Court Opinion

ID: 3147696
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-22 18:35:57.792063+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:06:21.807661
License: Public Domain

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
                                        Appellate Court

                           People v. Mitchell, 2011 IL App (1st) 083143

Appellate Court            THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption                    EDWARD MITCHELL, Defendant-Appellant.

District & No.             First District, Sixth Division
                           Docket No. 1-08-3143

Filed                      August 5, 2011

Held                       Defendant’s conviction for the first degree murder of a minor victim was
(Note: This syllabus       upheld over his challenges to the testimony of a fingerprint expert and a
constitutes no part of     DNA expert and the denial of his request to impeach an unavailable
the opinion of the court   witness.
but has been prepared
by the Reporter of
Decisions for the
convenience of the
reader.)

Decision Under             Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 99-CR-19684; the
Review                     Hon. Stanley J. Sacks, Judge, presiding.

Judgment                   Affirmed; mittimus corrected.
Counsel on                  Michael J. Pelletier, Alan D. Goldberg, Patricia Unsinn, and Steven W.
Appeal                      Becker, all of State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for
                            appellant.

                            Anita M. Alvarez, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg, Amy
                            Watroba Kern, and Heather Fahrenkrog, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of
                            counsel), for the People.

Panel                       PRESIDING JUSTICE GARCIA delivered the judgment of the court,
                            with opinion.
                            Justice Cahill concurred in the judgment and opinion.
                            Justice R. Gordon dissented, with opinion.

                                              OPINION

¶1          On retrial, defendant Edward Mitchell was convicted by a jury of first degree murder and
        sentenced to 100 years in prison. The defendant challenges, on various grounds, the
        fingerprint evidence that placed the defendant in the garage where the murder weapon was
        recovered. He also contends the circuit court erred in rejecting his request to further impeach
        a material and unavailable witness, whose testimony from the defendant’s first trial was read
        to the jury. Finally, he challenges the testimony of the State’s DNA expert. The circuit court
        did not err in any of its rulings. We affirm.

¶2                                         BACKGROUND
¶3          On August 21, 1999, the defendant and codefendant Kevin Johnson were charged by
        indictment with first degree murder of Paulette Peake, age eight. Based on Paulette’s age, the
        State filed notice of intent to seek an extended sentence upon conviction. Paulette was shot
        shortly before 9:30 p.m. on July 31, 1999, while she stood in the checkout line of Pat’s Food
        Store, a neighborhood grocery store located at the corner of 79th Street and Sangamon
        Avenue in Chicago. Codefendant Johnson pled guilty to conspiracy to commit murder,
        attempted aggravated battery, and armed violence. In exchange for his testimony at the
        defendant’s trial, Johnson received a sentence of 20 years, with day-for-day credit.
¶4          The defendant was originally convicted by a jury in 2002. This court ruled the
        defendant’s videotaped confession was involuntary and remanded for a new trial. People v.
        Mitchell, 354 Ill. App. 3d 396, 405 (2004). The Illinois Supreme Court denied the State’s
        petition for leave to appeal, but directed this court vacate the decision and reconsider in light
        of People v. Willis, 215 Ill. 2d 517 (2005). People v. Mitchell, 216 Ill. 2d 717 (2005). Upon
        reconsideration, this court again remanded for a new trial based on the same ground. People

                                                  -2-
     v. Mitchell, 366 Ill. App. 3d 1044 (2006).

¶5                                   Evidence at Second Trial
¶6        As the State’s first witness, codefendant Kevin Johnson claimed he was at home all
     evening until immediately prior to the shooting on July 31, 1999. Johnson testified he and
     the defendant were shot at the day before near the grocery store, which the defendant denied
     in his testimony. The store surveillance video showed a rival gang member by the nickname
     of “Toppy” near the store at the time of the shooting. Johnson considered Toppy to be an
     “enemy” even though Toppy, the defendant and Johnson were members of the same gang.
     Johnson testified he saw the defendant shoot the rifle in the direction of the store and Toppy.
¶7        Three neighborhood residents also testified for the State. Mary Lewis testified she saw
     Toppy walking toward the store just before she heard gunfire. Mary Lewis testified she saw
     the defendant, the codefendant, and a third man walking back and forth near the store.
     According to her testimony, Mary Lewis did not see the actual shooting, though a defense
     investigator testified Mary Lewis told him she saw shots being fired at Toppy. Marie Coffee
     testified she saw codefendant Johnson running in the alley shortly after the gunfire.
     Demetrius Jones could not be located at the time of the defendant’s second trial. On the
     State’s motion, the circuit court ruled Jones a material witness that was unavailable to testify.
     The court permitted a law clerk to read Jones’ testimony from the first trial to the jury.
¶8        At the defendant’s first trial in 2002, Jones testified he was 29 years old and attending
     Knoxville College in Knoxville, Tennessee. When not attending college, he lived with his
     mother and sister on Sangamon Avenue, near the grocery store. Jones testified he was not
     a member of a gang, but he knew the defendant was a member of the Vice Lords gang. Jones
     testified that in July 1999, he was “in the Naval Academy at Great Lakes, [Wisconsin].” In
     a follow-up question, he clarified he was at the naval boot camp at Great Lakes. He stated
     he received a pass to visit his mother and sister. At approximately 9 p.m., he went with his
     mother to meet a family friend at a lounge at 79th Street and Morgan Avenue, one block west
     of Sangamon. After leaving the lounge, he and his mother walked east toward the grocery
     store. As they were walking, Jones looked in the direction of the school that was diagonally
     across 79th Street from the grocery store, where he saw the defendant with a younger man.
     He described the clothing the defendant was wearing. Jones and his mother stepped into the
     grocery store to briefly greet the owner. Upon leaving the store, Jones saw the defendant still
     near the school.
¶9        As Jones and his mother walked south to her house on Sangamon, Jones greeted Toppy
     and stopped to talk with a friend named Linda. While Jones was talking with Linda, he heard
     6 to 10 gunshots coming from near the school. Jones ducked between a parked vehicle and
     a tree until the shooting stopped. During the shooting, he saw his mother jogging toward her
     house. He then looked in the direction of the school and saw the defendant with a rifle. Jones
     testified he was familiar from his military training with the type of rifle he observed. At the
     time Jones saw the defendant with the rifle, the defendant was wearing a black or dark blue
     jacket, different clothing than when he first saw him. Jones observed the defendant placed
     the rifle in his jacket with the barrel pointing down, but the barrel was still visible. He next

