Court Opinion

ID: 9914185
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-29 19:04:02.996695+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:10:28.189239
License: Public Domain

2023 IL App (1st) 191607-U

                                                                            SECOND DIVISION
                                                                             December 29, 2023

                                         No. 1-19-1607

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
______________________________________________________________________________

                                    IN THE
                        APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                           FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,            )     Appeal from the
                                                )     Circuit Court of
      Respondent-Appellee,                      )     Cook County.
                                                )
v.                                              )     Nos. 13 CR 5936
                                                )          13 CR 5937
                                                )
EVARISTO SANTA MARIA,                           )     Honorable
                                                )     Timothy Joseph Joyce,
      Petitioner-Appellant.                     )     Judge Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court.
       Presiding Justice Howse and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

                                            ORDER

¶1     Held:   Affirmed in part; reversed in part; remanded for resentencing. Evidence was
               sufficient to convict defendant of predatory criminal sexual assault against two
               victims. Trial court did not err in admitting propensity evidence, outcry evidence,
               or expert testimony; or in joining charges for trial. Failure to give IPI 11.66, and
               trial court comment about defendant’s absence from trial during jury selection,
               were harmless error. Prosecutors did not commit misconduct warranting new
               trial. Of two natural-life sentences imposed, one was improper, where conduct
               pre-dated enactment of statutory provision authorizing the sentence.

¶2     Defendant Evaristo Santa Maria was charged with predatory criminal sexual assault

(PCSA) and aggravated criminal sexual abuse (ACSA) against S.S. and S.F., two young female

relations of women with whom defendant, at different times, was sexually involved. He posted

bond and agreed to have the two cases, which were charged separately, joined for trial. As the
No. 1-19-1607

trial date approached, defendant absconded, ostensibly returning to his native Honduras. He was

later apprehended in Nicaragua, but not before he was convicted and sentenced in absentia.

¶3     Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. He argues that the trial court erred

in admitting propensity evidence, outcry evidence, and expert testimony; improperly joined the

charges for trial and remarked on his absence during jury selection; and failed to give a required

instruction on the jury’s consideration of the outcry evidence. He alleges “pervasive” misconduct

by the prosecutors throughout the trial. Lastly, he argues that the trial court erroneously imposed

a natural-life sentence for his PCSA conviction in the S.S. case. He does not challenge a second

natural-life sentence that was imposed for his PCSA conviction in the S.F. case.

¶4     We agree with some of defendant’s contentions of trial error, but we do not find any error

that warrants reversal of his convictions. The State concedes that the PCSA conviction in the S.S.

case was not eligible for a natural-life sentence. We thus vacate that sentence and remand the

S.S. case, 13 CR 5937, for resentencing. Defendant’s convictions, and his natural-life sentence in

the S.F. case, 13 CR 5936, are affirmed.

¶5                                      BACKGROUND

¶6                                         I. Overview

¶7     During the 1990s, defendant was in a romantic relationship and living in Chicago with

Rita L., who was S.S.’s grandmother. S.S. lived in the suburbs with her aunt but spent weekends

with her grandmother and defendant. In May 2000, S.S. told her father that defendant sexually

abused her. Among other investigative steps, S.S. met with a forensic interviewer to discuss the

alleged events, which took place between 1997 and 1999, when S.S was around 8 to 10 years

old. Defendant was arrested in August 2000 but was released without being charged.

¶8     Defendant soon returned to Honduras, where he became romantically involved with F.U.

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No. 1-19-1607

They had two children together; F.U. also had two children from a prior relationship, including a

young daughter named S.F. In the early 2000s, defendant moved back to Chicago and lived here

with F.U. and the kids.

¶9     In 2007, when S.F. was 9 years old, she ran crying into her older sister L.M.’s room and

said, in L.M.’s words, that defendant “was trying to touch her.” L.M., who was 14 years old, was

too scared to tell anyone about S.F.’s allegations at the time, though eventually, after a “long

time” had passed, she did tell her mother.

¶ 10   S.F.’s allegations remained within her immediate family circle until 2010, when she told

a friend at school about one instance of sexual abuse. By then, defendant had moved out of the

house and, as S.F. understood, had returned to Honduras. S.F.’s outcry at school prompted an

investigation. S.F. soon met with a forensic interviewer and reluctantly explained that defendant

sexually abused her multiple times between 2004 and 2007. The investigation was put on hold,

however, because defendant could not be found.

¶ 11   The police eventually found defendant and arrested him, in Chicago, in February 2013.

