Court Opinion

ID: 6333423
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-04-20 20:03:03.585252+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:28.128511
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U
                                        No. 2-20-0162
                                   Order filed April 19, 2022

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

                                            IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Du Page County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 17 CF 1659
                                       )
KONNOR W. BURNS,                       ) Honorable
                                       ) John J. Kinsella,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

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

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held: At defendant’s trial on domestic-abuse charges involving his live-in girlfriend, the
             trial court did not err in admitting evidence that, 10 years before the charged
             offenses, defendant assaulted a different victim, his girlfriend at the time.

¶2     Defendant, Konnor W. Burns, appeals from his conviction of domestic battery (720 ILCS

5/12-3.2(a)(l)) (West 2016)) for striking B.V. and causing her bodily harm. He contends that the

trial court abused its discretion in admitting other-crimes propensity evidence under section 115-

7.4 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code) (725 ILCS 5/115-7.4(b) (West 2016)). The

court admitted evidence of defendant’s prior aggravated battery of his then-girlfriend, S.B., when
2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

he was 17 years old, a little more than 10 years before the offense at issue. He argues that (1) the

offenses were not sufficiently similar under section 115-7.4 as they shared only characteristics

common to most domestic batteries, (2) the propensity evidence was improperly used to bolster

B.V.’s credibility, and (3) the court did not give proper weight to the time gap between the offenses

and his youth when he committed the prior offense. We disagree with defendant on the first two

points. Further, we conclude that the time-gap and youth-factors were, by themselves, insufficient

to make admission of the propensity evidence an abuse of discretion. We therefore affirm.

¶3                                      I. BACKGROUND

¶4     A grand jury indicted defendant on one count each of aggravated domestic battery (720

ILCS 5/12-3.3(a-5), (b) (West 2016)) (strangulation of B.V.) and domestic battery (720 ILCS 5/12-

3.2(a)(l)) (West 2016)) (striking B.V., causing bodily harm). Both offenses allegedly occurred on

August 16, 2017. The record indicates that defendant’s birthdate is July 22, 1989.

¶5     The State moved under section 115-7.4 of the Code to introduce, as evidence of defendant’s

propensity for domestic violence, testimony regarding his prior acts of domestic violence against

other individuals, S.B. (formerly S.T.) and M.R.

¶6     The State anticipated that it would prove the following at trial in this case:

               “[B.V.] and the defendant were in a dating relationship. On the early morning hours

       of August 16, 2017, [B.V.] arrived home from work, and the defendant initiated a verbal

       altercation that turned violent. During his attack, the defendant accused [B.V.] of cheating.

       The defendant was irate, trashing [B.V.]’s apartment and breaking a window and door. He

       strangled [B.V.] by the neck. [B.V.] lost consciousness. The defendant also punched and

       kicked [B.V.] about her head and body repeatedly, which resulted in swelling and bruising.

       [B.V.] begged the defendant to stop. The defendant also threatened [B.V.] if she called the

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      police. He ultimately took her cell phone from her. Eventually, [B.V.] escaped the

      apartment and went to the hospital for medical treatment. Hospital records confirm

      strangulation marks on [B.V.] as well as swelling and bruising about the face and body.”

¶7    The State described the incident involving S.B.:

             “[S.B.] and the defendant were in a dating relationship. On March 22, 2007, [S.B.]

      was at a friend’s apartment having lunch. The defendant drove by threatening to kill [S.B.]

      and her friend. At one point, the defendant climbed up the balcony to get to [S.B.] He left

      when he was told the police were being called. The defendant was able to grab [S.B.]’s

      cell phone prior to leaving. The defendant used the cell phone to lure [S.B.] back to his

      residence. When she arrived, he gave [S.B.] her cell phone back and then threw mud in

      her face. The [S.B.] began to cry and entered the defendant’s [house] to wash her face off

      in the bathroom. The defendant confronted [S.B.] about the friends she was hanging out

      with, believing [S.B.] was cheating on him. At this time the defendant punched [S.B.] in

      the head with a closed fist. [S.B.] fell to the ground and curled up in a ball while the

      defendant screamed at her uncontrollably. She remained on the ground terrified when the

      defendant exited the bathroom and punched a picture that hung on the wall. The picture

      frame shattered. The defendant walked back to the bathroom and punched the door, which

      also broke. The defendant then shattered another picture frame. The defendant was charged

      and convicted of this offense in DuPage County case numbered 07DV498.”