                                               -3-
       observed the defendant run east, down an alley immediately to the south of the school. Jones
       then ran into the grocery store, where he saw a little girl had been injured. When he exited
       the store, the police were on the scene and Jones observed an officer recover a bullet casing.
       Jones also saw Mary Lewis in the crowd that had gathered. Jones attempted to talk to an
       officer about what he had seen, but the officer was too absorbed in crowd control so he went
       home. The following day, the police were in the area. Jones told a police investigator what
       he saw the previous day and provided his telephone number. He testified that on August 4,
       1999, he was transported by Chicago police officers from the Great Lakes naval base to the
       police station at Area 2. At Area 2, Jones identified the defendant in a lineup. During his
       testimony, Jones identified a rifle and jacket as similar to those in possession of the
       defendant after the shooting. Jones testified he viewed the store’s surveillance tape that
       showed he and his mother entering and exiting the store. The tape also depicted Toppy
       entering and exiting the store. The tape showed Jones entering the store once again after the
       shooting when he saw the injured girl. On cross-examination, Jones denied he told Area 2
       detectives that when the gunfire started, he pushed his mother into an alley.
¶ 10       Illinois State Police DNA analyst Harold Johnson was qualified as an expert. The
       defendant unsuccessfully sought to exclude the expert’s testimony because “it was too
       inconclusive.” Expert Johnson testified he extracted DNA from swabs taken of a pair of
       gloves recovered from the same garage where the rifle was recovered. The swabs contained
       a mixture of human DNA profiles from at least three individuals. He testified that to
       positively identify the contributor of DNA, he would need to locate “13 specific segments
       of the DNA” or loci. He testified he was able to obtain a profile of only four loci of three
       different individuals from the swabs. DNA expert Johnson opined that “1 in 71 black, 1 in
       71 white and 1 in 82 Hispanic unrelated individuals cannot be excluded from having
       contributed to this mixture of DNA profiles.” Johnson concluded the defendant “could not
       be excluded as a donor to that mixture.” He testified his conclusion was based solely on his
       comparison of the 4-loci profile. On cross-examination, expert Johnson testified a 13-loci
       profile is necessary to make a positive identification because “13 markers *** were chosen
       by the FBI.” He clarified that while the mixture was from at least three individuals, the
       mixture could have come from more than three individuals. He admitted that it was “entirely
       possible that twenty people wore those gloves and didn’t leave DNA behind.”
¶ 11       Chicago police detective Arteaga testified he determined that the bullet that struck
       Paulette was fired from 7915 S. Sangamon based on where Paulette was standing when she
       was hit by the bullet. The address is the first house that abuts the alley that runs east and west
       and separates the school from the residences. The house at 7915 had bushes in front. In the
       bushes, Arteaga recovered five 9-millimeter Luger cartridge cases and three 40-caliber Smith
       and Wesson cartridge cases. Arteaga testified he was “certain” the bullet that killed Paulette
       was the 9-millimeter bullet found inside the store and not the 40-caliber bullet found outside
       the store. Arteaga admitted, however, it was possible that the bullets could have been kicked
       around in the chaos following the shooting. A “Diagram of the Area of 79th & Sangamon
       Av.,” depicting the grocery store, the school, the streets just east and west, and the addresses
       of houses on the block south of 79th Street, was admitted as State’s exhibit 43.
¶ 12       On August 1, 1999, Arteaga went to a garage located at the rear of 7927 S. Sangamon.

                                                  -4-
       According to codefendant Johnson, the garage was where the Vice Lord street gang, the gang
       he and the defendant belonged to, stored weapons and ammunition. A black HIPoint, 9-
       millimeter semiautomatic rifle with a metal barrel was recovered from the rear seat of a
       stripped-down car in the garage. The parties stipulated that the 9-millimeter bullet recovered
       at the grocery store and the five cartridge cases found in the bushes near the school were fired
       from the recovered rifle. Arteaga also found a blue windbreaker, black leather gloves, and
       a hat in the garage, along with numerous boxes of ammunition and a pane of glass.
¶ 13        Michael Kopina, an expert in gunshot residue testing, testified he tested the leather gloves
       and windbreaker recovered from the garage. To a reasonable degree of scientific certainty,
       expert Kopina found gunshot residue on both the gloves and left and right cuffs of the jacket.
¶ 14        The circuit court accepted Heather Adams Siemer as an expert in fingerprint
       examination, over the defendant’s objection. Siemer testified to her analysis of latent prints
       from two items recovered from the garage where the rifle and clothing were discovered. A
       latent print was “developed” from an ammunition box, displayed as State’s exhibit 67. The
       latent print on the box was photographed, which the State displayed as exhibit 85. Siemer
       also testified regarding two “lifts” of latent prints from the pane of glass, displayed in State’s
       exhibit 74. The photograph of the lift was displayed in State’s exhibit 87. As lifts, the latent
       prints were capable of immediate comparison to the defendant’s known prints, displayed as
       State’s exhibit 79. As to each latent print, Siemer examined the latent impression or lift “for
       certain things like pattern type, ridge flow, and things such as this. *** [Like] ridges that end,
       ridges that split into two, and short ridges or dots. I took that information from the latent
       [and] went along to each of the inked prints to see if I had a match.” The two latent prints
       matched the defendant’s prints from his number three finger and number eight finger. Siemer
       explained to the jury her comparison process with the aid of State’s exhibit 86, “a court chart
       of the latent print from the lift.” Five comparison points were marked on the chart. Siemer
       testified she quickly found “13 points of comparison,” but did not mark all 13 points on the
       chart because it would “be kind messy with all the lines and stuff like that.” On cross-
       examination, expert Siemer admitted she was unfamiliar with “ACE-V,” which defense
       counsel characterized as “the standard method of doing fingerprint comparison now that’s
       used by the FBI.” Expert Siemer admitted she made no notes of her comparison of the latent
       and known fingerprints. Expert Siemer made no examination of the ammunition box for
       fingerprints belonging to anyone else. “Once I identified Mr. Mitchell I deferred processing.”
       She never examined the glass pane directly.
¶ 15        The medical examiner testified Paulette was killed by a single gunshot that struck her
       chest and exited her back.
¶ 16        After the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was denied, three witnesses testified
       in the defendant’s case-in-chief, including the defendant. The defendant admitted he was
       arrested, on the day of the shooting, around 9:30 p.m. near 80th Street and Peoria, one block
       east of Sangamon. The defendant denied firing a gun near the school. He admitted he was
       a member of the Vice Lord street gang and hung out with other gang members on the 7900
       block of South Sangamon. During cross-examination, the defendant admitted hanging out
       in the “barn” more than 10 times. He recalled touching things in the barn when items were
       relocated there. The items in the barn might “possibly” have included ammunition boxes.

                                                  -5-
¶ 17       Following the State’s rebuttal, the defense made an offer of proof to impeach Demetrius
       Jones’ testimony beyond the transcript read to the jury. The defense also moved to strike the
       testimony of Harold Johnson, contending he was not qualified to give testimony on statistical
       analysis. The circuit court rejected the proposed impeachment of Jones and denied the
       motion to strike.
¶ 18       The jury found the defendant guilty of first degree murder after about 1 hour and 15
       minutes of deliberation. This appeal followed.

¶ 19                                        ANALYSIS
¶ 20       The defendant asserts three overarching issues on appeal. He challenges much of the
       fingerprint evidence and the DNA evidence. He also contends that the circuit court erred in
       rejecting the defendant’s offer of proof to impeach the unavailable witness with “numerous
       prior inconsistent statements.”

¶ 21                                  Fingerprint Evidence
¶ 22       The defendant contends the testimony of the fingerprint expert lacked an adequate
       foundation, which opened the expert’s opinion to a challenge at a hearing pursuant to Frye
       v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. 1923).

