Court Opinion

ID: 8208868
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-23 20:03:14.272164+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:41:35.942480
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (1st) 200638-U

                                                                               FIFTH DIVISION
                                                                            SEPTEMBER 23, 2022

                                            No. 1-20-0638
 NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
 limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
 ______________________________________________________________________________
                                                IN THE
                                  APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                          FIRST DISTRICT
 ______________________________________________________________________________
 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                           )   Appeal from the
                                                                )   Circuit Court of
           Plaintiff-Appellee,                                  )   Cook County.
                                                                )
     v.                                                         )   No. 18 CR 3271
                                                                )
 TERRELL WASHINGTON,                                            )   Honorable
                                                                )   William B. Raines,
           Defendant-Appellant.                                 )   Judge Presiding.

           JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM delivered the judgment of the court.
           Presiding Justice Delort and Justice Mitchell concurred in the judgment.

                                              ORDER

¶1        Held: We affirm the defendant’s conviction for attempted first degree murder where the
                trial court did not plainly err by considering inadmissible hearsay evidence.

¶2        Following a bench trial, the defendant-appellant, Terrell Washington, was convicted of

attempted first degree murder (720 ILCS 5/8-4(a) (West 2018), 720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1) (West Supp.

2017)) and sentenced to 21 years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he argues this court should reverse

his conviction and remand for a new trial because, in finding the victim’s identification testimony
No. 1-20-0638

credible, the trial court committed plain error by considering inadmissible hearsay evidence. The

defendant contends that the trial court erroneously considered: (1) police records that indicated his

nickname was “Krupt” and; (2) an officer’s statement in body-worn camera footage. For the

following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.

¶3                                       BACKGROUND

¶4     The defendant was charged by indictment with five counts of attempted first degree murder

(counts I-V) and one count of aggravated battery (count VI) for shooting Erika Chambliss.

Relevant to this appeal is count I, which alleged that the defendant shot Ms. Chambliss without

lawful justification and with intent to kill, and count VI which alleged that, in committing a battery,

he knowingly discharged a firearm and injured Ms. Chambliss.

¶5     At trial, Ms. Chambliss identified the defendant in open court and testified as follows. The

defendant was nicknamed “Krupt.” At about 9:14 p.m. on January 18, 2018, the defendant visited

Ms. Chambliss’ apartment. They sat in a rear room near the kitchen and smoked cigarettes. They

discussed Ms. Chambliss’ girlfriend and the defendant repeatedly told Ms. Chambliss to lower her

voice. However, she did not. At some point, the defendant drew an automatic weapon from his

waistband and shot at Ms. Chambliss, while saying “I knew you were going to do it. I knew you

were going to put me out.”

¶6     Ms. Chambliss ran towards the front of the apartment, and the defendant fired multiple

shots without pausing. Ms. Chambliss was shot in her elbow and calf. The defendant then ran out

the front door. A neighbor found Ms. Chambliss on her couch and called an ambulance.

Paramedics transported her to the hospital.

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No. 1-20-0638

¶7     When Ms. Chambliss was released from the hospital, she told police officers that “Krupt”

shot her. She identified the defendant in a photo array on January 19, 2018, and stated she was

“120 percent sure” that the man in the photograph shot her.

¶8     On January 23, 2018, someone knocked on Ms. Chambliss’ door very hard. The peephole

was covered, but she assumed it was the defendant and called 911. The police arrived and escorted

her to a police vehicle. From the vehicle, she saw the police escort someone out of the building.

She told the police officers that it was the person who shot her. The police detained the person and

later identified him as Will Coleman. Ms. Chambliss then told them that Mr. Coleman was not the

shooter. She claimed that Mr. Coleman was an “associate” whom she had known for a few years.

She later identified a photo of Mr. Coleman as the man who was detained outside her apartment.

She again said that he did not shoot her. She identified a photo of the defendant as “Krupt,” the

man who shot her.

¶9     On cross-examination, Ms. Chambliss testified that she entertained friends in her smoke

room, and occasionally let people spend the night and leave clothes at her apartment. She denied

using the smoke room for the street drug “leaf,” and further denied that, on January 18, 2018, she

was consuming marijuana, leaf, or alcohol. Ms. Chambliss said she had a “clear mind” when the

police and paramedics arrived after the shooting but did not know she had been shot in the leg until

the paramedics noticed the wound. She denied stating she did not want to go to the hospital,

smelling of alcohol, or telling an officer that the shooter was named “Tariq” and was about 5’6”

tall and weighed 230 pounds.

