Court Opinion

ID: 4686392
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-05-12 22:05:28.004368+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:33.573591
License: Public Domain

2021 IL App (2d) 190271
                                 No. 2-19-0271
                           Opinion filed May 12, 2021
_____________________________________________________________________________

                                              IN THE

                               APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Kendall County.
                                       )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
                                       )
v.                                     ) Nos. 17-CF-204
                                       )      17-TR-3769
                                       )
KYLE A. DELHAYE,                       ) Honorable
                                       ) Robert P. Pilmer,
      Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Hutchinson and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                             OPINION

¶1     Following a bench trial, defendant, Kyle A. Delhaye, was convicted of felony and

misdemeanor aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device. Defendant appeals

his convictions and seeks to vacate them on grounds that the charges were subject to compulsory

joinder with his traffic citation for failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident. He also challenges

the sufficiency of the evidence to support the convictions. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶2                                      I. BACKGROUND

¶3     On the afternoon of October 11, 2016, Selma Martinez drove her car northbound on Route

47 near Yorkville. Martinez’s two daughters, Ashley and Angela Lopez, were passengers in the
2021 IL App (2d) 190271

car. Angela sat in the front seat, and Ashley sat in the backseat. Meanwhile, defendant drove a

pickup truck, also northbound on Route 47. As Martinez prepared to turn left onto Corneils Road

from the single northbound lane on Route 47, defendant’s truck struck the rear of Martinez’s car.

Ashley died from the injuries she sustained in the collision, Martinez suffered extensive injuries,

and Angela suffered a concussion and a laceration to the head.

¶4                                       A. Traffic Citation

¶5     On the day of the collision, October 11, 2016, Yorkville police officer Matthew Nelson

issued defendant a uniform traffic citation, on an “Illinois Citation and Complaint” form, for failure

to reduce speed to avoid an accident, in violation of section 11-601(a) of the Illinois Vehicle Code

(Vehicle Code) (625 ILCS 5/11-601(a) (West 2016)). On January 25, 2017, defendant pled guilty

to the charge and was sentenced to three months of court supervision, assessed fines and costs of

$250, and ordered to attend driving school. In accepting defendant’s guilty plea, the trial court

admonished defendant that “[t]his Court only addressed the issue of whether or not you violated a

traffic law, and whether or not—how you should be punished based upon that petty offense” and

that “it’s for other and different courts that are going to address the issue of the consequences of

what you did.”

¶6                                      B. Criminal Charges

¶7     On July 7, 2017, the State filed a two-count felony information against defendant for

aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device in violation of section 12-610.2(b-

5) of the Vehicle Code (id. § 12-610.2(b-5)). One count was based upon Ashley’s death; one count

was based upon great bodily harm to Martinez. The charges were superseded by indictment on

August 8, 2017, for a felony violation of section 12-610.2(b-5) based upon Ashley’s death. Also,

a day earlier, on August 7, 2017, the State filed a criminal complaint against defendant for a

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misdemeanor violation of section 12-610.2(b-5) based upon great bodily harm to Martinez. The

indictment and the criminal complaint stated that defendant “operated a motor vehicle while using

an electronic communication device to read an electronic message.”

¶8                                      C. Pretrial Motions

¶9     On July 25, 2017, defendant moved to dismiss the information on the ground that the State

violated the compulsory-joinder statute (720 ILCS 5/3-3 (West 2016)) by bringing the charges

after defendant pled guilty to failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, on January 25, 2017,

and after his court-supervision period ended on April 19, 2017. An evidentiary hearing was held

on the motion on October 5, 2017, at which the lead investigator, Yorkville police detective Patrick

McMahon, testified. McMahon stated that a data extraction was performed on defendant’s cell

phone on October 17, 2016. McMahon explained that he was present for the extraction process but

that he did not conduct the extraction, because he had not received training on the extraction

device. McMahon reviewed the data and generated a report on October 18, 2016. The data included

text messages between defendant and Crystal Daniels on the afternoon of the accident. McMahon

acknowledged that he did not conduct any additional phone analysis after October 18, 2016.

¶ 10   The parties stipulated that McMahon’s October 18, 2016, report, “which contained the

times text message[s] were sent and received and the content of the text messages from

Defendant’s phone on 10/11/16 was in the State’s Attorney’s possession & tendered to the

defendant on 1/12/17 in 16 TR 6563.” The parties further stipulated that the “full phone data from

extract[ion] was not yet tendered prior to Jan. 25, 2017.”

¶ 11   McMahon further testified that the Illinois State Police performed an initial investigation

on November 2, 2016, and that he received the Illinois State Police accident reconstruction report

on June 20, 2017. McMahon acknowledged that the report pertained to “mathematical calculations

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in terms of the speed of the car and how the crash occurred” and not whether text messages were

sent and received on defendant’s cell phone.

¶ 12   The trial court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss in an October 18, 2017, written order.

The trial court pointed out that, at the time the charges were filed against defendant on July 7,

2017, the failure-to-reduce speed case already had been terminated. Thus, the trial court reasoned,

“there was no pending case to be joined, for purposes of the joinder statute.” Accordingly, “[i]t

would have been impossible at the time the felony case was filed to seek to join the traffic case for

the purpose of having a single prosecution as contemplated by the joinder statute.” Moreover, the

trial court reasoned, under our supreme court’s decision in People v. Jackson, 118 Ill. 2d 179

(1987), overruled in part on other grounds by People v. Stefan, 146 Ill. 2d 324 (1992), the

compulsory-joinder statute does not apply to offenses that have been charged by the use of a

uniform citation and complaint form for traffic offenses.

¶ 13   On January 11, 2018, defendant again moved to dismiss the two-count information, this

time on the ground that the prosecution for aggravated use of an electronic communication device

violated his right against double jeopardy. The State moved to strike or, alternatively, deny the

motion. On March 13, 2018, the trial court denied the State’s motion to strike and, following

argument, denied defendant’s motion to dismiss. The trial court noted that “the fact there was a

collision is not evidence of violation of failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident.” The trial

court concluded: “I do not believe this is a case where the lesser-included offense precludes this

prosecution.”

¶ 14                                           D. Trial

¶ 15   A bench trial was conducted on December 17 and 18, 2018. Defendant moved for a directed

finding at the close of the State’s case; the trial court denied the motion.

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¶ 16                                      1. The Collision

¶ 17   The evidence established that, on the day of the collision, October 11, 2016, defendant was

employed by Ralph Helm, Inc., which serviced outdoor power equipment. Defendant’s job was to

pick up the equipment from customers for servicing and return the equipment to the customers

upon completion of servicing. Defendant drove a company pickup truck on the day of the collision.

¶ 18   Martinez testified that she and Ashley picked up Angela from work at the store Boombah

on Boombah Way in Yorkville just before 3 p.m. on the day of the collision. Martinez drove her

black Nissan Altima. Martinez planned to show Angela an alternative driving route home—north

on Route 47 and left on Corneils Road. The evidence established that Route 47 at this juncture is

a two-lane north-south highway with a 55-mile-per-hour speed limit. There is no stop sign or left-

turn lane at Corneils Road. Martinez testified that she used her turn signal as she waited one to two

minutes to make the left turn onto Corneils Road. She did not see any vehicles behind her at this

point. Angela testified that her mother had her turn signal on and was pointing out the Corneils

Road sign before Angela heard a loud crash.