¶ 23                                         Foundation
¶ 24        The defendant cites a single case, People v. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d 212 (2009), to
       support his claim that the fingerprint expert’s opinion lacked an adequate foundation. The
       defendant asserts, “Safford is on all fours with the instant case.” The State counters that
       “Safford is completely distinguishable.” We agree with the State.
¶ 25        In Safford, we ruled that “[t]he trial court erred in admitting the testimony of the
       fingerprint identification expert where the foundation requirements were not met.” Id. at 230-
       31. The fingerprint expert, examiner Cutro, “testified he looks at three levels of detail of each
       fingerprint undergoing an analysis, explaining what he looks for at each level.” Id. at 220.
       Yet, as “the State conceded[,] no ‘Level One, Level Two, or Level Three’ detail of the
       comparison process involving the latent print and the defendant’s known print was ever
       testified to by examiner Cutro.” Id. at 221. The State’s concession was consistent with our
       reading of the record. “We find no testimony by examiner Cutro as to how he arrived at his
       conclusion that the latent print in question could only belong to the defendant.” Id. at 221.
       Ultimately, “[w]e agree[d] with the defendant’s argument that although the scientific
       community is divided as to how many points of comparison are needed to make a positive
       identification, the proffered expert must be subject to challenge on the analysis he undertook
       to arrive at his conclusion, regardless of the method he followed. Otherwise, the basis for
       making a positive identification between the latent and exemplar prints is not subject to
       scrutiny.” Id. at 225. While examiner Cutro testified to the “general process he follow[ed]
       in fingerprint identification,” he was unable to describe what he saw in common between the
       latent print and the known print, which made his identification of latent print as the

                                                 -6-
       defendant’s print beyond challenge during cross-examination. Id. at 220, 223. We reasoned
       that fingerprint analysis involves the comparison of “unique, distinctive characteristics of the
       latent print” to a known print of the defendant to warrant the conclusion that the latent print
       “belonged to no one other than the defendant,” a conclusion the expert must be able to
       explain. Id. at 225, 228.1 “[Examiner] Cutro never testified to any number of points of
       comparison that he found between the latent print from the patrol car and the defendant’s
       print.” Id. at 217.
¶ 26        The facts in this case stand in contrast to the fingerprint examiner’s testimony in Safford.
       Here, examiner Siemer explained the procedure she followed to make a comparison of the
       latent prints and the defendant’s known prints. Examiner Siemer stated she did a side-by-side
       comparison of the latent prints and the defendant’s known sample, looking for “ridge type,
       pattern flow, and things such as this. The fine details. The ridges that end, split into two,
       short ridges or dots.” Following this side-by-side comparison, she identified the latent prints
       on the ammunition box as matching the defendant’s right middle finger. Regarding the
       “lifted” print from the glass pane, examiner Siemer identified the defendant’s left middle
       finger as matching that print. Examiner Siemer stepped into the well of the courtroom to
       demonstrate to the jury on State’s exhibit 86 and exhibit 38, the five specific points of
       comparison between the lifted print and the defendant’s known print. Examiner Siemer
       testified she “quickly” found 13 points of comparison between the two prints.
¶ 27        Thus, the situation in Safford, where no points of comparison were ever identified, is not
       present in this case where examiner Siemer testified to 13. The points of comparison, which
       examiner Siemer identified, provided ample grounds to challenge her opinion that the
       recovered prints matched the known prints of the defendant had the defendant elected to do
       so.
¶ 28        Examiner Siemer’s opinion that the defendant’s fingerprints were found on items in the
       barn leads us to the last distinction between the instant case and Safford. In Safford, the
       fingerprint expert placed the defendant at the patrol car from where the shooting took place.
       “[The fingerprint expert] determined that one latent print found on the lower left corner of
       the hood of Officer Marcano’s patrol car matched the inked print card of the defendant.” Id.
       at 216. If this fingerprint evidence was trustworthy and reliable, then it destroyed the
       defendant’s otherwise strong alibi defense provided by three “unbiased witnesses.” Id. at
       229. In our adversarial system of justice, meaningful cross-examination of examiner Cutro’s
       opinion that the defendant placed his hands on the patrol car was essential to “place
       confidence in the outcome of [the] trial.” Id. at 224. “A jury may be so swayed by such

               1
                 The State takes issue with Safford to the extent it “stands for the proposition that the lack
       of points of comparison goes to the admissibility of the evidence, as opposed to the weight.” We
       reiterate our statement in Safford, which controlled our finding of error in that case. “While the
       paucity of points of similarity may go to the weight of the evidence rather than admissibility
       [citation], as the paucity approaches zero, our concern is no longer with weight but with
       admissibility.” Id. at 225. In other words, had examiner Cutro testified that there were zero points
       of comparison between the latent and exemplar prints, his opinion that the prints matched would be
       legally inadmissible.

                                                    -7-
       evidence that strong alibi witnesses have little chance of being found credible when
       fingerprint evidence points to the defendant being present at the scene of the crime.” Id. at
       225. In the instant case, however, the defendant’s fingerprints were discovered on objects in
       the garage that the defendant acknowledged was controlled by his gang. During his
       testimony, the defendant admitted that he may very well have touched items in the garage
       during his more than 10 visits to the garage. As such, the discovery of the defendant’s prints
       on two items recovered from the garage was hardly unexpected. Unlike in Safford, the
       fingerprint evidence in the instant case did not provide direct evidence of the defendant’s
       guilt.
¶ 29       Safford is neither legal authority for the defendant’s claim that an evidentiary foundation
       was lacking for examiner Siemer’s expert testimony, nor factually similar regarding the
       significance of the fingerprint examiner’s testimony.

¶ 30                                       Frye Hearing
¶ 31       The defendant’s contention that he was entitled to a Frye hearing to challenge examiner
       Siemer’s methodology used in her comparison of the latent and known prints is also
       unavailing because fingerprint analysis is neither novel nor new. Until our supreme court
       decides otherwise, as it did with regard to the HGN evidence in People v. McKown, 226 Ill.
       2d 245, 257 (2007), there is no authority in this state for the defendant’s claim that the circuit
       court erred in rejecting the defendant’s motion for a Frye hearing on the admissibility of
       fingerprint evidence. Nor are we persuaded to provide such authority in this case.

¶ 32                                        DNA Evidence
¶ 33       In his main brief, the defendant premises his challenge to the DNA testimony on the
       following contention. “The State’s forensic DNA analyst Harold Johnson, who was qualified
       as an expert in this field, testified that Mitchell could not be excluded from having
       contributed DNA to a pair of gloves that allegedly were worn by the shooter.” The defendant
       sought to exclude this testimony before the trial court on the basis that “[i]t’s not an
       identification of Mr. Mitchell by any stretch of the imagination. Falls far below the FBI
       standards to make an identification.”
¶ 34       We do not disagree with the defendant’s statement. We note only that DNA expert
       Johnson never testified that the defendant’s DNA was found on the pair of gloves. Expert
       Johnson testified that the defendant could not be excluded as having contributed to the DNA
       mixture discovered in the gloves, just as 1 in 71, or 10 in 710, or 100 in 7,100 African
       Americans could not be excluded. The DNA expert’s testimony did not place the defendant’s
       DNA in the gloves; the defendant’s DNA simply could not be excluded from the profile
       developed from the mixture of DNA recovered from the gloves. We reject the defendant’s
       contention that this DNA evidence could have overpersuaded the jury in light of its clear and
       limited import.
¶ 35       In any event, it falls to the discretion of the trial court to determine the admissibility of
       expert testimony. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221 (citing People v. Mack, 128 Ill. 2d 231, 250
       (1989)). In the absence of Illinois authority that DNA evidence is excludable as a matter of