S.S. and S.F. were interviewed anew, and the State charged him, in two separate informations,

with PCSA and ACSA against S.S. and S.F. Defendant posted bond and surrendered his

Honduran passport. At his arraignment, he was admonished (as to both cases) that he could be

tried and sentenced in absentia if he failed to appear. Defendant, speaking through a Spanish

interpreter, acknowledged that he understood.

¶ 12    The State initially elected to proceed on the S.S. case but later switched its election to the

S.F. case. The State moved to admit S.F.’s outcry statements to L.M. in 2007; to the forensic

investigator, Lynn Aladeen, in her 2010 victim sensitive interview (VSI); and to Chicago Police

Detective Emily Rodriguez in 2013. See 725 ILCS 5/115-10 (West 2022). The trial court held an

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No. 1-19-1607

evidentiary hearing and granted the motion.

¶ 13    The State moved to admit proof of defendant’s alleged abuse of S.S. as other-crimes

evidence in the S.F. case. The trial court granted the motion and thus admitted the evidence for

propensity (and any other relevant) purposes. See 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2022).

¶ 14    After the other-crimes motion was granted, the State moved to join the charges in the two

cases for trial. Defense counsel did not object. To the contrary, counsel said, given the rulings on

the other-crimes and section 115-10 motions, joinder was now part of the “defense strategy;” it

also served “judicial economy.” Counsel discussed the “pros and cons” with defendant, who later

confirmed, on the record, that he agreed to the joinder and remained “confident” about his

defense at a joint trial.

¶ 15    With the cases now joined, the State moved to admit S.S.’s initial outcry to her father and

her ensuing statements in the VSI conducted by forensic interviewer Dr. Jill Schoeneman-Parker.

The trial court held an evidentiary hearing and granted the motion.

¶ 16    In April 2015, as the trial date approached, defendant failed to appear in court. Defense

counsel had been trying to find him for some time. About two months later, the State detailed its

own efforts to locate defendant at an evidentiary hearing. The trial court found that he willfully

absented himself from the proceedings and thus granted the State’s motion to try him in absentia.

¶ 17    The case proceeded to trial in September 2015. On the first morning, before jury selection

began, the State asked the court to “double check” its ruling on the other-crimes motion. Strictly

speaking, the court had ruled that the State could offer evidence of defendant’s conduct toward

S.S. as other-crimes (in particular, propensity) evidence on the S.F. charges. But the other-crimes

motion was resolved before the charges were joined. In light of the joinder, the State argued, it

should now be allowed to “argue propensity in both directions for both victims.” The trial court

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No. 1-19-1607

agreed, over a timeliness objection from the defense.

¶ 18    Since the prospective jurors could hardly fail to notice that defendant was not present for

his own trial, the court preemptively addressed the matter in its opening remarks to the venire.

The court explained that defendant was admonished about the possibility of a trial in absentia

and that the court previously “made a finding that [he] had willfully absented himself from trial

and that is why we are proceeding today in his absence.”

¶ 19    The parties treated defendant’s current whereabouts as a jury question, and a disputed one

at that. Throughout its case in chief, the State thus detailed, at some length, its efforts to locate

him. The defense presented evidence of its own. In our view, this evidence had at best marginal

relevance to the questions before the jury—whether defendant sexually assaulted or abused

either or both of the victims. And it does not bear directly on any other appellate issue. So we

will, for the most part, leave it aside and limit our summary to the pertinent evidence.

¶ 20                                 II. Evidence regarding S.S.

¶ 21    By the time of trial, S.S. was 26 years old. In her childhood, she often spent weekends

with her grandmother, where she got to know defendant, her grandmother’s partner for a time.

S.S. knew defendant as “Oscar.” She recounted two specific incidents of sexual abuse when she

was between the ages of 7 and 9.

¶ 22    The first incident took place in the living room in the house on Dickens Avenue in

Chicago, where defendant lived with S.S.’s grandmother. S.S., then around 7 years old, was

alone in the house with defendant, who asked her to sit on his lap while they watched TV. S.S.

agreed. As defendant bounced her on his lap, she “felt something poking me on my butt while I

was sitting down.” At the time, S.S. didn’t know what was poking her, but as an adult she now

understood that it was defendant’s erect penis. S.S. kept falling off, but defendant kept pulling

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No. 1-19-1607

her back up and onto his lap. Defendant did not expose his penis or remove his pants. As a child,

S.S. thought it was a “joke.” So she did not tell her grandmother, or anyone else. At least not yet.