¶ 19   The parties stipulated that the first 911 call came in at 3:03:18 p.m. on October 11, 2016,

from a caller named “Miles,” who was not a witness to the crash. On the recorded call, Miles stated

that he missed the crash by “about a minute” and indicated that there were “about 10 people”

helping at the scene of the collision. The parties further stipulated that Yorkville police officers

were dispatched to the scene at 3:03:40 p.m.

¶ 20   Jessica Romero testified that, shortly before 3 p.m. on October 11, 2016, she drove

southbound on Route 47 to Yorkville. She “barely remember[ed]” seeing “a black car that was

coming” as she approached the intersection of Route 47 and Corneils Road. When she reached the

intersection, she heard “noise like a crash, like something very loud.” Debris, soil, and glass fell

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on her car. Romero’s windshield was broken. She stopped, exited her car, and proceeded toward

the car involved in the crash. A man and a woman had stopped and were at the scene. Romero

“saw that the woman [who] stopped was dialing 911.” When questioned as to how much time

passed between when the objects hit her car and when she first “heard” someone calling 911,

Romero responded: “I would say maybe a minute. Maybe a minute or two minutes maximum.”

She also stated that she did not know whether it was the man or the woman who was the first to

call 911.

¶ 21   Nelson testified that, at about 3:03 p.m., he was dispatched to the scene. When he arrived,

he saw “the black Nissan on the west edge of Route 47.” The car had “severe rear end damage”

with the trunk “pushed up over the rear axle.” The driver was “slumped sideways towards the front

seat passenger,” and the front-seat passenger was “disoriented and being assisted by the

paramedics.” Nelson saw “hair coming up between” the front seat and the backseat but did not see

a body beneath the hair. Nelson also saw “a red Chevy Silverado just north of that in the field with

front end damage.” Defendant was standing next to the vehicle. Nelson further stated that the

intersection of Boombah Way and Route 47 is “[l]ess than half a mile” from the intersection of

Corneils Road and Route 47.

¶ 22   Nelson testified that, after speaking to individuals at the scene, he issued defendant a traffic

citation that day for failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident. A certified copy of defendant’s

conviction of this offense was introduced into evidence without objection, to show defendant was

driving the vehicle involved in the crash. Nelson drove defendant to the hospital. Nelson did not

know how long defendant sat in the back of the squad car before they drove to the hospital, but he

testified that they arrived at the hospital around 4:20 p.m. En route to the hospital, Nelson requested

defendant’s verbal consent to provide his cell phone. Nelson testified that “I believe he gave it

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[(defendant’s cell phone)] to me when we got to the hospital.” Nelson returned to the police station

that day and placed the cell phone into evidence. Defendant provided written consent the next day

to search the cell phone.

¶ 23   Defendant’s employer, Ralph Helm, testified that he drove to the intersection of Route 47

and Corneils Road on October 11, 2016, after defendant called Helm to advise that he had been in

an accident. Helm testified that his company’s standard business practice was to provide drivers

with clipboards containing information regarding scheduled pick ups and deliveries. After

receiving permission from a police officer, Helm removed the following items from the pickup

truck defendant had been driving: a clipboard, a check, a navigational device, and a battery jumper

pack. Helm testified that no police officer requested to photograph any of the items removed. Helm

also removed, with permission from a police officer, an 18-foot trailer that was attached to the

pickup truck.

¶ 24   Daniels, defendant’s girlfriend at the time, testified that she and defendant engaged in a

series of text messages on October 11, 2016, that began with a text message from Daniels shortly

before 3 p.m. Defendant responded “[a]lmost immediately.” Daniels testified that the text-message

conversation lasted several minutes and that it was constant. Every time she sent a text message,

defendant replied. Eventually, however, Daniels sent defendant several text messages to which he

did not reply.

¶ 25   Later, in the evening hours after the collision, she received a friend request on her Facebook

account from an account with the name Tyler Fletcher. She accepted the friend request and

received several messages, at which point she realized that the messages were from defendant. The

evidence established that defendant had created the account four years earlier. The sequence of

messages read:

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               “Hey it’s me this is a spam account I can’t really talk right now but I’m okay I need

       you to not call text or snap my phone it’s not in my possession.

               Don’t use my name

               I was in a very bad accident and it’s going to cause lots of legal troubles ill get back

       to u when I can I’m so sorry I’m out of the hospital and I’m at home

               And you can’t tell a soul that I told you that[.]”

¶ 26   The parties stipulated that, as a result of the crash, Martinez suffered multiple injuries

resulting in great bodily harm. The parties also stipulated to testimony that the cause of Ashley’s

death was multiple blunt force injuries resulting from the pickup truck striking the car.

¶ 27                                    2. The Investigation

¶ 28   McMahon testified regarding the subsequent investigation. On October 17, 2016, after

Yorkville police detective Sergeant Ray Mikolasek removed defendant’s cell phone from the

evidence vault, they went to the Kendall County Sheriff’s Department to use the department’s

Cellebrite device on defendant’s cell phone. McMahon explained that a Cellebrite device is a

“forensic extraction device which is used for digital forensics to access readily viewable

information on digital devices as well as information that may have been hidden or deleted.”

¶ 29   McMahon testified that he had not used the Cellebrite device prior to this date (although

he has used it approximately 7 to 10 times since then), but he received contemporaneous instruction

from Mikolasek. McMahon described the device and explained the process. Namely, “[o]nce

turning the device on, it gives you a few prompts, it walks you through the entire process to

download [the] phone” to be examined. “And once you hook the phone up to the Cellebrite

machine with a memory card to transfer the recovered information to, the machine walks you [sic]

what you want, whether it’s an extraction which provides the user with only what’s visible on the

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phone, or there’s a physical extraction which offers what’s visible as well as what is not really

visible, which means deleted or hidden data.” The data recovered from an extraction includes

“everything, call logs, phone books, who the contacts are. MMS messages, SMS messages, which

are short message service, which are your text messages. Videos. Pictures you take, images you

save.” The extraction may also recover conversations on a third-party application, such as

Snapchat.

¶ 30   McMahon testified that Mikolasek “walked me through how to use the device,” at which

time “we performed the extraction on the defendant’s cell phone” by connecting the phone to the

Cellebrite device and following the prompts. McMahon further explained his collaboration with

Mikolasek on the Cellebrite extraction: “We were sitting right next to each other while he was

explaining to me how the process is done and how you use the machine. So I was right there. I

don’t recall who completed it. But we were right there together.”

¶ 31   A report with 4488 pages of data was generated; they downloaded the information to a

flash drive. McMahon proceeded to review the report over the next couple of days. He testified

that the report included a 10-message text conversation between defendant and Daniels on the day

of the collision, October 11, 2016, with the time stamped, as follows:

               2:58:15 p.m. Daniels: “I can just log into my snapchat.”

               2:58:25 p.m. Defendant: “Good”

               2:59:06 p.m. Daniels: “Yeah. I have so much to say tonight. Honestly”

               2:59:25 p.m. Defendant: “Write it down as soon as possible.”

               3:00:18 p.m. Daniels: “I will. I have a feeling this talk tonight won’t be fun. But I

       am gonna be honest with u”

               3:00:50 p.m. Defendant: “It’s not going to be fun I’m saying it right now.”