                                                  -8-
       law based on the evidence being “too inconclusive,” we reject the instant defendant’s claim
       that the equivocal nature of expert Johnson’s opinion rendered his testimony legally
       inadmissible. While the circuit court certainly had discretion to disallow the expert’s
       testimony if it determined its probative value was minimal, the court had the discretion to
       allow the triers of fact to assess that testimony and assign the weight, if any, the testimony
       warranted. Of course, a reasonable jury was free to disregard expert Johnson’s testimony that
       the DNA profile did not exclude the defendant from having worn the recovered gloves in
       favor of direct evidence from codefendant Johnson that the defendant wore those gloves
       when he fired the rifle in the direction of the neighborhood grocery store, where Paulette
       stood in line.
¶ 36        Finally, as to the statistical figures regarding the likelihood of individuals contributing
       to the DNA mixture recovered from the gloves, the defendant complains that the DNA expert
       “simply enters the alleles into a computer program, and it does the calculation for him.” The
       defendant does not suggest how else the statistical figures should be calculated. We decline
       to address this claim further when the defendant fails to make clear his position or provide
       authority for his contention of error. See generally In re Jessica M., 399 Ill. App. 3d 730,
       743-48 (2010) (describing the evolution of DNA analysis, including the statistical aspect of
       DNA profiling).
¶ 37        The defendant provides us with no persuasive reason to rule expert Johnson’s testimony
       was inadmissible as a matter of law, when the equivocal nature of the testimony was readily
       apparent to reasonable jurors.

¶ 38                                     Unavailable Witness
¶ 39        Finally, the defendant contends he should have been allowed to impeach the testimony
       of Demetrius Jones from the first trial, “with numerous prior inconsistent statements.” The
       defendant fails to explain how this further impeachment would have taken place, given that
       Jones’ testimony was read to the jury by a law clerk. To the extent the impeachment would
       have occurred by posing additional questions as if Jones were present at the second trial, we
       reject such a novel and unprecedented contention. More fundamentally, we reject the
       defendant’s contention that additional impeachment of Jones’ testimony was possible than
       the impeachment that occurred at the first trial.
¶ 40        In his main brief, the defendant contends the circuit court erroneously denied additional
       impeachment of Jones’ testimony “from three different sources: (1) Jones’ September 2,
       1999, statement to the police in which he stated that, after he heard shots, he pushed his
       mother toward the alley (not watched his mother jog to her house, as he testified at trial) and
       then turned around to see [the defendant] with a rifle in the direction of the store; (2) Jones’
       grand jury testimony wherein he clarified that [the defendant] was not trying to conceal a
       rifle and that 15 seconds elapsed between the time that Toppy passed by him and the time
       he heard shots; and (3) Jones’ August 4, 1999, written statement in which he said that from
       the time he left [the grocery store] until he heard the shots 10 to 15 seconds elapsed, as well
       as that, after the shots, he got up slowly and walked towards [the grocery store].”
¶ 41        As the State correctly points out, Jones was impeached at the first trial with a statement

                                                 -9-
       he allegedly made to Area 2 detectives, that when the gunfire started, he pushed his mother
       into an alley. We see no difference between this impeachment at the first trial and the first
       source of prior inconsistent statements the defendant sought to introduce at the second trial.
       As to the second source of prior inconsistent statements, the defendant does not explain why
       the grand jury testimony, sworn as it was, was not admissible under 115-10.1 of the Code of
       Criminal Procedure of 1963 (725 ILCS 5/115-10.1 (West 2008)), both substantively and for
       impeachment purposes. See People v. McCarter, 385 Ill. App. 3d 919, 930-31 (2008)
       (explaining the requirements of section 115-10.1, which allows a written prior inconsistent
       statement of a witness to be admitted as substantive evidence). In any event, neither point of
       “additional impeachment,” regarding the concealment of the rifle or the elapsed time based
       on Jones’ testimony before the grand jury, would have undermined Jones’ trial testimony.
       Finally, the defendant fails to persuade us that the third source of prior inconsistent
       statements, regarding the number of seconds that elapsed and the manner in which Jones
       walked, qualified as impeachment.
¶ 42       Furthermore, the authority the defendant cites for this claim of error is inapposite. The
       circumstances in People v. Smith, 127 Ill. App. 3d 622, 624-25 (1984), are too dissimilar to
       provide any support that Jones’ testimony at the first trial could be impeached with “prior
       inconsistent statements,” when Jones was ruled unavailable at the second trial. The rule
       announced in Smith does not reach the circumstances present in this case. “Where a
       statement of an abs2ent declarant is properly admitted into evidence under one of the hearsay
       exceptions, the opposing party may impeach such statement with a prior inconsistent
       statement by the declarant.” Id. at 630.
¶ 43       Here, Jones was present and testified at the defendant’s first trial. Jones’ testimony is not
       the equivalent of a “[statement of the absent declarant, Boyle,] who was present at the scene
       of the crime, [but] died prior to trial.” Id. at 630. The fairness concerns expressed in Smith
       are not present before us. “At trial, Boyle’s statements that the defendant was the assailant
       were admitted into evidence. Under these circumstances, Mrs. Smith should have been
       permitted to testify that Boyle told her that he was not sure who attacked [the murder
       victim.]” Id. at 630. Those circumstances are not the circumstances in this case.
¶ 44       In the absence of clear authority to the contrary, the circuit court did not err in rejecting
       the defendant’s efforts to “impeach” Demetrius Jones with “numerous prior inconsistent
       statements” not introduced at the defendant’s first trial.

¶ 45                                   Cumulative Error
¶ 46        The defendant argues the cumulative effect of the claimed errors deprived him of a fair
       trial. Because we rejected each individual claim of trial court error, this cumulative
       contention has no merit. See People v. Garmon, 394 Ill. App. 3d 977, 991 (2009) (before
       cumulative error can be recognized, “there must first be a showing of individual error”).

¶ 47                                    Sentencing Credit
¶ 48       The defendant claims he is entitled to an additional 12 days of credit for time served in
       custody prior to sentencing. The State acknowledges the defendant may have been arrested

                                                 -10-
       on July 31, 1999. We direct the mittimus be corrected to show an additional 12 days credit
       for time served in custody prior to sentencing.

¶ 49                                      CONCLUSION
¶ 50       The circuit court did not err in permitting the fingerprint expert and the DNA expert to
       testify over the defendant’s objections. The defendant had a full opportunity to cross-
       examine the experts. There is no support in Illinois jurisprudence for the defendant’s claim
       that he was entitled to a Frye hearing to challenge the particular methodology of the State’s
       fingerprint expert. The testimony of a witness from the defendant’s first trial of a witness
       found to be legally unavailable was not subject to additional impeachment on the claims
       urged by the defendant. We find no reason to question the jury’s verdict of guilty.

¶ 51       Affirmed; mittimus corrected.

