Court Opinion

ID: 8374124
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-18 20:02:13.587713+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:46:14.755389
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 210136-U
                                          No. 2-21-0136
                                   Order filed October 18, 2022

      NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 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 Winnebago County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 06-CF-405
                                       )
RICHARD E. WANKE,                      ) Honorable
                                       ) Joseph G. McGraw,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

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

                                             ORDER

¶1     Held: Defendant’s amended postconviction petition was properly dismissed because
             defendant forfeited the issues raised on appeal when he did not present them at a
             Krankel hearing.

¶2     Defendant, Richard E. Wanke, appeals the judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago

County dismissing his postconviction petition pursuant to the State’s motion to dismiss. On

appeal, defendant contends that his trial counsel, Greg Clark, provided ineffective assistance.

Specifically, defendant argues that Clark failed to call three witnesses to establish and bolster his

alibi, and that Clark failed to impeach the State’s eyewitness with his purported inability to
2022 IL App (2d) 210136-U

recognize defendant during chats between defendant and the witness while waiting for a hearing

to commence. We determine that defendant has forfeited these claims and affirm.

¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶4     We summarize the facts relevant to our disposition. On January 17, 2006, defendant

attempted to steal a laptop computer from the office of Professor Robert McCauley at Rockford

College (now Rockford University). Clark, a Winnebago County conflict counsel who had a

longstanding attorney-client relationship with defendant, was appointed as defendant’s trial

counsel.

¶5     Clark tried to withdraw several times during the representation, citing difficulties in

communicating with defendant and defendant withholding information as the reason. Specifically,

on March 14, 2007, Clark attempted to withdraw, relating that defendant would not communicate

with him. Defendant denied that he had difficulties in communicating with Clark, claiming only

that they did not see eye to eye about how to defend the case. The trial court denied Clark’s motion

to withdraw, admonishing defendant that it was his obligation to cooperate with Clark in preparing

his defense. The court further admonished that, if his refusal to communicate and cooperate with

Clark compromised his defense, it was “all on [defendant].” On May 7, 2007, the State asked for

a continuance which Clark joined, representing that defendant had been refusing to discuss and

prepare his defense. Clark represented that defendant would not respond to correspondence and

was, in Clark’s view, intentionally avoiding him. Clark further stated that he believed that

defendant was angling to create an ineffective assistance claim against him by his refusal to

communicate and cooperate. Clark renewed his motion to withdraw. The court once again denied

the motion to withdraw, but it stated that it was clear that defendant was not responding to Clark,

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meeting with Clark, returning phone calls, or assisting in preparing his defense, like suggesting

witnesses. The court stated that “the record will be very, very clear” that any deficiency in his

defense would be attributable solely to defendant. We also note that, in conjunction with both

attempts to withdraw, Clark represented that he had correspondence and other records to dispute

the charges leveled by defendant that Clark was at fault for failing to communicate with defendant

and to support Clark’s claim that the communications difficulty was caused by defendant.

¶6     In addition to the concerns about defendant’s conduct, Clark noted that, in July 2006,

defendant had disclosed a single alibi witness to him and that neither defendant nor the witness

had cooperated further. Defendant did not dispute Clark’s account. On July 19, 2007, at what was

scheduled to be the final pretrial conference, Clark asked for a continuance to procure the presence

of Chavez and Kim Klein, defendant’s sister—both of whom were to be alibi witnesses. This

continuance discussed only Chavez and Klein, and defendant did not indicate that that any other

alibi witnesses were needed but not subpoenaed or served. We note further that defendant

repeatedly interjected in many of the pretrial hearings, especially when he believed information

was being misrepresented to the court.

¶7     Eventually, in September 2007, the matter advanced to trial, and the jury returned a verdict

of guilty of burglary (720 ILCS 5/19-1(a) (West 2006)) for his attempt to steal the laptop.

Defendant was not, however, remanded into custody; Clark successfully argued that defendant

was not a flight risk, and defendant remained free on bond until sentencing, even though he faced

a mandatory prison sentence of 3-14 years based on his criminal history.

¶8     Clark filed a posttrial motion for a new trial and included a generic claim of ineffective

assistance of counsel. Clark represented to the trial court that he had invited defendant to provide

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him with a list of the various ways in which he believed Clark’s representation had been deficient

and had apprised defendant of the upcoming hearing on the posttrial motion. The court allowed

defendant to present his claims of ineffective assistance, prompting defendant at least six times to

relate “in what ways [defendant thought Clark] was ineffective.” Defendant alleged that Clark had

not subpoenaed his two trial witnesses for the sentencing hearing, which the court interpreted as a

motion to continue the sentencing hearing. Defendant also alleged that Clark failed to adequately

cross-examine the State’s eyewitness, Barry Roncal, about inconsistencies between his trial

testimony and his statements and testimony at pretrial hearings. Defendant further alleged that

Clark failed to highlight the lack of physical evidence, such as fingerprints on McCauley’s laptop

over which McCauley and the thief struggled, or to highlight the lack of other extrinsic evidence,

such as a contemporaneous 911 phone recording or transcript or contemporaneous descriptions of

the assailant versus how defendant claimed he looked on that date. Defendant also alleged that

Clark failed to present a motion in limine he drafted seeking to exclude any statements that Diane

Chavez, his landlord and friend, had made to the prosecution based on claims that Chavez had

been coerced and intimidated by the State’s alleged threats to prosecute her for the incident. The

trial court denied defendant’s pro se claim of ineffective assistance, remarking that Clark had done

a “wonderful job.” The matter was eventually set for sentencing on February 8, 2008.