¶ 23   The second incident took place in the spring or summer of 1998, when S.S. was 9 years

old, at a house on Kostner Avenue in Chicago that her grandmother and defendant had since

purchased together. S.S. had her own bedroom at the new house, and defendant, a mariachi, kept

his instruments in the closet. Late one night, defendant came home from a show, smelling of

alcohol and apparently drunk, and stumbled into the bedroom to put away his instruments.

Defendant pulled S.S. to the side of the bed, removed her panties, and put his penis between the

lips of her vagina and started “moving it around.” S.S. laid still and pretended to be asleep.

¶ 24   Afterwards, S.S. went to the bathroom. She found some “white sticky stuff” on herself

and cleaned it off. She didn’t recognize it at the time, but now as an adult she understood that it

was semen. As S.S. recalled, her grandmother was home (and asleep) when this happened, but

S.S. did not tell her, or anyone else, what happened, because she was too scared. After this

incident, however, S.S. did her best to avoid going to her grandmother’s house.

¶ 25   S.S. testified that defendant sexually abused her on other occasions between these two

incidents. But her recollections were “fairly vague” and she did not provide any details of the

alleged incidents. Nor did she tell anyone about them.

¶ 26   S.S.’s initial outcry came about two years after the bedroom incident, in May 2000. Her

father, Jamie S., had recently been released from prison and was trying to be present in S.S.’s

life. One day, while on a walk together, Jamie encouraged S.S. to talk openly about anything she

wished. This prompted S.S. to speak candidly, for the first time, about the sexual abuse that she

had endured. As Jamie testified, S.S. told him that defendant “put his private in her private.” The

family immediately called the police.

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No. 1-19-1607

¶ 27   According to Detective Alvarez-Pena, the lead investigator, Jamie reported that S.S. did

not want to pursue these allegations—she did not, as Jamie put it, want to “go to court.” (For his

own part, Jamie did not specifically remember saying this, but he agreed that he might have.)

Detective Alvarez-Pena also arranged for S.S. to have a VSI with Dr. Schoeneman-Parker.

¶ 28   Dr. Schoeneman-Parker testified that S.S. was, to say the least, “not cooperative” during

the VSI. In fact, she was downright “hostile” at times, displaying a “[g]uarded, angry, moody”

demeanor. Dr. Schoeneman-Parker went so far as to say that, despite the passage of time, she

still retained her impressions of the interview because S.S. appeared so memorably “hardened”

by her experiences. S.S.’s demeanor and apparent hostility toward the process made it difficult

for Dr. Schoeneman-Parker to establish rapport with S.S. in the usual way.

¶ 29   We will return to this point later, when we take up defendant’s challenge to the admission

of the outcry evidence. For now, suffice it to say that after all the usual approaches failed, Dr.

Schoeneman-Parker made one last-ditch effort to get S.S. talking. She said something to this

effect: “I know you don’t want to be here. I know you don’t want to talk with me. I know you

don’t want to answer these questions. The faster you answer these questions, the faster you are

out of here, and you don’t have to come back here again.”

¶ 30   And with that, S.S. opened up and starting talking “non-stop.” Dr. Schoeneman-Parker

could not remember all the details, and she gave conflicting answers as to whether she prompted

S.S. with any follow-up questions or whether S.S. delivered an uninterrupted account. In any

event, as she recalled, S.S. told her that defendant put his penis into her vagina, that she went to

the bathroom afterwards, and that one incident (possibly the same bedroom incident, but that is

not clear) took place in her grandmother’s bedroom. Dr. Schoeneman-Parker never testified that

S.S. disclosed the alleged incident in the living room. And she could not recall whether S.S. said

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No. 1-19-1607

anything about finding a “white sticky stuff” when she went to the bathroom.

¶ 31                                III. Evidence regarding S.F.

¶ 32   S.F. was 17 years old at the time of trial. She was born in Honduras and her father died

there when she was a baby. Her mother, F.U., became romantically involved with defendant,

who was effectively S.F.’s step-father and whom S.F. used to call “dad.” They came to Chicago

when S.S. was five; her older sister, L.M., eventually moved here from Honduras and lived with

them. S.F. testified that defendant sexually abused her in three ways when she was between the

ages of 6 and 9.

¶ 33   First, defendant groped S.F.’s breasts when she was 6 or 7 years old. There were two

such incidents, both at the family home, while F.U. was at work. One happened in the kitchen.

Defendant asked if he could touch S.F.’s breasts; she said no, but he did anyway. The other

incident happened in the dining room, but S.F. could not recall any further details. Nor did she

tell anyone about either of these incidents.