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               3:01:29 p.m. Daniels: “I know but to be honest I have been holding in so many

       feelings. Like u have no idea.”

               3:01:31 p.m. Defendant: “Idk of [sic] you checked snapchat yet but I want 100%

       honesty whether it’s good or bad news or else I have nothing left to say to you”

               3:01:51 p.m. Defendant: “I can’t stand lying to my face.”

               3:01:55 p.m. Daniels: “U can be mad as much as u can but it’s not all my fault. U

       had a lot to do with it to [sic]”

¶ 32   There were three additional text messages from Daniels to defendant, with the time

stamped, as follows:

               3:03:02 p.m. Daniels: “Yeah I know. I want honesty from u as well”

               3:03:31 p.m. Daniels: “Yeah I can’t stand someone messing with my feelings right

       now”

               3:03:38 p.m. Daniels: “For how long”

¶ 33   McMahon testified that the Cellebrite report showed that all 13 of these text messages had

been deleted from defendant’s cell phone. However, the text messages were recovered during the

extraction process. He acknowledged that the report did not reflect when the text messages were

deleted. McMahon further testified that the report showed that text messages on defendant’s cell

phone from earlier in the afternoon and later in the afternoon had not been deleted.

¶ 34   McMahon explained that the time stamps in the report reflected when each text message

was sent or received. He acknowledged that the report reflected only that the messages were read,

but not when the messages were read. He also acknowledged that the report did not reflect whether

defendant created the texts by “text talk,” i.e., “hold[ing] the phone with the application to text”

and “speak[ing] into the phone” and “dictat[ing] to the phone what you want the message to read.”

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¶ 35   McMahon testified regarding additional content from the Cellebrite extraction. Namely,

the extraction showed 10 Snapchat videos of defendant in the pickup truck created on the day of

the collision, each approximately 10 seconds or less, in which defendant was driving while

listening to music and singing along or nodding his head. Five of the videos were created between

1:14 p.m. and 2:06 p.m. and were deleted at approximately 3:23 p.m.—after law enforcement

arrived at the scene. Four videos were created between 1:01 p.m. and 1:08 p.m. and deleted

between 1:37 p.m. and 1:38 p.m. One video was created at 9:54 a.m. and deleted at 10:46 a.m.

¶ 36   Defendant objected to the admission of the Snapchat videos on relevance grounds. Citing

People v. Morales, 2012 IL App (1st) 101911, the State argued that the videos were a continuing

narration of crimes committed that day and not other-crimes evidence. The trial court agreed and

overruled defendant’s objection, finding that the evidence provided context for the charged

offenses. McMahon proceeded to testify that, in the videos, defendant was leaning toward the

camera and the phone was being moved while filming as if someone was holding it.

¶ 37   McMahon also testified regarding his assistance in conducting the reconstruction analysis.

On November 2, 2016, he accompanied Illinois State Police officers to the impound lot where the

vehicles had been towed. A lightbulb from the rear of Martinez’s Nissan was secured as evidence.

On November 2, 2016, McMahon accompanied the officers to the collision scene. McMahon

acknowledged that he told Illinois State Police sergeant Richard Vanko that the driver of the pickup

truck may have been using an electronic communication device or looking for a clipboard at the

time of the crash.

¶ 38   Vanko testified as an expert in the field of traffic crash reconstruction. He testified that he

was contacted on October 21, 2016, to assist in the reconstruction of the accident in this case. He

stated an Illinois State Police accident reconstruction report usually takes about six months to

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complete after an accident. Vanko detailed his investigation. Vanko assisted McMahon in

executing a search warrant to obtain an image of the pickup truck’s event data recorder. He

explained that an event data recorder is a device that “records precrash data, crash impulse data,

and it will give a snapshot of what the vehicle was doing at the time of the crash.” Vanko noted

that Martinez’s Nissan did not have “a module that can be read or records precrash data that we

have the ability to read.” Vanko further testified that the lightbulb recovered from Martinez’s car

was from the rear right brake light. Based upon the “stretching in the filament” of the lightbulb,

Vanko believed that the brake light was activated at the time of the collision. Vanko acknowledged

that he could not determine whether the Nissan was stopped or just slowing down.

¶ 39   In addition to reviewing the image of the pickup truck’s event data recorder, inspecting the

vehicles, and receiving the case file, Vanko inspected the collision scene on November 2, 2016.

He testified that, “[a]fter comparing the original photos from the day of the crash with what I was

looking at, I marked with a can of paint the marks that I wanted to measure later that I was certain

were from the day of the crash.” The markings included tire marks, gouges, and scratches. Vanko

testified that he saw no evidence in the photographs or on the roadway of preimpact braking by

the pickup truck, such as skid marks or an impending skid mark. Vanko was able to determine a

path of travel for the pickup truck and observed tire marks indicating postimpact braking as the

pickup truck crossed into the shoulder of the southbound lane. Vanko documented the scene and

subsequently created a forensic diagram of the scene.

¶ 40   Vanko later performed analyses of the relative speed of the vehicles in the collision. Vanko

opined that defendant’s pickup truck was traveling at the speed of 63 to 66 miles per hour at the

time of impact. He also opined that there was no preimpact braking by defendant’s pickup truck

and that there was no postimpact braking by the truck until it had traveled 137 feet. When

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questioned as to whether there was any diagnostic information showing preimpact braking by the

truck, notwithstanding the absence of any physical evidence of preimpact braking, Vanko

explained that the diagnostic information showed that the brakes were activated a half-second

before the airbags deployed. Vanko acknowledged that he could not determine the actual time of

the impact based upon his analysis of the data. He also acknowledged that he reached no

conclusion as to what defendant was doing at the time of the crash, other than driving.

¶ 41   The case proceeded to closing argument. During its closing argument, the State referred to

defendant’s failure-to-reduce-speed-to avoid-an-accident guilty plea as a basis to establish the

preliminary element of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device—that

defendant was driving a motor vehicle. Following the State’s closing argument, defendant renewed

his motion to dismiss the charges on double jeopardy grounds. He argued that the failure-to-

reduce-speed charge was a lesser included offense of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic

communication device, as evidenced by the State’s reliance on the conviction to establish an

element of the offense. The trial court denied the motion.

¶ 42                                    E. Guilty Finding

¶ 43   Following closing argument, the trial court found defendant guilty of felony and

misdemeanor aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device. The trial court

noted that it “heard the testimony of witnesses over the past two days and observed the demeanor

of the witnesses as they testified on direct examination and cross examination.” The trial court

found that Daniels, Romero, Martinez, Lopez, and Helm testified credibly regarding the events of

the date of the collision. The trial court further found that Nelson, McMahon, and Vanko testified

credibly regarding their investigation and the accident reconstruction.

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¶ 44   The trial court reasoned that the State met its burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt

the elements of the offenses charged: that defendant was operating a motor vehicle upon a

roadway; that defendant was using an electronic communication device (a handheld wireless

telephone), that defendant was involved in a motor vehicle accident, that the accident resulted in

Lopez’s death and Martinez’s injuries, and that defendant’s use of the electronic communication

device while driving was the proximate cause of the death and injuries. The trial court also noted

that “[t]here has been testimony regarding the actions of [defendant] following the collision.”