¶ 52        JUSTICE ROBERT E. GORDON, dissenting:
¶ 53        I respectfully dissent.
¶ 54        On this appeal, defendant claims that the trial court erred by: (1) admitting the testimony
       of Dr. Siemer, a fingerprint expert who failed to support or provide a basis for most of the
       comparison points that she claimed to have found; (2) failing to conduct a Frye hearing to
       determine if the underlying methodology of this fingerprint expert’s opinion had gained
       general acceptance; (3) refusing to allow defendant to impeach the testimony of a missing
       witness, whose testimony was read into the record, with prior inconsistent statements; (4)
       admitting the testimony of the State’s DNA expert whose testimony was based on an analysis
       of only 4 loci when a 13-loci analysis is standard for a match; (5) admitting statistical
       testimony from the State’s DNA expert when he was not qualified as an expert in statistics;
       and (6) denying defendant a fair trial from the cumulative effect of these errors. For the
       following reasons, I would reverse.
¶ 55        First, I would find that, after defendant raised the issue of lack of evidentiary support for
       admission of the fingerprint evidence, the trial court erred by failing to consider whether the
       State had established an adequate basis for admission of this evidence. Second, after
       reviewing the entire record, I would find that the State did fail to establish an adequate basis
       for the expert’s testimony. Third, I would find that, in light of the contradicting narratives
       offered by the State’s own witnesses, this error was not harmless. Fourth, I would find that
       the trial court also erred with respect to the fingerprint evidence by failing to hold a Frye
       hearing concerning whether the particular methodology employed by this particular examiner
       in this case had gained general acceptance. Fifth, I would find that the trial court erred by not
       permitting defendant to perfect the impeachment of the missing witness by introducing
       evidence of the prior inconsistent statements. Sixth, since the missing witness was one of
       only two event witnesses who testified to observing defendant with a rifle and the other was
       the codefendant, who provided self-serving testimony, I would find that this error was also
       not harmless. Last but not least, the cumulative effect of these errors requires reversal and

                                                 -11-
       a remand for a new trial. Since I would reverse on these issues, I do not reach the DNA issues
       raised by defendant on this appeal.

¶ 56                                      BACKGROUND
¶ 57       The only issue at trial was the identity of the gunman whose bullet killed Paulette Peake.
       The State’s evidence established that the bullet that killed Peake went completely through
       her body and that the one spent bullet recovered from inside the store did not contain blood
       or bodily residue.
¶ 58       One issue at trial was which bullet, of the many bullets recovered, was the fatal bullet.
       The State’s evidence indicated the possibility of three gunmen. First, a neighbor testified that
       she observed three young men patrolling the area immediately before the shooting. Second,
       the State’s evidence established that three types of ammunition were recovered from the
       scene: 9 millimeter, 380 caliber and 40 caliber. The police sergeant who collected the crime
       scene evidence testified that he was “certain” that the bullet that killed Peake was the 9-
       millimeter bullet found inside the store, and not a 40-caliber bullet found outside the store,
       although he admitted that it was possible that bullets could have been inadvertently kicked
       around in the chaos that followed the shooting. The parties stipulated that the 9-millimeter
       bullet was fired from a rifle that police recovered from a nearby garage.
¶ 59       The only witnesses who provided evidence relating to the identity of the rifle gunman
       were: (1) codefendant Kevin Johnson, who testified in exchange for a 10-year reduction in
       sentence and whose testimony was contradicted in part by a neighbor, Mary Lewis; (2)
       missing witness Demetrius Jones, whose prior testimony was read into the record and whose
       prior inconsistent statements were not admitted at trial and thus are now an issue on this
       appeal; (3) Mary Lewis, a neighbor, who testified that defendant, as well as codefendant and
       a third man, were walking back and forth in the area prior to the shooting; and (4) the
       forensic evidence which is disputed on this appeal.
¶ 60       Of the event witnesses, only codefendant testified that he observed defendant actually
       shooting a rifle at the store. The missing witness claimed to have observed defendant after
       the shooting with a rifle in his hands. Although the testimony of Mary Lewis placed
       defendant, as well as codefendant and a third man, at the scene and walking back and forth,
       she admitted that she never saw who was shooting. Also, codefendant denied that he was
       walking back and forth, claiming instead that he was in his house all evening until
       immediately prior to the shooting. Another neighbor, Marie Coffee, testified that she
       observed codefendant running in the alley shortly after the gunfire.
¶ 61       No fingerprints were recovered from the rifle. The State’s DNA experts testified that
       defendant could not be excluded from a mixture of DNA profiles obtained from a pair of
       gloves that codefendant testified were worn by defendant during the shooting. The mixture
       was created by at least three people. The State’s fingerprint expert testified that defendant’s
       prints were lifted from a box of 32-caliber ammunition and a pane of glass found in the same
       garage, which was used by defendant’s gang as a hangout and where police found the 9-
       millimeter rifle and the gloves.
¶ 62       Another issue was the motive behind the shooting. Two possible targets of the shooting

                                                -12-
       suggested by the evidence were: a rival gang; and a fellow gang member named “Toppy.”
       Codefendant testified that a rival gang member had shot at him and defendant on July 30,
       1999, the day before the shooting, at the same location. However, there was no evidence that
       the rival gang was present on July 31, the day of the shooting, and defendant denied being
       shot at by anyone the night before the murder. As for Toppy, the store surveillance videotape
       indicated that Toppy was inside the store immediately prior to or at the time of the shooting,
       and codefendant testified that he considered Toppy to be an “enemy” although they were
       members of the same gang. Specifically, Mary Lewis, a neighbor, testified that she saw
       Toppy walking toward the store and then heard gunfire. Demetrius Jones, the missing
       witness, testified that he reviewed the store’s security videotape from the time shortly before
       and after the shooting and that on the tape he observed Toppy enter and exit the store. In
       addition, Steven Glazier, a defense investigator, testified that Mary Lewis had told him that
       she observed shots being fired at Toppy.
¶ 63       The State’s key witnesses provided conflicting narratives of the events.
¶ 64       For example, the testimony of codefendant Kevin Johnson that he was in his house all
       afternoon and evening until 9 p.m. was contradicted by the testimony of a neighbor, Mary
       Lewis, who testified that, while she was on or near her front porch starting at 6 p.m. and
       through most of the evening, she saw Kenny and Kevin (codefendant) hanging out by Leo
       High School with defendant.
¶ 65       Marie Coffee, a neighbor, identified codefendant Johnson from a photographic array as
       the man she had seen running down an alley less than a minute after she had heard gunfire.
       At trial, Coffee denied having told an officer that she had also observed this man fire four
       to five rounds at Pat’s store from a handgun, and that she recognized the man from the
       neighborhood but she did not know his name. Officer Paul Bailey, who had interviewed
       Coffee shortly after the shooting, testified that Coffee had, in fact, told him these things.
¶ 66       The conflicts concerning the location and actions of codefendant Kevin Johnson are
       crucial since in our legal analysis we must determine whether any error against defendant
       was harmless in light of the other evidence against him.

¶ 67                                         ANALYSIS
¶ 68        As I stated above, I would find first that, after defendant raised the issue of lack of
       evidentiary support for admission of the fingerprint evidence, the trial court erred by failing
       to consider whether the State had established an adequate basis for admission of this
       evidence. Second, after reviewing the entire record, I would find that the State failed to
       establish an adequate basis for the expert’s testimony. Third, I would find that, in light of the
       conflicting narratives offered by the State’s own witnesses, this error was not harmless.
       Fourth, I would find that the trial court also erred with respect to the fingerprint evidence by
       failing to hold a Frye hearing concerning whether the particular methodology employed by
       this particular examiner in this case had gained general acceptance. Fifth, I would find that
       the trial court erred by not permitting defendant to perfect the impeachment of the missing
       witness by introducing evidence of the conflicting statements. Sixth, since the missing
       witness was one of only two event witnesses who testified to observing defendant with a rifle

                                                 -13-
       and the other was the codefendant, who provided self-serving testimony, I would find that
       this error was also not harmless. Last but not least, the cumulative effect of these errors
       requires reversal and a remand for a new trial.
¶ 69       I will now analyze each of these points in order.

