Court Opinion

ID: 2961082
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-18 22:04:00.847531+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:41:31.775689
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                   2015 IL App (4th) 130644                September 18, 2015
                                                                               Carla Bender
                               NOS. 4-13-0644, 4-13-0650 cons.              th
                                                                           4 District Appellate
                                                                                Court, IL
                                IN THE APPELLATE COURT

                                         OF ILLINOIS

                                     FOURTH DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                       )      Appeal from
           Plaintiff-Appellee,                             )      Circuit Court of
           v.                                              )      McLean County
EDDIE BROTHERS,                                            )      Nos. 12CF891,
           Defendant-Appellant.                            )           12CF1020
                                                           )
                                                           )      Honorable
                                                           )      Robert L. Freitag,
                                                           )      Judge Presiding.

              JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
              Justices Knecht and Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                          OPINION

¶1            In January 2013, a jury in McLean County case No. 12-CF-891 convicted

defendant, Eddie Brothers, of home invasion (720 ILCS 5/12-11(a)(1) (West 2010)), three counts

of aggravated criminal sexual assault (two involving vaginal penetration and one involving anal

penetration) (720 ILCS 5/11-1.30(a)(1) (West 2010)), three counts of domestic battery (720

ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1) (West 2010)), and aggravated unlawful restraint (720 ILCS 5/10-3.1(a)

(West 2010)). That same month, defendant pleaded guilty to harassment by telephone (720

ILCS 135/1-1 (West 2010)) and violation of a bail bond (720 ILCS 5/32-10(b) (West 2010)) in

McLean County case No. 12-CF-1020.

¶2            Defendant's convictions in case No. 12-CF-891 stemmed from a September 2012
incident in which defendant entered the trailer of his estranged lover, A.W., and physically and

sexually attacked her over the course of several hours. Defendant's convictions for harassment

by telephone and violation of a bail bond in case No. 12-CF-1020 resulted from numerous

jailhouse phone calls defendant made to A.W. while he was in pretrial custody in case No. 12-

CF-891. In those calls, defendant persuaded A.W. not to cooperate with the prosecution in case

No. 12-CF-891. In March 2013, the trial court sentenced defendant to aggregate prison terms of

95 years in case No. 12-CF-891 and 6 years in case No. 12-CF-1020, with the 6-year sentences

to be served consecutively to those imposed in case No. 12-CF-891.

¶3             Defendant appeals, arguing that he was denied a fair trial in case No. 12-CF-891

because (1) the trial court improperly admitted, as substantive evidence under section 115-10.1

of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code) (725 ILCS 5/115-10.1 (West 2012)), A.W.'s

hearsay statements to a detective; (2) the State presented improper opinion testimony from police

officers regarding defendant's and A.W.'s credibility; and (3) the State failed to present sufficient

evidence to sustain defendant's conviction for home invasion.

¶4             We agree with defendant that the State presented inadmissible hearsay and

opinion testimony. Because the only evidence supporting one of defendant's convictions for

aggravated criminal sexual assault (involving anal penetration) was inadmissible hearsay, we

reverse that conviction and remand for further proceedings on that count. However, because (1)

the properly admitted evidence overwhelmingly proved defendant guilty of the remaining counts

and (2) no reasonable probability exists that the jury would have acquitted defendant if the

improper hearsay and opinion testimony had been excluded, we affirm defendant's remaining

convictions.

                                                -2-
¶5                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶6             The State presented the following evidence at defendant's January 2013 jury trial.

¶7                                    A. A.W.'s Testimony

¶8             A.W. testified that on September 4, 2012, she ended her romantic relationship

with defendant. In light of the break up, she changed the locks on her trailer home, which was

located in the Royal Acres mobile home park (Royal Acres) in Normal, Illinois.

¶9             On September 6, 2012, A.W. went to work at 2:45 p.m., locking the door of her

trailer behind her. When she returned home shortly after 10:30 p.m., she unlocked her front door

and went inside to the bathroom, where she removed her clothes. As A.W. was using the

bathroom, defendant emerged from inside the shower stall. A.W. tried to get away from

defendant through the back door of the trailer, but defendant grabbed her and brought her into

the kitchen. Defendant was angry because he suspected that A.W. was "messing around" with

his brother, Gregory. Defendant took A.W.'s cell phone from the counter and began looking

through it.

¶ 10           A.W. testified that after defendant took her phone, the next thing she remembered

was running through the street to her grandfather's house wearing only a towel. When the State

asked A.W. why she was wearing only a towel, she recalled that she had taken a shower in her

trailer, but she claimed that she did not remember anything else that happened in the trailer.

¶ 11           The trial court admitted an audio recording of a 9-1-1 call made immediately after

the incident. (We note that A.W.'s mother—who did not testify—initiated the 9-1-1 call and

spent the first several minutes of the call giving her secondhand account of the incident to the

dispatcher. Pursuant to the parties' agreement, the jury heard only the portion of the call after

                                                -3-
A.W. began speaking.) A.W. sounded hysterical and was sobbing throughout much of the 9-1-1

call. Because both defendant and the State agree that the 9-1-1 call was a critical piece of

evidence, we set forth the pertinent portions of the call in detail, as follows:

                       "[DISPATCHER]: Take a deep breath for me, okay?

               Alright, now what's your name?

                       [A.W.]: [A.W.]

                       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, so you explain to me exactly what

               happened over at your trailer.

                       [A.W.]: I got home from work [probably] like 10:45, and I

               went into the bathroom to get ready to get in the shower like I

               always do, and he was hiding in the shower.

                       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, and what happened then?

                       [A.W.]: He got out and he kept talking about—'cause he

               said I'm messin' with his brother. So he kept—that's all he kept

               saying. He grabbed me by my hair and dragged me in the kitchen

               where my phone was so he could go through it. Then he got the

               knives out of the drawer and he followed me around everywhere I

               went so I couldn't leave, and he made me take all my clothes off

               and walk around. He made me—he made me have sex with him

               twice. And he had me in there for a couple hours. Finally I

               convinced him I needed to go out to the car to get my—

                       [DISPATCHER]: —Okay. Okay. Did he actually cut you

                                                 -4-
at all?

          [A.W.]: No. He punched me in my back and then punched

me in my chest. Then when I finally convinced him I needed to

get my insulin out of the car, I was in a towel, and while he was

bent over in the car looking, I ran down the street to my grandpa's

house, and he came chasing after me and ripped my towel off, so I

just started screaming. And then he finally ran off. And then my

grandpa—

          [DISPATCHER]: Okay.

          [A.W.]: —I came to his porch.

          [DISPTACHER]: *** So, okay, backup here. ***

Do you know where he's at now?

          [A.W.]: I don't know.

          [DISPATCHER]: Okay, can you describe what he's

wearing for me?

          [A.W.]: Um, I think it was a black T-shirt and some blue

jeans.

          [DISPATCHER]: Did he have keys to your trailer?

          [A.W.]: He had all my—he has all my keys, to the car and

everything.

          [DISPATCHER]: Okay, do you need an ambulance to

check you out at all? [pause] Okay, A.W.?

                                  -5-
       [A.W.]: I—I don't. He just had me on the ground once I—

he caught me coming from his brother's house 'cause he was hiding

me in his shower.

       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, A.W., you need to talk to me

instead of whoever is there, okay? Are you talking to an officer

now?

       [A.W.]: I am talking to you.

       [DISPATCHER]: Okay. *** When you took off running,

do you know if he went back in the home? Did he go off on foot

somewhere?

       [A.W.]: Well, he had to have went back to the house 'cause

all he had was a towel on. So he had to go back to the house to put

his clothes on.

       [DISPATCHER]: Okay. Did, at any times when he had

you take your clothes off and his clothes were off, did he try and

have—have intercourse with you at all?

       [A.W.]: He—he made me twice.

                              ***

       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, so—so you both had towels on

when you went out to the car?

       [A.W.]: Yes.

       [DISPATCHER]: Okay.

                                -6-
                       [A.W.]: 'Cause he made me get in the shower because I'm

               on my period and he made me have sex with him, so it was messy.

               So he made me get in the shower. [Long pause.] What, are they

               outside?

                       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, is there an officer out there now?

                       [A.W.]: I can hear 'em.

                       [DISPATCHER]: Okay, if there's an officer out there now,

               you need to talk to them, okay?

                       [A.W.]: Okay.

                       [DISPATCHER]: Alright. [End of call.]"

¶ 12           A.W. testified that shortly after the incident, she began receiving several phone

calls each day from defendant, who at that time was in custody at the McLean County jail. A.W.

claimed to remember nothing about the calls, other than defendant's saying he loved her, and her

telling defendant she loved him, too. A.W. admitted that she subsequently disobeyed a grand

jury subpoena and refused to testify against defendant at grand jury proceedings. (The trial court

took precautions to prevent the jury from learning that A.W. was testifying at defendant's trial

while she was in custody, after having been arrested pursuant to a bench warrant for her refusal

to comply with the State's trial subpoena.)

¶ 13           A.W. professed to having no memory of her conversations with the 9-1-1

dispatcher or police officers after the incident. She denied refusing to provide the police with a

recorded statement about the incident. She explained that the officers never came to her for a

recorded statement, as they originally told her they would. The following exchange occurred on

                                                 -7-
direct examination by the State:

                       "[THE STATE]: [Y]ou talked to an officer on September

               7th, [2012,] is that correct?

                       [A.W.]: Yes, I believe I talked to several of them.

                       [THE STATE]: Okay. You actually even walked an

               officer through your house. Is that right?

                       [A.W.]: I might have. I don't remember that neither.

                       [THE STATE]: And when you talked to that officer and

               walked them through, you even pointed out certain evidence about

               things that happened that night. Is that right?

                       [A.W.]: I—I guess so. I don't recall it[.]"

                                                ***

                       [THE STATE]: Now, when you talked to the officer, you

               gave him details about what happened between you and the

               defendant that night, correct?

                       [A.W.]: If I would have did it that night, then I probably

               would have remembered that night if I did give him details. I just

               don't remember what happened now.

                       [THE STATE]: Did you tell him that night what

               happened?

                       [A.W.]: I guess so. I can't say for sure because I don't

               remember."

                                                -8-
Although A.W. professed memory loss as to the content of her prior conversations, she stated

that she would not have lied or "made something up" to police officers or the 9-1-1 dispatcher.

She also stated that she would not have had sex willingly while on her period.

¶ 14           On cross-examination, A.W. testified that she had spoken with defendant several

times each day between the September 4, 2012, break up and the September 6, 2012, incident.

She and defendant were both uncertain as to whether they should actually end their relationship.

The following exchange occurred between defense counsel and A.W.:

                      "[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Didn't you agree to talk with

               [defendant] about your relationship after you got off work, and

               didn't you leave the door unlocked for him to come in and wait for

               you?

                      [A.W.]: I'm not sure about leaving the door unlocked. But

               I do, I remember saying I'd talk to him but I didn't say an exact

               time and place I was going to talk to him.

                                              ***

                      [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Is it possible that you did leave

               the door unlocked?

                      [A.W.]: Anything is possible.

                      [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Didn't you—didn't you

               acknowledge in a written affidavit that you may have left the door

               unlocked after a conversation with him?

                      [A.W.]: I may have, but with me having to use my key, I

                                               -9-
               just figured nobody was there. I mean maybe he could have went

               in and locked it back. But like I say, I don't remember."