¶ 10   Ms. Chambliss explained that, at her building, visitors must be buzzed through an outside

gate by a resident. On January 23, 2018, she did not buzz anyone into the premises before hearing

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No. 1-20-0638

the knock on her door. She denied telling the 911 operator that the man who shot her was outside

her door. She then insisted that she identified Mr. Coleman to police as the person who knocked

on her door, not as the person who shot her. Mr. Coleman frequented her home but did not keep

belongings there.

¶ 11   On redirect examination, Ms. Chambliss testified that the defendant left a green hoodie

jacket at her apartment the night of the shooting, which she gave to police. She was nearsighted

and supposed to wear glasses. She initially told the police that the person she viewed from the

police vehicle on January 23, 2018, i.e., Mr. Coleman, was the person who shot her because she

was far away when she looked at him from the police vehicle.

¶ 12   On recross-examination, Ms. Chambliss testified that, while she was still in the police

vehicle, the police showed her Mr. Coleman’s photograph and she stated that he was not the

shooter. She told the police she was nearsighted.

¶ 13   Paramedic Steven Baranowski testified that he responded to Ms. Chambliss’ apartment the

night of the shooting. Ms. Chambliss was on the couch, “very disoriented,” and had been shot in

the arm. In the ambulance, the paramedics noticed entry and exit wounds on her leg.

¶ 14   During Mr. Baranowski’s testimony, the State published footage from the body camera of

a police officer who responded to the scene. The footage is included in the record on appeal and

depicts officers arriving at Ms. Chambliss’ apartment. The police officer wearing the camera

approaches Ms. Chambliss, who is on the couch, and asks for the shooter’s name. Ms. Chambliss

does not audibly respond to the question but asks for help with her arm. The paramedics ask if she

can walk and help her off the couch. The police officer states into her radio that the offender is

Ms. Chambliss’ boyfriend. The police officer again asks for the shooter’s name as Ms. Chambliss

                                               -4-
No. 1-20-0638

is helped down the stairs. The paramedics ask Ms. Chambliss what is wrong with her legs, tell her

to walk, saying “come on, let’s go.” After they descend the stairs and approach the door, a

paramedic asks why Ms. Chambliss is limping and she says her knee hurts. Outside, the police

officer again asks for the shooter’s name. Ms. Chambliss, slurring, responds with what sounds like

“Krupt,” then spells “K-U-R-U-P-T.” The police officer incorrectly repeats the spelling and states

her belief that the shooter is named “Tariq.”

¶ 15   Ms. Chambliss repeatedly asks where they are taking her and denies needing

hospitalization. Near the ambulance, the police officer asks for the shooter’s last name while a

paramedic simultaneously asks if Ms. Chambliss has been drinking. She repeatedly denies being

intoxicated or knowing the shooter’s last name. In the ambulance, she states the shooter is 5’6”

tall and weighs 230 pounds. She repeats the shooter’s name and its spelling, and says the shooting

was about a girl.

¶ 16   On cross-examination, Mr. Baranowski testified that Ms. Chambliss smelled of alcohol

and he thought she was inebriated.

¶ 17   Detective Eric Reyes testified that he and a partner met with Ms. Chambliss at the hospital

on January 18, 2018. Immediately after they introduced themselves, she said, “I know who shot

me,” and gave them the nickname “Krupt.” The trial court overruled defense counsel’s hearsay

objection because the testimony was “part of a police investigation.”

¶ 18   Detective Reyes then went to Ms. Chambliss’ apartment. He observed blood and shell

casings in the kitchen. Afterwards, the detectives searched a “data warehouse” for individuals

named “Krupt,” “took those photographs,” and compiled a photo array. Ms. Chambliss viewed the

photo array and identified the defendant as the shooter. The police officers recovered a jacket from

                                                -5-
No. 1-20-0638

Ms. Chambliss’ apartment, which she said belonged to the defendant. They then released an

investigative alert for the defendant.

¶ 19   On January 23, 2018, Detective Reyes learned that someone had been arrested. Detective

Reyes went to the police station, learned that the person arrested was Will Coleman, and released

him. On cross-examination, Detective Reyes agreed that he interviewed Mr. Coleman before

releasing him.