¶ 70                          I. Fingerprint Evidence: Inadequate Basis
¶ 71       Defendant challenges the fingerprint evidence by claiming, first, that the trial court erred
       by admitting the testimony of a fingerprint expert who failed to support the majority of the
       comparison points which she claimed to have found; and, second, that the trial court erred
       by failing to conduct a Frye hearing concerning the methodology of this particular fingerprint
       expert. In this section, I will analyze the first claim, which concerned the lack of an adequate
       basis.

¶ 72                            A. Standard of Review: Lack of Basis
¶ 73       The parties dispute the appropriate standard of review for defendant’s first claim.
       Defendant claims that an appellate court reviews de novo the issue of whether the proponent
       has laid an adequate basis for a latent fingerprint expert’s testimony, and he cites in support
       this district’s decision in People v. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d 212, 221-22, 226 (2009). In
       response, the State claims that we review only for an abuse of discretion the issue of whether
       the trial court properly admitted the expert’s testimony, and it cites the Fifth District’s
       opinion in People v. Mehlberg, 249 Ill. App. 3d 499, 533 (1993).
¶ 74       In Safford, we agreed that the admission of expert testimony is generally left to the
       discretion of the trial court. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221 (citing People v. Mack, 128 Ill.
       2d 231 (1989)). However, we observed that proper admission requires the proponent to show
       an adequate basis for the opinion. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221 (citing Hiscott v. Peters,
       324 Ill. App. 3d 114, 122 (2001)). An adequate basis requires a showing that the expert based
       his or her opinion on reliable information. Id. Whether the basis was adequate is a question
       of law, which we review de novo. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221 (citing Peters, 324 Ill.
       App. 3d at 123 (it is a “question of law *** whether there was a sufficient basis for the
       expert’s opinions”)). Specifically, we stated in Safford that determining whether an adequate
       basis was shown “presents a question of law.” Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221.
¶ 75       I would adhere to what we wrote in Safford and apply a de novo standard of review. In
       addition, I observe in this case, as we did in Safford, that there are no facts in dispute
       concerning this issue. The State conceded in its appellate brief that its fingerprint expert did
       not make any notes regarding the detail of the prints during her analysis. The State also
       conceded that, although its expert claimed to have based her opinion on finding 13 points of
       comparison during her analysis, she marked only 5 points on the enlarged photographs used
       during trial and did not have any documents to show the other 8 points. Where the facts are
       not in dispute, our review is also de novo. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 221-22 (citing People
       v. Chapman, 194 Ill. 2d 186, 217 (2000)).
¶ 76       In addition, the case on which the State relies, Mehlberg, was in a different procedural

                                                -14-
       posture than the case in bar and, as a result, is less instructive. In Mehlberg, after the trial
       court ruled that the type of test was generally accepted, the trial court specifically told
       defendant that he still had the right to file a pretrial motion challenging the specific
       procedures and methodology used in his case. Mehlberg, 249 Ill. App. 3d at 534-35.
       However, defendant chose not to file such a motion. Mehlberg, 249 Ill. App. 3d at 534-35.
       Even though he chose not to file a pretrial motion, defendant did argue on appeal that the
       trial court was required to scrutinize the specific procedures used in the case before ruling
       on admissibility, a contention that the appellate court rejected. Mehlberg, 249 Ill. App. 3d
       at 539. However, it is not clear whether defendant was arguing that the trial court had the
       responsibility to scrutinize these procedures sua sponte. By contrast, in the case at bar,
       defendant did file a pretrial motion, and the issue before us is the appropriate standard of
       review for the denial of such a motion. Safford is closer to our case since it is clear that in
       Safford the defendant objected specifically in response to receiving a report without any
       supporting notes and before the examiner’s testimony. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 216.

¶ 77                                      B. Inadequate Basis
¶ 78        In the case at bar, defendant filed a written pretrial motion on August 4, 2008, to exclude
       testimony by the fingerprint expert, arguing that “[b]ased on [her] report it is impossible to
       tell whether [she] is qualified as a fingerprint examiner, whether the minimum number of
       ridge detail matches were found, and whether the standard ACE-V method of examination
       was followed.”
¶ 79        At a pretrial hearing on August 18, 2008, defense counsel argued: “the reason why I take
       this stance is I have absolutely no information as to what methodology this [expert] used
       because his notes consist of one line.” The trial court responded that it was “a question of
       credibility not admissibility.” The defense renewed its objection at trial, when the State
       tendered Siemer as a fingerprint expert, and the trial court overruled the objection. In
       defendant’s posttrial motion, the defense again objected to “the fingerprint evidence and the
       methodology employed in this case.”
¶ 80        Neither party disputes the legal proposition that a proponent of expert evidence must
       show an adequate basis for its admission, nor could this time-honored proposition be
       disputed. People v. McKown, 236 Ill. 2d 278, 311 (2010) (finding that “the absence of a
       proper foundation” is “error”). “An expert’s opinion is only as valid as the basis and reasons
       for the opinion.” Wilson v. Bell Fuels, Inc., 214 Ill. App. 3d 868, 875 (1991) (citing
       McCormick v. Maplehurst Winter Sports, Ltd., 166 Ill. App. 3d 93, 100 (1988)). “A party
       must lay a foundation sufficient to establish the reliability of the bases for the expert’s
       opinion.” Petraski v. Thedos, 382 Ill. App. 3d 22, 28 (2008) (citing Turner v. Williams, 326
       Ill. App. 3d 541, 552-53 (2001)). Expert opinions based on guess, speculation or conjecture
       are inadmissible. Modelski v. Navistar International Transportation Corp., 302 Ill. App. 3d
       879, 886 (1999).
¶ 81        In Safford, we explained why, for fingerprint evidence, it is particularly important for a
       trial court to determine whether the State has shown an adequate basis:
                    “Fingerprint evidence is extremely persuasive. A jury may be so swayed by such

                                                -15-
                evidence that strong alibi witnesses have little chance of being found credible when
                fingerprint evidence points to the defendant being present at the scene of the crime.
                The persuasiveness of fingerprint evidence reinforces the need to require a proper
                foundation to establish its admissibility.” Safford, 392 Ill. App. at 225.
¶ 82        In the case at bar, the trial court did not make a specific determination whether the State
       had shown an adequate basis. Instead, the trial court ruled that the issue of whether there was
       a lack of evidentiary support for the expert’s conclusions was solely an issue of credibility
       or weight for the jury, rather than an issue of admissibility. The trial court erred in this legal
       ruling.
¶ 83        Once defendant raised the issue that there was a lack of evidentiary support for the
       expert’s conclusions, this issue became a factor that the trial court was required to consider
       first in determining admissibility. If the trial court determined that the State had shown an
       adequate basis to admit the evidence, then any alleged deficit in evidentiary support would
       become a factor that the jury could also consider later when determining the weight to give
       to the expert’s testimony. However, the trial court made an erroneous legal determination
       when it held that the alleged lack of evidentiary support was a question of weight alone, and
       not an issue of admissibility.
¶ 84        The facts in the case at bar are similar to the facts in Safford. In Safford, the fingerprint
       expert made no notes concerning his visual examination of the prints, except to record
       whether there was or was not an identification. Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 220. His
       conclusion was then verified by another examiner. Id. At trial, he explained the general
       process that he followed, which is to look at three levels of detail for each fingerprint. Id. He
       did not testify to a particular number of comparison points, explaining that he belonged to
       a group of experts that did not exclusively base their conclusions on the comparison points.
       Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 217.
¶ 85        The case at bar is similar to Safford, in that both experts did not make notes and both
       experts had their conclusions verified by another examiner. The case at bar differs from
       Safford in that, in our case, the expert did offer an explanation at trial for 5 of the 13 points
       that she claimed to have found between defendant’s print and the print lifted from the pane
       of glass.
¶ 86        However, the lack of any explanation for the other eight points, which the expert claimed
       to have found curtailed the defendant’s ability to cross-examine the witness. In Safford, we
       stated that our problem with the expert’s testimony was that the examiner claimed to have
       based his opinion upon facts personally known to him, but he failed to testify to those facts.
       Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 227. Similarly, in the case at bar, the expert testified that she
       based her opinion on 13 points of comparison, which she found “pretty quickly,” but then
       she failed to testify to the facts underlying the overwhelming majority of those points. Thus,
       for the same reasons we held in Safford, I would hold here that the State failed to establish
       an adequate basis for the opinion offered by its fingerprint expert.