¶ 15           Later on cross-examination, defense counsel asked A.W. about an affidavit she

completed after the State charged defendant in this case:

                       "[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And in this written affidavit

               that you faxed to the State's Attorney, you remember that, don't

               you, that document?

                       [A.W.]: I don't remember what all I said in it, sir.

                       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: You don't remember writing

               [']the night in question we were arguing and things got out of

               proportion, and, yes, I was mad, but I laid there because of my love

               for him and I never told him no.['] You don't remember writing

               that?

                       [A.W.]: I remember writing it, but if I—if I would have

               laid there, it would have had to have been—I wouldn't have. If I

               was scared, I would have did it. I would have laid there. But like I

               said, I don't remember how I [was] even feeling at that point

               because I don't remember being in the room with him."

¶ 16                          B. Sergeant Longfellow's Testimony

¶ 17           Sergeant Jeff Longfellow, an investigator with the Normal police department,

testified that on September 7, 2012, he spoke with A.W. at Royal Acres. The State's direct

examination of Longfellow proceeded, as follows:

                                               - 10 -
       "[THE STATE]: Were you able to understand what she

was saying?

       [LONGFELLOW]: She briefly told me what happened.

She basically stated that—

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection.

       THE COURT: Just a minute. Counsel?

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: We object.

       THE COURT: [Counsel for the State?]

       [THE STATE]: Basically just [answer] the question, could

you understand the words that she was saying?

       [LONGFELLOW]: I could understand, yes, I could.

       THE COURT: Objection is sustained. Ask your next

question.

       [THE STATE]: Did you ask her what happened?

       [LONGFELLOW]: I did.

       [THE STATE]: And was she able to tell you what

happened?

       [LONGFELLOW]: She did.

       [THE STATE]: And did she give you great detail or not?

       [LONGFELLOW]: Very great detail. We went over the

entire incident twice.

                             ***

                             - 11 -
       [THE STATE]: And what did she tell you happened?

       [LONGFELLOW]: When—

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Object, hearsay.

       THE COURT: Counsel?

       [THE STATE]: You Honor, at this point in time, we'd like

to use this, because the victim has made a prior inconsistent

statement and this is to be used as impeachment and substantive

evidence.

       THE COURT: [Defense counsel], anything else?

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, I think she testified she

didn't remember the substance of any statement that she made. I

don't recall whether she was confronted with the details of the

statement, alleged statement.

       [(At this point, the trial court excused the jurors from the

courtroom and directed Longfellow to wait in the hallway.)]

       THE COURT: All right, counsel for the State, I need you

to tell me specifically[,] under what section are you offering this[?]

       [THE STATE]: You Honor, [section 115-10.1 of the

Code] 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1.

       THE COURT: [Section 115-]10.1 [of the Code], all right,

thank you.

       All right, [defense counsel], your objection is? Here is just

                                - 12 -
a straight hearsay objection, is that correct?

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, it is a hearsay objection. I

think that the witness testified that she didn't have a specific

recollection, but I don't believe she was questioned about a detailed

interview that she gave with Sergeant Jeffrey Longfellow, and she

wasn't given an opportunity[,] or I don't believe that *** her lack

of memory is necessarily inconsistent, having not been confronted

with these alleged statements. So that's the substance of my

objection.

       THE COURT: Counsel, anything else?

       [THE STATE]: Your Honor, she testified under oath that

she believed that she had talked to the officers, that she does not

remember what she told the officers. And she did say that what

she told the officers would have been truthful, basically saying that

she would not have lied to the officers.

       THE COURT: All right. And just so I understand, and

perhaps you were going to ask some more questions, but given the

discovery you have and what you expect this witness to testify to,

is this an oral statement simply?

       [THE STATE]: It is, Your Honor.

       THE COURT: So this is not a recorded statement?

       [THE STATE]: Correct.

                                 - 13 -
        THE COURT: All right. [Defense counsel], anything

else?

        [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: No thank you, Judge.

        THE COURT: All right, the concern that the court has, I

will tell you that I'm going to overrule the objection. I'm going to

allow the officer to testify under [section] 115-10.1 [of the Code].

I think the weak point here is [section 115-10.1 of the Code] does

require that the witness who made the out of court statement

acknowledge the making of the statement, since it's not written and

signed by the witnesses and since it was not recorded. The witness

did acknowledge, that being [A.W.], that she spoke with officers.

She could not recall which ones, but she indicated she did speak

with someone. She just couldn't remember who it was. In the

court's view, that's somewhat sketchy, but it is an

acknowledgement under oath that she made statements.

        This witness had now testified, at least preliminarily, that

he spoke with her and that she gave him statements that were based

on her personal knowledge, events that she had personal

knowledge of[,] and gave some great detail on it. So, the court

finds that it is admissible under [section 115-10.1 of the Code], and

I will allow the witness to testify as to the content of the statement

over objection."

                                - 14 -
Following the trial court's ruling, the State elicited the following testimony from Longfellow.

¶ 18           Longfellow testified that after he spoke with A.W. inside her grandparents' trailer

at Royal Acres, he walked with A.W. to her trailer, which was approximately 100 yards away.

There, in the early morning hours of September 7, 2012, A.W. walked Longfellow through her

trailer to explain the sequence of events and identify potential evidence. When the State asked

Longfellow what A.W.'s demeanor was like as she was explaining what happened, Longfellow

gave the following response:

                      "She was still in shock. I mean it was just a very blank

               stare. She was scared, you know, talking about it, still trembling

               but very believable, very credible."

¶ 19           A.W. told Longfellow that after she arrived home shortly after 10:45 p.m. on

September 6, 2012, defendant emerged from behind her shower curtain while she was urinating.

Defendant was gritting his teeth and appeared angry. Defendant told A.W. that he had seen her

texting someone in her car before she came inside. A.W. became scared and attempted to flee

from the trailer through the back door. Defendant grabbed A.W. by her hair and throat and

brought her into the kitchen. Defendant then took A.W.'s cell phone and began looking through

the text messages. Defendant told A.W. that he was going to use her phone to text his brother,

Gregory, while posing as A.W., to determine whether A.W. and Gregory were having an affair.

After defendant accused A.W. of having relations with Gregory, he punched her in the right side

of her lower back, causing a bruise.

¶ 20           A.W. told Longfellow that defendant pushed her onto the kitchen floor and

grabbed a knife, which he "held in a threatening manner" and "used it to sort of control her as

                                              - 15 -
they moved around the trailer." (Although Longfellow found two kitchen knives in A.W.'s

trailer, A.W. did not recall which of the knives defendant used.) Next, defendant gestured with

the knife for A.W. to enter the bedroom. Once in the bedroom, defendant told A.W. to take off

her clothes and get on the bed. As Longfellow explained, defendant then "placed the knife to the

side, and he had vaginal intercourse with [A.W.] against her will." A.W. was crying, and she

told defendant to stop several times. She did not fight back because she thought he would attack

her with the knife.

¶ 21           A.W. told Longfellow that after defendant had intercourse with her, he made her

take a shower because she was menstruating. Defendant told A.W. that he would hurt her if she

tried to run away. Before going into the shower, A.W. saw defendant use a towel to wipe

menstrual blood from his genitals. A.W. showed Longfellow that towel, which was laying in her

living room. A.W. also showed Longfellow defendant's underwear, which was laying on the

bedroom floor, stained with menstrual blood.

¶ 22           Once A.W. got out of the shower, defendant used A.W.'s cell phone to record

nude video images of her. Defendant told A.W. that he was going to post the videos on

Facebook. Defendant was drinking gin at the time. He continued to send text messages to

Gregory from A.W.'s phone. In a text message to A.W.'s cell phone, Gregory asked for the

return of his digital video disc (DVD) player, which A.W. had in her trailer. Defendant,

apparently still posing as A.W., arranged for Gregory to come retrieve the DVD player from the

front porch, which would avoid the need for Gregory to enter A.W.'s trailer or otherwise interact

with defendant and A.W. When Gregory came to retrieve the DVD player, defendant forced

A.W. into the bedroom and placed tights in her mouth to prevent her from yelling.

                                               - 16 -
¶ 23           After Gregory retrieved the DVD player from the porch, defendant sexually

assaulted A.W. again. As A.W. described to Longfellow, defendant removed A.W.'s underwear

(which she had apparently put back on), bent her over the bed, and attempted to have anal sex

with her. After A.W. told defendant that this hurt her, defendant had A.W. lie on her side.

Defendant then had vaginal intercourse with A.W., who was crying and telling him to stop.

(Longfellow testified that he "assumed" defendant had vaginal intercourse with A.W. while she

was on her side because defendant's attempt to perform anal sex was "apparently" unsuccessful.)

Again, A.W. did not physically resist because she was afraid that defendant would use the knife

against her. During this second instance of intercourse, defendant punched A.W. in the chest

above her right breast.

¶ 24           After the second instance of sexual intercourse, defendant and A.W. took a

shower together. Longfellow believed that the purpose of this second shower was to clean off

menstrual blood, although A.W. never told Longfellow this. By the time of the second shower,

A.W. was becoming increasingly fearful and trying to think of a way to escape. She began to

"sweet talk" defendant to calm him down. This made defendant angry.

¶ 25           A.W., who is a diabetic, convinced defendant to accompany her to her car so that

she could retrieve her insulin. A.W. and defendant, both wearing only towels, went outside to

A.W.'s car. While defendant was bending over into A.W.'s car looking for the insulin, A.W.

took off running down the street toward her mother's trailer. She fell several times while

running, scraping her knees on the pavement.

¶ 26           Defendant chased A.W., who began screaming loudly. Once A.W. began

screaming, defendant retreated back to A.W.'s trailer, and A.W. was able to reach her mother's

                                               - 17 -
trailer. A.W. banged loudly on her mother's door, but no one answered. She then went to

Gregory's trailer, which was also in Royal Acres. Gregory let her inside and provided her with

clothing. Shortly thereafter, defendant began knocking on the door of Gregory's trailer, looking

for A.W. Gregory told A.W. to hide in the back of his trailer. After Gregory spoke to defendant,

Gregory told A.W. that he did not "want to be in the middle of all this," and he made A.W. leave

his trailer through the back door. A.W. left Gregory's trailer and attempted to go back to her

mother's trailer. However, as Longfellow explained, defendant "kind of stepped out of the

shadows and confronted her again."

¶ 27           A.W. began running again. She fell on the pavement, at which point defendant

"began kicking her in the butt and the legs and the back area." A.W. started screaming. Gregory

exited his trailer and pulled defendant away. A.W. was able to get up and continue running, but

she fell again, and defendant broke free from Gregory. Defendant again kicked A.W. in the

buttock, legs, and back. (Longfellow was unable to find any bruises on A.W.'s buttock, legs, or

back.) Again, Gregory pulled defendant off A.W., and A.W. got up and ran away. A.W. finally

made it to the safety of her mother's trailer. (We note that A.W. testified on direct examination,

and stated during the 9-1-1 call, that she went to her grandfather's trailer.)

¶ 28                                   C. Defendant's Arrest

¶ 29           A few hours after the incident, officers located and arrested defendant, who was

shirtless and attempting to enter Gregory's trailer through the back door. A search of defendant's

person revealed (1) two cell phones in defendant's pocket (one of which was A.W.'s) and (2) a

crumpled up, bloodstained white shirt, which had been stuffed into defendant's pant leg.

Defendant had blood on his pants and hands as well.