¶ 20   Chicago police officer Edward Poppish testified that he responded to Ms. Chambliss’

apartment on January 23, 2018, after receiving information that Ms. Chambliss had called the

police and stated that the person who shot her was outside her door. Officers detained Mr. Coleman

outside Ms. Chambliss’ apartment. Officer Poppish stood with Mr. Coleman on the sidewalk while

Ms. Chambliss viewed Mr. Coleman from inside a police vehicle on the street. Ms. Chambliss

identified Mr. Coleman as the shooter.

¶ 21   The State asked Officer Poppish if officers told Ms. Chambliss that it was Mr. Coleman

who had been detained. Officer Poppish did not know and, to refresh his memory, the State showed

him several minutes of body-camera footage taken by another police officer, referring to it as

“Video No. 7.” After viewing the video, Officer Poppish stated that he was uncertain of the

distance between Mr. Coleman and the police vehicle when Ms. Chambliss identified Mr. Coleman

as the shooter.

¶ 22   The State also asked Officer Poppish about a statement made by Officer McKenna near the

end of the video. Defense counsel objected to the question as leading, and the trial court sustained

the objection. The State then asked him what Ms. Chambliss said in the video about her

                                               -6-
No. 1-20-0638

relationship with Mr. Coleman. Officer Poppish replied, “[f]rom what it said on the video,” Ms.

Chambliss stated that Mr. Coleman was her brother and was homeless.

¶ 23   The State then published the last minute of the video for the court, although the court noted

that it had “heard most of it” when it was played to refresh Officer Poppish’s memory. The video

is included in the record on appeal. The last minute of the timeframe, which the State published at

trial, depicts a police officer with the name tag “McKenna” approaching the police officer wearing

the camera and stating, “She’s saying that that’s her brother, he’s homeless, and supposedly he has

her phone.”

¶ 24   On redirect examination, the State asked how much time passed after Ms. Chambliss

identified Mr. Coleman as the shooter until she “recanted.” Defense counsel objected as there had

been “no evidence of a recantation.” The trial court responded: “Well, there is evidence, from what

I heard, that she then identified him as her brother and homeless. So you can ask questions about

that, if he considers that a recantation.” The State asked how much time passed after Ms. Chambliss

identified Mr. Coleman as the shooter until she stated that he was her brother and not the shooter.

Defense counsel objected, arguing that there was “no testimony that he’s not the shooter.” The

court sustained the objection, explaining:

                “What I heard in the video *** is that Officer McKenna walked up and says that

       Willie Coleman is her brother, he’s got her phone, she wants her phone back, there may be

       some evidence on the phone. I don’t recall hearing anything about him not being the shooter

       in what I heard.”

                                               -7-
No. 1-20-0638

¶ 25   The State asked Officer Poppish how much time passed before someone told him that Mr.

Coleman was Ms. Chambliss’ brother. The court overruled defense counsel’s “double hearsay”

objection, and Officer Poppish responded that 7 to 10 minutes had passed.

¶ 26   The State then published another video of body-worn camera footage, “Video No. 11.” In

the video, which is included in the record on appeal, the police officer wearing the camera is

driving a vehicle, another police officer is in the passenger seat, and Ms. Chambliss is in the back

seat. The vehicle is parked near Ms. Chambliss’ apartment building. The police officers state that

a detainee is being brought over for identification and ask Ms. Chambliss if she can see. The

passenger-officer exits the vehicle and approaches the gate to Ms. Chambliss’ apartment building,

which is on the right side of the street. The driver-officer asks if Ms. Chambliss sees the detainee.

Ms. Chambliss is silent for a moment, begins to respond affirmatively, and the police officer drives

several feet closer to the gate. Ms. Chambliss says, “Yeah, that’s him,” and “That’s Krupt.” The

officer then reverses away from the gate. Ms. Chambliss states that she does not want any “static”

with “his” family. The officer says, “I get it—he shot you, right?” and she responds affirmatively.

She confirms she knows him as Krupt.

¶ 27   Several minutes later, the police officer exits the vehicle and returns to the front of the

apartment building to speak to other police officers while Ms. Chambliss remains in the vehicle.