¶8    The State described two incidents involving M.R.:

             “[M.R.] and the defendant were in a dating relationship for approximately two and

      half years.   [M.R.] lived part-time with the defendant at his family’s residence in

      Naperville, Illinois. On March 5, 2011, [M.R] was sleeping in the basement at the

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       defendant’s house. The defendant arrived home around 3 [a.m.] intoxicated. The defendant

       punched [M.R.] in the face out of nowhere. He became irate and accused [M.R.] of

       cheating on him, calling her a ‘whore’ and a ‘slut’. The defendant shattered a flower vase

       in the room. [M.R.] screamed for help in the basement and was eventually able to escape

       from the house. She went to a hospital to received [sic] medical treatment for her injuries,

       which included a laceration and contusion [sic] her eye and nose. Following the attack, the

       defendant called [M.R.]’s sister and threatened to slit her throat and kill her and her unborn

       child. This case was charged in DuPage County case numbered 11DV309.

               On March 26, 2009, the defendant also violently attacked [M.R.]. The defendant

       pushed her against the wall, ripped a chain off her neck and choked her. The defendant

       then chased [M.R.] with a tire iron. The defendant hit [M.R.’s] vehicle with the weapon.

       This case was charged in DuPage County case numbered 09DV452.”

¶9     Defendant responded that, because the two prior acts involving M.R. did not result in a

conviction—the complaining witness did not appear at the trial—the evidence of the acts was

unreliable. He also argued that the offense involving S.B. was too remote because it occurred

more than 10 years before the offenses charged here. Further, “the alleged factual similarities

identified by the State are not that significant.” “[T]hat these [acts] all were from dating

relationships and that the defendant was violent and enraged means nothing because such facts are

common to all domestic violence cases.” “The only facts that are not inherent in the offense and

that are common in all cases ***, are (1) the alleged breaking of items during the encounters,

(2) the alleged punching to the head, and (3) post-incident threats.”

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¶ 10   The court granted the State’s motion to admit the prior acts, finding that (1) they were more

than sufficiently similar to the charged acts and (2) the 10-year interval since the acts involving

S.B. was not dispositive:

       “[I]n reading and reviewing the incidents involved, I find them strikingly similar, although

       probably falling short of modus operandi in the sense it’s normally used to show one’s

       identification as a perpetrator of an offense because they have committed identical offenses

       in the past. ***

               ***

               There is some question of time. I don’t find it dispositive in terms of admissibility.

       The incidents are several-years old. And, I think, it’s relevant that there are other incidents

       that the State is not seeking admission of in terms of weighing the probativeness versus the

       prejudicial effect, which is, certainly, part of the evaluation of the question to be addressed.

               But there is factual similarity. The proximity, I think, is sufficient in terms of being

       admissible.

               And it would be relevant to establish that the defendant has engaged in a pattern of

       behavior and conduct of physically abusing women with whom he was in a relationship.

       And these would be two other women that he had relationships with in [sic] the past.”

¶ 11   At defendant’s jury trial, the State presented evidence of the battery of S.B. but not the

battery of M.R. In its opening statement, the State first described what it expected to prove

defendant had done to B.V. The State then remarked that defendant had done something similar

before, to S.B.:

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2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

                “This isn’t the first time the defendant flew into a fit of rage and beat up a girlfriend.

        He’s done this before to [S.B.] *** When this defendant gets angry he deals with it by

        beating up a girlfriend, by destroying property, that’s his response to anger.”

¶ 12    In his opening statement, defendant asserted that the evidence would show that B.V. got

into a fight with him because he would not give her his prescription drugs. He also argued that

B.V. had a propensity to lie and that the evidence would show that, “when confronted with

something that doesn’t fit her story, she comes up with a new story.”

¶ 13    B.V. was the first witness for the State. She testified that, in August 2017, she was working

as a server at “Empire,” which was later identified as Empire Burgers and Brew (Empire). She

had been dating defendant for a few months, and they lived together in her apartment. On August

15, 2017, she finished her shift at 10 or 11 p.m. She did not go home immediately when she

finished. Defendant started to text her, asking in profane language why she had not yet returned.

¶ 14    Sometime after midnight, she returned to her apartment. Defendant came up to her as she

entered and screamed at her for her delayed return. B.V. walked to the bedroom to change out of

her work clothes. Defendant followed her, screaming and calling her names; she commented, “He

was up for days at that point so he was not in the best mood.” Among the things he screamed at

her was an accusation that she was cheating on him. Defendant then started throwing “random

things.”