However, the trial court found, “the State’s evidence, without the testimony concerning the actions

of [defendant] in the minutes and hours after the collision, is sufficient to prove beyond a

reasonable doubt each of the elements which the State must prove.”

¶ 45                                   F. Posttrial Motion

¶ 46   Defendant timely filed a motion to reconsider on grounds that the admission of the

Snapchat videos was erroneous, that their exclusion would warrant a finding of not guilty based

upon insufficiency of the evidence, and that the prosecution for aggravated unlawful use of an

electronic communication device violated his right against double jeopardy. Defendant sought a

finding of not guilty or dismissal of the charges. On March 8, 2019, following argument, the trial

court denied the motion.

¶ 47                                      G. Sentencing

¶ 48   A sentencing hearing proceeded on March 8, 2019. In a combined order, defendant was

sentenced to 180 days in jail and 30 months’ probation (until September 8, 2021) on the felony

charge of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device and 24 months’

probation (until March 8, 2021) on the misdemeanor charge of aggravated unlawful use of an

electronic communication device. Defendant was ordered to pay court costs and fees and $3200 in

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fines ($2000 for the felony conviction and $1200 for the misdemeanor conviction). He also was

ordered to perform 120 hours of community service, including 30 hours in a morgue.

¶ 49   Defendant timely appealed.

¶ 50                                      II. ANALYSIS

¶ 51   Defendant argues that the charges for aggravated unlawful use of an electronic

communication device were subject to compulsory joinder with the traffic citation for failure to

reduce speed to avoid an accident. He also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support

his convictions of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device.

¶ 52   Preliminarily, however, defendant argues extensively that we have jurisdiction over the

appeal from the misdemeanor conviction, notwithstanding the omission of the misdemeanor case

number from his notice of appeal and amended notice of appeal. We already ruled on this issue.

In a January 31, 2020, order, we denied as untimely defendant’s renewed motion for leave to file

a second amended notice of appeal but found that a liberal reading of the amended notice of appeal

included an appeal from the misdemeanor conviction. We reiterate that we have jurisdiction over

the misdemeanor conviction.

¶ 53   We turn to defendant’s arguments.

¶ 54                                  A. Compulsory Joinder

¶ 55   Defendant argues that his separate prosecutions for failure to reduce speed to avoid an

accident and aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device violated the

compulsory-joinder statute. We disagree, as set forth below.

¶ 56   Section 3-3 of the Criminal Code of 2012 (Criminal Code) (720 ILCS 5/3-3 (West 2016))

governs multiple prosecutions for the same act and requires the compulsory joinder of certain

offenses in a single prosecution. People v. Quigley, 183 Ill. 2d 1, 6-7 (1998). Specifically, “[w]hen

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the same conduct of a defendant may establish the commission of more than one offense, the

defendant may be prosecuted for each such offense.” 720 ILCS 5/3-3(a) (West 2016). However,

“[i]f the several offenses are known to the proper prosecuting officer at the time of commencing

the prosecution and are within the jurisdiction of a single court, they must be prosecuted in a single

prosecution, except as provided in Subsection (c) [(where the court may order separate trial in the

interest of justice)], if they are based on the same act.” Id. § 3-3(b). Section 3-3 “was enacted to

prevent the prosecution of multiple offenses in a piecemeal fashion and to forestall, in effect, abuse

of the prosecutorial process.” Quigley, 183 Ill. 2d at 7.

¶ 57   In turn, section 3-4(b)(1) of the Criminal Code (720 ILCS 5/3-4(b)(1) (West 2016))

“addresses the consequences of failing to comply with compulsory joinder under section 3-3.”

Quigley, 183 Ill. 2d at 11. The statute provides, in relevant part, that a prosecution is barred if the

defendant was formerly prosecuted for a different offense if the former prosecution resulted in

either a conviction or an acquittal and the subsequent prosecution “was for an offense with which

the defendant should have been charged on the former prosecution, as provided in Section 3-3 of

this [Criminal] Code.” 720 ILCS 5/3-4(b)(1) (West 2016). Whether charges are subject to

compulsory joinder is an issue of law and thus subject to de novo review where, as here, the

relevant facts are not disputed. See People v. McGee, 2015 IL App (1st) 130367, ¶ 28.

¶ 58   Our analysis begins with the supreme court’s decision in Jackson, 118 Ill. 2d at 192,

overruled on other grounds by Stefan, 146 Ill. 2d 324. There, the defendant was the driver in a

single-car accident in which the passenger was killed. Id. at 183. The defendant was issued uniform

traffic complaint citations for driving under the influence (DUI) and illegal transportation of

alcohol. Id. The defendant pled guilty to the charges three days later. Id. Prior to sentencing,

however, the trial court granted the State’s motion to nol-pros both charges. Id. The defendant was

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subsequently indicted on two counts of reckless homicide. Id. Count I alleged reckless swerving

of the car resulting in striking a tree and causing the passenger’s death, and count II alleged that

the defendant’s reckless act was the DUI. Id. The trial court granted the defendant’s motion to

dismiss count II on double jeopardy grounds and ruled that the State could not use the evidence of

the DUI or illegal transportation of alcohol on the remaining count. Id. The appellate court

affirmed. Id.

¶ 59   The supreme court reversed, holding that the defendant was placed in jeopardy on the DUI

and illegal-transportation-of-alcohol charges, even though the charges were nol-prossed, but that

DUI was not a lesser included offense of reckless homicide for double jeopardy purposes. Id. at

188-92. The court proceeded to address the argument that the compulsory-joinder statute barred

prosecution for the reckless homicide charges. Id. at 192-93. Rejecting the “underlying assumption

in the argument that a charge in a traffic ticket is the type of offense referred to in our compulsory-

joinder statute,” the court pronounced: “We hold today that the compulsory-joinder provisions of

section 3-3 do not apply to offenses that have been charged by the use of a uniform citation and

complaint form provided for traffic offenses.” Id. at 192. The uniform citation and complaint forms

cannot be used to charge a felony. Id. Rather, the forms “are intended to be used by a police officer

in making a charge for traffic offenses and certain misdemeanors and petty offenses.” Id. While

section 3-3 was intended to “curtail abuses of prosecutorial discretion,” the legislature did not

intend “that a driver could plead guilty to a traffic offense on a traffic ticket issued by a police

officer and thereby avoid prosecution of a serious offense brought by the State’s Attorney, such as

reckless homicide, through the use of sections 3-3 and 3-4 of the Criminal Code.” Id. at 193.

¶ 60   Similar to Jackson, the State notes, here, defendant was charged with failure to reduce

speed to avoid an accident by way of a uniform citation and complaint form. Thus, the State argues,

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the subsequent charges for aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communications device were

not subject to compulsory joinder. Defendant acknowledges Jackson but urges a more nuanced

analysis, arguing that this court, in People v. Thomas, 2014 IL App (2d) 130660, rejected a

mechanical application of Jackson.

¶ 61       In Thomas, the arresting officer initially charged the defendant with two traffic offenses

and one misdemeanor DUI charge pursuant to section 11-501(a)(2) of the Vehicle Code (625 ILCS

5/11-501(a)(2) (West 2010) (impairment)). Thomas, 2014 IL App (2d) 130660, ¶ 3. The State

subsequently charged the defendant, by information, with a second misdemeanor DUI pursuant to

section 11-501(a)(1) of the Vehicle Code (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(1) (West 2010) (blood alcohol

content of 0.08 or more)). Thomas, 2014 IL App (2d) 130660, ¶ 6. The trial court dismissed the

second DUI charge, finding that it was subject to compulsory joinder with the first DUI charge

and that the delay in bringing the charge violated the defendant’s statutory right to a speedy trial.