The police officers stand in the street, and a woman is intermittently visible on the left side of the

street, opposite the apartment building. The police officers discuss whether to show Ms. Chambliss

the photo in an investigative alert. Officer McKenna approaches, nods his head toward the left side

of the street, and states, “She’s saying his name is William Coleman.” The police officer wearing

                                                -8-
No. 1-20-0638

the camera asks, “She who?” and Officer McKenna points towards the location of the woman on

the left side of the street and answers, “She’s supposedly his sister, allegedly.”

¶ 28    Officer Poppish further testified that there was a “bulletin” related to the incident which

named the defendant and listed his nickname as “Krupt.”

¶ 29    The State entered several stipulations, including that three shell casings recovered near the

rear door of Ms. Chambliss’ kitchen were fired from the same weapon, that an evidence technician

photographed bullet holes and suspected blood stains in the kitchen, and that the defendant was a

possible donor of the major DNA profile found on a tissue in a pocket of the jacket recovered from

Ms. Chambliss’ apartment. The expected frequency of the DNA profile was “no more common

than approximately 1 in 42 nonillion” individuals. The parties also stipulated to the foundation for

a phone call made by the defendant in jail and published a portion of it. The recording is in the

record on appeal. In the recording, the defendant and the other person on the line discuss calling

“[t]hat b***,” and telling her “don’t bring her ass to court,” or “come and say it wasn’t me.” The

State then rested its case.

¶ 30    Defense counsel moved for a directed finding, arguing that Ms. Chambliss’ identification

of the defendant as the shooter was incredible given the video evidence showing that she identified

Mr. Coleman as the shooter five days later. Defense counsel further argued that the video taken

the night of the shooting showed that Ms. Chambliss was disoriented, “high,” and “drunk,” and

Officer Baranowski testified she smelled of alcohol. Counsel also noted that the defendant was

“[c]learly” taller and lighter than how Ms. Chambliss described the shooter in the video of her

statement. Finally, defense counsel argued that the video reflected that the police believed the

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No. 1-20-0638

shooter was Ms. Chambliss’ boyfriend, but she did not testify that the defendant was her boyfriend.

The court denied the motion for a directed finding and the defense rested.

¶ 31    In closing argument, defense counsel incorporated his argument from the motion for a

directed finding and further argued that Ms. Chambliss’ courtroom demeanor indicated that she

abused drugs. He pointed out that she “mumbled,” “slumped in her seat,” and answered questions

illogically. Defense counsel argued that the evidence suggested the police dispatcher on January

23, 2018, received a call from Ms. Chambliss, indicating that she said the shooter was at her door.

And the video from that day depicted the officers ensuring that she could see Mr. Coleman from

the police car during the show-up. Ms. Chambliss did not testify that Mr. Coleman was her brother,

was homeless, or had her phone. Defense counsel also claimed that the jail-call recording was

“unintelligible.” In sum, defense counsel argued the State did not meet its burden of proof.

¶ 32    Following closing arguments, the trial court found the defendant guilty on all counts but

amended the ruling to reflect guilty findings on counts I and VI. 1 The court noted that, on the video

taken the night of the shooting, Ms. Chambliss stated, as soon as she could, that “Krupt” shot her.

The court explained that while Ms. Chambliss looked intoxicated, she could have been in shock

from being shot, and it declined to assume she was on drugs. The trial court also noted that the

paramedics gave Ms. Chambliss “a hard time” and asked her multiple questions at once. Yet, she

continued to identify the defendant as the shooter throughout the investigation and in court. The

trial court stated, “we saw that on video because they were going to show her a picture that they

pulled based on the nickname of Krupt to be Terrell Washington.” Further, the defendant’s DNA

        1
         On the next court date, the State moved to nol-pros four counts of attempted first degree murder
(counts II-V), explaining that they should have been nol-prossed before trial. The court granted the State’s
motion.

                                                   - 10 -
No. 1-20-0638

was linked to the jacket that Ms. Chambliss told officers belonged to the defendant. Regarding the

video of the show-up, the court explained: “Yes, she identified Willie Coleman as the shooter from

the vehicle. And the next thing you know, the police officer walks up and she told that police

officer that that’s my brother and I want my phone back.”