¶ 87                                C. Not Harmless Error
¶ 88       Having found error, I turn next to the question of whether the error was harmless.

                                                 -16-
       Safford, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 230 (holding that admission of the fingerprint evidence was not
       harmless). An error is harmless if “it appears beyond a reasonable doubt that the error at
       issue did not contribute to the verdict obtained.” People v. Stechly, 225 Ill. 2d 246, 304
       (2007).
¶ 89       The fingerprint expert’s testimony served to corroborate the testimony of codefendant.
       The expert’s testimony about a match corroborated codefendant’s testimony that he observed
       defendant shooting a rifle at the store, since the rifle was later found in close proximity to the
       pane of the glass that yielded the print.
¶ 90       Codefendant was the only witness who claimed to have observed defendant shooting at
       the store. The missing witness claimed to have observed defendant after the shooting with
       a rifle in his hands. Although the testimony of Mary Lewis placed defendant, as well as
       codefendant and a third man, at the scene, she admitted that she never saw who was shooting.
¶ 91       Codefendant’s testimony was called into question by the fact that he was testifying in
       return for a reduction of his sentence in half, by the conflicting testimony of one of the
       State’s own witnesses, and by the State’s own ballistic evidence. First, codefendant testified
       that, in exchange for testifying at defendant’s trial, he was allowed to serve only half of his
       20-year sentence. Second, codefendant’s testimony that he was in his house all afternoon and
       evening until 9 p.m. was contradicted by the testimony of State witness Mary Lewis, who
       testified that, while she was on or near her front porch starting at 6 p.m. and through most
       of the evening, she observed codefendant walking back and forth near the crime scene. Last
       but not least, codefendant testified that there was only one gunman. However, Mary Lewis
       testified that she observed three men patrolling the area immediately prior to the shooting,
       and the State’s ballistic evidence established that three types of ammunition were recovered
       from the crime scene, indicating the firing of three different guns.
¶ 92       For these reasons, I cannot find “beyond a reasonable doubt that the error at issue did not
       contribute to the verdict obtained.” People v. Stechly, 225 Ill. 2d 246, 304 (2007).

¶ 93                            II. Fingerprint Evidence: Frye Hearing
¶ 94       Second, with respect to the fingerprint evidence, defendant also claims that the trial court
       erred by failing to conduct a Frye hearing concerning the methodology of this particular
       fingerprint expert and whether it had gained general acceptance.
¶ 95       Our supreme court has held that, although a test performed according to accepted
       standards might satisfy the Frye standard for admissibility, the test as performed by the
       expert in a particular case still might not meet the Frye standard. People v. McKown, 236 Ill.
       2d 278, 308, 311 (2010). The burden is on the State to prove that the expert’s methodology
       was generally accepted in the scientific community. McKown, 236 Ill. 2d at 294. “We review
       the trial court’s conclusion that the State has met this burden de novo.” McKown, 236 Ill. 2d
       at 294-95.
¶ 96       Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion in limine requesting a Frye hearing concerning the
       methodology of this particular fingerprint examiner. The defense observed that it had not
       received a curriculum vitae for the examiner. Based on the examiner’s report, defendant
       argued that “it was impossible to tell whether [the examiner] is qualified as a fingerprint

                                                 -17-
      examiner, whether the minimum number of ridge detail matches were found, and whether
      the standard ACE-V method was followed.”
¶ 97      At the pretrial hearing on the motion, held on August 18, 2008, defense counsel again
      argued for an evidentiary hearing on “the methodology used by the particular examiner.”
      Counsel argued that there was an issue “whether this guy knows what he is doing, whether
      he could use accepted technology, accepted methodology in the field.” In response, the trial
      court ruled this “is a question of credibility not admissibility.”
¶ 98      At the trial, immediately after the examiner recited her qualification, defense counsel
      objected and the objection was overruled. During cross-examination, the examiner admitted
      that she had never heard of the ACE-V method and that she did not know whether the ACE-
      V method was the standard used by the FBI for fingerprint examination.
¶ 99      ACE-V is an acronym standing for “ ‘Analysis, Comparison, Evaluation, and
      Verification.’ ” National Research Council of the National Academies, Strengthening
      Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward 137 (2009). It has been accepted as
      the standard method of fingerprint analysis since 1959. Id. First, the examiner must analyze
      the print, considering the many factors that may “introduce variability in the resulting
      impression.” Id. Second, the examiner must compare the details of the print in question to
      the known standard. Id. at 138. Third, the examiner must “evaluate[ ] the sufficiency of the
      detail present” in both the print and the standard “to establish an identification.” Id. Fourth,
      another qualified examiner must repeat these steps and arrive at the same conclusion. Id.
¶ 100     In a case, such as the one at bar, where the defense has legitimately called into question
      the examiner’s methodology and knowledge of accepted standards, it was error not to hold
      a Frye hearing on that issue. McKown, 236 Ill. 2d at 308, 311. The trial judge’s response, that
      fingerprints had been accepted in the State of Illinois since before he was born, misses the
      issue. The trial court’s subsequent ruling, that the expert’s methodology was solely an issue
      of credibility and not admissibility, was a legal error. For the reasons already discussed
      above, this error was not harmless.

¶ 101                               III. Impeachment Evidence
¶ 102     Defendant also claims that the trial court erred by not allowing him to perfect the
      impeachment of the missing witness by introducing evidence of the witness’s prior
      inconsistent statements. Specifically, defense counsel had sought, at defendant’s second trial,
      to call the police officers who interviewed Jones, or to introduce his grand jury testimony or
      prior written statement to impeach this witness.
¶ 103     The trial court denied defendant’s motion on the ground that these statements were
      available to prior counsel at the time of the first trial and that prior counsel had cross-
      examined Jones based on them.2 However, prior counsel did not perfect the impeachment by

                2
                While prior counsel had asked Jones about the police interview on August 4, 1999, and had
        touched briefly on his grand jury testimony, it does not appear that prior counsel inquired about
        Jones’ September 2, 1999, statements.

                                                  -18-
        introducing the written statements or calling the police officers who heard the statements.