¶ 34   Second, defendant touched his penis to S.F.’s buttocks. S.F. could not recall exactly when

this happened, but she was somewhere between the ages of 6 and 9. Defendant was in his bed,

laying on his back. He sat S.F. on top of him, so that she faced him and straddled him with her

legs. He put his hands on S.F.’s hips and bounced her up and down, rubbing his penis against her

buttocks. They were both clothed. Defendant did not say anything to her afterwards. S.F. said

that this type of abuse happened more than once.

¶ 35   Third, defendant touched S.F.’s vagina when she was 8 years old. One night, S.F. fell

asleep in her daytime clothes while watching T.V. in the living room. Her mother and siblings

were home and (except for L.M.) asleep. Around midnight, S.F. awoke to find defendant laying

next to her on the floor and smelling of alcohol. Defendant touched S.F., put his hand up her jean

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No. 1-19-1607

skirt and inside her underwear, and rubbed the lips of her vagina. Defendant told S.F. to “stay

quiet and not say anything.” He kept his clothes on and went to his bedroom afterwards.

¶ 36   Meanwhile, L.M., who was 14 at the time, was doing her homework in the bedroom she

shared with S.F. She heard S.F. crying in the living room. S.F. came running into the bedroom,

still crying and shaking. S.F. said that defendant was “on top of her,” “trying to touch her,” and

“trying to pull [her] skirt up.” But S.F. did not say that defendant actually touched her vagina.

¶ 37   L.M. asked if S.F. was sure about all this, and S.F. said she was. They never talked about

that night again. And they were both too scared to tell anyone else about it at the time.

¶ 38   L.M. did eventually tell F.U. about the outcry, but not before a “long time” had passed.

L.M. could not recall exactly when she told F.U., but she testified that it was before defendant

moved out of the house, and apparently returned to Honduras, sometime in 2007 or 2008. In fact,

L.M. testified that he left precisely because these allegations had been aired.

¶ 39   For her own part, S.F. testified that she was scared to speak up because defendant had

“hit her” at least once before. (This in addition to the obvious reasons why any child would be

frightened in these circumstances, physical violence aside.) In particular, defendant once struck

S.F. in the back with a belt, for reasons that S.F. could not discern. Beyond that, S.F. could not

provide any details of this incident.

¶ 40   S.F. did not tell anyone (other than her sister) about the abuse until 2010, when she was

12 years old. By then, defendant was long out of the house. S.F., who was still “traumatized,”

told a friend at school. Teachers and school administrators got wind of her outcry and informed

the police. In November 2010, Detective Rodriguez arranged for S.F. to have a VSI with forensic

interviewer Lynn Aladeen and a physical examination with Dr. Marjorie Fujara.

¶ 41   Aladeen testified to the details of the forensic interview. Her testimony was based on the

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No. 1-19-1607

interview notes taken by Detective Midlowski, filling in for Detective Rodriguez, who was either

off work or in court on the day of the interview. Aladeen acknowledged that she no longer had

an independent recollection of the interview. In sum, according to the interview notes, S.F. said

that the father of her little sister (namely, defendant) touched her breasts, buttocks, and vagina at

various times. S.F. could not remember the first time any such abuse took place, but the last time

was when she was 9 years old. S.F. did speak more specifically about the incident in the living

room: when she was 6 or 7, she woke up to find defendant touching her vagina with his finger.

He was drunk and told S.F. not to tell anyone. S.F. said that she told her older sister about this

incident when she was 8; S.F. never told Aladeen that she ran into the bedroom immediately

afterwards and told L.M. what happened.

¶ 42   Dr. Marjorie Fujara testified as an expert in child-abuse pediatrics, and child sexual abuse

in particular. S.F.’s physical exam was normal. But Dr. Fujara was not at all surprised: 95% of

sexually abused children have normal physical exams, even when the abuse is confirmed by

objective evidence like a video, and even when there was an immediate outcry, defined as one

made within 72 hours of the alleged abuse. (Pediatricians use this cutoff because it determines

whether or not an evidence kit should be collected.) And here, there was a years-long delay.

¶ 43   During the exam, S.F. pointed to her chest and crotch and told Dr. Fujara that her step-

father touched her in these places. Dr. Fujara did not ask her to elaborate. S.F. did not tell the

doctor that defendant touched her buttocks with her penis, struck her with a belt, or physically

abused her mother.