¶9     On February 6, 2008, as Clark was clearing snow from his driveway and sidewalk,

defendant murdered him. See People v. Wanke, 2019 IL App (2d) 170373-U (Wanke II). In the

burglary case, defendant was eventually sentenced to a 14-year term of imprisonment. Defendant

appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in denying Clark’s motions to withdraw and that his

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sentence was excessive. We affirmed. People v. Wanke, No. 2-08-1031 (2010) (unpublished order

under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23) (Wanke I).

¶ 10   On June 11, 2012, defendant filed his pro se postconviction petition alleging that Clark

provided ineffective assistance. The trial court advanced the petition to the second stage, and, on

April 30, 2019, defendant’s appointed counsel filed defendant’s amended postconviction petition.

In the amended postconviction petition, relevant to the issues defendant raises on appeal, defendant

alleged that Clark was ineffective for failing to call three witnesses at trial who would have

supported his alibi and for failing to impeach Roncal because defendant believed that Roncal did

not recognize him in two interactions occurring before scheduled hearings in the trial court.

Defendant included affidavits from himself and the three alibi witnesses to support the allegations.

¶ 11   The State moved to dismiss the amended postconviction petition, arguing that defendant

had forfeited his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel by murdering Clark. Alternatively,

the State argued that the claims were barred by the doctrine of res judicata, forfeiture, and that the

claims related to trial strategy. On March 10, 2021, the trial court granted the State’s motion to

dismiss, and defendant timely appeals.

¶ 12                                       II. ANALYSIS

¶ 13   On appeal, defendant alleges that Clark provided ineffective assistance of counsel by

failing to investigate and call three witnesses that defendant asserts would have helped to establish

and bolster his alibi: Terry Klein, his mother, Mary Wanke, and his friend, Cornn. Defendant also

argues that Clark provided ineffective assistance by failing to impeach Roncal over interactions

with defendant that Clark allegedly witnessed in which Roncal, according to defendant, was unable

to recognize defendant.

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¶ 14                          A. Postconviction Procedure and Review

¶ 15    Under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2020)), a

convicted defendant may challenge his or her conviction on the basis that he or she suffered the

deprivation of state or federal constitutional rights. People v. Domagala, 2013 IL 113688, ¶ 32.

The Act sets forth a three-stage process: at the first stage, a defendant need only present the gist of

a constitutional claim.     At the second stage, a defendant’s petition and its accompanying

documentation must make a substantial showing of a constitutional deprivation. At the third stage,

an evidentiary hearing on the claim is held. Id. ¶¶ 32-34.

¶ 16    When a petition is advanced to the second stage, the court may appoint counsel for an

indigent defendant, and counsel may amend the postconviction petition as necessary. People v.

Cotto, 2016 IL 119006, ¶ 27. The State may answer the petition, in which case, the proceedings

are advanced to the third stage, or it may move to dismiss the petition. People v. Andrews, 403 Ill.

App. 3d 654, 658 (2010). If the State moves to dismiss the petition at the second stage, such

dismissal is warranted only when the allegations in the petition fail to make a substantial showing

of a constitutional violation. People v. Hall, 217 Ill. 2d 324, 334 (2005). As in any other motion

to dismiss, the trial court takes as true all allegations that are not positively rebutted by the record.

Id.

¶ 17    The purpose of the postconviction process is to permit inquiry into constitutional issues

arising from the original conviction and sentence that were not, and could not have been, raised

and resolved on direct appeal. People v. English, 2013 IL 112890, ¶ 22. Issues raised and decided

on direct appeal are precluded by res judicata, and issues that could have been raised on direct

appeal, but were not, are forfeited. Id. A postconviction petition is subject to dismissal on grounds

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of res judicata or forfeiture at both the first and second stages. People v. Blair, 215 Ill. 2d 427,

450-51 (2005). We review a second-stage dismissal de novo. Hall, 217 Ill. 2d at 334.

¶ 18                           B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

¶ 19   On appeal, defendant argues that Clark was ineffective in two ways. First, for failing to

investigate and present three alibi witnesses. Specifically, defendant alleged that he communicated

with Clark about the three witnesses before trial commenced, and Clark confessed to defendant

that he “forgot” to contact the alibi witnesses and did not present them at trial. Second, for failing

to impeach the State’s eyewitness, Roncal. Specifically, defendant alleged that, on two occasions,

Clark, as well as the prosecutor, observed Roncal chatting with defendant, and defendant alleged

that he believed that Roncal did not recognize him.

¶ 20   As an initial matter, we note that the State askes us to find that defendant’s murder of Clark

should forfeit defendant’s postconviction claims, analogizing to the doctrine of forfeiture by

wrongdoing. See Ill. R. Evid. 804(b)(5) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). In the argument on the State’s motion

to dismiss defendant’s amended postconviction petition, the trial court refused to entertain the

State’s argument on forfeiture by wrongdoing because it would have pertained to the third stage

evidentiary hearing, allowing Clark to speak through his records. While there may also be merit

to the State’s analogy on public policy grounds, we need not attempt to craft such a policy-based

rationale because existing authority overwhelmingly supports our decision on forfeiture grounds.

We therefore begin by considering our standard of review for claims of ineffective assistance of

counsel.

¶ 21   At the second stage of a postconviction proceeding, a defendant must satisfy the familiar

Strickland standard.    Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984).           A defendant must

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demonstrate both that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,

and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defendant. People v. Tate, 2012 IL 112214, ¶ 19.

This contrasts with the more lenient first-stage standard, in which a defendant need only show that

counsel’s performance was arguably deficient, and the defendant was arguably prejudiced as a

result. Id. At the second stage in a postconviction proceeding, a defendant must demonstrate both

elements of the Strickland test, and if the defendant fails to show either deficient performance or

prejudice, the claim will fail. People v. Edwards, 195 Ill. 2d 142, 163 (2001).