¶ 15    B.V. went into the bathroom and locked the door. Defendant, after screaming for B.V. to

open the door, eventually broke it open, then hit her with “a closed fist across the face.” He hit

her face about three more times; she fell into the shower, striking the back of her head against the

tiles on the wall.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

¶ 16    B.V. testified that she then ran to the living room, intending to pick up her car keys and

phone so she could leave. Defendant followed her into the living room and took the phone and

keys from her. He then grabbed her by her arms and threw her to the ground, where he pinned

her, sitting on her and holding her arms out. She “was screaming really loud at that point because

he kept punching [her] really hard in the face and the ear and nose.” Defendant shoved something

made of cloth in her mouth, covered her mouth with his hand, and told her that, if she kept

screaming, he was “going to fucking kill [her].” He then put his hands around her neck and started

choking her. She felt that she could not breathe and blacked out. As she described it, “The last

thing I remember before I lost consciousness was him looking into my eyes and saying ‘I’m going

to fucking kill you.’ ”

¶ 17    B.V. testified that, when she regained consciousness, she left the apartment and drove

herself to the hospital.     Someone at the hospital called the police.     Officers arrived and

photographed her injuries. In photographs admitted at trial, B.V. identified bruising on her face,

a cut inside her mouth, marks on her neck, rug burns on her elbow, and bruising on her legs. She

attributed these injuries to defendant’s attack on August 16, 2017.

¶ 18    When B.V. returned from the hospital, she discovered damage to her apartment including

a broken bathroom door and a damaged kitchen sink. She identified the damage in photographs

admitted at trial; for instance, the spigot in the kitchen sink was detached and the bathroom door

was damaged at the hinge. Another photograph showed items strewn about the living room. She

claimed that the living room was “[n]ot exactly like that” before defendant started yelling at her

and throwing things. He also threw things around her bedroom and punched a hole in the side of

her dresser, causing the side panel to fall off.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

¶ 19   On cross-examination, B.V acknowledged speaking with Officer John Stull1 shortly after

she returned from the hospital. She remembered giving her version of the events, but she was

concussed at the time and could not recall what she said. She agreed that she tried to be as accurate

and complete as possible when she gave the statement. She denied telling Stull that she and

defendant had been dating for two years before the incident. B.V. guessed that defendant had

moved into her apartment “a couple [of] months” before the incident, and she admitted that

defendant had cosigned the lease.

¶ 20   B.V. denied that she regularly got bumps and bruises as a server at Empire. She was sure

that she had worked the night of August 15, 2017, and she believed that she had worked the

previous night as well. She agreed that Empire kept accurate payroll records. She finished work

at 11 p.m. on August 15 or 12 a.m. on August 16. She did not recall exactly what she did after

work, but she believed that she “either ran errands or hung out at work like [she] would normally

do.” She denied that she went to the home of someone named “Louis” or “Mighty” after work.

She had not shown the police the texts defendant sent her on the night of August 15 into August

16 because she wanted to move on with her life and have nothing more to do with the situation.

Six months after the incident, her phone was stolen and she was no longer able to access the texts.

¶ 21   Questioned further about her statement to Stull, B.V. testified that she told him that she

was “running errands” after work, not that she was “running around.” B.V. reiterated that she was

concussed while speaking with Stull and that this affected her memory of the interview. She

       1
           During her cross-examination, B.V. periodically claimed that she did not recall speaking

to Officer Stull, yet at other times she acknowledged their interview and purported to recall what

she told him.

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testified that she would not typically run errands at that time of night and might have stayed at

work to avoid going home.          She denied telling Stull that defendant wanted to go to his

grandmother’s house at around 4 a.m. on August 16, 2017. She claimed, however, that defendant

did sometimes run errands that early. She could not recall defendant biting her on the wrist but

said that, if that was what she told Stull, then it was correct. She did not recall telling Stull that

defendant threatened to kill her. She also did not recall telling Stull that defendant stuffed a cloth

in her mouth, but she did recall telling him that she was not able to breathe at a point during the

attack.

¶ 22      B.V. further testified that she probably told officers what medications defendant was

taking—Adderall and Xanax—including the specific doses. She agreed that she had sometimes

filled prescriptions on his behalf. She acknowledged that she went to drug rehabilitation in 2018

but claimed that her substance abuse developed in response to the August 2017 incident.