¶ 33   After the trial court rendered its decision, the defendant filed a motion for reconsideration

and a new trial. At a hearing on the motion, defense counsel argued that Ms. Chambliss never

recanted her identification of Mr. Coleman, but the videos contained “some incidental

conversations, which is essentially hearsay.” The court clarified that, according to its notes, during

Video No. 7, played during Officer Poppish’s direct examination, “Officer McKenna approached,

and then they asked Ms. Chambliss if Willie Coleman is the shooter, and she said, ‘Willie Coleman

is my brother and he’s homeless.’ So that was Officer Poppish’s testimony ***.” Defense counsel

nonetheless noted that, despite the officer’s statement, the video did not show Ms. Chambliss

recanting her identification of Mr. Coleman. The court acknowledged that and explained its

perspective of what the video showed.

¶ 34   The trial court then denied the defendant’s motion for reconsideration and a new trial. In

doing so, the court emphasized that it found Ms. Chambliss’ testimony credible and that her

identification of Mr. Coleman “was cleared up when she said that’s my brother and he’s homeless.”

The court also noted that Ms. Chambliss testified that she had poor eyesight and needed glasses.

The court reiterated that Ms. Chambliss told an officer who responded to the shooting that “Krupt”

shot her, which was “a nickname for the defendant.” When shown the photo array, Ms. Chambliss

made “an immediate identification of the defendant also known as “Krupt.”

                                                - 11 -
No. 1-20-0638

¶ 35    Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court sentenced the defendant to the minimum

term of 21 years’ imprisonment for attempted first degree murder (count I), 12 years’

imprisonment for aggravated battery (count VI), and merged count VI into count I. The court

denied the defendant’s motion to reconsider sentence. This appeal followed.

¶ 36                                      ANALYSIS

¶1      We note that we have jurisdiction to consider this matter, as the defendant filed a timely

notice of appeal. Ill. S. Ct. R. 603 (eff. Feb. 6, 2013); R. 606 (eff. July 1, 2017).

¶ 37    On appeal, the defendant argues that two pieces of evidence which were admitted at trial

were inadmissible hearsay: (1) the police records which listed his nickname as Krupt; and (2)

Officer McKenna’s statement in Video No. 7 that “she” said Mr. Coleman was her brother and

homeless. The defendant contends that the trial court erred by considering this hearsay evidence

in finding him guilty.

¶ 38    The defendant acknowledges that he failed to preserve these issues for appeal by not

objecting at trial or raising them in his motion for a new trial. People v. Reese, 2017 IL 120011,

¶ 60 (“To preserve an issue for review, a defendant must object at trial and raise the alleged error

in a written posttrial motion.”). However, he requests plain-error review. The plain-error doctrine

allows a reviewing court to address a forfeited claim where a clear or obvious error occurred and

(1) “the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone threatened to tip the scales of justice

against the defendant, regardless of the seriousness of the error,” or (2) the error “is so serious that

it affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial and challenged the integrity of the judicial process,

regardless of the closeness of the evidence.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. The defendant

carries the burden of persuasion under either prong. People v. Lewis, 234 Ill. 2d 32, 43 (2009). The

                                                 - 12 -
No. 1-20-0638

first step in plain-error analysis is determining whether a clear and obvious error occurred. People

v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 49.

¶ 39   As the defendant had a bench trial, we will presume that the court considered only

competent evidence unless the record affirmatively shows otherwise. People v. Moon, 2019 IL

App (1st) 161573, ¶ 28. That includes the presumption that the trial court considered evidence only

for competent purposes. See, e.g., People v. Naylor, 229 Ill. 2d 584, 603 (2008) (“As a matter of

law, we must presume that the trial court considered the defendant’s prior conviction only with

respect to the purpose for which it was competent.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).

¶ 40   “Hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered in court to prove the truth of the matter

asserted.” In re Jovan A., 2014 IL App (1st) 103835, ¶ 23; see also Ill. R. Evid. 801(c) (eff. Oct.

15, 2015). Hearsay evidence is generally inadmissible, subject to certain exceptions. Jovan A.,

2014 IL App (1st) 103835, ¶ 23; see also Ill. R. Evid. 802 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). However, evidence

is not hearsay where it is not offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted—for example, police

officers may testify to information they received during an investigation to explain why they took

a certain action, so long as that testimony is offered only to show the steps of the investigation.