¶ 22   As noted in our discussion of the standard of review applicable to postconviction claims,

waiver and forfeiture apply to a defendant’s claims that were not but could have been raised on

direct appeal. English, 2013 IL 112890, ¶ 22. This is because a claim of ineffective assistance

should be reviewed on direct appeal unless the record is insufficient to address the claim. People

v. Veach, 2017 IL 120649, ¶ 46. Failure to raise an ineffective assistance claim on direct appeal

runs the risk of procedurally defaulting a subsequent postconviction ineffective assistance claim.

Id. ¶ 47. Where the claim is dependent upon facts not found in the record, procedural default will

not preclude its consideration on collateral review. Id. Here, we are faced precisely with the

question of whether defendant’s postconviction claims are procedurally defaulted.

¶ 23   Below, following the entry of the guilty verdict, defendant complained that Clark had

provided ineffective assistance during the trial. This resulted in a Krankel inquiry; on appeal,

defendant’s ineffective assistance claims could and should have been raised during the Krankel

inquiry and his failure to do so results in forfeiture of the issues before us. English, 2013 IL

112890, ¶ 22.

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¶ 24   The purpose of a Krankel inquiry is to allow the trial court to address the defendant’s claim

of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, thereby narrowing the issues to be addressed on appeal

and subsequent proceedings. People v. Roddis, 2020 IL 124352, ¶ 34. Under this procedure, the

defendant need not file a written motion; he or she needs only to bring the claim of ineffective

assistance to the trial court. Id. ¶ 35. The court does not automatically appoint new counsel. Id.

Instead, it examines the defendant’s claim and, if the defendant’s allegations show possible neglect

of the case, new counsel should be appointed; if, however, the defendant’s allegations lack merit

or pertain only to matters of trial strategy, new counsel is unnecessary, and the court may deny the

defendant’s motion. Id. If new counsel is appointed, he or she will be able to investigate and flesh

out the defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance (id. ¶ 36), and this will allow the court to address

the merits of the defendant’s ineffective assistance allegations in their entirety (id. ¶ 61). In other

words, by following the Krankel procedures, the parties will develop a sufficient record to allow

trial and reviewing courts to address the ineffective assistance claim. Id.

¶ 25   Even so, while a Krankel hearing presents a defendant with an opportunity to make a

posttrial claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the failure to raise a specific claim within the

Krankel inquiry will not necessarily result in the forfeiture of the claim on appeal or in a

postconviction petition. People v. McGee, 2021 IL App (2d) 190040, ¶ 41. However, where the

trial court in the original prosecution has given the defendant a full and complete opportunity to

raise the specific claims of ineffective assistance, and the court has taken pains to allow the

defendant the opportunity to air all the bases of his or her complaints that trial counsel provided

ineffective assistance, the failure to raise claims that could, and should, have been raised in the

Krankel context operates as a forfeiture in the postconviction proceeding. People v. Johnson, 2016

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IL App (5th) 130554, ¶¶ 28-32. With these principles in mind, we turn to defendant’s posttrial

claim of ineffective assistance and the trial court’s inquiry.

¶ 26   On October 12, 2007, Clark filed a posttrial motion for a new trial that included an

allegation that “the Defendant had ineffective assistance of counsel.” On November 5, 2007, the

matter was scheduled for sentencing, and before the commencement of the sentencing

proceedings, the trial court first addressed defendant’s motion for a new trial. Specifically, the

court addressed the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel in the following colloquy:

               “THE COURT: Thank you. We need to address No. 10. It alleges ineffective

       assistance of counsel.

               MR. CLARK: Can I have a moment? Judge, my client would like to address the

       Court concerning his list of issues concerning ineffective assistance of counsel, and I am

       telling him he should have communicated with me. I corresponded with him twice since

       our jury trial.

               THE DEFENDANT: Oh.

               THE COURT: [Defendant], I will let you speak because we are going to move this

       along. Tell me in what ways you think Mr. Clark was ineffective.

               THE DEFENDANT: I don’t know how someone cannot serve a subpoena or have

       a subpoena served because somehow finding my house and finding my landlord, who lives

       in the same house—and it was made part of my trial—and my sister’s home seems difficult.

       Warrants are either served at—or I’m sorry—subpoenas are either serve[d] the night before

       the case is involved and then if the people can’t get here on time. In this instance I spoke

       with my attorney right after the trial, right after the guilty verdict, and said I wanted my

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      sister and my landlord as witnesses here today. They have not been served to testify here.

      My landlord cannot get off work. She works for the State of Illinois, as the judge knows.

      She has taken probably two days off because of different parts of hearings and trial—and

      then two more days off for trial, and she just doesn’t have personal days, vacations [sic]

      days, medical days, any other days to utilize, and a simple subpoena will allow her boss to

      give her the day off.

               THE COURT: So are you asking the attorney to make a motion to continue the

      sentencing date?

               THE DEFENDANT: Well, that’s just the first thing, your Honor. I don’t know

      how the address where I live can’t [have] been utilized, the warrant or the subpoena can’t

      be served in an adequate manner.         All of it then is thrown back at me for being

      incommunicative, but I have been very clear those two witnesses are ones that I want here

      today.

               THE COURT: So I will ask the question again, are you asking your attorney to

      continue the sentencing?

               THE DEFENDANT: Yes.

               THE COURT: Okay. Now, let’s address the Motion for New Trial. I presided over

      the trial, I had the opportunity to listen to everything involved in the trial. Tell me in what

      ways you believe Mr. Clark was ineffective?