¶ 23      B.V. stated that, before her testimony, she reviewed an audio recording of a statement that

she gave detectives. She attested that the recording was accurate. For impeachment purposes, the

audio was played in court, and B.V. admitted that she told the detectives that defendant “punched

[her] in the face with a closed fist hard six times.”

¶ 24      The State next called S.B., who testified that, in 2007, when she was 17 years old, she was

in a dating relationship with defendant. In March 2007, she had been dating defendant for about

six months. On March 22, 2007, at noon, she, Scott Burford (a school friend), three other friends,

and Burford’s grandmother were having lunch on the balcony of Burford’s second-floor apartment.

Defendant started texting her, telling her that he did not want her to be at Burford’s home and that

she should come outside. He then stopped his Hummer in front of the apartment and started yelling

for her to come out. He threatened to kill S.B. and burn her parents’ house down. He eventually

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left but came back three or four minutes later and started yelling again, this time demanding that

Burford let him into the building. When Burford refused, defendant started climbing from a first-

floor balcony to Burford’s balcony. He yelled that he was going to kill them and that S.B. was

going to regret being at Burford’s home. Burford’s grandmother told defendant that, if he did not

leave, she would call the police. Defendant jumped to the ground, got in his vehicle, and drove

away.

¶ 25    By then, S.B. and her friends had to leave to get back to their classes. As she was getting

into the back seat of a friend’s car, defendant “came flying up in the Hummer” and blocked her

friend’s car. He came so close that S.B. thought that he was going to hit the car. Defendant jumped

out of his Hummer, reached through the open back window—which S.B.’s friend was trying to

close—and grabbed S.B.’s cell phone off her lap. Defendant told S.B. that the only way that she

was going to get her phone back was to go to his house.

¶ 26    S.B. had her friend drive to defendant’s house. Defendant was in the front yard when they

arrived, holding her phone. When S.B. went to take it from his left hand, he slapped her in the

face with his right hand, which was full of mud. As a result, she had half of her face and part of

her hair covered with mud.

¶ 27    S.B. then ran into defendant’s house to wash the mud off. Defendant followed her into the

bathroom, calling her names and telling her that she had made “a huge mistake” by going to

Burford’s apartment. When they got to the bathroom, defendant started crying and telling her that

he loved her and that he was sorry; they started hugging. He asked her whether she “had feelings”

for Burford. When she responded, he punched her hard in the face. She fell to the ground, crying.

Defendant started hitting pictures on the wall, breaking the glass; he punched some of them, but

he hit one with his head. This resulted in “blood[ ] everywhere.” He started telling S.B. that she

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2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

“was going to pay for doing this to him.” He kept punching walls, and he broke the bathroom

door. S.B. tried to leave, but defendant initially blocked her. After she sat for a while with her

head in her hands, he told her to leave. She walked out of the house, and she and her friends drove

to school. Defendant started phoning her while she was on the way.

¶ 28     On cross-examination, S.B. said that she was aware that defendant had pleaded guilty to a

count of battery based on the incident she described.

¶ 29     The State rested after S.B.’s testimony.

¶ 30     The first defense witness was defendant’s father, William A. Burns (Burns). He said that

defendant had always had great difficulty talking to strangers and often could not communicate by

telephone at all.

¶ 31     Burns said that B.V. had stayed at his home in Decatur no more than three times before the

August 2017 incident. The first time she came was about three months before the incident. Each

time he encountered her, she seemed to be intoxicated. Also, three or four times before the August

2017 incident, he had been to the apartment that defendant shared with B.V. He had used the

bathroom there and noticed that the door and doorframe were cracked.

¶ 32     One time when defendant and B.V. were in Decatur, Burns noticed that defendant had left

his prescription bottles on his dresser. B.V. opened one of those bottles and put several pills in her

mouth.

¶ 33     Burns testified that, in 2017, he owned an advertising agency and a recording studio. After

defendant spent three or four thousand dollars on a sound-mixing board, Burns let him keep several

valuable audio and video monitors in the apartment he shared with B.V. That equipment was in

the apartment when he was present.