Jovan A., 2014 IL App (1st) 103835, ¶ 23. We review whether a trial court allowed inadmissible

hearsay under the abuse of discretion standard. People v. McNeal, 405 Ill. App. 3d 647, 666 (2010).

¶ 41   We first consider the defendant’s argument that the trial court impermissibly considered

testimony that police records listed “Krupt” as his nickname as evidence that he was, in fact,

nicknamed Krupt. The State argues that the evidence was offered only to show the course of the

investigation, and that the court did not consider it to bolster Ms. Chambliss’ identification of the

defendant.

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No. 1-20-0638

¶ 42   After reviewing the record, we find that the court did not abuse its discretion in allowing

the State to present this evidence. The evidence presented was that Detective Reyes compiled a

photo array that included the defendant, after searching the nickname “Krupt” in the police

database. And after Ms. Chambliss identified the defendant in the array, an investigative alert or

“bulletin” listing the defendant with that nickname was created. In other words, this evidence was

presented to show the investigative process.

¶ 43   At the outset, Ms. Chambliss identified the defendant at trial and stated that his nickname

was Krupt. And Detective Reyes testified that Ms. Chambliss told the police officers the shooter’s

nickname was Krupt. The court overruled the defendant’s objection to that testimony, and he does

not challenge that ruling on appeal. Detective Reyes confirmed that the police officers searched

the nickname in a “data warehouse” and created a photo array from “those photographs” to show

Ms. Chambliss. She identified the defendant’s photograph as the shooter. The police officers

subsequently released an investigative alert for the defendant. Officer Poppish testified there was

a “bulletin” naming the defendant and listing his nickname as Krupt. In Video No. 11, which was

admitted into evidence, the police officers discussed showing Ms. Chambliss the investigative

alert. The trial court noted that action when it found the defendant guilty.

¶ 44   Consequently, the evidence that a search for “Krupt” in police records implicated the

defendant was not offered for the truth of the matter asserted—that the defendant was nicknamed

Krupt—but rather to show how the officers created the photo array through which Ms. Chambliss

identified the defendant as her shooter. See Jovan A., 2014 IL App (1st) 103835, ¶ 23. Accordingly,

the trial court did not err in allowing evidence that the police searched the nickname “Krupt” in a

                                               - 14 -
No. 1-20-0638

database in order to compile the photo array from which Ms. Chambliss identified the defendant,

or subsequently created an investigative alert for the defendant.

¶ 45   In reaching this conclusion, we reject the defendant’s argument that the trial court’s

statements when announcing the verdict and ruling on the defendant’s posttrial motion that the

defendant was “known as” Krupt show that the court considered the evidence as proof he was

nicknamed Krupt. We acknowledge that the court did state that the defendant was “known as”

Krupt and that Ms. Chambliss identified a photograph of “the defendant also known as Krupt.”

However, those statements by the court do not rebut the presumption that it considered the

evidence only for its competent purpose of showing the course of the police investigation. Again,

Ms. Chambliss testified that the defendant was nicknamed Krupt. The trial court could therefore

rely on her testimony to state that the defendant was known as Krupt. The record thus does not

affirmatively show that the court erred in considering inadmissible hearsay evidence that the

defendant was nicknamed Krupt. Naylor, 229 Ill. 2d at 603. Accordingly, as the defendant has not

shown the court erred in this regard, he cannot establish plain error.

¶ 46   The defendant next contends that the court erred in considering Officer McKenna’s

inadmissible hearsay statement in Video No. 7, played during Officer Poppish’s direct

examination. In that video, Officer McKenna states, “She’s saying that that’s her brother, he’s

homeless, and supposedly he has her phone.” The defendant characterizes the statement as a

retraction by Ms. Chambliss of her identification of Mr. Coleman as the shooter and argues the

retraction is inadmissible double hearsay, or hearsay within hearsay. The defendant maintains that

the “natural implication” of Officer McKenna’s statement is that Ms. Chambliss misidentified Mr.

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No. 1-20-0638

Coleman as the shooter. The State maintains that the statement was offered to show the course of

the police investigation and the court did not consider it as a recantation by Ms. Chambliss.