                                                - 18 -
¶ 30                          D. Physical Evidence and Photographs

¶ 31           Detectives searched A.W.'s cell phone. Among the media files were two short

videos, each only a few seconds long and recorded just before midnight on September 6, 2012.

The videos depicted A.W. standing naked in her trailer and crying. The trial court admitted the

videos into evidence.

¶ 32           Detective Brian Williams, an evidence technician for the Normal police

department, testified that he arrived at A.W.'s trailer on September 7, 2012, and collected the

following pieces of physical evidence: (1) a pair of women's panties lined with a menstrual pad;

(2) a pair of tights; (3) a white towel containing bloodstains; (4) a pair of men's boxer shorts

containing bloodstains on the crotch area; (5) a tan towel found next to the boxer shorts; and (6)

a white towel, which another officer recovered from Gregory's trailer. The trial court admitted

the aforementioned exhibits into evidence.

¶ 33           Williams also took photographs inside A.W.'s trailer, focusing on things that

A.W. identified as being "out of place." In addition to the aforementioned pieces of physical

evidence admitted at trial, the images also showed (1) a small bloodstain on A.W.'s bedspread

and (2) two kitchen knives—one serrated steak knife with a plastic handle and one slightly

larger, straight-bladed chef's knife with a wooden handle—which Williams pulled from dirty

dishwater in the sink—sitting side by side on the kitchen counter. The trial court admitted the

photographs into evidence.

¶ 34                          E. Defendant's Police Station Interview

¶ 35           Detective Brian Larimore of the Normal police department testified that he

interviewed defendant at the Normal police station on the morning of September 7, 2012. The

                                                - 19 -
trial court admitted an audio and video recording of that interview, which was shown to the jury.

We note that defendant's explanation of the sequence of events did not remain consistent

throughout the 40-minute interview. In fact, it is impossible to piece together a single, coherent

timeline of events based upon defendant's statements. As Larimore asked additional questions

and sought clarification as to the order in which certain things happened, pieces of defendant's

story would shift places or fall away altogether. Accordingly, although we do our best to

summarize defendant's version of what happened, the sequence of events is unclear.

¶ 36           Defendant stated that A.W. invited him to her trailer to talk. The pair had been

together for 2 1/2 years, and A.W. left the back door of her trailer unlocked for defendant, as she

would often do. After being dropped off by his cousin, defendant smoked a blunt (cannabis

rolled in a cigar wrapper) on the back porch of A.W.'s trailer. Defendant then went inside the

trailer through the back door, entering just as A.W. returned from work through the front door.

Defendant and A.W. talked and argued, apparently throughout the entire night and into the

morning. Although defendant gave several explanations as to why the argument occurred, he

ultimately admitted that the argument concerned A.W.'s relationship with Gregory.

¶ 37           A.W., who was pleading with defendant not to argue, took defendant by the hand

and led him into the bedroom. There, A.W. told defendant to sit on the bed, then climbed on top

of him and began having intercourse. (At a different point in the interview, defendant stated that

he was on top of A.W. during this first instance of sex.) Throughout the sex, defendant was

texting Gregory from A.W.'s cell phone, pretending to be A.W. After the first instance of sex,

the couple argued more. Defendant "grabbed" A.W. during the argument, leaving a bruise on her

back. A.W. cried. A.W. initiated a second round of consensual sex, beginning with her

                                               - 20 -
performing oral sex on defendant, followed by vaginal intercourse.

¶ 38           During the interview, Larimore asked defendant, "at what point did a knife come

into play tonight?" Defendant, after pausing for several seconds and appearing perplexed by the

question, eventually stated that he held a "butter knife" to his abdomen and threatened to stab

himself so that A.W. would "get [his] point." Defendant acknowledged that this probably scared

A.W. and may have influenced her willingness to engage in sexual acts. Defendant could not

remember what he did with the knife after he put it to his abdomen.

¶ 39           At certain points in the interview, defendant stated that he and A.W. showered

together after the first instance of sex. At other times, he stated they showered after the second

instance of sex. Later in the interview, defendant stated that A.W. showered alone before any

sex occurred, followed by a mutual shower after sex. The shower (or showers) took place

because A.W. was menstruating during sex.

¶ 40           According to one version of defendant's story, after the second instance of sex,

A.W. told defendant to leave. Defendant refused to leave, and, following some additional

arguing, A.W. left. In another version, defendant and A.W. got out of the shower together (after

the second instance of sex) and defendant found a text from Gregory on A.W.'s cell phone,

which prompted A.W. to flee the trailer.

¶ 41           After A.W. left her trailer, defendant remained inside for a while before going to

Gregory's trailer, where he saw A.W. exiting from the back door. When A.W. saw defendant,

she began running. She fell on the pavement and started yelling. Defendant grabbed at A.W.,

leaving a mark. Gregory came out of his trailer and told defendant to leave A.W. alone.

¶ 42           Midway through the interview, Larimore made the following statement to

                                               - 21 -
defendant:

                      "There's a couple of things that aren't making sense to me.

               Some of the things you're saying, I believe you're being honest

               about. But you are not being honest about everything.

                                             ***

                      I've interviewed more people than I can count, okay? And

               I've talked to people that have been 100% honest with me. I've

               been—I've talked to people that have been 0% honest with me.

               Everything that came out of their mouth was a lie. And I've—most

               of the people that I've talked to tell some truth and some

               dishonesty, okay?

                                             ***

                      For something that happened this recently, you seem to not

               remember anything. Every question I ask you, you're taking

               forever to remember."

After Larimore made those remarks, defendant suggested the marijuana he smoked before A.W.

came home (at approximately 10:45 p.m.) was to blame for his difficulty answering questions.

Larimore pointed out that it was 6 a.m. and defendant might just be tired. Defendant disagreed

and told Larimore that he was "wide awake." Defendant then purported to retell his story "from

step one."

¶ 43           Defendant admitted to "putting [his] hands on" A.W., specifically, "hitting her in

the side." He also admitted to "holding her against her will" by standing in the doorway to

                                               - 22 -
prevent her from leaving and saying, "you ain't going nowhere." However, defendant adamantly

denied committing home invasion or any type of sexual assault. Referring to the sex, defendant

told Larimore, "this was something she wanted to do too, man. *** You don't know her like I

do. *** This was her doing." Defendant told Larimore that A.W. enjoyed having sex while she

was on her period, stating, "that's her best time." A.W. never told defendant to stop or said "no."

She told defendant, "Baby, I'll do whatever you want me to do."

¶ 44                      F. Defendant's Jailhouse Phone Calls to A.W.

¶ 45            Larimore testified that he planned to interview A.W. on the morning of September

7, 2012, after she completed a sexual assault examination at a local hospital. However, a

shooting at a local high school drew Larimore away from the investigation in this case.

Thereafter, Larimore made several unsuccessful attempts to contact A.W. to complete an

interview. Larimore, suspecting that defendant had contacted A.W. to dissuade her from

speaking with detectives, inspected jailhouse phone-call recordings. The trial court admitted 13

audio recordings of phone calls defendant made from the McLean County detention center to

A.W. between September 10, 2012, and September 21, 2012. (By stipulation, typed transcripts

of those phone calls were provided to the jury. We set forth the pertinent portions of those phone

calls, in detail, exactly as they appeared in the typed transcripts.)

¶ 46            The following pertinent conversation took place on September 10, 2012, at 2:43

p.m.:

                        "[DEFENDANT]: Man *** they said I was in your house

                and when you walking in there I had a knife in my hand and put

                the knife up to you. Come on man I didn't do that to you.

                                                 - 23 -
       [A.W.]: That aint what I told em. *** I didn't tell em you

was in the shower with a knife. I told em you got them later. ***

I'm gonna do what I'm gonna do to try and get you out of it.

                               ***

       [DEFENDANT]: *** I never put once put it put it up to

you. I never once did that put in on your skin.

       [A.W.]: [Y]ou didn't when we was layin in here on the

bed? You didn't put that knife up to me?

       [DEFENDANT]: No. No. Not once. *** [B]ut you you

didn't say that though?

       [A.W.]: Say what?

       [DEFENDANT]: I do whatever you want me to do? You

didn't say that?

       [A.W.]: Yeah, cause you had a knife to me.

       [DEFENDANT]: Oh man don't do that over this phone.

Like you just gonna—

       [A.W.]: *** [O]kay well don't talk about that then cause

you already know. I'm not gonna lie about it. But like I said I'll do

what I can to get it took off. *** I'll do whatever I can.

                               ***

       [DEFENDANT]: I don't wanna talk about it over this

phone man. My whole life's gone.

                                - 24 -
                [A.W.]: So what do you want me to say?

                [DEFENDANT]: Just tell em you lied about all of it that

       you were just mad and you lied about everything.

                                        ***

                [A.W.]: Well, that's what I'll tell the lady but if they're

       talkin about doin this and this to me I'm not doin it.

                [DEFENDANT]: Then what else can you do then? Just let

       me go.

                [A.W.]: Tell her I don't wanna press no charges. *** I'll

       call her back.

                [DEFENDANT]: Well, go do it now, and I'll call you

       back. *** Do it for me girl, don't let me rot up in here man.

                [A.W.]: Yeah okay."

¶ 47   The following conversation took place about 25 minutes later:

                "[DEFENDANT]: *** What they say?

                [A.W.]: The lady wasn't there to talk to me right now.

                                        ***

                [DEFENDANT]: You gotta get on that for me man. Come

       on man don't let me do 60 man don't let me do all them mother

       fuckin years behind these bars man.

                [A.W.]: I told you I was.

                [DEFENDANT]: What's up though man you hate me now?

                                         - 25 -
              [A.W.]: No.

              [DEFENDANT]: I know you don't love me no more but.

              [A.W.]: I hate what you did.

              [DEFENDANT]: I apologize for what I did.

                                      ***

              [A.W.]: Just know what you did is crazy.

              [DEFENDANT]: What?

              [A.W.]: I said you just know what you did is bogus.

              [DEFENDANT]: Come on man I'm in (inaudible) took

       you through that and I ain't never did shit to you man. I ain't never

       did shit. *** Come on man I just blacked out for a minute ***."

¶ 48   The following conversation took place about 1 hour and 20 minutes later:

              "[DEFENDANT]: [W]hy you doin me like this girl?

                                      ***

              [A.W.]: So this is my fault?

              [DEFENDANT]: No *** you don't deserve nothin cause I

       really didn't do nothin but kick ya. That's all I did was kick ya and

       hit ya and punch ya ***.

              [A.W.]: I got a bruise on my chest, 2 bruises on my chest I

       got one on my back my feet and knees are all scratched up.

              [DEFENDANT]: Don't talk about all that on the phone.

              [A.W.]: Well you started talkin about it actin like you ain't

                                       - 26 -
       did nothin."

¶ 49   The following conversation took place about one hour later:

              "[DEFENDANT]: I apologize to you. I'm sorry for

       everything girl. I just didn't know how to express how much I

       wanted you to know that how much I loved you. That's all that

       was girl.

              ***

              [A.W.]: You know you don't have to say that to get me to

       drop the charges. I'm gonna do it anyway. *** You about had me

       pee on myself when you opened that shower curtain.

              [DEFENDANT]: I ain't even know you was in there.

              ***

              [A.W.]: *** [H]ow long was you in the house before I

       even got there[?]

              [DEFENDANT]: You don't understand the front door was

       unlocked how you think because I was gonna sit on the porch. But

       the front door was unlocked I just walked in the mother fucker.