               THE DEFENDANT: In the suppression hearing a big deal was made about the

      appearance and comings and goings of the person Mr. [Roncal] saw. Mrs. Zerouali [(a

      prosecutor)] asked whether the person he saw had glasses. Mr. Clark asked whether the

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      person had glasses. When all was said and done with that hearing Judge Prochaska found

      that there was enough evidence, but at the end of that chastised both of these attorneys for

      not exploring that one particular aspect given that everybody in the lineup had glasses.

      Then we get to trial and Mr. [Roncal] changes his testimony and says well now the person

      did have glasses. I would think just a question about well are they similar to the glasses

      that the person is wearing right now. Are they similar to the glasses that are in this photo

      of the suspect. Are they similar to any of the glasses of any of the other people, but no

      question on something that where Mr. [Roncal] changed dramatically his testimony was

      ever asked. Similarly, [Professor McCauley] changed his testimony that the suspect that

      he had seen now did not have a hat. You would think that the follow-up of that was because

      Mr. [Roncal] had said that he had a hat and a gray beard, that you would spend sometime

      [sic] on identification to see if they were actually seeing the same person, but no questions

      on, well, okay if he didn’t have a hat what color was his hair. What—you know—what

      color were his eyes, what complexion did he have. He had dark clothes, dark this, dark

      that. You know, were they blue jeans or were they black leather coat. Given that this was

      all circumstantial and there’s—only thing that everyone is deal [sic] with is identification

      you would think that there would [have] been some questions about identification,

      but there were very few. And then at the suppression hearing the biggest point that

      the prosecution made was that hey look he looked [sic] at the van as it sped away,

      he saw a license plate with this number, he called in, they dispatch—or they called

      911. We don’t have a 911 transcript. We don’t have a 911 call that was made. We

      have requested certain documents that I have personally seen when I was taken out

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      of the Court Room and arrested for this case that have never shown up from the

      prosecution, from the—from the police.

             When I was arrested my attorney came down to speak with me, I ran through

      what I thought happened. This was obviously pulling together six weeks of memory

      because I was arrested out of Court six weeks or so after the commission of whoever

      did this crime. The jury didn’t hear anything like that. They certainly heard Officer

      [unintelligible] say that I was arrested for a traffic stop, I mean you warned him

      against it but, you know, but it was still said, but nothing was said about, you know,

      more than 45 days later—I understand the whole concept of not saying that I was

      taken out of court, but the point that somehow the people who serve subpoenas and

      the detectives that go pickup suspects have that same problem of being able to find

      my house, even though they were able to find my house, even though they were able

      to use my drivers license as identification. Nowhere in there in testimony [sic]

      before this Court or before the jury was there anything about them tracking down a

      suspect to their home, finding gloves and leather coats and hats and computers and,

      you know, all of that sort of stuff, and my attorney didn’t at least point that out that

      these things weren’t found. The prosecution did a great job of pointing out what

      they did not have. We don’t have any fingerprints, we don’t have any forensic

      evidence. Supposedly somebody wrestled with Robert McCauley, but no hair and

      fibers were found, but you would think that because the prosecution said it my

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      attorney doesn’t have to necessarily say that. Him and I have battled over how to

      present this case, and I am not saying he did a horrible job, he just left out a

      tremendous amount of stuff where there’s opportunity to question whether the

      prosecution has a case. When the prosecution questioned, of all people, my sister

      whether I am employed or not, but didn’t question me, my attorney didn’t come

      back and at least sew up that loose end of whether I was or wasn’t employed. I was

      employed. I still am employed by Miss Chavez, but the jury is given the impression

      I am an unemployed person.

             Mr. Roncal has three versions of the confrontation with the suspect that he

      saw drive away from Rockford College campus. The first one he zoomed in front

      blocking off the van jumping out of his car—at least this is what the police report

      says—blocking the car and nearly getting run over by the get-a-away [sic]. Okay.

      That was not brought up to the jury. When we had the suppression hearing[,] no

      [Roncal] patiently came up to parallel[,] crossed in front of the car, was eight to ten

      feet away from the suspect and made a viewing of, you know, seconds. When we

      got to trial[,] he pulled up parallel went behind the van and went between the two

      vehicles—or went behind his security car or whatever—went between the two

      vehicles and stood fifteen seconds—well, at first he said thirty seconds—but fifteen

      seconds staring at the person in front of him. Mr. Clark did a great job of saying

      well wait a minute you said this in previous hearing, you are saying this now, but

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      what about the very spectacular police work that he claims in the police report where

      he pulled up, blocked the vehicle from proceeding anywhere, the person pulled back

      and nearly ran him over? That’s three different version of one account. Now hand-

      in-hand, if we take—

             MS. ZEROUALI [(Prosecutor)]: Judge, I am just going to object at this point.

      I am not sure if we are crossing over into the Motion for New Trial itself or if we

      are just on the other portions of the Motion or if we are just dealing with the

      ineffective assistance of counsel issue at this point. I think that [defendant] is

      addressing some of the other matters.

             THE COURT: Well, I am going to allow you to continue to address only

      the ineffective assistance of counsel.

             THE DEFENDANT: I am trying. When I approached [Clark]—[Clark] and

      I got along famously until we came to trial.

             MR. CLARK: Your Honor, I am going to have to object to some of this, the

      generalness of this. You know, I am not going to tolerate much more of this, frankly.

             THE COURT: Tell me what you think was ineffective. I sat through the

      trial, tell me in what other ways you think he was ineffective.

             MR. CLARK: I mean, your Honor, I am handicapped in that I have

      attorney/client privilege that’s not been waived, and this stuff is going in on a record

      for the Court’s review and, you know, this is almost intolerable, that I am still

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       appointed to represent him, he is making these general allegations, and I have

       rebuttal to all of it, but not at this point in time am I going to present it, and I am not

       sure we are being very productive at this point.