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2022 IL App (2d) 200162-U

¶ 34   Defendant’s second witness was Stull, an Aurora police officer. He interviewed B.V. at

Copley hospital. She told him that she had worked until 2 a.m. on August 16, 2017, and then had

some “running around” to do until 4 a.m. She said that, when she got back to the apartment,

defendant was angry with her because he needed the car to go to his grandmother’s house. Stull

asked her if it was normal for defendant to go to see his grandmother that early; B.V. said that it

was not. B.V. never told him that defendant (1) threatened to kill her, (2) put a towel or bandanna

in her mouth, or (3) followed her to the bathroom. She did tell him that defendant bit her on the

wrist. She also said that she had been dating defendant for two years but denied that he lived with

her.

¶ 35   On cross-examination, Stull agreed that B.V. told him that defendant punched her multiple

times and choked her until she passed out. Asked about B.V.’s demeanor when she was speaking,

he described her as “lethargic” and “kind of dazed.” At first, she seemed to be protecting

defendant; she did not want to say who was responsible for her injuries. On redirect, he agreed

that, once B.V. identified defendant as her assailant, she seemed to be forthcoming in her answers.

¶ 36   Defendant elected to testify. He stated that he took medications for anxiety and attention

deficit disorder. He also had difficulty communicating; it was stressful for him to talk in the

presence of people he did not know. He met B.V. in May 2017. One of her jobs was at Empire.

He moved in with B.V. within a week or so of meeting her.

¶ 37   Defendant testified that he had observed B.V. regularly using cocaine and nonprescribed

Xanax and Adderall. When the two were about 12 weeks into their relationship, B.V. asked

defendant to give her his prescribed Xanax or Adderall. She reacted angrily when he refused. One

evening about a week before the charged incident, B.V. became angry with defendant because he

was out too long with the car. She told him that she had called the police. They were in the

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bedroom; a plate and a butter knife were on the nightstand. B.V. started slapping defendant and

attacking him with the butter knife. She struck his neck and lip with the knife. Initially, he was

focused more on calming her than on defending himself. Once he was cut, he was more intent on

self-defense. However, because the attack was with a butter knife, he never felt seriously

threatened. Defendant identified photographs of his face and neck as accurately depicting his

appearance the day after this incident.

¶ 38   Defendant testified that, on August 15, 2017, he B.V. had dinner together at about 4 p.m.

That night, they went to a friend’s house in Berwyn where people were using cocaine. When they

got back to their apartment, B.V. asked defendant to let her use his Norco or Xanax to calm down

from the cocaine she had taken. When he refused, she became irate—much angrier than ever

before. She dumped a two-liter bottle of cola over his mixing board and started throwing objects

at items of memorabilia that defendant had brought to the apartment. Defendant got paper towels

and started wiping the soda off the board, but B.V. grabbed a steak knife. He tried to take the knife

away from her while she struck him with her other hand. During the struggle, they fell to the

ground with defendant on top. This allowed him to pin her and use both his hands to take the knife

from her. He got up and threw the knife toward the kitchen area. B.V. resumed breaking objects.

The fight ended when he gave B.V. the car keys and told her to leave. After she left, he started

packing to leave, but then fell asleep on the couch. He was awakened by a police officer.

¶ 39   Defendant reviewed Stull’s photographs of the apartment. He testified that, when he

moved in, the bathroom door was already broken and B.V.’s dresser already had a panel that was

not attached properly. He also did not cause damage to the kitchen sink. He said that some of the

strewn trash in the apartment was not there when B.V. left; some of it might have been there, but

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he did not put it there. After B.V. left, he packed his luggage and left it in the middle of the living

room area before going to sleep. In the photographs, however, the luggage was empty.

¶ 40   Defendant denied threatening to kill B.V., punching her, or choking her. He testified that,

during their relationship, he had often seen her legs uncovered. She always had heavy bruising on

her legs; she said that she bruised easily.

¶ 41   On cross-examination, defendant agreed that he did not tell the police about either occasion

when B.V. attacked him with a knife.

¶ 42   The defense recalled B.V. The audio recording of her statement was played for the jury,

and she acknowledged that she told the detectives that defendant called and spoke to her—not that

he texted her—after she left work on August 15, 2017. She also acknowledged that she did not

tell the detectives that she was concussed, but only that she had a cauliflower ear and a bandage.

(The audio recording is not in the record on appeal.)

¶ 43   On cross-examination, B.V. said that the incident with the butter knife had started with

defendant physically attacking her, then saying that he was sorry and holding the knife to his own

neck. She denied that she ever threatened defendant with a knife, held a knife to his throat, or tried

to stab him. She clarified on redirect examination that the knife involved was a steak knife, not a

butter knife.