¶ 44   Dr. Fujara opined that while children under the age of 10 can reliably report being

harmed, the cognitive development needed to accurately place those events in time generally

does not begin to emerge before age 12. The doctor explained that “grooming” is a process in

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No. 1-19-1607

which an abuser builds trust with a child over time, by conferring affection and attention on the

child that initially seems appropriate but escalates over time into inappropriate conduct. Lastly,

over defense objection, Dr. Fujara further opined that children make delayed outcries in the

“[v]ast majority” of cases, particularly when the abuser is someone they know, and went on to

explain various reasons why this is believed to be the case.

¶ 45   L.M. also participated in the 2010 investigation. She spoke to a DCFS case worker about

S.F.’s outcry to her in 2007. By the time of trial, L.M. could not remember what she told the case

worker, but she insisted that she said something about S.F. claiming to have been touched. In its

own case, the defense presented stipulated testimony from the case worker, Angely Diaz, that

L.M. did not remember what S.F. had said to her years earlier.

¶ 46   Later, in 2012, L.M. saw defendant at a factory where she worked. Despite the pending

investigation, she did not call the police; at the age of 17 or 18, she was still young and scared

and did not know what to do.

¶ 47   Detective Rodriguez interviewed S.F., L.M., and F.U. after defendant was arrested in

2013. She also interviewed S.S. after learning that there was a pending investigation into her own

allegations against defendant. But at trial, the State did not offer any of the various statements

that these witnesses made to Detective Rodriguez, even though the trial court had granted a pre-

trial motion admitting at least some of them.

¶ 48   Apart from the Diaz stipulation, the only other defense witness was Edward Mielke,

defendant’s boss at a Chicago printing company, who testified that defendant took vacation time

in February 2015 and never returned to work.

¶ 49                      IV. Verdicts, post-trial motions and sentencing

¶ 50   The jury found defendant guilty on two counts of PCSA (penile penetration of S.S., and

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digital penetration of S.F.) and three counts of ACSA (groping S.F.’s breasts, and rubbing his

penis against the buttocks of S.S. and S.F.) The trial court merged the three ACSA convictions

into the two PCSA convictions and imposed life sentences, in absentia, on each PCSA count. As

the trial court construed the applicable statute, these life sentences were both mandatory.

¶ 51    The FBI apprehended defendant in Guatemala in January 2019. Counsel filed a second

motion for new trial, this time arguing that defendant should not have been tried in absentia

because he did not willfully absent himself to avoid the proceedings; instead, he made a difficult

decision to skip his trial and return home to care for his ill mother in Honduras. The trial judge

had since retired; the case was reassigned, and the new judge denied the motion.

¶ 52                                        ANALYSIS

¶ 53                               I. Sufficiency of the evidence

¶ 54   Defendant argues that the evidence was not sufficient to convict him beyond a reasonable

doubt of any offense, be it PCSA or ACSA, against either S.S. or S.F.

¶ 55   As a preliminary matter, the trial court merged the ACSA convictions into the PCSA

convictions and sentenced defendant only on the two convictions for the latter offense. Absent

certain exceptions that are not relevant here, our sufficiency review is limited to the convictions

on which defendant was sentenced and does not encompass any convictions that were merged.

People v. Fort, 2019 IL App (1st) 170644, ¶ 37 (appellate court “cannot consider” sufficiency

challenge to merged conviction); People v. Jones, 2019 IL App (1st) 170478, ¶¶ 23-24 (same);

see People v. Relerford, 2017 IL 121094, ¶¶ 71-76 (“[T]he appellate court lacked jurisdiction to

decide the validity of defendant’s unsentenced convictions.”); People v. Caballero, 102 Ill. 2d

23, 51 (1984) (“The final judgment in a criminal case is the sentence, and, in the absence of the

imposition of a sentence, an appeal cannot be entertained.”).

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¶ 56   If we were to reverse the PCSA counts, thus reinstating the merged ACSA counts, the

sufficiency of the evidence on the latter charges would properly be at issue. But for the reasons

that follow, we affirm defendant’s PCSA convictions against S.S. and S.F. Thus, we limit our

discussion to those two offenses. (And for what it’s worth, what we say below would largely

dispose of defendant’s challenges to his ACSA convictions, anyway, since those challenges are

based, by and large, on the same credibility arguments that we consider and reject.)

¶ 57   A conviction will not be reversed on sufficiency grounds unless the evidence was so

“unreasonable, improbable, or unsatisfactory” that, viewed in the light most favorable to the

State, no rational trier of fact could accept it as proof beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Ross,

229 Ill. 2d 255, 272 (2008); see Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (1979). The trier of fact’s

findings regarding the credibility of witnesses, the inferences to be drawn from the evidence, and

the appropriate resolution of conflicts in the evidence, are not conclusive, but they are all entitled

to significant deference. Ross, 229 Ill. 2d at 272.