                 THE COURT: [Defendant]?

                 MR. CLARK: I also advised [defendant] that his representations—I invited him to

       give me a list of this. He has had an opportunity to review the Motion containing the

       allegation, and there’s been no communication with my office since the trial.

                 THE COURT: All right. I sat through the trial. If there isn’t anything else that

       you can point to specifically in what ways Mr. Clark was ineffective I am prepared to

       rule.

                 THE DEFENDANT: Well, I would like to submit this Motion 1 that I tried to submit

       to you. My attorney has got it. I guess the biggest one is he withheld evidence from you,

       the Court, and withheld evidence from Miss Zerouali, because I attempted to present this

       to Judge Prochaska and he wouldn’t accept it unless my attorney presented it. My attorney

       would not present it. I asked him repeatedly. It was forgotten about, but the Court may

       remember the first thing—or the last thing right before the trial proceeded was the State

       wanted additional documents, or documents that we had not turned over. I am assuming

       this was the document that they were talking about, this Motion that I made up and tried to

       1
           Defendant is referring to his pro se “motion on filing charges of witness tampering” that

he tendered at an earlier hearing, but Clark refused to adopt it. Clark filed defendant’s pro se

motion as an exhibit to the Krankel hearing for the sake of creating a complete record.

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      present to Judge Prochaska stating that Miss Zerouali questioned my landlord [(Chavez)]

      inappropriately and threatened her, and I tried to have a hearing so that that evidence would

      either be not allowed into my trial on anything she, my landlord[,] said while speaking with

      Miss Zerouali in her office or whether it be ruled it’s admissible and just go through the

      procedure of seeing whether it should be disallowed or allowed.

             Now, they made a big deal about whether my sister and my landlord would talk to

      them. They made a big deal on who said what when. Miss Zerouali, I think if I remember

      correctly, stated on the record that you only told—I’m sorry, it was the other prosecutor

      said—you only told Miss Zerouali that you spoke to [defendant] once. Now you are

      changing your testimony. They used that information of the meeting in Miss Zerouali’s

      office against my witness, against me, and my attorney having this document then did not

      present it and utilize it to say hey wait a minute my client wants this information

      disallowed.   I didn’t have the opportunity to quash that testimony or question that

      testimony, and my attorney definitely didn’t revise my witness or come back and try to

      rebuild my witness after the prosecution basically said well wait a minute you told us once,

      you had communication with [defendant] once. Whereas my witness said that hey no I

      talked to him twice on that day. Now, that information seeping in without me being able

      to quash it or at least have it evaluated on whether it was a proper questioning by the

      prosecution of my witness—

             Now, the other thing is Miss Chavez is listed as a Codefendant on the State’s web

      site as well as the docket. Her name, unless I am reading it incorrectly, it’s the State versus

      [defendant] and Diane Chavez. I got this off of—

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               THE COURT: You are really getting so far off. In what way—let’s assume

       whatever you have there that’s from this web site, the jury was never informed she was on

       trial, this was your trial, how does that make Mr. Clark ineffective that somewhere

       there’s a web site that shows up with Diane Chavez’ name? That was never disclosed

       to the jury.

               THE DEFENDANT: I guess you have to read the Motion, your Honor.

               THE COURT: I am prepare[d] to rule on your Motion for Ineffective Assistance of

       Counsel [which] is heard and denied. I sat through the trial and Mr. Clark did a wonderful

       job, as far as the Court is concerned in representing you. In applying the Montgomery [sic]

       standard you don’t even meet the first prong, and that was that his representation of you

       fell below a reasonable standard of care, and that simply didn’t happen. We don’t even

       have to get to prong two, that but for—did I say Montgomery, I meant Strickland. I don’t

       know. If I said Montgomery I misspoke, it’s under Strickland—your Motion fails in that

       you can’t meet prong number one. This Court sat through the trial, heard the testimony,

       saw Mr. Clark cross-examine the State’s witnesses, present your case and argue closing

       and opening, and there is no basis for an ineffective assistance of counsel argument.”

¶ 27   In addition, following defendant’s subsequent murder of Clark and the unsuccessful

appointment of several attorneys, attorney Glenn Jazwiec was eventually appointed to represent

defendant. At a February 29, 2008, hearing, the trial court apprised Jazwiec of its expectations.

Specifically, the court proposed to set the matter for a sentencing date sufficiently removed to

allow “[Jazwiec] to communicate with [defendant], review the trial file, review the post-trial

motions that have already been heard, determine if they’re sufficient or adequate, whether or not

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you wish to supplement [them].” Following this hearing, Jazwiec filed motions to change venue,

motions for substitution of judge and for the trial court to recuse, and motions to reinstate

defendant’s bond. He did not, significantly, seek to supplement or amend the posttrial motion,

particularly with defendant’s appellate contentions of Clark’s ineffective assistance. 2

¶ 28    The point of a Krankel hearing is to investigate a defendant’s allegations of counsel’s

ineffective assistance and to determine if the defendant has shown, among other things, possible

neglect of the case. Roddis, 2020 IL 124352, ¶ 35. Indeed, the Krankel process proceeds in two

distinct steps: in the first step, the trial court determines whether there is a factual basis supporting

the defendant’s allegations of potential neglect by trial counsel with new counsel being appointed

if potential neglect is shown. In the second step, an adversarial evidentiary hearing is held on the

defendant’s claims. People v. Downs, 2017 IL App (2d) 121156-C, ¶ 43. Here, we are concerned

        2
            We note that defendant disputes that the trial court’s appointment of Jazwiec included

within its scope revisiting the posttrial motion. However, defendant does not appear to have

considered the effect of the trial court’s actual words at Jazwiec’s appointment. Moreover, the

citation to the record offered to support the contention does not even remotely support the

contention that “neither Jazwiec nor the [trial court] considered the renewal of the motion for new

trial to be within the scope of [Jazwiec’s] appointment.” Additionally, in defendant’s affidavit in

support of his amended postconviction petition, defendant avers that Jazwiec told defendant that

he would, among other things, “reopen the ineffectiveness hearing, ask for a new trial.” Defendant

therefore demonstrates, during Jazwiec’s representation, that he had more ineffective assistance

claims to present, yet he neither broached the matter in court nor claimed Jazwiec to be ineffective.