              [A.W.]: Well I didn't leave it unlocked.

              [DEFENDANT]: And then I got home invasion. Huh?

       I'm like wow.

              [A.W.]: I didn't leave it unlocked cause I just got the locks

       changed. So what was I gonna leave it unlocked for?

                                      - 27 -
                      [DEFENDANT]: It was unlocked man. It was unlocked

              cause real talk that mother fucker was unlocked. How else I'm a

              get in there?

                      [A.W.]: Cause you're you."

¶ 50          The following conversation took place two days later, on September 12, 2012, at

12:48 p.m.:

                      "[DEFENDANT]: *** I was just gonna wait til you come

              home but I just went on opened the door was the front door was

              unlocked all I did was turn the knob it just came open. I walked

              straight back there I set up in there I'm like man what I'm thinkin

              bout was she gonna hit me with this or she man these people these

              bitches talkin bout they got charges on me rapin an anal. Rapin.

              I'm like huh come on man you the one that that said man I do said

              come on let's go in the room and we went in the room and we did

              that. Didn't we or didn't we not but didn't you or didn't you not do

              that?

                      [A.W.]: No not that first and second time.

                      [DEFENDANT]: The second time right?

                      [A.W.]: *** Don't do that. You know I didn't want to.

                      [DEFENDANT]: Man but you you aint—

                      [A.W.]: *** [A]nd of course I'm gonna say I'll do anything

              you want me to do. You know how scared like I said you know

                                              - 28 -
                how scared I was?

                       [DEFENDANT]: Man but you just you you really tryin to

                bury me man. *** And then it's like you ain't tryin to show no

                effort of really goin up there. *** Go on call up there man and see

                what they sayin man and tell them that you really need to get get

                somebody to drop this shit cause you don't wanna go through it no

                more. You're not comin to court or none of that. Just call em real

                quick and I'll just call you back."

A.W. told defendant that she wished Gregory would have been with her when she arrived home

on the evening of the incident. Defendant responded, as follows:

                       "[DEFENDANT]: You know what girl I'm a be straight up

                with ya what I had on my mind if I would of seen that it was gonna

                be an ugly sight man. It was gonna be an ugly sight man and I ain't

                talkin bout just no no no it was just gonna be ugly that's all I gotta

                say.

                       [A.W.]: *** [W]orse that what already happened?

                       [DEFENDANT]: Yeah it would have been worser than

                that man because I cause I was really tryin to get down to the nitty

                gritty of that shit man. So thank God I didn't."

¶ 51            The following conversation took place later in the evening of September 12, 2012,

at 9:11 p.m.:

                       "[A.W.]: [T]he sheriff just came and served me with a

                                                - 29 -
       subpoena.

              [DEFENDANT]: Oh that's for the Grand Jury. *** When

       you go just say you plead the fifth. No this didn't happen and that

       didn't happen man. You just wanna drop all the charges all you

       gotta do. They can't do nothin to ya. Okay?

              [A.W.]: What about all the stuff they got from the house?

              [DEFENDANT]: Don’t worry bout that that ain't nothin

       that can be throwed away man. I tell you how it gonna go. ***

       Just make sure you just do plead the fifth on everything. Tell them

       you don't even want to go through it with. Okay?

              [A.W.]: Yeah."

¶ 52   The following conversation took place three days later, on September 15, 2012:

              "[DEFENDANT]: So what you gonna do in court then?

       *** [W]hat you gonna say?

              [A.W.]: *** I been runnin things through my head I

       thought about sayin you know maybe things got a little out of hand

       and I just get scared too easy and I blew it out of proportion and I

       don't know.

              [DEFENDANT]: *** I'll take the domestic charge man.

       *** I take the 6 years on that man. If you wanted to say man drop

       the uh the home invasion and the uh rape man.

              [A.W.]: Yeah. "

                                       - 30 -
¶ 53   The following conversation took place six days later, on September 21, 2012:

              "[DEFENDANT]: Yeah man just leavin me out there in

       the cold huh?

              [A.W.]: *** I've been sittin here cryin all day.

              [DEFENDANT]: Bout what? What's wrong with ya?

       What's wrong?

              [A.W.]: Because of what they're tryin to get you.

              [DEFENDANT]: I know man I'm fucked. It'll be over

       with for me man. *** I'm fucked but I'm good though.

              [A.W.]: I've been lookin up stuff about how much time I

       get about filing a false police report and everything. I don't know

       what to do.

              [DEFENDANT]: All they'll do is hit you with it's perjury

       and that ain't nothing but a misdemeanor and they ain't ain't really

       gonna do shit to ya.

              [A.W.]: I don't know what to do. I'm sorry.

                                      ***

              [DEFENDANT]: *** [O]nly thing I can tell you to do is

       just call up here and just tell em you want do I mean it was just a

       false police thing and *** I ain't do none of that shit to ya. ***

       [T]hey can't get you for nothin."

¶ 54   After the jailhouse phone calls were played for the jury, the State rested its case.

                                       - 31 -
Defendant did not present evidence.

¶ 55                      G. Closing Arguments and Jury Deliberation

¶ 56          During its closing argument, the State discussed Longfellow's testimony about

what A.W. told him, as follows:

              "[T]he things that [A.W.] told Officer Longfellow matched the

              things that were at that scene, bloody towels, bloody boxer shorts,

              her underwear with a pad still in it, the tights that he shoved in her

              mouth when Greg came to pick up the DVD player. It was all

              there.

                                             ***

              And you heard what Officer Longfellow said. [A.W.] told Officer

              Longfellow that night that the defendant was gritting his teeth and

              looked—looked angry, and when he stepped out of the shower, he

              came at her.

                       Now, as I described before, the scene, back to what she told

              Officer Longfellow, the blood on the bed, the underwear on the

              floor, the tights that he made her shove in her mouth when Greg

              came to get the DVD player, the knives that were found in her

              apartment readily accessible to the defendant, a bloody towel,

              another towel and a pair of boxer shorts with blood on them, a

              close-up of the towel and the boxer shorts *** it matches exactly

              what she told the officers."

                                              - 32 -
The State also argued that defendant's admissions regarding text messages confirmed the story

that A.W. told Longfellow.

¶ 57            Defense counsel conceded in closing argument that defendant committed the

charged domestic batteries, but he argued that the State failed to prove defendant guilty of the

remaining charges.

¶ 58            During deliberations, the jury requested a transcript of Longfellow's testimony,

which the trial court provided after defense counsel stated that he had "no particular objection to

[the jury] reviewing a transcript."

¶ 59            The jury found defendant guilty on all counts: (1) one count of home invasion; (2)

three counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault with a weapon (two involving vaginal

penetration and one involving anal penetration); (3) three counts of domestic battery; and (4) one

count of aggravated unlawful restraint. In March 2013, the trial court sentenced defendant to an

aggregate prison term of 95 years for those convictions (consecutive sentences of 20 years for

home invasion and 25 years each for the three aggravated criminal sexual assaults, to be served

concurrently with a 5 year sentence for aggravated unlawful restraint and 3 year sentences for

each of the three domestic batteries). The court also sentenced defendant to 6 years in prison in

case No. 12-CF-1020 (in which he pleaded guilty to harassment by telephone and violation of a

bail bond), to be served consecutively to the aforementioned sentences in case No. 12-CF-891,

resulting in a total of 101 years in prison.

¶ 60            These appeals followed, which we consolidated. (We note that defendant raises

no issues on appeal regarding his convictions or sentences in case No. 12-CF-1020.)

¶ 61                                           II. ANALYSIS

                                                  - 33 -
¶ 62           On appeal, defendant argues that he was denied a fair trial because (1) the trial

court improperly admitted, as substantive evidence under section 115-10.1 of the Code, A.W.'s

hearsay statements to Longfellow; (2) the State presented improper opinion testimony from

Longfellow and Larimore regarding A.W.'s and defendant's credibility; and (3) the State failed to

present sufficient evidence to sustain defendant's conviction for home invasion. We address

these claims of error in turn.

¶ 63                              A. Section 115-10.1 of the Code

¶ 64           Section 115-10.1 of the Code provides as follows:

               "Admissibility of Prior Inconsistent Statements. In all criminal

               cases, evidence of a statement made by a witness is not made

               inadmissible by the hearsay rule if

                       (a) the statement is inconsistent with his testimony

               at the hearing or trial, and

                       (b) the witness is subject to cross-examination

               concerning the statement, and

                       (c) the statement—

                                 (1) was made under oath at a trial, hearing,

                       or other proceeding, or

                                 (2) narrates, describes, or explains an event

                       or condition of which the witness had personal

                       knowledge, and

                                        (A) the statement is proved to have

                                                 - 34 -
                               been written or signed by the witness, or

                                       (B) the witness acknowledged under

                               oath the making of the statement either in

                               his testimony at the hearing or trial in which

                               the admission into evidence of the prior

                               statement is being sought, or at a trial,

                               hearing, or other proceeding, or

                                       (C) the statement is proved to have

                               been accurately recorded by a tape recorder,

                               videotape recording, or any other similar

                               electronic means of sound recording.

                     Nothing in this Section shall render a prior inconsistent

               statement inadmissible for purposes of impeachment because such

               statement was not recorded or otherwise fails to meet the criteria

               set forth herein." 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1 (West 2012).

¶ 65           The purpose of section 115-10.1 of the Code is to " 'protect parties from turncoat

witnesses' " who, while on the stand at trial, disown a prior statement by testifying differently or

professing inability to remember the subject matter. People v. Fauber, 266 Ill. App. 3d 381,

390-91, 640 N.E.2d 689, 695 (1994) (quoting Robert J. Steigmann, Prior Inconsistent Statements

as Substantive Evidence in Illinois, 72 Ill. B.J. 638, 640-41 (1984)). If the enumerated statutory

conditions are met, the statute allows a witness's prior inconsistent statement to be admitted as

substantive evidence.

                                                - 35 -
¶ 66           More than 15 years after the General Assembly enacted the statute, the author of

this opinion noted that "even experienced trial courts face serious uncertainties when applying

section 115-10.1 of the Code." People v. Edwards, 309 Ill. App. 3d 447, 457, 722 N.E.2d 258,

265 (1999) (Steigmann, J., specially concurring). Now, more than 30 years after the statute's

enactment, seasoned attorneys and trial judges still regularly mishandle section 115-10.1 issues

when they come up at trial. To help clear up the confusion about the appropriate use of section

115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code, which addresses a witness's acknowledgement of her prior

inconsistent statement, we provide the following detailed explanation regarding the proper

procedure to be followed under subsection (c)(2)(B).

¶ 67                     1. Admitting a Prior Inconsistent Statement Under
                       Subsection (c)(2)(B)—the "Acknowledgement" Provision

¶ 68           Proper admission of a prior inconsistent statement under section 115-10.1 of the

Code requires the proponent to first lay a foundation. "Laying the foundation for the admission

of a prior inconsistent statement as substantive evidence under section 115-10.1 of the Code is

essentially the same as laying the foundation to impeach a witness with his prior inconsistent

statement." Id. The Second District has explained the purpose of the confrontation requirement,

as follows:

               "The witness must have an opportunity to explain the

               inconsistency before the introduction of extrinsic evidence of the

               statement; this requirement prevents unfair surprise and gives the

               witness an opportunity to explain any inconsistency. [Citations.]