¶ 58   The offense of PCSA requires proof of an act of sexual penetration by a person 17 years

or older (as defendant was) against a victim who is under 13 years of age (as S.S. and S.F. both

were). 720 ILCS 5/12-14.1(1), renumbered as 720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) by P.A. 96-1551 (eff.

July 1, 2011). Sexual penetration includes “any contact, however slight, between the sex organ

*** of one person and *** the sex organ *** of another person” (as relevant to S.S.); and “any

intrusion, however slight, of any part of the body of one person ***into the sex organ *** of

another person” (as relevant to S.F.). 720 ILCS 5/11-0.1.

¶ 59   S.S. testified that, in the spring or summer of 1998, defendant came into her room, drunk

and late at night, to put away his mariachi instrument, which he kept in her bedroom closet. S.S.

had been asleep. Defendant moved her to the side of bed and pulled down her panties. He put his

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penis between the lips of S.S.’s vagina, touching her “hole” and “moving [his penis] around.”

Upon going to the bathroom afterwards, S.S. found what she now knew to be semen on herself.

¶ 60   S.F. testified that when she was around 8 years old, she fell asleep while watching TV in

the living room. She awoke to find defendant, smelling of alcohol, lying next to her. He put his

hand up her skirt, inside her underwear, and “rubb[ed] the lips of [her] vagina.”

¶ 61   This testimony establishes the essential elements of the PCSA offenses against S.S. and

S.F. And the “testimony of a single witness, if it is positive and the witness credible, is sufficient

to convict.” People v. Smith, 185 Ill. 2d 532, 541 (1999). So this testimony alone, to say nothing

of the propensity and outcry evidence, is enough to sustain defendant’s convictions—provided,

of course, that a rational trier of fact, viewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to

the State, could find the victims credible.

¶ 62   Defendant’s principal sufficiency challenge thus comprises a series of impeachment

arguments meant to show that the victims’ testimony was “not credible enough” on its own—that

is, without corroboration from physical evidence or further eyewitnesses—to provide proof

beyond a reasonable doubt. He argues, in sum, that their various accounts of the sexual assaults

suffered from too many vagaries, omissions, and inconsistencies to be worthy of belief.

¶ 63    We will survey some of defendant’s specific points in a moment. But first, to put the

trier of fact’s credibility assessments in their full context, we begin with a topic that defendant is

(understandably) keen to avoid in his sufficiency challenge: the propensity evidence.

¶ 64   Various sex crimes, including those charged here, are among the rare exceptions to the

general rule that other-crimes (or bad acts) evidence is not admissible to show that the defendant

had a propensity to commit the charged offense(s). 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2022). The trial

court thus allowed defendant’s jury to consider evidence of his conduct toward one victim as

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evidence of his propensity to commit similar conduct against the other victim. The inference, to

be clear, runs in both directions. So the jury did not have to consider each victim’s credibility as

an entirely independent question. Rather, it could consider the fact that two complete strangers

separately accused defendant of conduct that was strikingly similar in key respects.

¶ 65   To elaborate: S.S. and S.F. independently accused defendant of sexually abusing and

assaulting them when they were between the ages of 6 and 9. They were both female relations of

women with whom defendant was romantically involved, and thus they both lived in defendant’s

home, either full time or at least on weekends. They both alleged a pattern of conduct that

escalated over time from abuse to assault. In each case, the conduct began, quite specifically,

with defendant placing the child on his lap, bouncing her up and down, and, in the opening

brief’s own words, “grinding his penis on her buttocks.” And in each case, it culminated with the

child awakening to find a drunk defendant next to her and (not to put too fine a point on it for the

moment) touching her labia with either his fingers or his penis.

¶ 66   This is strong evidence that defendant has a “propensity,” as we say, to engage in such

conduct. Jurors probably don’t think in terms of “propensity inferences,” but they surely grasp

the underlying point: when two unrelated victims separately come forward with evidence of

notably similar conduct, it is that much more likely that the allegations are essentially true and

hence that the victims are fundamentally credible.

¶ 67   Defendant’s efforts to impeach S.S. and S.F. must be understood against the backdrop of

these propensity inferences. Indeed, because these inferences were proper, their probative value

registers not as unfair prejudice to the defense (as it does in the usual case, when such inferences

are improper) but rather as strong support for the State’s case.

¶ 68   And it bears emphasis that a victim’s account “need not be unimpeached, uncontradicted,

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crystal clear, or perfect in order to sustain a conviction for sexual abuse” or assault. People v.

