in defendant’s view, had failed to stick up for him against Cervantes.

Defendant’s brother testified that defendant told him that someone had punched him, and he was

“going to fight with the guys.” Carlin testified that defendant called him repeatedly on the day of

the shooting. Carlin ignored most of the calls. However, during one of the calls that Carlin

answered, defendant threatened to beat Carlin and Cervantes when he next saw them. Carlin

answered another call from defendant’s phone when the caller ID function had been blocked.

Again, defendant threatened him. Carlin had no evident reason to fabricate this testimony, and it

was corroborated by phone records showing that defendant’s phone was used to place numerous

calls to Carlin’s phone during the relevant period and that the caller ID function was blocked for

some calls. Moreover, shortly after the shooting, an individual wearing an item of red clothing was

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2024 IL App (2d) 230100-U

observed fleeing the scene. When defendant arrived at the police station, he was wearing a pair of

red sweatpants under a pair of black sweatpants, even though the August weather apparently did

not require him to dress so warmly. It is reasonable to infer that defendant feared the red sweatpants

could be used to identify him, so he tried to conceal them under a second pair.

¶ 34   Furthermore, phone records detailed the approximate location of defendant’s phones

throughout the day of the shooting and the approximate location of one of the phones in the period

after the shooting. The records show that, when the shooting occurred, both phones were in the

general vicinity.

¶ 35   Defendant contends that “[f]or every piece of evidence the State presented, [defendant’s]

statement provided explanations that the jury could have utilized to rebut it.” We disagree. In his

statement, defendant offered no explanation for Carlin’s testimony that defendant called him

repeatedly during the relevant time frame and that, when Carlin answered the calls, defendant

threatened him. Nor did he explain how, in the roughly 20-minute period before the shootings,

both the phone defendant used to make the calls and a phone defendant claimed to have thrown

away were tracked traveling from defendant’s home to the general vicinity of where the shooting

took place. Apparently, defendant would have had the jury believe that, without his knowledge,

someone obtained both phones, traveled with them to the general vicinity of the shooting, and

called Carlin from one of the phones shortly before the shooting. Such an explanation is simply

incredible.

¶ 36   We note that defense counsel vigorously cross-examined Bauer, trying to cast doubt on the

precision of the location data Bauer derived. However, counsel did not meaningfully rebut Bauer’s

testimony that the phones were located a significant distance from defendant’s Beach Park home

during the periods preceding and following the shootings. Moreover, the location data was

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corroborated at certain points. For instance, the data was consistent both with defendant being

home when he met with the parole officer and with the phones being hidden at the Park Avenue

address in North Chicago. Finally, if the location data were inaccurate, it would be a remarkable

coincidence that the error put the phones in the general vicinity of the shooting of two people

defendant knew and had argued or fought with. Again, this is a preposterous theory of the evidence.

¶ 37   Failing to offer any innocent explanation for the State’s evidence that even approaches

plausibility, defendant focuses on perceived shortcomings in the State’s case—the lack of physical

evidence (such as DNA, fingerprints, gunshot residue, or a murder weapon) connecting defendant

to the crime. Notwithstanding the absence of such evidence, however, the evidence that the State

did present was extraordinarily incriminating.

¶ 38   Defendant argues that, given that he repeatedly, emphatically, and unwaveringly

maintained his innocence during 48 minutes of intense questioning by Cappelluti, there was a

significant chance that, but for the misguided decision to present Thompson as an alibi witness,

the jury would have believed defendant’s statements to police. We disagree. It does not take an

uncommonly skilled liar to feign indignance and anger when faced with truthful accusations of

wrongdoing. Cappelluti’s interviewing style was confrontational but not especially hostile. He

tried to gain defendant’s trust. That technique is often effective but does not guarantee securing a

confession from every guilty subject. That defendant could endure less than an hour of questioning

by Cappelluti hardly attests to his innocence.

¶ 39   Obviously, the State did not introduce the recorded interview into evidence for defendant’s

benefit. Undoubtedly, the State recognized that, when viewed in light of the overwhelming

circumstantial evidence of defendant’s guilt, the recorded statement showed him being caught in

a lie in real-time. It is firmly established that “[a] false exculpatory statement is probative of a

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defendant’s consciousness of guilt.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Milka, 211 Ill.

2d 150, 181 (2004).

¶ 40   At the close of the State’s case-in-chief, the evidence was far from closely balanced. Had

defendant rested without presenting any evidence to contest the charges, he would almost surely

have been convicted. Thus, whatever effect Thompson’s testimony had on the jury’s deliberations,

it could not plausibly have tipped the balance against defendant. There was no reasonable

probability that the proceeding’s outcome would have favored defendant if counsel had refrained

from calling Thompson as a witness. Thus, defendant suffered no prejudice within the meaning of

Strickland.

¶ 41                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 42   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County.

¶ 43   Affirmed.

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