               Through this process, the opponent to admission of the statement is

               properly alerted to the existence of the statement and thus is able to

                                               - 36 -
               cross-examine the witness regarding it." People v. Hallbeck, 227
Ill. App. 3d 59, 62, 590 N.E.2d 971, 972-73 (1992).

¶ 69           Before the proponent of a prior inconsistent statement can begin to lay a

foundation, however, he or she must make the following determination: how can I ultimately

present the prior inconsistent statement to the jury? If the prior statement cannot be presented to

the jury in the form of (1) the witness's sworn testimony from an earlier proceeding (725 ILCS

5/115-10.1(c)(1) (West 2012)), (2) a statement written or signed by the witness (725 ILCS 5/115-

10.1(c)(2)(A) (West 2012)), or (3) an electronic recording (725 ILCS 5/115-10.1(c)(2)(C) (West

2012)), then the proponent's only remaining option is to present the prior inconsistent statement

to the jury by having the witness acknowledge, under oath, having made the prior statement (725

ILCS 5/115-10.1(c)(2)(B) (West 2012)). (We note that, as with all prior inconsistent statements

under subsection (c)(2), a prior inconsistent statement may not be admitted under subsection

(c)(2)(B) unless it "narrates, describes, or explains an event or condition of which the witness

had personal knowledge." 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1(c)(2) (West 2012); see also People v. Simpson,

2015 IL 116512, 25 N.E.3d 601, wherein the supreme court recently explained what the term

"personal knowledge" under section 115-10.1(c)(2) means.)

¶ 70           When counsel seeks to offer a prior inconsistent statement by way of

acknowledgement under subsection (c)(2)(B), the following general procedure should be

followed.

¶ 71           a. "Acknowledgement Hearing" Outside the Presence of the Jury

¶ 72           To avoid potential prejudice, the jury should not be present when the party

                                               - 37 -
seeking to offer the statement under subsection (c)(2)(B) first confronts the witness with the prior

statement for purposes of obtaining the witness's acknowledgement that she made the statement.

This is because if the proponent recites the prior statement in front of the jury for the purpose of

asking the witness whether she made the statement, the jury will hear the statement before the

acknowledgement requirement of subsection (c)(2)(B) has been satisfied. However, if the

witness does not acknowledge making the statement after being confronted with it, the statement

is inadmissible as substantive evidence. In this scenario, the jury has nonetheless heard the

potentially damaging contents of the statement, and depending upon its prejudicial effect,

reversible error may have occurred.

¶ 73           Further, we note that if a witness's prior inconsistent statement is incriminating to

the defendant, it is not admissible for mere impeachment of the witness. See People v. Cruz, 162
Ill. 2d 314, 362, 643 N.E.2d 636, 659 (1994) ("Now that a party can admit into evidence a

'turncoat' witness' prior inconsistent statement by complying with section 115-10.1, the

introduction of oral inconsistent statements under the guise of impeachment should be

foreclosed."). The only exception to this rule is if the witness's trial testimony affirmatively

damages the State's case. See People v. Donegan, 2012 IL App (1st) 102325, ¶ 57, 974 N.E.2d
352. On this point, we emphasize that "a witness's professed lack of memory, standing alone,

does not 'affirmatively damage' a party's case for the purpose of impeaching one's own witness."

People v. Wilson, 2012 IL App (1st) 101038, ¶ 45, 966 N.E.2d 1215. "It is insufficient that a

witness merely disappoints the State by failing to incriminate the defendant." People v.

McCarter, 385 Ill. App. 3d 919, 933, 897 N.E.2d 265, 278 (2008).

¶ 74           To avoid letting the jury hear a prior inconsistent statement before the witness

                                                - 38 -
renders the statement admissible by acknowledging making it, the better practice is to conduct

what we will refer to as the "acknowledgement hearing" outside the presence of the jury. At the

acknowledgement hearing, the proponent of the prior statement should confront the witness with

the prior statement. This court has explained the basic component of such confrontation, as

follows: "Normally, when a prosecutor attempts to lay the foundation for the admissibility of a

prior inconsistent statement under section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code, the prosecutor would

establish the time, place, and date of the statement and then ask the witness whether she made

the statement at issue." People v. Sykes, 2012 IL App (4th) 100769, ¶ 37, 968 N.E.2d 174.

Importantly, this process must be repeated for all of the witness's specific prior statements that

the proponent may wish to offer as substantive evidence under subsection (c)(2)(B). In other

words, the witness must be confronted with, and acknowledge making, each of the specific prior

statements sought to be admitted as substantive evidence. Further, this acknowledgement must

be linked to the contents of a specific statement. It is not sufficient, for example, if the witness

merely acknowledges the subject matter of a prior conversation that she had with another person.

¶ 75           After the witness has been confronted with, and given an opportunity to

acknowledge making, her prior statements at the acknowledgement hearing, the proponent will

know which, if any, of the prior statements may be admissible under subsection (c)(2)(B) based

upon the witness's acknowledgement.

¶ 76           b. The Witness' Trial Testimony Is Inconsistent With an Earlier
       Statement That the Witness Acknowledges Making at the Acknowledgement Hearing

¶ 77           Assuming that at the acknowledgement hearing the witness acknowledges making

a certain statement, the acknowledged statement is still not admissible until the witness testifies

inconsistently with it in the presence of the jury once the trial resumes. 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1(a)

                                                - 39 -
(West 2012). Once that happens, the proponent can repeat, in the presence of the jury, what he

had just done outside the presence of the jury at the acknowledgement hearing—namely,

confront the witness with the specific prior inconsistent statement and ask the witness whether

she made the statement.

¶ 78           If the witness acknowledges in the presence of the jury having made the prior

inconsistent statement, that acknowledgement constitutes the evidence of the prior inconsistent

statement for purposes of subsection (c)(2)(B), and nothing more need be done for the prior

inconsistent statement to be admitted as substantive evidence. In that instance, the prior

inconsistent statement has been admitted as substantive evidence through the witness's

acknowledgement in open court of having made the statement, and the jury has heard it.

However, in the unlikely event that the witness changes her answer once the jury comes back

into the courtroom, and, contrary to what she had just said at the acknowledgement hearing,

denies having made the prior inconsistent statement, the pertinent portion of the transcript of the

acknowledgement hearing needs to be presented to the jury as evidence of the prior inconsistent

statement, which is then admissible substantively.

¶ 79           c. Trial Surprises—Testimony Inconsistent With Prior Statement:
                             The Midtrial Acknowledgement Hearing

¶ 80           Although counsel will usually know ahead of time which witnesses are likely to

testify inconsistently with their prior statements, it is possible that a witness may surprise counsel

at trial. If no acknowledgement hearing had been held prior to the witness's testifying in the

presence of the jury and the witness surprises the questioner by testifying inconsistently with a

prior statement, the questioner may ask the trial court (at a sidebar) to excuse the jury for the

purpose of holding an acknowledgement hearing. To avoid shuffling the jury back and forth

                                                - 40 -
each time a new inconsistency arises during the witness's testimony, the court may direct the

proponent of the prior inconsistent statement to complete his examination of the witness before

the acknowledgement hearing takes place. That way, the acknowledgement hearing can be

targeted at only the witness's prior statements that were inconsistent with the witness's testimony

at trial. If, after confrontation at the acknowledgement hearing, the witness acknowledges

making a prior inconsistent statement, the jury can be brought back into the courtroom, at which

time the proponent can again confront the witness with the prior statement and ask the witness

whether she made that prior statement. Again, if the witness does not acknowledge making the

prior inconsistent statement when the jury is present, the transcript of the acknowledgement

hearing can provide the evidence of her prior inconsistent statement, which is then admissible

substantively.

¶ 81             d. Procedural Concerns Regarding Acknowledgement Hearings

¶ 82             Contrary to what happened in this case, in which Longfellow's testimony

provided the evidence of A.W.'s prior inconsistent statements, a witness's prior inconsistent

statements should not be admitted under subsection (c)(2)(B) through the testimony of another

live witness. Instead, the declarant witness's acknowledgement of having made the prior

inconsistent statement is the means by which the statement comes in as evidence, which is then

admissible substantively. Accordingly, having another witness testify about the same prior

inconsistent statement will simply be cumulative. Put another way, once the jury hears the

witness acknowledge that she made a specific prior inconsistent statement, no need exists for

another witness to repeat that same statement as he remembers hearing it.

¶ 83             We also note that whether the acknowledgement hearing occurs before or after the

                                               - 41 -
witness testifies in front of the jury will depend mostly upon practical considerations. If the

proponent, in advance of trial, has reason to believe that a witness will testify at trial

inconsistently with the witness's prior statements, holding the acknowledgement hearing before

the witness is examined in the presence of the jury may be advantageous. That way, assuming

the proponent has then obtained the witness's acknowledgement as to certain specific prior

statements, the proponent can offer those prior statements as substantive evidence if the witness

testifies inconsistently with the prior statements in the presence of the jury. As already

explained, offering the acknowledged prior inconsistent statement simply entails repeating what

was done at the acknowledgment hearing—namely, confronting the witness with the prior

inconsistent statement and asking the witness whether she made the statement. Again, if the

witness refuses to acknowledge making the statement in the presence of the jury, the transcript of

the acknowledgement hearing can serve as the means of offering the witness's acknowledgement

of the statement into evidence.

¶ 84            The quantity of prior statements at issue will also affect the planning of the

acknowledgement hearing. If, as in the present case, the proponent has reason to believe that a

witness will testify at trial inconsistently with an entire narrative of events that the witness

previously provided to another person (in this case, A.W.'s prior statements to Longfellow about

what happened in the trailer over the course of several hours), a lengthy acknowledgement

hearing will likely prove necessary.

¶ 85            As a last matter regarding acknowledgement hearings, we note the Practice Tip

for how to conduct acknowledgement hearings, which can be found at the beginning of section

10:43 of volume 2 of the 2014-2015 Cumulative Supplement of Robert J. Steigmann and Lori A.

                                                 - 42 -
Nicholson, Illinois Evidence Manual, § 10:43 (4th ed. 2006).

¶ 86                                 2. The Errors in This Case

¶ 87           In this case, while A.W. was under oath on the witness stand in the presence of

the jury, the State asked her the following questions:

                       "[THE STATE]: [Y]ou talked to an officer on September

               7th, [2012,] is that correct?

                       [A.W.]: Yes, I believe I talked to several of them.

                       [THE STATE]: Okay. You actually even walked an

               officer through your house. Is that right?

                       [A.W.]: I might have. I don't remember that neither.

                       [THE STATE]: And when you talked to that officer and

               walked them through, you even pointed out certain evidence about

               things that happened that night. Is that right?

                       [A.W.]: I—I guess so. I don't recall it[.]

                                                ***

                       [THE STATE]: Now, when you talked to the officer, you

               gave him details about what happened between you and the

               defendant that night, correct?

                       [A.W.]: If I would have did it that night, then I probably

               would have remembered that night if I did give him details. I just

               don't remember what happened now.

                       [THE STATE]: Did you tell him that night what

                                                - 43 -
               happened?

                       [A.W.]: I guess so. I can't say for sure because I don't

               remember."

¶ 88           Later in the trial, when the State began asking Longfellow about statements that

A.W. made to him, defense counsel objected on the ground that A.W. was neither "questioned

about a detailed interview that she gave with [Longfellow]" nor "confronted with these alleged

statements." The State responded to that objection, as follows:

                       "Your Honor, she testified under oath that she believed that

               she had talked to the officers, that she does not remember what she

               told the officers. And she did say that what she told the officers

               would have been truthful, basically saying that she would not have

               lied to the officers."