Garcia, 2012 IL App (1st) 103590, ¶ 84. Some “minor inconsistencies or discrepancies” in a

victim’s testimony are perhaps to be expected, given the nature of the events at issue, and do not

automatically “detract from the reasonableness of her story as a whole.” Id. Even more so when

the victims, like S.S. and S.F., were young children. See People v. Bishop, 218 Ill. 2d 232, 247

(2006); People v. Guerrero, 356 Ill. App. 3d 22, 28 (2005).

¶ 69                  A. Credibility challenges regarding the S.S. conviction

¶ 70   With all of that said, we begin with S.S. Some of defendant’s arguments are simply non-

starters. Like this one: S.S. did not remember “what time she went to sleep” on the night of the

bedroom assault or “whether she had been under the covers” before defendant assaulted her.

¶ 71   The jury could decide for itself what, if any, weight to give to the two-year delay before

S.S.’s initial outcry to her father. But as we have said before, when a victim, especially a child

victim, is sexually abused by a family member, the lack of an immediate outcry is neither

surprising nor a meaningful hit to the victim’s overall credibility. E.g., People v. Duplessis, 248

Ill. App. 3d 195, 199-200 (1993) (noting that fear, shame, guilt, or embarrassment may all be

factors here). And we would note that S.S. was scared of her abuser, as children routinely are,

and so was too scared to say anything to anyone until defendant had left the home, the family,

and indeed, the country.

¶ 72   In that initial outcry, defendant says, S.S. only told her father about the bedroom assault,

when defendant “put [his] private in [her] private,” and she did not mention the prior incidents of

being bounced in defendant’s lap. The point pertains most directly to the conduct underlying the

ACSA charge, not the PCSA charge at issue here, but we will grant defendant that it could bear,

to some extent, on S.S.’s credibility in general. Even still, the point is a weak one at best. Recall

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that S.S. was a sexually abused, emotionally “hardened” child who was opening up about these

traumatic experiences for the very first time, and to a father who had only recently come into her

life. A rational person need not—and frankly should not—dismiss her as unworthy of belief just

because she inched her way into this fraught topic.

¶ 73   The rest of defendant’s arguments focus on S.S.’s statements to Dr. Schoeneman-Parker

during the VSI and the various ways, in defendant’s view, in which they were inconsistent with

S.S.’s trial testimony and thus undermine her credibility. In particular, he says, S.S. never told

Dr. Schoeneman-Parker about the lap-bouncing incident; but she did say—contrary to her trial

testimony—that the bedroom assault took place in her grandmother’s bedroom (instead of her

bedroom at her grandmother’s house) and that defendant also inserted his fingers (in addition to

his penis) into her vagina.

¶ 74   The short answer is that these points of impeachment, if actually established, would be

matters for the jury to weigh for itself, but none of them, or even all of them together, would

compel a rational juror to reject S.S.’s testimony on the essential point: that defendant put his

penis between the lips of her vagina during the bedroom assault. Notably, S.S. did not deny,

contradict, or even fail to mention this essential point in any of the statements at issue.

¶ 75   The longer answer is that none of these points of impeachment were clearly established in

the first place. Defendant is playing fast and loose with the record.

¶ 76   For one, Dr. Schoenman-Parker never testified that S.S. didn’t mention the lap-bouncing

incident. Rather, she never affirmatively testified that S.S. mentioned it. But then again, she was

never asked, either on direct or cross-examination. It is an arguable inference, from the absence

of any testimony on this topic, that S.S. did not mention this incident during the VSI. But it is by

no means a fact established by the record. And on sufficiency review, defendant is not entitled to

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have us read the record in the light most favorable to him.

¶ 77   The record does not establish that S.S. told Dr. Schoenman-Parker that the bedroom

assault at issue here took place in her grandmother’s bedroom. Rather, Dr. Schoenman-Parker

agreed on cross-examination that “one of the incidents,” according to S.S., took place in her

grandmother’s bedroom. The clear, if unspoken, implication of counsel’s question was that there

were incidents of assault or abuse besides the bedroom assault on which the PCSA conviction is

based. And for whatever reason, Dr. Schoeneman-Parker was never asked about those other

incidents at trial. (We acknowledge that the jury was not privy to the following information, but

for the sake of context and background: at the pre-trial hearing, Dr. Schoeneman-Parker had

testified that S.S. spoke of three separate incidents, the bedroom assault being one of them.)

¶ 78   Counsel asked Dr. Schoeneman-Parker if S.S. said that defendant put his fingers into her

vagina, and she said yes. But counsel did not make clear which incident this question referred to.