¶ 104                                   A. Standard of Review
¶ 105      The parties disagree about the appropriate standard of review. The State claims that this
      is purely an evidentiary matter and evidentiary issues are subject to an abuse of discretion
      standard. In contrast, defendant argues that this issue affected his sixth amendment
      confrontation rights and that constitutional issues are subject to de novo review.
¶ 106      In order to determine the appropriate standard of review, we must first determine what
      defendant is, and is not, arguing on appeal. Defendant does not claim on appeal that the trial
      court erred by permitting the State to introduce the prior trial transcript of the missing
      witness. In addition, during the second trial, defendant’s counsel had informed the trial court
      that he was considering asking the trial court to read the transcript without the cross-
      examination. However, before the transcript was read to the jury, defense counsel asked the
      trial court to include the cross-examination. Thus, on this appeal, defendant is not contesting
      the admission of the prior trial transcript, both the direct and cross, of the missing witness.
¶ 107      On this appeal, defendant claims that the trial court erred only by denying him the right
      to perfect the impeachment by introducing evidence of prior inconsistent statements. Neither
      party has provided a citation as to whether the denial of the right to perfect is a constitutional
      issue or a purely evidentiary matter. This court has found only one prior decision on this
      question, and it held that this issue is not a constitutional one. United States ex rel. Ruddock
      v. Briley, 216 F. Supp. 2d 737, 744 (N.D. Ill. 2002). However, that court acknowledged that
      it could not locate any other relevant decisions. Briley, 216 F. Supp. 2d at 744.
¶ 108      I do not need to resolve this issue in this case since the standard of review would be the
      same whether the right to perfect was a constitutional or purely evidentiary question.
      Although most evidentiary questions are reviewed only for an abuse of discretion, “reviewing
      courts sometimes review evidentiary rulings de novo.” People v. Hall, 195 Ill. 2d 1, 21
      (2000). This exception applies to evidentiary rulings that were “uniquely legal rulings.” Hall,
      195 Ill. 2d at 21. In the case at bar, the trial court permitted no perfection, on the ground that
      prior counsel had cross-examined. The trial court stated that it did not believe that a
      defendant could introduce evidence “to impeach testimony given under oath at a previous
      trial.” This was a purely legal ruling, which we may review de novo. Hall, 195 Ill. 2d at 21
      (de novo review is appropriate when the trial court applies “a broadly applicable rule”).

¶ 109                             B. Right to Perfect Impeachment
¶ 110      The right to perfect impeachment of a missing witness is now codified in the new Illinois
        Rules of Evidence, which took effect on January 1, 2011. Rule 806 states in relevant part:
               “When a hearsay statement3 *** has been admitted in evidence, the credibility of the

                3
                 The missing witness’s testimony was hearsay but was admissible under the exception for
        former testimony by a witness whom the court finds to be unavailable. See generally Ill. R. Evid.
        804(b)(1) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).

                                                  -19-
                declarant may be attacked, and if attacked may be supported, by any evidence which
                would be admissible for those purposes if declarant had testified as a witness.
                Evidence of a statement or conduct by the declarant at any time, inconsistent with
                defendant’s hearsay statement, is not subject to any requirement that the declarant
                may have been afforded an opportunity to deny or explain.” Ill. R. Evid. 806 (eff. Jan.
                1, 2011).
      If the above rule was in effect at the time of defendant’s trial, then the trial court’s ruling–that
      defendant’s prior opportunity to cross-examine barred his present right to perfect the
      impeachment–was clearly error. The rule states that the impeachment “may be supported, by
      any evidence which would be admissible for those purposes if declarant had testified as a
      witness.” Ill. R. Evid. 806 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 111      I find that the substance of the rule was in effect, although it had not yet been codified.
      The above-quoted rule is identical to Rule 806 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which
      Illinois courts have previously cited and applied as the law in Illinois. E.g., People v. Smith,
      127 Ill. App. 3d 622, 630 (1984) (citing Fed. R. Evid. 806 and stating its substance as the
      rule in Illinois). See also People v. Johnson, 271 Ill. App. 3d 962, 965 (1995) (citing Fed. R.
      Evid. 806 with approval); Kincaid v. Ames Department Stores, Inc., 283 Ill. App. 3d 555,
      568 (1996) (citing Fed. R. Evid. 806 with approval). In addition, the Committee Commentary
      accompanying the new Illinois rules announced that the new rules merely codified “the
      current law of evidence in Illinois,” with the exception of two areas not involved here. Ill.
      R. Evid., Committee Commentary (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). With respect to Rule 806, the
      committee observed:
                    “Rule 806 dispenses with the requirement of an opportunity to deny or explain
                an inconsistent statement or conduct of an out-of-court declarant under all
                circumstances when a hearsay statement is involved. Whether Illinois law had
                already dispensed with the requirement *** [is] unclear.” Ill. R. Evid., Committee
                Commentary (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
¶ 112      Even if the above requirement persisted, which is in doubt, the declarant in the case at
      bar was confronted during cross-examination concerning his grand jury statement and his
      prior statement to the police on August 4, 1999. Thus, this requirement, even if it still
      existed, would not have barred the defense from introducing evidence of these statements.
¶ 113      For these reasons, I find that it was error, as a matter of law, for the trial court to have
      ruled that defendant’s prior opportunity to cross-examine barred his present ability to perfect
      the impeachment.

¶ 114                              C. Harmless Error Analysis
¶ 115      Having found error, I must now determine whether the error was harmless. As we
      observed above, an error is harmless if “it appears beyond a reasonable doubt that the error
      at issue did not contribute to the verdict obtained.” Stechly, 225 Ill. 2d at 304.
¶ 116      On appeal, defendant focuses particularly on his inability to perfect the impeachment of
      the missing witness on the issue of whether Jones pushed his mother into the alley after he
      heard gunshots. If Jones was occupied pushing his mother into the alley, then this affected

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      his ability to turn and observe defendant standing on the corner with a rifle.
¶ 117     At trial, Jones testified that when he heard gunfire, he ducked between a parked vehicle
      and a tree. As soon as the gunfire stopped, he looked to see where his mother was and
      observed that she was jogging toward their house. Then he looked toward Leo High School
      and observed defendant with a rifle in his hands. By contrast, in his prior statements, he
      stated that, after he heard the shots, he pushed his mother toward the alley. At trial, he denied
      having pushed his mother into an alley, and he denied having told this to the police. A police
      officer’s testimony to the contrary might have led the jury to conclude that Jones was lying
      about having seen defendant immediately after the gunfire.
¶ 118     I cannot say, “beyond a reasonable doubt that the error at issue did not contribute to the
      verdict obtained.” Stechly, 225 Ill. 2d at 304. The testimony of two witnesses identified
      defendant with a rifle: the self-serving testimony of his codefendant, and the testimony of a
      missing witness whose impeachment the defense was not allowed to support. As a result I
      cannot say, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the trial court’s clear legal error did not
      contribute to the verdict.

¶ 119                                       CONCLUSION
¶ 120        As stated above, I would find first that, after defendant raised the issue of lack of
        evidentiary support for admission of the fingerprint evidence, the trial court erred by failing
        to consider whether the State had established an adequate basis for admission of this
        evidence. Second, after reviewing the entire record, I would find that the State did fail to
        establish an adequate basis for the expert’s testimony. Third, I would find that, in light of the
        conflicting narratives offered by the State’s own witnesses, this error was not harmless.
        Fourth, I would find that the trial court also erred with respect to the fingerprint evidence by
        failing to hold a Frye hearing concerning whether the particular methodology employed by
        this particular examiner in this case was generally accepted. Fifth, I would find that the trial
        court erred by not permitting defendant to perfect the impeachment of the missing witness
        by introducing evidence of the inconsistent statements. Sixth, since the missing witness was
        one of only two event witnesses who testified to observing defendant with a rifle and the
        other was the codefendant, who provided self-serving testimony, I would find that this error
        was also not harmless. Last but not least, I would find that the cumulative effect of these
        errors requires reversal and a remand for a new trial.

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