The trial court overruled defense counsel's objection, finding that A.W. had acknowledged

making the prior statements at issue:

               "The witness did acknowledge, that being [A.W.], that she spoke

               with officers. She could not recall which ones, but she indicated

               she did speak with someone. She just couldn't remember whom it

               was. In the court's view, that's somewhat sketchy, but it is an

               acknowledgement under oath that she made statements."

¶ 89           In Sykes, this court held that "[t]he term 'acknowledged' in [section 115-

10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code] is not a term of art, having only one precise meaning. Instead,

whether a witness's testimony constitutes an acknowledgement within the meaning of section

                                               - 44 -
115-10.1(c)(2)(B) is a matter left to the trial court's sound discretion ***." Sykes, 2012 IL App

(4th) 100769, ¶ 35, 968 N.E.2d 174. In this case, however, we agree with defendant's claim that

the trial court erred by finding that A.W. acknowledged the statements at issue.

¶ 90           Although A.W. arguably acknowledged talking to police officers about the

incident, her testimony came nowhere close to satisfying the acknowledgement requirement of

subsection (c)(2)(B) of the statute. Even if A.W. had unambiguously acknowledged that she

gave Longfellow a detailed account of what happened inside the trailer, such an

acknowledgement would still be insufficient because section 115-10.1 of the Code speaks in

terms of statements, not references. That is, A.W. needed to be confronted with what she

actually said to Longfellow, not just a reference that she spoke with him. Because A.W. was

never confronted with the contents of a single specific statement that she allegedly made to

Longfellow, her testimony at trial completely failed to meet the acknowledgement requirement

of section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code. Accordingly, Longfellow's testimony about what

A.W. told him was not admissible under section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code.

¶ 91           The State argues in its brief to this court that because A.W. claimed to not

remember speaking with Longfellow, "the State was not required to engage in the superfluous

task of confronting her with her specific statements she made to Longfellow." We disagree. By

its plain terms, subsection (c)(2)(B) provides that a prior inconsistent statement is not admissible

unless "the witness acknowledged under oath the making of the statement." 725 ILCS 5/115-

10.1(c)(2)(B) (West 2012). Under subsection (c)(2)(B), a witness can acknowledge under oath

the making of a particular statement only when the witness has first been confronted with the

actual contents of that statement. In other words, what the proponent asserts that the witness had

                                               - 45 -
actually said.

¶ 92             We recognize that properly admitting a prior inconsistent statement under

subsection (c)(2)(B) may be a somewhat laborious procedure for the parties, witnesses, and trial

court to undertake in the midst of a jury trial. However, section 115-10.1 permits no shortcuts

for prior inconsistent statements to become admissible substantively. Further, we note that, as in

the present case, the need to conduct acknowledgment hearings will usually arise only because

police officers in the field have failed to preserve a witness's statements by using one of the

methods set forth in section 115-10.1 of the Code, such as obtaining a written or signed

statement or creating an electronic recording. As already mentioned, when Longfellow

interviewed A.W. mere hours after this incident, she willingly provided him with a detailed

narrative of what happened inside the trailer. But Longfellow did not record that narrative or

obtain a written or signed statement from A.W. setting forth what happened. Perhaps

unsurprisingly in this domestic violence case, A.W.'s willingness to cooperate with the

prosecution did not last. By the time of trial, no extrinsic evidence of A.W.'s prior statements

existed, which meant that if A.W. testified at trial inconsistently with her earlier statements to

Longfellow, the State could seek admission of those prior inconsistent statements only through

appropriate use of section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code. Thus, when A.W. testified at trial

inconsistently with what she told Longfellow, the State's only remaining option to get her

statements to Longfellow before the jury was to conduct a proper acknowledgement hearing, as

we discussed previously in this opinion. But the State failed to do so, arguing instead that A.W.'s

reference to her having talked to Longfellow about the incident somehow met the foundational

requirements of section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code. The State's argument was wrong, and the

                                                - 46 -
trial court erred by accepting it.

¶ 93             Neither Longfellow nor any of the other experienced police officers involved in

this case sought to operate a recording device while A.W. walked them through her trailer and

gave a detailed description of the alleged offenses that defendant had committed just hours

earlier. This omission illustrates the continuing need for the training of Illinois law enforcement

personnel so they will become familiar with the requirements of section 115-10.1 of the Code.

State's Attorneys' offices should foster a close working relationship with their local law

enforcement agencies to provide guidance on the effective use of section 115-10.1. That statute

provides a valuable tool in the administration of criminal justice, but the State's Attorneys'

offices will have difficulty wielding that tool effectively unless law enforcement personnel first

do their part.

¶ 94             For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Longfellow's testimony about what

A.W. told him was inadmissible under section 115-10.1 of the Code, and the trial court erred by

admitting that testimony.

¶ 95                                     3. Harmless Error

¶ 96             The State contends that Longfellow's testimony about what A.W. told him, even if

erroneously admitted, was harmless. We agree in part. Regarding defendant's conviction for

aggravated criminal sexual assault based upon anal penetration, we conclude that the error was

not harmless because the only evidence of anal penetration came from Longfellow's improper

recitation of hearsay testimony. As to defendant's remaining convictions, we agree with the

State that the error was harmless.

¶ 97             "The improper admission of evidence is harmless where there is no reasonable

                                               - 47 -
probability that, if the evidence had been excluded, the outcome would have been different."

People v. Brown, 2014 IL App (2d) 121167, ¶ 28, 11 N.E.3d 882. We note that defendant argues

that we should consider the erroneous admission of Longfellow's testimony harmless only if it

appears beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the verdict. However, this

beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard applies only when the erroneous admission of evidence

implicates a constitutional protection (such as the confrontation clause, for example), whereas

the reasonable-probability standard applies to evidentiary errors that are not constitutional in

dimension. People v. Stull, 2014 IL App (4th) 120704, ¶ 104, 5 N.E.3d 328; In re E.H., 224 Ill.
2d 172, 180, 863 N.E.2d 231, 235 (2006). We apply the reasonable-probability standard in this

case because the erroneous admission of Longfellow's testimony violated a rule of evidence—

namely, the State presented an insufficient foundation for the admission of A.W.'s prior

inconsistent statement under section 115-10.1(c)(2)(B) of the Code.

¶ 98           "When deciding whether error is harmless, a reviewing court may (1) focus on the

error to determine whether it might have contributed to the conviction; (2) examine the other

properly admitted evidence to determine whether it overwhelmingly supports the conviction; or

(3) determine whether the improperly admitted evidence is merely cumulative or duplicates

properly admitted evidence." In re Rolandis G., 232 Ill. 2d 13, 43, 902 N.E.2d 600, 617 (2008).

We view Longfellow's improper testimony about A.W.'s statements as largely cumulative in

nature. Except for the anal penetration element of one of defendant's aggravated criminal sexual

assault convictions, the necessary elements of all the remaining convictions were established by

other admissible evidence. Based upon our review of the record, we conclude that (1) the other

admissible evidence overwhelmingly supported defendant's remaining convictions and (2) no

                                               - 48 -
reasonable probability exists that the jury would have acquitted defendant if Longfellow's

improper testimony had been excluded.

¶ 99                         a. Defendant's Remaining Convictions

¶ 100          The jury found defendant guilty of the following offenses, as set forth in the grand

jury indictments and described in the jury instructions. (We note that defendant does not

challenge his domestic battery convictions, which we need not discuss.)

¶ 101          The jury convicted defendant of home invasion in that he, not being a police

officer acting in the line of duty, without authority, knowingly entered A.W.'s dwelling place and

remained in such dwelling place until he knew or had reason to know that one or more persons

were present, and, while armed with a dangerous weapon, he used force or threatened the

imminent use of force upon any person within the dwelling place. 720 ILCS 5/12-11(a)(1) (West

2010).

¶ 102          The jury convicted defendant of two identical counts of aggravated criminal

sexual assault in that he committed an act of sexual penetration by placing his penis in A.W.'s

vagina and used force or the threat of force by displaying, threatening to use, or using a

dangerous weapon in a manner that led A.W. to reasonably believe, under the circumstances, that

the object was a dangerous weapon. 720 ILCS 5/11-1.30(a)(1) (West 2010).

¶ 103          The jury convicted defendant of aggravated unlawful restraint in that he, while

using a deadly weapon, knowingly and without authority detained A.W. 720 ILCS 5/10-3.1(a)

(West 2010).

¶ 104                       b. The Admissible Evidence Supporting
                               Defendant's Remaining Convictions

¶ 105          The 9-1-1 call alone provided sufficient evidence to sustain defendant's

                                               - 49 -
convictions for home invasion, two counts of aggravated sexual assault based upon vaginal

penetration, and aggravated unlawful restraint. A.W. reported to the 9-1-1 dispatcher that

defendant (1) was "hiding" in her shower when she arrived home; (2) "got the knives out of the

drawer"; (3) "followed [A.W.] around everywhere [she] went so [she] couldn't leave"; (4) "made

[A.W.] have sex with him twice" while she was menstruating; and (5) "punched [A.W.] in [her]

back and then punched [her] in [her] chest." The physical evidence recovered from the scene, as

well as A.W.'s bodily injuries, corroborated her 9-1-1 report.

¶ 106          Defendant's statements during the police station interview confirmed, among

other things, that he (1) entered A.W.'s trailer, where he and A.W. remained for several hours;

(2) held A.W. "against her will"; (3) physically battered A.W. inside the trailer; (4) had sexual

intercourse with A.W. multiple times; (5) picked up a knife, which probably scared A.W. and

influenced her willingness to engage in sex acts; and (6) chased A.W. down the street while she

was wearing only a towel, hitting her when she was on the ground. Defendant also admitted that

A.W. attempted to leave the trailer, but he physically blocked her from doing so.

¶ 107          Defendant's claim that he and A.W. had consensual sex makes no sense in light of

the undisputed evidence that (1) defendant physically battered A.W. multiple times throughout

the night, (2) defendant admitted in his interview that he held A.W. "against her will," (3) A.W.

was crying throughout the night (as can be seen on the video that defendant recorded from

A.W.'s cell phone, in which A.W. was standing naked and crying), and (4) A.W. fled from

defendant in a panic after she was able to escape her trailer. Additionally, we note that A.W. (1)

hid in Gregory's trailer while defendant looked for her, (2) testified at trial that she would not

have willingly engaged in sexual intercourse while she was menstruating, and (3) mentioned to

                                                - 50 -
defendant over the phone that she engaged in sex acts because defendant held a knife to her and

she was scared.

¶ 108          The jailhouse phone calls between defendant and A.W. provide perhaps the

strongest evidence of defendant's guilt. In discussing the State's charges and brainstorming how

to defeat the prosecution's case, neither defendant nor A.W. ever entertained the idea of simply

telling the truth about what happened. Instead, defendant's singular focus was to convince A.W.

to either lie or say nothing. For example, defendant gave A.W. the following instructions for her

grand jury testimony:

               "When you go just say you plead the fifth. No this didn't happen

               and that didn't happen man. You just wanna drop all the charges

               all you gotta do. They can't do nothing to ya. Okay?

                                              ***

               [J]ust say you plead the fifth about everything. Every every

               question they ask you just say you plead the fifth."