¶ 44   The parties stipulated that B.V.’s timesheets at Empire showed that she worked from about

5:04 p.m. until about 10:50 p.m. on August 14, 2017; she had no other reported hours that week.

The defense rested after this stipulation.

¶ 45   The State called B.V. and Stull as rebuttal witnesses. B.V. testified that, although she

worked at Empire as a server, she had worked on a few occasions as a food runner and had been

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paid “[u]nder the table with tips.” She was certain that she worked at Empire the night of August

15, 2017. She might have worked as a food runner that night.

¶ 46   Stull testified that, when he went to the apartment on the morning of August 16, 2017, he

found the door unlocked and entered. Defendant was asleep on the couch. The room was a mess,

with items strewn about.

¶ 47   In its closing argument, the State asserted that S.B.’s testimony bolstered B.V.’s credibility:

               “And, in fact, it wasn’t just [B.V.’s] testimony you heard. You also heard [S.B.’s]

       testimony who also showed you exactly who this defendant is. He beats his girlfriend,

       that’s what he does. He beats his girlfriends. He gets jealous, he gets obsessed, and then

       he beats them.”

In its closing argument, the defense focused on indications that B.V. lied.

¶ 48   The jury sent a note to the court that read: “Drugs = unknowingly? Define knowingly.”

The court answered with a definition of “knowingly.”

¶ 49   The jury found defendant guilty of domestic battery (striking) but not guilty of aggravated

domestic battery (strangulation). Defendant moved for a new trial or a judgment of acquittal,

arguing, among other things, that the court erred in allowing the use of S.B.’s testimony. Defense

counsel did not offer argument on his motion, and the court denied the motion without comment.

After an extensive hearing, the court sentenced defendant to 18 months’ imprisonment. Defendant

timely appealed.

¶ 50                                      II. ANALYSIS

¶ 51   On appeal, defendant argues that “[S.B.’s] testimony *** was not sufficiently similar to

the charged offense to be more probative than prejudicial.” He argues that “[t]he primary similarity

to the instant case was that [defendant] was in [a] dating role with [S.B.]—a relationship that is

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implicit in the domestic violence other-crimes statute itself.” “[His] actions when he was [a]

juvenile were done in front of others, the slap with the mud was more demeaning action than

harmful, and he attempted to speak with [S.B.] about why he was upset as she seemed to be with

another young man while they were dating.” Further, the other-crimes evidence was admitted

primarily to enhance the credibility of B.V.’s testimony, a purpose that defendant argues was

improper. Last, defendant argues that the court gave insufficient weight to his youth when he

assaulted S.B. and to the 10-year gap between that offense and the charged offenses. The State

disagrees on all points.

¶ 52   Section 115-7.4(a) of the Code permits courts to admit “evidence of the defendant’s

commission of another offense or offenses of domestic violence” in any “criminal prosecution in

which the defendant is accused of an offense of domestic violence.” 725 ILCS 5/115-7.4(a) (West

2016). In enacting section 115-7.4, the legislature indicated its intent to allow the use of other-

crimes evidence to show propensity to commit the charged crime. See People v. Dabbs, 239 Ill.

2d 277, 291-94 (2010)) (holding that section 115-7.4 is analogous to section 115-7.3 of the Code

(725 ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2008)), a section that “revealed an intent [by the legislature] to use

other-crimes evidence to protect society against sex offenders who have a propensity to repeat

their crimes.” (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) In Dabbs, our supreme court

addressed the legislature’s purpose in enacting section 115-7.4:

               “When it enacted [section 115-7.4], the General Assembly was legitimately

       concerned with the effective prosecution of crimes of domestic violence ***. An abuser

       may have a pattern of targeting victims who are vulnerable. Such a victim may be reluctant

       to testify against her abuser, or the effectiveness of her testimony in court may be affected

       by fear or anxiety. The abuser may also be adept at presenting himself as a calm and

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       reasonable person and his victim as hysterical or mentally ill. Evidence that the defendant

       has been involved in a similar incident may persuade a jury that the present victim is worthy

       of belief because her experience is corroborated by the experience of another victim of the

       same abuser.” Dabbs, 239 Ill. 2d at 293.

¶ 53   Section 115-7.4(b) specifies:

       “In weighing the probative value of the evidence against undue prejudice to the defendant,

       the court may consider:

                        (1) the proximity in time to the charged or predicate offense;

                        (2) the degree of factual similarity to the charged or predicate offense; or

                        (3) other relevant facts and circumstances.” 725 ILCS 5/115-7.4(b) (West

               2016).