Id. ¶ 7.

¶ 62       On appeal, the State argued that, under Jackson, the subsequent DUI charge was not subject

to compulsory joinder, because the initial DUI charge was filed by a police officer by way of a

uniform traffic citation and complaint. Id. ¶ 16. In rejecting the State’s argument, we reasoned that

the court in Jackson was primarily concerned with the possibility that a defendant could avoid

prosecution for a later-charged felony by pleading guilty to the earlier-filed lesser offense. See id.

¶¶ 20-22 (citing People v. Kazenko, 2012 IL App (3d) 110529, ¶ 22 (Schmidt, P.J., specially

concurring) (“[w]hile a felony is not subject to compulsory joinder with a charge made by a

uniform citation” under Jackson, a misdemeanor DUI charge “may well be subject to compulsory

joinder” with an almost identical earlier-filed misdemeanor DUI charged by uniform citation)).

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¶ 63   We proceeded to discuss the critical distinctions between the facts in Thomas and the facts

in Jackson. Id. ¶ 21. Initially, we noted that the original misdemeanor DUI charge in Thomas was

not in fact brought by a uniform traffic citation and complaint like in Jackson. Id. ¶ 17. Rather, the

original DUI charge was brought through a verified complaint, and the State later attempted to

“add another misdemeanor charge, based on the same incident, on the eve of trial.” Id. ¶ 21. We

explained that Thomas did not involve (1) “charges brought via traffic tickets,” (2) “a defendant

pleading to traffic offenses,” or (3) “the subsequent filing of felony charges based on the same

incident.” Id. Thus, “[t]he danger that the supreme court sought to avoid in its ruling in Jackson,”

that the defendant could plead guilty to a traffic offense and avoid prosecution for a felony, “simply

[was] not present.” Id.

¶ 64   We further rejected the State’s argument that the information necessary to charge the

defendant with the second DUI (blood alcohol content of 0.08 or more) was not available to the

State at the time of the initial charge. Id. ¶¶ 23-25. Although the State did not receive the results

of a blood analysis until approximately six months after the initial charge, the record established

that the police officer learned the defendant’s blood-serum blood alcohol content from an

emergency room nurse on the night of the defendant’s arrest, calculated the defendant’s actual

level of blood alcohol to be 0.134, and included this information in his reports. Id. Accordingly,

we held that compulsory joinder applied to the charges. Id. ¶ 30.

¶ 65   We note that the Appellate Court, Third District, subsequently held, citing our analysis in

Thomas, that compulsory joinder may apply to misdemeanor charges that are initially filed by a

police officer. People v. Rogers, 2020 IL App (3d) 180088, ¶ 26, appeal allowed, No. 126163 (Ill.

Sept. 30, 2020). Neither party cites Rogers. We highlight that our supreme court allowed the

State’s petition for leave to appeal in Rogers on September 30, 2020.

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¶ 66   Notwithstanding Thomas and Rogers, Jackson controls our holding here. The bases upon

which Jackson was distinguished in Thomas and Rogers are simply not present in this case. First,

the traffic citation for failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident that Nelson issued to defendant

on the day of the collision was brought by a uniform citation and complaint form. Second,

defendant pled guilty to the traffic citation. Third, the subsequent charges were for both

misdemeanor and felony aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device in

violation of section 12-610.2(b-5) of the Vehicle Code. Specifically, the initial information

charged two counts of felony aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device. The

charges were superseded by indictment for a felony violation of the statute based upon Ashley’s

death, and the State filed a criminal complaint against defendant for a misdemeanor violation of

the statute based upon great bodily harm to Martinez. See 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2(e) (West 2016)

(“A person convicted of violating subsection (b-5) commits a Class A misdemeanor if the violation

resulted in great bodily harm, permanent disability, or disfigurement to another. A person

convicted of violating subsection (b-5) commits a Class 4 felony if the violation resulted in the

death of another person.”). Accordingly, the very danger present in Jackson—that defendant could

plead guilty to a traffic offense and avoid felony prosecution—persisted here.

¶ 67   Moreover, to the extent defendant maintains that the misdemeanor aggravated-unlawful-

use-of-an-electronic-communication-device charge was nonetheless subject to compulsory

joinder, the argument is unpersuasive. Compulsory joinder requires, at a minimum, knowledge of

the possibility of additional charges when the defendant is initially charged. Thomas, 2014 IL App

(2d) 130660, ¶ 24 (citing People v. Dismuke, 2013 IL App (2d) 120925, ¶ 22)); see also People v.

Luciano, 2013 IL App (2d) 110792, ¶ 78 (“for purposes of section 3-3, ‘knowledge’ or ‘known to

the proper prosecuting officer’ means the conscious awareness of evidence that is sufficient to give

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the State a reasonable chance to secure a conviction”). Defendant provided his cell phone to Nelson

at the hospital on the day of the collision, but that did not provide the requisite knowledge—

defendant had deleted the relevant text messages. The charging officer had neither the Cellebrite

report nor the accident reconstruction analysis at the time failure to reduce speed was charged.

Accordingly,    the    felony   and     misdemeanor      aggravated-unlawful-use-of-an-electronic-

communication-device charges were not subject to compulsory joinder, because the factual basis

for the charges was not known to the proper prosecuting officer at the time failure to reduce speed

was charged by the officer. In sum, we continue to adhere to the holding in Jackson and conclude

that the charges for felony and misdemeanor aggravated unlawful use of an electronic

communication device were not subject to compulsory joinder with the uniform citation for failure

to reduce speed to avoid an accident.

¶ 68   Defendant nevertheless maintains that “Jackson does not support the State’s use of a

conviction on the original traffic charge to support the State’s later felony and misdemeanor

charges at trial.” Defendant points out that the traffic charges in Jackson were nol-prossed, whereas

here, defendant pled guilty and was sentenced on the traffic charge. According to defendant, unlike

in Jackson, the State gained an unfair advantage here by introducing his failure-to -reduce-speed-

to-avoid-an-accident conviction in the prosecution and relying on the conviction in closing

argument.

¶ 69   However, nothing in Jackson limited the holding to cases in which the initial traffic charges

were nol-prossed. Rather, the court stated in no uncertain terms: “We hold today that the

compulsory-joinder provisions of section 3-3 do not apply to offenses that have been charged by

the use of a uniform citation and complaint form provided for traffic offenses.” Jackson, 118 Ill.

2d at 192. Moreover, the State referred to the failure-to-reduce-speed-to-avoid-an-accident

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conviction merely as a basis to establish the preliminary element—that defendant was driving a

motor vehicle. The record demonstrates that there was no dispute that defendant was driving the

pickup truck. Accordingly, there is no basis upon which to conclude that the State gained an unfair

advantage through introduction of the conviction.