¶ 109          We also note that at the time of the phone calls, defendant had been fully apprised

of the State's allegations against him. The jury even listened to defendant recite some of the

State's charges to A.W. over the phone. However, aside from some quibbling with A.W. over

whether her trailer door was unlocked, defendant had very little to say in dispute of the overall

truth of the State's allegations. At one particularly revealing moment in a phone call, defendant's

question about a factual detail inadvertently prompted A.W. to openly discuss what actually

happened:

                        "[DEFENDANT]: I do whatever you want me to do? You

                                               - 51 -
               didn't say that?

                       [A.W.]: Yeah, cause you had a knife to me.

                       [DEFENDANT]: Oh man don't do that over this phone.

               Like you just gonna—

                       [A.W.]: *** [O]kay well don't talk about that then cause

               you already know. I'm not gonna lie about it. But like I said I'll do

               what I can to get it took off."

The jailhouse phone calls bolstered the credibility of the State's case by revealing that defendant

and A.W. shared knowledge of defendant's guilt.

¶ 110          We further note that defendant responded to the State's charges by cajoling A.W.,

his victim, to refuse to participate in this criminal case. He largely succeeded in his efforts, and,

in so doing, deliberately sabotaged the mechanism by which the courts search for truth and

dispense justice. For this reason, we have little sympathy for defendant's claim that he was

denied a fair trial. The centerpiece of a fair trial for defendant would have been direct testimony

from A.W., the only other person who knew exactly what happened inside the trailer on the night

in question. By convincing A.W. to withhold that information, defendant demonstrated that he

was not actually interested in a fair trial—he was interested in no trial at all. His efforts to

prevent the truth from coming out bolstered the credibility of the evidence supporting the State's

factual allegations. Longfellow's testimony, albeit improper, was a direct consequence of

defendant's efforts to thwart the criminal justice system's search for truth. Our conclusion that

the jury would have convicted defendant even without Longfellow's testimony is based, in part,

upon the natural inference that the jury could have drawn from defendant's efforts to silence the

                                                 - 52 -
only other person who could have revealed what actually happened.

¶ 111                              c. Forfeiture by Wrongdoing

¶ 112          Indeed, an argument could be made that the admission of A.W.'s statements

through Longfellow's testimony was not error at all because defendant deliberately sought to

make A.W.'s direct testimony unavailable for the jury to hear. Illinois Rule of Evidence

804(b)(5) provides as follows:

                       "(b) Hearsay Exceptions. The following are not excluded

               by the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a witness:

                                               ***

                                (5) Forfeiture by Wrongdoing. A

                       statement offered against a party that has engaged

                       or acquiesced in wrongdoing that was intended to,

                       and did, procure the unavailability of the declarant

                       as a witness." Ill. R. Evid. 804(b)(5) (eff. Jan. 1,

                       2011).

¶ 113          Illinois Rule of Evidence 804(a)(3) defines " '[u]navailability as a witness' " as

including situations in which the declarant "testifies to a lack of memory of the subject matter of

the declarant's statement." Ill. R. Evid. 804(a)(3) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). In the present case, the

"subject matter" of the statement of the declarant (A.W.) is the sexual assaults and other harm

she suffered at the hands of defendant. Defendant's cajolery succeeded in persuading A.W. not

to testify at trial beyond the point at which she discovered defendant in her shower. After that

point, she claimed to be unable to remember what defendant did to her.

                                                - 53 -
¶ 114           We acknowledge that forfeiture by wrongdoing has typically been used in murder

cases (see, e.g., People v. Hanson, 238 Ill. 2d 74, 97, 939 N.E.2d 238, 252 (2010); People v.

Coleman, 2014 IL App (5th) 110274, 24 N.E.3d 373; People v. Peterson, 2012 IL App (3d)
100514-B, 968 N.E.2d 204), but we see no reason why that doctrine should not apply in any case

in which a defendant has succeeded in undermining the criminal justice system by preventing the

trier of fact from hearing all pertinent testimony regarding the case on trial. Certainly,

defendant's repeated jailhouse phone calls to A.W. leave no doubt in this case of either his intent

or his success in getting her not to testify. See People v. Hampton, 406 Ill. App. 3d 925, 940,

941 N.E.2d 228, 240 (2010) (in a case involving charges of aggravated criminal sexual assault

and home invasion in which the defendant and his mother colluded to convince a witness to

" 'plead the fifth' " at trial, the appellate court affirmed the trial court's application of the doctrine

of forfeiture by wrongdoing).

¶ 115           However, the State has not argued that the doctrine of forfeiture by wrongdoing

applies in this case. Accordingly, because this issue has not been raised, and because we

conclude that the admission of Longfellow's hearsay testimony was harmless error, we need not

address whether defendant's wrongful efforts to keep A.W. quiet estop him from challenging

Longfellow's testimony.

¶ 116           Based upon the strength of the admissible evidence of defendant's guilt, we

conclude that the erroneous admission of Longfellow's testimony was harmless error as to

defendant's convictions for home invasion, aggravated criminal sexual assault based upon

vaginal penetration, domestic battery, and aggravated unlawful restraint.

¶ 117                            B. Opinion Evidence on Credibility

                                                  - 54 -
¶ 118          Defendant next argues that the State solicited improper opinion testimony from

(1) Longfellow regarding A.W.'s credibility and (2) Larimore regarding defendant's credibility.

¶ 119          Initially, we note that defendant forfeited his claims of error regarding this

evidence by failing to object at trial. See People v. Korzenewski, 2012 IL App (4th) 101026, ¶ 7,

970 N.E.2d 90. However, defendant contends that we should consider the merits of these claims

because (1) the admission of the improper opinion evidence constituted plain error and (2) in the

alternative, defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to (a) object to

Longfellow's and Larimore's statements and (b) request a limiting instruction that Larimore's

statements, if admissible, could be considered only for purposes of lending context to the

statements that defendant made during the interview. We disagree with each of these

contentions.

¶ 120                                      1. Plain Error

¶ 121          "The plain-error doctrine is a narrow and limited exception." People v. Hillier,

237 Ill. 2d 539, 545, 931 N.E.2d 1184, 1187 (2010). Under this doctrine, we will consider an

unpreserved error if "(1) a clear or obvious error occurred and 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) a clear or obvious error occurred and that 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." People v. Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d 166,

189, 940 N.E.2d 1045, 1058 (2010). "In both instances, the burden of persuasion remains with

the defendant." People v. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d 167, 187, 830 N.E.2d 467, 480 (2005).

¶ 122          Defendant proceeds under the first prong of the plain-error analysis, arguing that

                                                - 55 -
the evidence was closely balanced because "[t]he trial was a credibility contest." Specifically,

defendant asserts that (1) Longfellow's testimony improperly bolstered the credibility of the

inculpatory statements A.W. apparently made to Longfellow and (2) Larimore's comments

improperly diminished the credibility of the exculpatory statements that defendant made during

the police station interview. We choose to begin our plain-error analysis by first addressing

whether any error occurred at all. See Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d at 189, 940 N.E.2d at 1059 ("As a

matter of convention, our court typically undertakes plain-error analysis by first determining

whether error occurred at all.").

¶ 123                    a. Longfellow's Comment on A.W.'s Credibility

¶ 124          Regarding A.W.'s credibility, defendant argues that Longfellow gave the

following improper testimony when the State asked him to describe A.W.'s demeanor:

                       "She was still in shock. I mean it was just a very blank

               stare. She was scared, you know, talking about it, still trembling

               but very believable, very credible."

¶ 125          We agree with defendant that Longfellow's testimony—in which he stated that

A.W. was "very believable, very credible" when she told Longfellow what defendant had done—

was clear and obvious error. This court has described it as a "fundamental rule that one witness

should not be allowed to express his opinion as to another witness's credibility." (Emphasis

added.) People v. Henderson, 394 Ill. App. 3d 747, 754, 915 N.E.2d 473, 478 (2009).

"Questions of credibility are to be resolved by the trier of fact." People v. Kokoraleis, 132 Ill. 2d
235, 264, 547 N.E.2d 202, 216 (1989). Accordingly, " 'it is generally improper to ask one

witness to comment directly on the credibility of another witness.' " People v. Boling, 2014 IL

                                               - 56 -
App (4th) 120634, ¶ 121, 8 N.E.3d 65 (quoting People v. Becker, 239 Ill. 2d 215, 236, 940
N.E.2d 1131, 1143 (2010)).

¶ 126          We recognize that in this case, Longfellow volunteered his opinion as to A.W.'s

credibility without the State's directly asking him to do so. (The State had simply asked

Longfellow to describe A.W.'s demeanor.) This does not affect our conclusion. In Boling, a

child sexual assault victim's out-of-court statements to a sexual assault nurse examiner were

admitted pursuant to section 115-13 of the Code (725 ILCS 5/115-13 (West 2012)), which

creates a hearsay exception in certain cases for a victim's out-of-court statements that are made

for purposes of medical diagnosis or treatment. The nurse in Boling, while under direct

examination by the State, was testifying about her medical interview of the victim when she

stated, " '[the victim] gave me a really good—what I felt was a credible history.' " Boling, 2014
IL App (4th) 120634, ¶ 57, 8 N.E.3d 65. The State had not asked the nurse about the victim's

credibility. However, this court noted that "the State was responsible for adequately preparing

its witnesses to ensure that [the nurse] did not volunteer improper and prejudicial testimony."

(Emphasis in original.) Id. ¶ 122, 8 N.E.3d 65 (citing People v. Rice, 234 Ill. App. 3d 12, 19,

599 N.E.2d 1253, 1259 (1992) ("It is axiomatic that prosecutors have a certain amount of control

over their witnesses; in the instant case, the State neglected to keep [the witness's] testimony

within the bounds delineated by the court.")). Similarly, in this case, the State was responsible

for preparing Longfellow to ensure that he would not volunteer improper and prejudicial

testimony regarding A.W.'s credibility.

¶ 127          We note that although Longfellow's testimony about what A.W. told him was

inadmissible hearsay (as we discussed in the previous section of this opinion), our plain-error

                                               - 57 -
analysis does not focus on the overall prejudicial effect of that improper hearsay testimony.

Instead, we focus narrowly on Longfellow's comment that A.W. was "very believable, very

credible." The question before us is whether the evidence was so closely balanced that

Longfellow's improper comment on A.W.'s credibility alone threatened to tip the scales of justice

against defendant. Sargent, 239 Ill. 2d at 189, 940 N.E.2d at 1058. We conclude that it did not.

¶ 128          Before Longfellow commented that A.W. was "very believable, very credible,"

the jury heard the 9-1-1 call, which occurred shortly before A.W. spoke with Longfellow. In that

call, A.W. provided the 9-1-1 dispatcher with the same general report that she gave Longfellow.

Namely, A.W. told the dispatcher that defendant (1) hid in A.W.'s shower and waited for her to

come home, (2) grabbed A.W. by the hair and dragged her into her kitchen, (3) looked through

A.W.'s cell phone, (4) took hold of a knife (or knives), (5) held A.W. against her will, (6) made

A.W. disrobe, (7) forced A.W. to have sex with him twice while she was menstruating, (8) struck

A.W., and (9) chased A.W. when she tried to escape. The physical evidence recovered from the

scene corroborated that account. Although the jury could not visually observe A.W.'s

appearance as she made the 9-1-1 call, the audio recording provided a solid foundation for the

jury to make its own credibility determination as to the veracity of A.W.'s report. The 9-1-1

recording clearly revealed A.W.'s trembling voice, deep sobs, and prompt, definitive answers to

the dispatcher's specific questions. A.W. sat on the witness stand, listening as that recording was

played for the jury in open court. After the recording was played, A.W. testified that although

she did not remember the call, she would not have "made something up" to the dispatcher.