“As factual similarities increase, so does the relevance, or probative value, of the other-crimes

evidence.” People v. Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d 159, 184 (2003). However, when other-crimes evidence

is not offered under the exception for evidence of modus operandi, “mere general areas of

similarity will suffice” to support admissibility. (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d at 184.

¶ 54   The parties agree that a court’s decision to admit other-crimes evidence under section 115-

7.4 is reviewed under an abuse-of-discretion standard. See Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d at 182 (admission

of other-crimes evidence under section 115-7.3, which applies in sex-crimes cases and is analogous

to section 115-7.4, is reviewed for an abuse of discretion).          A trial court’s ruling on the

admissibility of propensity evidence is not an abuse of discretion unless its “evaluation is arbitrary,

fanciful or unreasonable or where no reasonable man would take the view adopted by the trial

court.” (Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d at 182.

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¶ 55   Given what the Dabbs court said about the purpose of section 115-74, we reject two of

defendant’s contentions: (1) that what defendant calls “broad stroke ‘commonalities’ between the

current case and [S.B.]’s testimony” are not a basis to find the two acts to be similar, and (2) that

it was improper to use the other-crimes evidence to bolster B.V.’s credibility.

¶ 56   First, defendant argues that the similarities between his battery of S.B. and the charged

offenses were simply characteristics common to most domestic violence offenses and not at all

distinctive. This argument appears to miss the point of propensity evidence altogether. If one is

using evidence to show that a person has a propensity towards acts of domestic violence, the fact

that the acts include behaviors typical of a commonly observed pattern makes them, if anything,

more indicative of a pattern of domestic violence than quirkier or more incidental similarities. No

doubt a large part of domestic violence between romantic partners involves the abuser expressing

jealousy and becoming violent in response to the other partner’s perceived transgression against

the abuser’s expectations. That this is a typical pattern simply means that the evidence tended to

show that defendant was a typical domestic abuser.

¶ 57   Moreover, in downplaying the similarities between the offenses, defendant presents an

inaccurate picture of the offense against S.B. He focuses on the first part of the incident, in which

he slapped mud against her face, something he suggests was more embarrassing than serious. He

ignores the second part of the incident in which he struck S.B. in the face hard enough to knock

her down and then started punching pictures. S.B.’s testimony about the latter part of the incident

mirrored B.V.’s testimony that defendant struck her in the face and then started destroying things

in the apartment.

¶ 58   Defendant argues this case “is analogous to [People v. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d 805

(2010)], in which [the First District] determined that two sexual assaults were not significantly

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similar where they involved different victims, where one assault involved the use of a car, and

where the victims alleged the assaults were carried out on different parts of the body.” We do not

deem Johnson to be dispositive. We are doubtful of Johnson’s reasoning, and, in any event, we

find the case distinguishable.

¶ 59   At issue in Johnson was whether evidence of the defendant’s “involvement in an uncharged

sexual assault was inadmissible to prove his propensity to commit sexual offenses under section

115-7.3 of the Code.” Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 807. The central question, given that the other-

crimes evidence met the “preliminary statutory requirements,” was whether “its probative value

was not substantially outweighed by its prejudicial effect.” Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 809. The

Johnson court stated, “The key to balancing the probative value of other crimes evidence to prove

propensity against its possible prejudicial effect is to avoid admitting evidence that entices a jury

to find defendant guilty only because it feels he is a bad person deserving punishment.” (Emphasis

in original. Internal quotation marks and citation omitted.) Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 809.

¶ 60   In the uncharged assault in Johnson, the victim was walking when a car pulled into an alley

and blocked her path. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 807. A person, whom she identified as

defendant, pulled her into a car and started removing her clothing. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at

807-08. The car’s driver, an unidentified male, drove the car to an abandoned building. Johnson,

406 Ill. App. 3d at 808. The defendant and the driver pulled her into the building. Johnson, 406

Ill. App. 3d at 808. Defendant stripped the victim; the driver put his penis in her mouth, and the

defendant penetrated her with his penis vaginally, anally, and orally. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at

808.