¶ 47    Section 10-30 of the Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body Camera Act (Act) (50 ILCS

706/10-1 et seq. (West 2018)) provides that body camera recordings “may be used as evidence in

any administrative, judicial, legislative, or disciplinary proceeding.” 50 ILCS 706/10-30 (West

2018). However, the Act does not except body-worn camera footage from the hearsay rule. People

v. Collins, 2020 IL App (1st) 181746, ¶¶ 21-26, modified on denial of reh’g. 2 Indeed, we ultimately

found in Collins that certain statements contained in a body camera video were inadmissible

hearsay. See id. ¶¶ 30-33.

¶ 48    Before we determine whether the court erred here, we must note that Officer Poppish’s

testimony assumed that, in Video No. 7, Officer McKenna was referring to Ms. Chambliss when

he stated that “she” asserted Mr. Coleman was “her” brother. The trial court also expressed this

view when ruling on defense counsel’s objection to the State asking Officer Poppish how much

time passed until Ms. Chambliss “recanted” her identification of Mr. Coleman as the shooter.

¶ 49    However, in Video No. 11, which we have reviewed, the officer wearing the camera stands

in the street. The vehicle in which Ms. Chambliss sits is behind him, Ms. Chambliss’ apartment is

on the right side of the street, and a woman is intermittently visible on the left side of the street.

Officer McKenna approaches from the officer’s front. He nods towards the left side of the street

and states that “she” said the detainee was named William Coleman. When asked to whom he is

referring, Officer McKenna points towards the location of the woman on the street and says, “She’s

        2
        An appeal in this case is pending before the supreme court. See People v. Collins, No. 127584 (Ill.
Nov. 24, 2021) (allowing petition for leave to appeal).

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No. 1-20-0638

supposedly his sister, allegedly.” Officer McKenna is never depicted speaking with Ms. Chambliss

or walking past the officer towards the vehicle where Ms. Chambliss sits.

¶ 50   Thus, Video No. 11 shows that Officer McKenna referred to the woman on the left side of

the street, not Ms. Chambliss, as the person who asserted that Mr. Coleman was her brother. It

follows that in the statement from Video No. 7, which is at issue here, Officer McKenna also

referred to the woman on the street, not Ms. Chambliss. Moreover, Ms. Chambliss testified that

Mr. Coleman was her “associate.” Accordingly, the matter asserted within Officer McKenna’s

statement is not that Ms. Chambliss stated Mr. Coleman was her brother. Rather, it is that the

woman on the street, visible on the video, stated that Mr. Coleman was her brother.

¶ 51   The record does contain some evidence suggesting that the trial court considered Officer

McKenna’s statement for the truth of the matter asserted—that Ms. Chambliss said Mr. Coleman

was her brother. Ultimately, however, we need not decide whether the trial court erred in

considering Officer McKenna’s statement as the defendant is unable to show plain error. See

People v. White, 2011 IL 109689, ¶ 134 (court may conduct plain-error analysis without

determining whether error occurred). He asserts only the first prong, that the evidence here was so

closely balanced that the error threatened to tip the scales of justice against him. Reese, 2017 IL

120011, ¶ 60.

¶ 52   To determine whether the evidence at trial was closely balanced, we undertake a

“qualitative, commonsense assessment” of the evidence in its totality and context, including any

evidence regarding the witnesses’ credibility. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 53. An error is prejudicial

under the first prong where its impact on the outcome was “potentially dispositive.” Id. ¶ 68;

accord White, 2011 IL 109689, ¶ 133 (the defendant must show that the guilty verdict “may have

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resulted from the error and not the evidence properly adduced at trial” (internal quotation marks

omitted)).

¶ 53   Evidence may be closely balanced where the trier of fact was required to select between

two competing, credible versions of events. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 63 (citing Naylor, 229 Ill.

2d at 606-08 (evidence closely balanced where no extrinsic evidence corroborated or contradicted

competing version of events and case turned on credibility contest)). Even when the defendant

does not present any evidence, however, the evidence may still be closely balanced if the State’s

witnesses were unreliable or provided evidence that favored the defendant. People v. Othman,

2020 IL App (1st) 150823-B, ¶¶ 69-70 (rejecting State’s argument that evidence could not be

closely balanced where the defendant did not present evidence) (citing People v. Piatkowsi, 225

Ill. 2d 551, 567 (2007))); see also People v. Effinger, 2016 IL App (3d) 140203, ¶¶ 12, 26 (evidence

not closely balanced under commonsense assessment where the defendant presented no evidence

and circumstantial evidence supported victim’s version of events).