¶ 129          The jury also learned that defendant had successfully convinced A.W. to not

cooperate with the police or the State's Attorney's office. The jailhouse phone calls revealed (1)

                                              - 58 -
defendant coaching A.W. on how to thwart the prosecution and (2) A.W. keeping defendant

apprised of her efforts. A.W. and defendant also talked about the incident, although most of the

details remained unspoken. Even after A.W. told defendant that she would help him avoid

prosecution, she never said anything—either to defendant over the phone or at trial—to indicate

that her initial report was untruthful. A.W. even testified at trial that although she could not

remember what happened, she would not have fabricated a story to the police.

¶ 130          Although A.W.'s credibility was undoubtedly a central issue in this case, we

conclude that the admissible evidence upon which the jury could have judged A.W.'s credibility

was so voluminous that Longfellow's improper comment alone could not have threatened to tip

the scales of justice against defendant. Accordingly, Longfellow's statement regarding A.W.'s

credibility was not plain error.

¶ 131                   b. Larimore's Comment about Defendant's Credibility

¶ 132          Regarding defendant's credibility, defendant contends that the jury should not

have heard the following statements, which Detective Larimore made to defendant during the

police station interview:

                       "There's a couple of things that aren't making sense to me.

               Some of the things you're saying, I believe you're being honest

               about. But you are not being honest about everything.

                                               ***

                       I've interviewed more people than I can count, okay? And

               I've talked to people that have been 100% honest with me. I've

               been—I've talked to people that have been 0% honest with me.

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               Everything that came out of their mouth was a lie. And I've—most

               of the people that I've talked to tell some truth and some

               dishonesty, okay?

                       ***

                       For something that happened this recently, you seem to not

               remember anything. Every question I ask you, you're taking

               forever to remember."

¶ 133          Larimore clearly remarked on defendant's credibility by accusing defendant of

"not being honest about everything." However, as one Illinois evidence scholar has noted,

"[c]ontext is critical in the determination of whether otherwise inadmissible opinion and fact

statements will be received." Michael H. Graham, Graham's Handbook of Illinois Evidence

§ 611.25, at 105 (Supp. 2015). Viewed in the context of the entire 42-minute police station

interview in this case, we conclude that Larimore's statements to defendant were properly

admitted as part of the interview recording.

¶ 134          Larimore directed his statements to the lone suspect in an ongoing criminal

investigation. The jury knew that Larimore's interview with defendant took place in an

interrogation room at the police station shortly after defendant had been arrested. The jury also

knew that, prior to the interview, A.W. had called 9-1-1 to report that defendant entered her

trailer without permission, threatened her with a knife, held her against her will, and sexually

assaulted her. A.W. repeated this story to the investigating detectives, whom she walked through

her trailer and showed physical evidence that appeared to corroborate her story. Based upon the

information available to him, Larimore had strong reason to believe that defendant had

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committed aggravated criminal sexual assault, domestic battery, unlawful restraint, and home

invasion. Viewed in that context, it was hardly surprising that Larimore did not believe that

defendant "was being honest about everything" when defendant initially denied any wrongdoing.

Accordingly, given the context, the prejudicial effect of Larimore's statements was minimal.

¶ 135          Larimore's statements also had probative value in that they provided context for

the remainder of the interview, which continued well beyond defendant's first recitation of his

story. Had Larimore's statements expressing his skepticism of defendant's story simply been

edited out of the interview recording, the jury would have been left wondering why Larimore

continued questioning defendant about the same factual details after defendant had already

provided an initial set of answers. Of course, even if Larimore's statements had been redacted,

most jurors would have likely figured out that Larimore continued questioning defendant

because he did not believe defendant's initial story. Defendant's version of events changed

constantly throughout the interview, and his difficulty answering even the simplest of Larimore's

questions was unmistakable. By the time Larimore made the statements at issue (approximately

20 minutes into the 42-minute interview), defendant's credibility was already in doubt.

Defendant appeared so bewildered by Larimore's simple, straightforward questions that no

reasonable juror could have thought he was "being honest about everything." (Perhaps some

things, but certainly not everything.) Simply put, the jury did not need Larimore's statements to

figure out that defendant was not telling the whole truth.

¶ 136          To the extent that Larimore's statements carried any prejudicial effect, their

probative value far outweighed any prejudice. Viewed in the context of the entire 42-minute

interview at issue in this case, we conclude that the inclusion of Larimore's statements in the

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interview recording was not error.

¶ 137                          2. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

¶ 138          Defendant also contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to (1)

object to Longfellow's and Larimore's statements and (2) request a limiting instruction that

Larimore's statements, if admissible, could be considered only for purposes of lending context to

the statements that defendant made during the interview.

¶ 139          "To show ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must demonstrate that 'his

attorney's representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and that there is a

reasonable probability that, but for counsel's errors, the result of the proceeding would have been

different.' " Simpson, 2015 IL 116512, ¶ 35, 25 N.E.3d 601 (quoting People v. Patterson, 192 Ill.
2d 93, 107, 735 N.E.2d 616, 626 (2000), citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 695

(1984)). "Further, in order to establish deficient performance, the defendant must overcome the

strong presumption that the challenged action or inaction may have been the product of sound

trial strategy." People v. Smith, 195 Ill. 2d 179, 188, 745 N.E.2d 1194, 1200 (2000).

¶ 140          This court has held that "[c]laims of ineffective assistance of counsel are usually

reserved for postconviction proceedings where a trial court can conduct an evidentiary hearing,

hear defense counsel's reasons for any allegations of inadequate representation, and develop a

complete record regarding the claim and where attorney-client privilege no longer applies."

People v. Weeks, 393 Ill. App. 3d 1004, 1011, 914 N.E.2d 1175, 1182 (2009) (citing People v.

Kunze, 193 Ill. App. 3d 708, 725-26, 550 N.E.2d 284, 296 (1990)). Based upon these

considerations, we decline to reach the merits of defendant's ineffective-assistance-of-counsel

claim in this direct appeal.

                                               - 62 -
¶ 141                     C. Defendant's Conviction for Home Invasion

¶ 142          Last, defendant contends that the State's evidence failed to prove him guilty of

home invasion beyond a reasonable doubt. Specifically, defendant asserts that the State failed to

prove that he entered A.W.'s trailer "without authority" because (1) A.W. acknowledged in her

testimony that it was possible she left her door unlocked for defendant and (2) the State

presented no evidence that defendant forced entry or possessed criminal intent when he entered.

We are not persuaded.

¶ 143          Initially, we note that the offense of home invasion does not require proof of (1)

forced entry or (2) the defendant's intent at the time of entry. See 720 ILCS 5/12-11(a)(1) (West

2010). Proof that the defendant forced entry or had a criminal intent could serve, at most, as

circumstantial evidence of the defendant's lack of authority to enter the dwelling. The lack of

such particular circumstantial evidence is not dispositive in this case.

¶ 144          Although defendant told Larimore during the police station interview that A.W.

invited him into her trailer, this self-serving statement was the only evidence to support

defendant's claim that he had authority to enter A.W.'s trailer. Not only was defendant's

credibility virtually nonexistent, but the remaining evidence overwhelmingly supported the

conclusion that defendant entered and remained in A.W.'s trailer without authority. A.W.'s

statements to the 9-1-1 dispatcher, her trial testimony, and the jailhouse phone calls

unambiguously revealed that defendant entered A.W.'s trailer and waited for her in the shower

stall without her knowledge or permission. In the jailhouse calls, A.W. specifically refuted

defendant's claim that the front door of the trailer was unlocked. (We note that although

defendant told A.W. that he entered through the unlocked front door, defendant told Larimore

                                                - 63 -
that he entered through the unlocked back door after smoking a blunt on A.W.'s back porch.)

Simply put, the State's evidence overwhelmingly supported defendant's conviction for home

invasion.

¶ 145            D. Defendant's Retrial for Aggravated Criminal Sexual Assault
            Based Upon Anal Penetration Does Not Violate the Double Jeopardy Clause

¶ 146           For the reasons stated, we reverse defendant's conviction and sentence for

aggravated criminal sexual assault based upon anal penetration, and we remand for further

proceedings on that charge. In doing so, we note that the double jeopardy clause does not

prohibit retrial on the anal-penetration count even though the State presented no admissible

evidence of that offense. The supreme court has explained the pertinent rules, as follows:

                       "The double jeopardy clause forbids a second, or

                successive, trial for the purpose of affording the prosecution

                another opportunity to supply evidence it failed to muster in the

                first proceeding. (Burks v. United States (1978), 437 U.S. 1, 11,

                *** 98 S. Ct. 2141, 2147.) As this court acknowledged in People

                v. Mink (1990), 141 Ill. 2d 163, 173, [565 N.E.2d 975, 979], for

                purposes of double jeopardy the United States Supreme Court has

                distinguished between judgments reversing convictions on account

                of trial error and judgments reversing convictions on account of

                evidentiary insufficiency. Reversal for trial error is a

                determination that the defendant has been convicted by means of a

                judicial process defective in some fundamental respect, whereas

                reversal for evidentiary insufficiency occurs when the prosecution

                                                - 64 -
               has failed to prove its case, and the only proper remedy is a

               judgment of acquittal. (Mink, 141 Ill. 2d at 173[, 565 N.E.2d at

               979].) Although the double jeopardy clause precludes the State

               from retrying a defendant after a reviewing court has determined

               that the evidence introduced at trial was legally insufficient to

               convict, the double jeopardy clause does not preclude retrial of a

               defendant whose conviction has been set aside because of an error

               in the proceedings leading to the conviction. (Mink, 141 Ill. 2d at

               173-74[, 565 N.E.2d at 979-80].) Moreover, retrial is permitted

               even though evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict once

               erroneously admitted evidence has been discounted, and for

               purposes of double jeopardy all evidence submitted at the original

               trial may be considered when determining the sufficiency of the

               evidence." (Emphasis added.) People v. Olivera, 164 Ill. 2d 382,

               393, 647 N.E.2d 926, 931 (1995).

¶ 147          The supreme court has reiterated these principles in subsequent decisions. See

People v. Lopez, 229 Ill. 2d 322, 367, 892 N.E.2d 1047, 1073 (2008); People v. McKown, 236 Ill.
2d 278, 311, 924 N.E.2d 941, 959 (2010) ("If the evidence presented at the first trial, including

the improperly admitted evidence, would have been sufficient for any rational trier of fact to find

the essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt, retrial is the proper

remedy.").

¶ 148                               III. CONCLUSION

                                               - 65 -
¶ 149          We reverse defendant's conviction and sentence for aggravated criminal sexual

assault based upon anal penetration and otherwise affirm defendant's remaining convictions and

sentences in McLean County case Nos. 12-CF-891 (our case No. 4-13-0644) and 12-CF-1020

(our case No. 4-13-0650). As part of our decision, we award the State its $50 statutory

assessment against defendant as costs of this appeal.

¶ 150          No. 4-13-0644, Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.

¶ 151          No. 4-13-0650, Affirmed.

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