¶ 70   Defendant also maintains that Jackson did not endorse the State’s “tactic” here, which he

characterizes as “accepting a guilty plea to the traffic violation at a time when it had the evidence

it would use at trial on the subsequently filed felony and misdemeanor charges.” Defendant

analogizes this case to People v. Smith, 2017 IL App (1st) 161231. In Smith, the defendant was

charged with marijuana possession; he pled guilty and was sentenced to probation. Id. ¶ 4. Over a

year later, the defendant was charged with manufacturing counterfeit currency based upon

evidence the State obtained in connection with the search that led to the marijuana-possession

charge. Id. The appellate court affirmed the dismissal of the subsequent charge on compulsory-

joinder grounds, reasoning that to hold otherwise “would permit prosecutors to impose consecutive

sentences the court would not otherwise order, by waiting until the defendant served his sentence

on one charge before formally seeking an indictment on other charges based on information

prosecutors knew when they filed the original charges.” Id. ¶ 15.

¶ 71   Smith does not impact the application of Jackson here. Indeed, as discussed, the evidence

for aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device was not known to the proper

prosecuting officer when the traffic ticket was issued on the day of the collision. Defendant

provided his cell phone to Nelson on the day of the collision, but he had deleted the text messages

at issue. The record demonstrates that the Cellebrite extraction on defendant’s cell phone was

conducted the following week and that the accident reconstruction analysis was conducted over

the next several months. Accordingly, there is no basis upon which to hold that “the several

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offenses [were] known to the proper prosecuting officer at the time of commencing the

prosecution.” See 720 ILCS 5/3-3(b) (West 2016); Jackson, 118 Ill. 2d at 192-93.

¶ 72   Defendant’s argument effectively rewrites the relevant time period set forth in section 3-

3(b) from “at the time of commencing the prosecution” to “at the time of accepting a guilty plea

to the traffic violation.” His argument also fails to appreciate that, while the Cellebrite extraction

had been conducted before defendant pled guilty on January 25, 2017, the record demonstrates

that completion of an accident reconstruction report usually takes about six months and that, here,

McMahon received the report on June 20, 2017—several months after defendant pled guilty. In

sum, the charges for aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device were not

subject to compulsory joinder with the traffic citation for failure to reduce speed.

¶ 73                               B. Sufficiency of the Evidence

¶ 74   Defendant argues that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of

felony and misdemeanor aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device. We

disagree and hold that the State presented sufficient evidence upon which the trial court reasonably

could conclude that defendant was guilty of the offenses.

¶ 75   The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt each element of an offense.

People v. Gray, 2017 IL 120958, ¶ 35. A reviewing court faced with a challenge to the sufficiency

of the evidence must determine “whether, [after] viewing the evidence in the light most favorable

to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond

a reasonable doubt.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. The same standard for reviewing the

sufficiency of the evidence applies to both jury trials and bench trials. People v. Howery, 178 Ill.

2d 1, 38 (1997). The reviewing court’s role is not to retry the defendant. Gray, 2017 IL 120958,

¶ 35. Rather, it is the trier of fact’s responsibility to resolve conflicts in the testimony, weigh the

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evidence, and draw reasonable inferences from the facts. Id. Thus, a reviewing court will not

substitute its judgment for that of the trier of fact on questions involving the weight of the evidence

or the credibility of the witnesses. Id. A criminal conviction will not be reversed unless the

evidence is “so unreasonable, improbable, or unsatisfactory” that it leaves reasonable doubt of the

defendant’s guilt. Id.

¶ 76   Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, we conclude that

the record demonstrates sufficient evidence from which a rational trier of fact could have found

beyond a reasonable doubt the essential elements of felony and misdemeanor aggravated unlawful

use of an electronic communication device. At the time of the offenses here, section 12-610.2(b)

of the Vehicle Code provided that “[a] person may not operate a motor vehicle on a roadway while

using an electronic communication device.” 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2(b) (West 2016). The offense is

elevated to aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device when the defendant

“violates subsection (b) and in committing the violation he *** was involved in a motor vehicle

accident that results in great bodily harm, permanent disability, disfigurement, or death to another

and the violation was a proximate cause of the injury or death.” Id. § 12-610.2(b-5). If great bodily

harm, permanent disability, or disfigurement results from the violation, the offense is a Class A

misdemeanor, and, if death results, the offense is a Class 4 felony. Id. § 12-610.2(e).

¶ 77   Defendant argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence that his use of an

electronic communication device caused Ashley’s death and Martinez’s injuries. “The concept of

proximate cause encompasses two separate requirements, cause in fact and legal cause,” i.e.,

foreseeability. People v. Swift, 2016 IL App (3d) 140604, ¶ 50 (citing People v. Hudson, 222 Ill.

2d 392, 401 (2006)). Defendant does not contest the general foreseeability of a collision and

resulting injuries from the use of a cell phone while driving. See id. ¶ 52 (explaining that a rational

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trier of fact could conclude “that when a driver takes his eyes off the road, whether to stare into a

cornfield, or to pick up sandwiches, it is foreseeable that a traffic accident might occur”). Rather,

his argument is that there was a reasonable doubt that he was in fact using his cell phone at the

time of the collision. We review the evidence regarding the timeline of events occurring before

and after the collision.

¶ 78    Martinez testified that, after she and Ashley picked up Angela from work on Boombah

Way just before 3 p.m., they proceeded to drive north on Route 47. According to Nelson, the

intersection of Route 47 and Boombah Way is “[l]ess than half a mile” from the intersection of

Route 47 and Corneils Road. Martinez testified that she used her turn signal and waited one to two

minutes as she prepared to turn left onto Corneils Road from Route 47. Angela testified that

Martinez was pointing out the Corneils Road sign before she heard the crash.

¶ 79    The Cellebrite extraction performed on defendant’s cell phone recovered a 10-message text

conversation between defendant and Daniels beginning at 2:58:15 p.m. and ending at 3:01:55 p.m.

The last text message defendant sent was at 3:01:51 p.m.; Daniels responded at 3:01:55 p.m.

¶ 80    The parties stipulated that the first 911 call came in at 3:03:18 p.m. from a caller named

Miles, who had not witnessed the crash. On the recorded call, Miles stated that he missed the crash

by “about a minute” and that there were “about 10 people” helping at the scene. In addition,

Romero, the southbound driver whose windshield was broken from the falling debris, testified that

she exited her car and proceeded toward the scene. She stated that two other people had stopped—

a man and a woman. Romero testified that “[m]aybe a minute or two minutes maximum” passed

between when the debris hit her car and when she first “heard” someone calling 911. However,

she also testified that she “saw” that the woman who had stopped was dialing 911. She did not

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know whether it was the man or the woman who first called 911. Nelson testified that he was

dispatched to the scene at about 3:03 p.m.

¶ 81   In weighing all of this evidence, the trial court reasonably could have concluded that the

collision occurred no later than 3:02:18 p.m.—“about a minute” before the first 911 call (and

possibly earlier, 3:01:18 p.m., if Miles’s 911 call was the 911 call to which Romero referred as

having occurred “[m]aybe a minute or two minutes maximum” after the debris hit her car). That

left, at most, a window of 27 seconds after defendant sent his last text message at 3:01:51 p.m.,

and 23 seconds after Daniels sent her last text message at 3:01:55 p.m., before the collision

occurred. During the less than 4-minute time period leading up to this window, defendant and

Daniels had exchanged 10 text messages (5 messages from defendant and 5 messages from

Daniels), averaging a message approximately every 24 seconds. Specifically, defendant’s response

time to Daniels’s text messages ranged from 10 seconds, to 19 seconds, to 32 seconds (and then 2

seconds and 20 seconds in texts from defendant without an intervening text from Daniels).