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with the adequacy of the first stage Krankel hearing regarding whether it provided an adequate

exploration of defendant’s pro se claims of Clark’s ineffective assistance during his representation

at trial and posttrial.

¶ 29    In making this evaluation, we note that our supreme court has provided guidance about

how the trial court should conduct a first stage Krankel hearing. The court is expected to discuss

the allegations with defendant and trial counsel, to rely on its knowledge of trial counsel’s

performance at trial, and to consider the facial adequacy or inadequacy of the ineffective assistance

claims. People v. Moore, 207 Ill. 2d 68, 78-79 (2003). Finally, the “ ‘trial court must conduct an

adequate inquiry *** , that is, inquiry sufficient to determine the factual basis of the claim.’ ”

People v. Ayres, 2017 IL 1200071, ¶ 11 (quoting People v. Banks, 237 Ill. 2d 154, 213 (2010)).

With these principles in mind, we turn to the Krankel hearing in this matter.

¶ 30    We first note that the record shows that Clark included a generic claim of ineffective

assistance in defendant’s posttrial motion. Additionally, Clark represented to the trial court that

he invited defendant to prepare a list of the instances he believed Clark had provided ineffective

assistance. Defendant does not appear to have responded to Clark’s invitation, and there appears

to have been no further communication between Clark and defendant following the end of the trial.

Instead, at the hearing, defendant embarked on an oral presentation of his claims.

¶ 31    The record also demonstrates that the trial court was fully cognizant of its duty in a Krankel

inquiry. The court prompted defendant no less than six times to relate “in what ways” defendant

believed Clark “was ineffective.” Despite the court’s prompting, defendant offered a disjointed,

unorganized, and rambling account of his grievances about Clark’s representation.

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¶ 32   Specifically, defendant first complained that Clark had failed to subpoena his sister and

Chavez to testify at the sentencing hearing. The court interpreted this to be an oblique request for

a continuance of the sentencing hearing. Next, defendant complained that Roncal had not been

adequately cross-examined based on the inconsistencies of his trial testimony with his previous

statements and testimony. Defendant also complained that Clark did not present or emphasize the

lack of physical evidence, particularly regarding McCauley’s stolen laptop. Defendant also

alleged that Clark had not presented a motion in limine he drafted challenging statements Chavez

made to the prosecution based on claims that Chavez was coerced and intimidated by the threat of

criminal prosecution against her.

¶ 33   The foregoing summary does not include rambling and off-topic discursions by defendant.

In addition, we note that defendant’s first complaint refers to the sentencing hearing (which had

not yet occurred), not trial representation. When defendant began discussing Clark’s deficiencies,

he discussed only the alleged inadequacy of Clark’s cross-examination of Roncal which was

premised on the inconsistencies between Roncal’s reports (as campus security), his testimony in

the motion to suppress, and his trial testimony. On appeal, however, defendant claims that Clark

failed to raise Roncal’s inability to identify defendant based upon prehearing interactions between

defendant and Roncal that Clark purportedly witnessed, interactions that defendant purportedly

discussed with Clark as impeachment for Roncal’s identification of defendant. In other words,

when defendant was given a full opportunity to raise any and all issues of ineffective assistance

during the Krankel inquiry, defendant did not mention Roncal’s purported inability to recognize

him, and he only catalogued the alleged inconsistencies in Roncal’s statements and testimony.

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¶ 34   Similarly, the other issue raised in this appeal, the failure to present three alibi witnesses,

was not mentioned despite the trial court imploring defendant to discuss “in what ways Mr. Clark

was ineffective.” Instead, defendant devoted the balance of his complaints to matters of strategy,

like defendant’s pro se witness-tampering motion in limine and the scope of Roncal’s cross-

examination, the lack of physical evidence tying defendant to the offense, as well as wandering

into substantive matters supporting his request for a new trial.

¶ 35   The two issues defendant raises on appeal, that alibi witnesses were not called and Roncal’s

purported inability to recognize defendant during their pretrial interactions, were most assuredly

known to defendant at the time of the Krankel hearing. Arguably, the failure to present alibi

witnesses would have potentially shown that Clark had neglected the case; likewise, the failure to

demonstrate Roncal’s inability to recognize defendant during pretrial interactions could also have

shown Clark’s neglect, because it would have undermined Roncal’s in-court identification of

defendant. Had these points been raised during the Krankel hearing, the trial court, which very

clearly understood its obligations in Krankel proceedings, likely would have appointed counsel to

flesh out defendant’s claims, and the record would have been made at that time. This process

would have also resulted in an evidentiary hearing and the resolution of defendant’s claims of

ineffective assistance. Roddis, 2020 IL 124352, ¶¶ 34-36.