¶ 61   As to the charged offense in Johnson, the victim testified that the defendant grabbed her as

she walked past an alley and dragged her into an abandoned building. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d

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at 806. He threatened to kill her if she did not do what he said, and he ordered her to perform oral

sex on him. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 806. She put his penis in her mouth, but then “told him

[that] she was so scared that she might bite him.” Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 806. The defendant

then pushed her up against a wall, digitally penetrated her vagina, then placed his penis in her

vagina. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 806.

¶ 62   The Johnson court concluded that because the assaults had “significant dissimilarities” and

the trial court did not measure the prejudicial effect of the prior offense, the trial court erred in

admitting the section 115-7.4 evidence. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 812. The court held that “the

most telling difference[ ]” was that the defendant acted alone in the charged offense, whereas he

had an accomplice in the uncharged offense. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 811.

¶ 63   We are not fully persuaded by this analysis. Although the similarity between the two

assaults was arguably not suggestive of a fixed modus operandi, the two were nevertheless

strikingly similar. The two offenses were very much the same kind of crime: accosting a female

pedestrian (a stranger), transporting her to an abandoned building, and assaulting her with more

than one form of penetration. Thus, to us, the uncharged offense appeared well suited to indicating

a propensity to commit the charged offense. Consequently, we are uncertain how the trial court’s

analysis in Johnson was insufficient. To be sure, we recognize that the presence of a second

perpetrator could make evidence of the uncharged offense possibly more inflammatory, but that

does not seem to be the basis for the Johnson court’s rejection of the evidence.

¶ 64   In any event, Johnson is distinguishable. In Johnson, both the charged offense and the

prior assault seemed to have been planned attacks; thus, it was fair to compare how the attacks

were executed. Domestic violence is typically more reactive and unplanned. Similarities between

offenses that go beyond what defendant calls “broad stroke ‘commonalities’ ” are likely to be

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incidental. A domestic abuser might, for instance, have a propensity to “punish” a victim for

having other friends, but the specific way that propensity is manifested will likely differ from

incident to incident.

¶ 65   Next, defendant argues that the propensity evidence here had the effect of improperly

bolstering B.V.’s credibility. Defendant quotes People v. Strawbridge, 404 Ill. App. 3d 460, 468

(2010), for the proposition that “ ‘[i]t is generally improper… to admit evidence of other crimes

simply to enhance the credibility of a prosecution witness.’ ” What we said in Strawbridge was,

“It is generally improper—with some exceptions not pertinent here—to admit evidence of other

crimes simply to enhance the credibility of a prosecution witness.”            (Emphasis added.)

Strawbridge, 404 Ill. App. 3d at 468. Strawbridge was stating the common-law rule. By contrast,

the Dabbs court did not deem credibility-bolstering as a problem for evidence sought to be

admitted under section 115-7.4. Dabbs recognized that propensity evidence will generally support

the credibility of testimony from the victim of domestic violence. Indeed, Dabbs seems to have

treated this as a purpose of section 115-7.4. Dabbs noted that the legislature had intended that

“[e]vidence that the defendant has been involved in a similar incident may persuade a jury that the

present victim is worthy of belief because her experience is corroborated by the experience of

another victim of the same abuser.” Dabbs, 239 Ill. 2d at 293. Thus, just as Dabbs saw section

115-7.4 an exception to the common-law rule against admission of other-crimes evidence to prove

propensity, Dabbs also appears to have recognized section 115-7.4 as necessarily an exception to

the common-law rule against admission of other-crimes evidence to bolster a witness’s credibility.

Therefore, cases like Strawbridge that address only the common-law admission of other-crimes

evidence are not persuasive here.

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¶ 66   Finally, defendant claims that the trial court gave insufficient weight to his youth when he

assaulted S.B. and to the 10-year gap between that offense and the charged offenses. Defendant

is, of course, correct that these facts weighed against the admission of the propensity evidence.

However, they are not by themselves enough to establish an abuse of discretion, and we do not

read defendant as claiming that they are. See People v. Lobdell, 2017 IL App (3d) 150074, ¶ 21

(noting that proximity in time is evaluated on a case-by-case basis and that reviewing courts have

upheld the admission of other-crimes evidence that was over 20 years old). The trial court here

considered the time gap2 and concluded that it was dispositive when weighed against the similarity

of the offenses. As we see no error in the court’s evaluation of the similarity of the offenses, we

see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s ultimate ruling.

¶ 67                                     III. CONCLUSION

¶ 68   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County.

¶ 69   Affirmed.

       2
           Defendant appears not to have argued below that his youth when committing the offense

against S.B. was relevant to admissibility.

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