¶ 54   Here, the defendant did not present any evidence. Thus, the issue is whether “the quantum

of admissible evidence presented by the State *** rendered the evidence closely balanced.”

Othman, 2020 IL App (1st) 150823-B, ¶ 70. The defendant argues there is closely-balanced

evidence regarding whether Ms. Chambliss was too inebriated to credibly identify her shooter. As

already noted, he carries the burden of persuasion. Lewis, 234 Ill. 2d at 43.

¶ 55   Ms. Chambliss testified that the defendant, whom she knew by the nickname Krupt, visited

her apartment on January 18, 2018. They smoked cigarettes in the rear room of her apartment, near

the kitchen. When the defendant requested Ms. Chambliss lower her voice and she did not, he

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No. 1-20-0638

drew a firearm and shot her multiple times. She ran to the apartment’s front. The defendant exited

the apartment, leaving his jacket.

¶ 56    Other evidence supports Ms. Chambliss’ testimony. The body camera footage of the

responding police officer shows Ms. Chambliss spelling her shooter’s name “K-U-R-U-P-T”

shortly after the shooting. Detective Reyes testified that, when he met Ms. Chambliss at the

hospital, she “immediately” stated she knew who shot her and, shortly thereafter, identified the

defendant’s photograph in the array. Ms. Chambliss testified she was “120 percent sure” that the

man in the photograph she identified shot her as she ran from the back room near the kitchen

through the apartment. Detective Reyes observed blood in Ms. Chambliss’ kitchen, shell casings

were recovered near the rear kitchen door, and an evidence technician photographed bullet holes

and suspected blood stains in the kitchen, corroborating her testimony that she was shot in the rear

of the apartment. The jacket that Ms. Chambliss stated the defendant left at her apartment held a

tissue with a DNA profile consistent with the defendant.

¶ 57    The defendant argues the evidence is closely balanced because paramedic Baranowski

testified that, when he arrived, Ms. Chambliss smelled of alcohol and he believed she was

inebriated. She did not know she had been shot in the leg until the paramedics discovered the

wound. The defendant further notes that, in the video from the night of the shooting, Ms. Chambliss

appears disoriented and says the shooter is 5’6” tall and weighs 230 pounds while defense counsel

noted, without objection in arguing the motion for new trial, that the defendant is taller and lighter. 3

He also points out that, on January 23, 2018, the police officers conducted a show-up with Mr.

        3
         In his brief on appeal, the defendant directs us to the online records of the Illinois Department of
Corrections (IDOC), where he is listed as being 5’11” tall and weighing 178 pounds. See People v. Johnson,
2021 IL 125738, ¶ 54 (court may take judicial notice of IDOC’s online records).

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No. 1-20-0638

Coleman outside Ms. Chambliss’ apartment and she told them that Mr. Coleman was Krupt and

confirmed he shot her.

¶ 58   With regard to her identification of Mr. Coleman as the shooter, Ms. Chambliss explained

in court that, after learning it was Mr. Coleman who was detained outside her apartment, she

realized that she had misidentified him as her shooter because she was nearsighted, and she then

told the officers Mr. Coleman did not shoot her.

¶ 59   Ms. Chambliss identified the defendant in the photo array only a few hours after the

shooting and identified him again in open court. She also testified that she retracted her

identification of Mr. Coleman as the shooter as soon as she realized her mistake. And it would

require belief that it was a coincidence the jacket Ms. Chambliss said the shooter left in her

apartment at the time of the shooting, held a tissue with a DNA profile linked to the defendant.

¶ 60   In making a commonsense evaluation of the evidence in its totality and context, Ms.

Chambliss’ testimony that the defendant shot her is supported by her consistent identification of

him as the shooter and his DNA link to the tissue from the jacket left in her apartment after the

shooting. See Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶ 53. Thus, even if the trial court erroneously considered

Officer McKenna’s statement in Video No. 7 to mean that Ms. Chambliss stated Mr. Coleman was

her brother and not the shooter, the error was harmless. The evidence was not closely balanced

such that the error threatened the fairness of his trial. Lewis, 234 Ill. 2d at 43. Consequently, the

defendant has not carried his burden of establishing that the trial court plainly erred. We therefore

affirm the defendant’s conviction.

¶ 61                                      CONCLUSION

¶ 62   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.

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¶ 63   Affirmed.

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