¶ 36   Thus, defendant had the opportunity to raise the ineffective assistance issues he now raises

on appeal, as well as to create a complete record in support of those claims. We note that,

significantly, defendant does not contend that the trial court’s conduct of the Krankel inquiry, i.e.,

its inquiry into the factual bases of his claims of ineffective assistance, was inadequate. Further,

the trial court repeatedly directed defendant to present any and all ways in which defendant

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believed that Clark provided ineffective assistance. Finally, the issues were obvious and known

to him at the time of the initial Krankel hearing and Clark had instructed defendant to create a

complete list of the instances he believed Clark to have provided ineffective assistance. We

therefore hold that defendant could have, and should have, raised the issues of the alibi witnesses

and Roncal’s purported inability to identify him at the initial Krankel hearing. Therefore,

defendant’s failure to include these issues when he had the opportunity and forum to do so during

the initial Krankel hearing, constitutes forfeiture. English, 2013 IL 112890, ¶ 22 (issues that could

have been raised on direct appeal, but were not, are forfeited). Accordingly, we hold that the trial

court properly dismissed defendant’s postconviction petition.

¶ 37   Defendant tries to avoid the forfeiture of his ineffective assistance claims by contending

that the affidavits in support of them were not created until after the direct appeal was concluded.

This argument wholly misses the mark. The underlying issues were obviously known to defendant

as soon as the trial concluded. Indeed, defendant was present in open court when Clark tendered

and announced defendant’s list of witnesses (and did not seek to complain that the three alibi

witnesses were omitted). It is hard to fathom that the absence of the alibi witnesses went unnoticed

and unremarked by defendant, and, were it the issue defendant makes out on appeal, he would

have mentioned it in the Krankel hearing. Likewise, Clark’s failure to inquire about Roncal’s

purported failure to recognize defendant could not have gone unnoticed by defendant during the

trial. Defendant’s claim that the affidavits he obtained in support of these claims could not have

been added to the appellate record ignores both his knowledge of the claims dating back to the

Krankel proceeding and the very purpose of that proceeding. Had defendant timely raised his

claims of ineffective assistance at the Krankel proceeding, he would have been able to create the

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same record that he did for the postconviction petition, or better, and we would have had the benefit

of that complete record to resolve the ineffective assistance issues during his direct appeal. We

therefore reject defendant’s contention.

¶ 38   Defendant also insists that he was not given advance notice of the impending Krankel

hearing. This claim is belied by the record. Clark represented to the trial court that he told

defendant to prepare a list of the ways defendant believed Clark had rendered ineffective

assistance. Defendant ignored this instruction. It is also telling that defendant admitted that he

received at least one of Clark’s letters that was sent to defendant following his conviction but

before the parties appeared for the Krankel hearing. Defendant also did not dispute that he had

not contacted Clark following the receipt of the letter. Finally, the letter defendant admitted

receiving had information about the scheduled hearing at which defendant’s ineffective assistance

claims would be raised. Defendant wholly ignores this information in the record and does not

explain how it squares with his assertion that he had no knowledge or notice of the impending

Krankel hearing.

¶ 39   In similar fashion, defendant does not explain how his failure to raise what can only be

described as obvious and known issues should be excused. Defendant characterizes his complaints

during the Krankel hearing as “off the cuff,” but ignores the information the record contains,

namely, his admission that he received a letter from Clark apprising him of the upcoming hearing,

and the failure to dispute any of Clark’s representations about instructing him how to prepare for

the upcoming hearing.      In the face of this information in the record, defendant makes an

unsupported assertion that he had no knowledge concerning the Krankel hearing and did not

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explain why the contrary information in the record should not be considered or how it could be

harmonized with his assertion. As such, we reject this contention.

¶ 40   We are left, then, with defendant’s unexplained failure to raise what can only be

characterized as obvious and well-known issues when asked to by the trial court. This results in

the forfeiture of the issues for failing to raise them at the Krankel hearing.

¶ 41   Defendant argues that forfeiture should be relaxed when a pro se defendant is questioned

during a Krankel proceeding because that defendant is usually speaking “off the cuff in response

to the judge’s questions.” According to defendant, there is authority to invoke forfeiture where

the defendant is represented by new counsel in the Krankel proceeding and the issue is not raised

during the proceeding. See People v. Fretch, 2017 IL App (2d) 151107, ¶ 136 (new counsel

forfeited a posttrial claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel by failing to raise it during the

consideration of the posttrial motion). However, defendant contends that an extension of this

principal is unwarranted and unsupported. We disagree.

¶ 42   In the first instance, we disagree that that there is a principle that limits forfeiture or

procedural default to the situation in which new counsel, and only new counsel, presents a posttrial

claim of ineffective assistance. While Fretch encompasses this factual scenario, in which new

counsel presents posttrial claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel during the hearing on the

posttrial motion (id.), we note that, generally, pro se defendants are held to the same standards

required of attorneys, and procedural rules are not relaxed for pro se defendants. People v. Vilces,

321 Ill. App. 3d 937, 940 (2001). Moreover, in Johnson, 2016 IL App (5th) 130554, ¶¶ 28-32, the

defendant failed to raise readily apparent issues in his pro se presentation during a Krankel hearing.

The trial court there spent a substantial amount of the hearing discussing the defendant’s

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allegations. The appellate court, considering the defendant’s subsequent postconviction petition,

determined that the failure to mention the claims during the Krankel hearing subjected those claims

to forfeiture. Id. Defendant does not consider Johnson or the effect of the general rule holding

pro se litigants to the same standard expected of attorneys, instead proposing his own rule of lenity

that is, itself, unsupported in reasoned and considered authority.            Accordingly, we reject

defendant’s invitation to craft a new rule applicable to the Krankel framework and adhere to well-

established principles. See id. (where the trial court thoroughly and fully considers a pro se

defendant’s posttrial claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, claims not raised during the

Krankel proceeding will be subject to forfeiture in a subsequent postconviction petition).

¶ 43    Here, as discussed above, defendant received a thorough Krankel hearing, and the trial

court repeatedly requested defendant to present any way he believed Clark’s representation to have

constituted ineffective assistance. Defendant cannot maintain that Clark’s failure to call three

witnesses to bolster defendant’s alibi was somehow unknown to defendant at the time of the

Krankel inquiry. His failure, therefore, to include this issue in his presentation results in forfeiture.