Accordingly, it was reasonable to infer that defendant continued to read Daniels’s most recent text

message in the ongoing conversation, just as he had been doing during the previous four minutes,

and that the use of his cell phone was a proximate cause of the resulting death and injuries.

¶ 82   The content of the text-message conversation further supported a reasonable inference that

defendant’s reading of Daniels’s text messages was a proximate cause of the death and injuries.

Indeed, in their intimate discussion over text, defendant told Daniels: “Write it down as soon as

possible.” A “trier of fact is not required to disregard the inferences that normally flow from the

evidence.” People v. Murphy, 2017 IL App (1st) 142092, ¶ 11.

¶ 83   Defendant, however, contends that such an inference was unreasonable, citing People v.

Casciaro, 2015 IL App (2d) 131291. There, we explained the analytical framework and underlying

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considerations in resolving whether an inference is reasonable. See id. ¶ 89. “An inference is a

factual conclusion that can rationally be drawn by considering other facts. [Citation.] Due process

protects a defendant against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of ‘every

fact necessary to constitute the crime with which the defendant is charged.’ [Citation.]” Id. An

inference satisfies due process where “(1) there is a rational connection between the basic fact and

the presumed fact; (2) the presumed fact more likely than not flows from the basic fact; and (3) the

inference is supported by corroborating evidence of guilt.” Id.

¶ 84   Distilled, defendant’s argument challenges what he posits was the “basic fact”—the precise

timing of the text-message conversation. He contends that the State was required to prove that “the

extracted data are accurate to the second and synchronized with the timing system used for the 911

call.” In support, defendant cites in his opening brief an article from the “iGeeksBlog” for the

proposition that “[a]n IPhone can have bugs that distort its functioning. Incorrect times have at

times been experienced.” In his reply brief, he cites an article purportedly by a cell phone forensic

technician discussing what defendant describes as “this timing problem.” We disregard these

articles, as they pertain to matters outside the record. The proposition for which they are cited was

never argued or presented to the trial court and lacks any evidentiary support in the record. See

Keener v. City of Herrin, 235 Ill. 2d 338, 346 (2009); People v. Boykin, 2013 IL App (1st) 112696,

¶ 9.

¶ 85   Defendant nevertheless contends that an expert witness was required to testify to the

accuracy of the text-message transcript. Defendant never raised this objection at trial or in his

posttrial motion and has therefore forfeited the argument. See People v. Enoch, 122 Ill. 2d 176,

186 (1988). Defendant also acknowledges, citing several decisions from other jurisdictions, that

“[c]ourts have held that lay witnesses such as police officers may testify about their use of the

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Cellebrite device to extract information from a cellular telephone.” Ultimately, defendant’s

argument is that McMahon’s qualifications to testify regarding the data extracted from defendant’s

cell phone “are questionable” because the record demonstrated that it was McMahon’s first time

utilizing Cellebrite along with Mikolasek and McMahon may not have personally performed the

extraction. Again, defendant never raised this objection at trial or in his posttrial motion and

therefore has forfeited the argument. See id. Defendant’s characterization of McMahon’s

testimony is also not complete. Defendant cites a portion of McMahon’s testimony from the

evidentiary hearing on the motion to dismiss, but McMahon testified at trial that Mikolasek

“walked me through how to use the device,” at which time “we performed the extraction on the

defendant’s cell phone” by connecting the phone to the Cellebrite device and following the

prompts. At trial, McMahon further explained his collaboration with Mikolasek on the Cellebrite

extraction: “We were sitting right next to each other while he was explaining to me how the process

is done and how you use the machine. So I was right there. I don’t recall who completed it. But

we were right there together.” Accordingly, defendant’s arguments with respect to purported

deficiencies in the data from the Cellebrite extraction report are unpersuasive.

¶ 86   Moreover, defendant’s arguments ignore that Daniels’s testimony corroborated the

accuracy of the text-message transcript extracted from defendant’s cell phone. Daniels testified

that she and defendant engaged in a text-message conversation that began shortly before 3 p.m. on

the day of the collision and lasted several minutes. As such, we cannot say that it was unreasonable

for the trial court to conclude that defendant’s use of his cell phone was a proximate cause of

Ashley’s death and Martinez’s injuries.

¶ 87   Defendant notes that the indictment, as drafted by the State, accused him of “operat[ing] a

motor vehicle while using an electronic communication device to read an electronic message.”

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(Emphasis added.) He then notes that McMahon testified that the Cellebrite report reflected only

that the text messages were read, not when the text messages were read. Of course, the text-

message conversation itself reflects defendant’s consistent responses to Daniels’s texts. A

reasonable inference from the nature and timing of his responses was that defendant in fact read

the text messages before responding. Defendant does not articulate any argument otherwise. That

brings us again to the last two text messages in the 10-message conversation preceding the

collision—the message defendant sent at 3:01:51 p.m. and the message Daniels sent at 3:01:55

p.m. As set forth above, this left a window of 27 seconds (if calculating from the time of

defendant’s message) or 23 seconds (if calculating from the time of Daniels’s message) before the

latest the collision could have occurred (about 60 seconds before the first 911 call). Focusing on

the 27-second time period, defendant argues that, “[t]o prove that [defendant] was sending his last

text message when the accident occurred, the State needed to prove with precision that [defendant]

sent his last text message 87 seconds before the 911 call.”

¶ 88   We point out that the State was not required to prove that defendant was sending or reading

a text message at the exact moment of the collision. Section 12-610.2(b) prohibits “operat[ing] a

motor vehicle on a roadway while using an electronic communication device.” (Emphasis added.)

625 ILCS 5/12-610.2(b) (West 2016). When in addition the use is “a proximate cause of the injury

or death,” the defendant is guilty of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication

device. Id. § 12-610.2(b-5).

¶ 89   The legislative history of the statute is also illustrative. The initial version of the statute

provided that “[a] person may not operate a motor vehicle on a roadway while using an electronic

communication device to compose, send, or read an electronic message.” See 625 ILCS 5/12-

610.2(b) (West 2010). As technology advanced, the statute was amended to delete “to compose,

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send, or read an electronic message” for the purpose of “[e]xpand[ing] the prohibition on driving

while using an electronic communication device to include uses beyond composing, sending, or

reading an electronic message.” (Emphasis added.) 98th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Bill 1247, 2013

Sess. Indeed, the current version of the statute provides that “[a] person may not operate a motor

vehicle on a roadway while using an electronic communication device, including using an

electronic communication device to watch or stream video.” Pub. Act 101-297, § 5 (eff. Jan. 1,

2020) (amending 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2(b)). Accordingly, we refocus the analysis on what the State

was required to prove—that defendant’s use of his cell phone was a proximate cause of Ashley’s

death and Martinez’s injuries. This of course would include the use of his cell phone to read

Daniels’s text messages.

¶ 90   In arguing that the State failed to meet its burden of proof, defendant likens this case to two

“texting-while-driving decisions” from other jurisdictions. See State v. Warnke, 441 P.3d 1074

(Kan. Ct. App. 2019); Lee v. Croskey, Nos. 313217, 313218, 2015 WL 1814033 (Mich. Ct. App.