Likewise, defendant cannot maintain that Clark’s failure to impeach Roncal with his purported

inability to recognize defendant was somehow unknown to defendant at the time of the Krankel

inquiry. Defendant’s failure to include the impeachment issue in his presentation during the

Krankel inquiry results in its forfeiture.

¶ 44    We are also compelled to observe that defendant’s issues are based, in broad strokes, on

the same basic pattern of defendant informing Clark about the issue, and Clark forgetting or

neglecting to present the issue at trial. We find this broad-stroke pattern to be problematic. First,

the record is replete with the trial court’s observations that defendant was refusing to communicate

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and withholding information from Clark. Indeed, we commented on this in defendant’s direct

appeal:

                 “The trial court expressly determined, repeatedly, that defendant was manipulating

          the communications between himself and Clark. On March 14, 2007, the trial court, after

          Clark had argued to be allowed to withdraw, noted that defendant was not cooperating with

          his attorney and that he was acting at his own peril. On May 7, 2007, the trial court again

          noted that there was apparently little cooperation between defendant and Clark and

          admonished defendant to cooperate.        The court also noted that, with respect to the

          difficulties in communication, ‘It’s all on you. Every bit of it is on you.’ We have carefully

          reviewed the record and we conclude that the trial court’s determination that defendant was

          at fault for the problems in communications between himself and Clark is not against the

          manifest weight of the evidence. See People v. Johnson, 237 Ill. 2d 81, 88 (2010)

          (deference is given to the trial court’s factual findings, and those findings will be disturbed

          only if they are against the manifest weight of the evidence); Hensley Construction LLC v.

          Pulte Home Corp., 399 Ill. App. 3d 184, 190 (2010) (reviewing court’s role ‘regarding the

          trial court’s factual findings is limited to determining whether they are against the manifest

          weight of the evidence).

                 Defendant’s refusal to cooperate and communicate with Clark is significant. It

          means that any prejudice experienced by defendant as a result of the communication

          difficulty is entirely of his own making. In People v. West, 137 Ill. 2d 558, 576 (1990), the

          defendant complained to the trial court that there had been a breakdown of communication

          with the court-appointed public defender. The public defender, however, informed the trial

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      court that the breakdown in communication was wholly unilateral—the attorney could

      communicate with the defendant, but the defendant could not or would not communicate

      with the attorney. [Id.] After the trial, the defendant raised an ineffective-assistance-of-

      counsel claim based, in part, on the lack of communication with the public defender. Our

      supreme court denied the claim, holding that there was ‘nothing of record that would

      indicate [that the] defendant was inadequately represented’ by the public defender ‘or that

      he was unable to cooperate and communicate with’ the public defender despite the claim

      that communication had broken down. [Id.] at 588. Likewise here. Where defendant is

      responsible for the breakdown in communication, we will not credit defendant’s claim of

      error stemming from that breakdown in communication. See [id.]; see also People v.

      Clarke, 391 Ill. App. 3d 596, 622 (2009) (the defendant ‘cannot benefit from a claim of

      error that he injected’ into the case).

              Here, defendant claims that the trial court’s denial of Clark’s motion to withdraw

      resulted in prejudice to him because he was unable to communicate with Clark and prepare

      his defense at trial. However, because the trial court’s factual determination that it was

      defendant alone who caused the breakdown in communication (and this conclusion was

      not against the manifest weight of the evidence), we hold that defendant’s own actions

      vitiate his claim of error. As a further reason in support of our decision, we note that it

      would be well beyond problematic to allow defendant’s claim on this record as a matter of

      public policy. To allow the claim would give a defendant carte blanche to stonewall his

      own attorney, confident that by doing so, he would create reversible error and receive a

      new trial. Indeed, a defendant could repeat his actions until he received an acquittal. It

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       would be unwise in the extreme to allow a defendant to manufacture error and to reward

       intolerable behavior.” Wanke I, No. 2-08-1031, slip op. at 28-29.

¶ 45   Our comments fully illustrate the problematic nature of defendant’s conduct while Clark

represented him. Because defendant’s claims on appeal before us now follow the broad-stroke

pattern of “I told Clark information, and he ignored it,” they are based on a breakdown of

communication between defendant and Clark.               However, because the breakdown in

communication is solely upon defendant and attributable to defendant’s conduct, based on the

record and the trial court’s factual findings of record (which, we note, continue to be not against

the manifest weight of the evidence), we conclude that the error, and any accruing prejudice is

attributable to defendant. As a result, even if we accepted that defendant’s claims on appeal

showed that Clark had provided deficient representation, any prejudice would be attributable to

defendant’s actions, not Clark’s. In other words, we would not, indeed, we could not, recognize

the prejudice because defendant himself caused it. See id.

¶ 46   This conclusion is based on the record in this case, alone, and does not take into account

defendant’s murder of Clark. Indeed, if we consider the implications of defendant’s murder of

Clark, the broad-stroke view of defendant’s claims on appeal becomes far more problematic.

Therefore, based on the record in this case alone, defendant’s claims are forfeited and any prejudice

accruing from the alleged deficient conduct is attributable to defendant’s own actions and, thus, is

beyond our purview. Accordingly, on the record before us, there is no way that defendant could

demonstrate cognizable prejudice because his own conduct (the breakdown of communication and

stonewalling his attorney) caused any prejudice arising from the two issues of Clark’s allegedly

deficient performance raised on appeal.

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¶ 47                                 III. CONCLUSION

¶ 48   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court Winnebago County.

¶ 49   Affirmed.

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