Apr. 21, 2015) (unpublished opinion). Initially, we note that decisions from other jurisdictions are

not binding on this court (see Kostal v. Pinkus Dermatopathology Laboratory, P.C., 357 Ill. App.

3d 381, 395 (2005)), particularly where a decision is unpublished, as is Lee (see Illinois State Toll

Highway Authority v. Amoco Oil Co., 336 Ill. App. 3d 300, 317 (2003)). A close review of the

cases demonstrates that they do not offer a persuasive basis for defendant’s position in any event.

¶ 91   In Warnke, 441 P.3d at 1081, the court reasoned that a 46-second phone call that the

defendant placed on her cell phone had to have occurred after the last text message on her phone

and before the accident. Otherwise, if the accident happened while the defendant was reading the

text message, the phone call never would have occurred. Id. Since it was not unlawful to use a cell

phone to make a phone call while operating a motor vehicle, the defendant’s convictions were

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reversed. Id. at 1084. Warnke is inapposite. There was no evidence that defendant was on a phone

call at the time of the collision.

¶ 92    In Lee, 2015 WL 1814033, at *5, the evidence established that the defendant driver sent a

text message at 12:46 p.m. and received a text message at 12:47 p.m. The evidence also established

that the accident occurred at either 12:48 p.m. or 12:55 p.m. Id. Since the defendant could have

sent the 12:46 p.m. message well before the accident and there was no evidence that the defendant

read the 12:47 p.m. text message, the defendant driver was entitled to summary judgment on the

plaintiff’s claim that the defendant was grossly negligent in causing an accident by texting while

driving. Id.

¶ 93    In contrast, here, the evidence demonstrated that defendant and Daniels were engaged in a

fluid text-messaging conversation between 2:58:15 p.m. and 3:01:55 p.m. They exchanged 10

messages in a 4-minute time period. Daniels described the text-message conversation as constant.

According to Daniels, every time she sent a text message, defendant replied. The Cellebrite

extraction report reflects defendant’s responses to the text messages. Accordingly, a reasonable

inference was that defendant’s use of his cell phone in the ongoing text-message conversation was

a proximate cause of the death and injuries in this case.

¶ 94    Defendant maintains that the inference is not supported by corroborating evidence of guilt.

Rather, defendant argues, “there is evidence that [defendant] told the police immediately after the

accident that he was looking at his clipboard when the accident occurred.” In support of this

statement, defendant cites the transcript from his guilty-plea hearing on the failure-to-reduce-speed

charge, during which the assistant state’s attorney stated, in response to the trial court’s question

as to the manner in which the accident occurred, his belief that defendant was working at the time

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and indicated that he was looking down at a clipboard. Defense counsel at the guilty-plea hearing

added that defendant was “just momentarily distracted” and “[l]ocked up the brakes.”

¶ 95   However, no such evidence was introduced at trial. The only mentions of the clipboard at

trial were Helm’s testimony that he removed the company clipboard from the pickup truck after

the collision and McMahon’s testimony that he told Vanko that the driver of the pickup truck may

have been using an electronic communication device or looking for a clipboard at the time of the

crash. Moreover, the expert testimony regarding the accident reconstruction analysis refutes the

suggestion that defendant was momentarily distracted at the time of the collision. To the contrary,

Vanko’s testimony demonstrated that defendant was completely disengaged from the roadway—

driving 63 to 66 miles per hour at impact with no evidence of any preimpact braking.

¶ 96   In addition, although the trial court found that the State established defendant’s guilt even

without consideration of defendant’s actions after the accident, we note that the State presented

persuasive evidence of consciousness of guilt. Although similarly not dispositive in our

determination, the evidence demonstrated that defendant deleted the incriminating text-message

exchange with Daniels from his cell phone before he provided it to the police. See People v.

Abernathy, 402 Ill. App. 3d 736, 753 (2010) (“ ‘Evidence that the accused has attempted to destroy

evidence against himself is always admissible for the purpose of showing consciousness of guilt.’ ”

(quoting People v. Spaulding, 309 Ill. 292, 306 (1923))). Also, later, on the evening of the collision,

defendant, through a “spam account,” directed Daniels not to use his name or “call, text or snap

[his] phone.” He advised that he was in “a very bad accident” that would “cause lots of legal

troubles” and instructed her not to “tell a soul.” This evidence clearly exhibited defendant’s

consciousness of guilt as to his use of his cell phone in causing the collision. Accordingly, viewing

this and all the other evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we cannot say that the

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evidence was so unreasonable, improbable, or unsatisfactory that it leaves a reasonable doubt of

defendant’s guilt.

¶ 97   As a final matter, defendant argues that the trial court erroneously admitted the Snapchat

videos, because the videos were irrelevant to whether he was using his cell phone at the time of

the collision. He points out that the videos were created between 9:54 a.m. and, at the latest, 2:06

p.m.—nearly one hour before the 911 call reporting the collision—and thus “in no way eliminated

the reasonable doubt undermining the State’s case.”

¶ 98   The trial court relied upon Morales, 2012 IL App (1st) 101911, in admitting the Snapchat

videos. In Morales, the defendant and several codefendants were convicted of murder and robbery

after beating the victim to death. Id. ¶ 1. The court held that evidence of the defendant’s

participation in a similar beating of a different victim at the same location three weeks earlier was

properly admitted to show that the earlier beating led to the charged beating. Id. ¶¶ 28-30. “[I]f the

prior crime is part of the ‘course of conduct’ leading up to the crime charged, then it constitutes

intrinsic evidence of the charged offense and its admissibility is not analyzed as ‘other crimes’

evidence ***.” Id. ¶ 25. In other words, there, the first beating provided an explanation for the

murder and was part of the “context” of the second beating. Id. ¶ 34.

¶ 99   Even if the videos were improperly admitted, considering the entirety of the record, any

error in their admission was harmless. As discussed, there was ample evidence from which the

trier of fact could have found that defendant’s use of his cell phone proximately caused Ashley’s

death and Martinez’s injuries in this case. This included the text-message conversation between

defendant and Daniels that was recovered from defendant’s cell phone during the Cellebrite

extraction process. The State also introduced expert testimony from Vanko that defendant’s pickup

truck was traveling at the speed of 63 to 66 miles per hour at the time of impact and that there was

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no evidence of preimpact braking by the truck. Accordingly, we cannot say that there is a

reasonable probability that, if the evidence had been excluded, the outcome would have been

different. See People v. Gharrett, 2016 IL App (4th) 140315, ¶ 83. Thus, any alleged error in the

admission of the videos was harmless. Considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable

to the prosecution, we conclude that a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements

of aggravated unlawful use of an electronic communication device beyond a reasonable doubt.

¶ 100                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 101 For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Kendall County.

¶ 102 Affirmed.

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2021 IL App (2d) 190271

                                  No. 2-19-0271

 Cite as:                 People v. Delhaye, 2021 IL App (2d) 190271

 Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kendall County, No. 17-CF-
                          204; the Hon. Robert P. Pilmer, Judge, presiding.

 Attorneys                James T. Malysiak, of Jenner & Block LLP, of Chicago, for
 for                      appellant.
 Appellant:

 Attorneys                Eric C. Weis, State’s Attorney, of Yorkville (Patrick Delfino,
 for                      Edward R. Psenicka, and Steven A. Rodgers, of State’s
 Appellee:                Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the
                          People.

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