Defendant simply asserts on appeal that it was the bedroom assault for which he was convicted,

but the record does not establish that. (Again, by way of background: at the pre-trial hearing, it

was clear that Dr. Schoeneman-Parker could not pin down which incident allegedly involved

digital penetration. That lack of clarity may explain why defendant was not charged with such

conduct. And that, in turn, would explain why S.S. did not testify to any such conduct at trial.)

¶ 79   Lastly, in a more general vein, defendant argues that “procedural irregularities” in the

VSI rendered all of S.S.’s statements to Dr. Schoeneman-Parker “unreliable.” But S.S. had

already alleged the essential element of the bedroom assault (in less precise, but clear enough,

terms) in her initial outcry to her father. So defendant cannot plausibly argue that it was an

untrustworthy artifact of an irregular and “highly suggestive” interview process.

¶ 80    We can leave the matter at that for now and largely defer our discussion of the VSI

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methods until we take up defendant’s challenge to the pre-trial ruling admitting this evidence.

¶ 81                  B. Credibility challenges regarding the S.F. conviction

¶ 82   Here, too, we can quickly dispose of various non-starters, points defendant makes about

the living-room assault, during which defendant inserted his fingers into S.F.’s vagina: S.F. did

not remember exactly when it happened, except that she was about 8 years old (and thus it was

long ago). She wasn’t sure how long it lasted. When she ran to her bedroom immediately

afterwards, crying and shaking with fright, she neglected to give her sister a full accounting of

other incidents of sexual abuse that she would later disclose. L.M., who was 14, did not

immediately report S.F.’s outcry and was hazy on the timing of when she eventually did. S.F.

and L.M. may or may not have talked about the incident again. Aladeen, the forensic interviewer,

was an unreliable witness because she lacked independent recollections of the interview, nearly 5

years later, and thus relied on interview notes. Arguments like these are just not the stuff of a

viable sufficiency challenge. They merit no further discussion.

¶ 83   Defendant argues that S.F.’s trial testimony was inconsistent with her outcry to L.M. in

any number of ways. Granted, the accounts differed on some details, such as whether the assault

commenced on the living-room floor or couch, and whether defendant was directly on top of

S.F., or on his side, right next to her, with his head propped up. But these are the kinds of “minor

inconsistencies or discrepancies” that “do not detract from the reasonableness of her story as a

whole.” Garcia, 2012 IL App (1st) 103590, ¶ 84. And it may be true that S.F. did not tell L.M.

what defendant said—namely, don’t tell anyone about this—but that incidental omission hardly

undermines her account of what he did.

¶ 84   The same could be said of various discrepancies between S.F.’s trial testimony and her

VSI, including her age at the time of the offense, as well as when, and how many times, S.F. told

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L.M. about the assault. But we have belabored enough attempted impeachments of this general

kind. So we conclude with one last argument that at least speaks to the proof of the charged

conduct: L.M. testified that defendant rubbed the lips of her vagina, but as L.M. recalled, S.F.

never told her that defendant actually touched her; rather, S.F. said that he “was trying to touch

her.” If that is literally what happened, defendant did not consummate the offense for which he

was convicted.

¶ 85   But that argument takes the evidence in the light most favorable to defendant. In the light

most favorable to the State, the evidence is that defendant did touch S.F.’s vagina, as she testified

at trial and told Aladeen during the VSI.

¶ 86   And a reasonable trier of fact could credit S.F.’s trial testimony and the VSI evidence,

L.M.’s account of the outcry notwithstanding. After all, defendant’s argument stakes its claim on

the precise turn of phrase purportedly used by a crying, terrified, roughly 8-year-old child

immediately after a traumatic experience—not to mention the ability of another child, hearing

startling revelations about the predatory conduct of an adult in the home, to recall that phrase

with pinpoint accuracy some years later. (And we might add that neither S.F. nor L.M. was a

native English speaker, both having been born and spent the better part of their lives, before the

night in question, in Honduras.)

¶ 87   All told, defendant’s attacks on the victims’ credibility suffer the usual fate of such

arguments on appeal. The victims’ testimony, along with the evidence of their outcries and the

propensity inferences the jury was (correctly) permitted to draw, were more than sufficient to

convict defendant of PCSA against both S.S. and S.F.

¶ 88                          C. Evidence of penetration against S.F.

¶ 89   To convict defendant of PCSA, the State had to prove an act of “penetration” against

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S.F., and this element, as alleged here, required proof of an “intrusion, however slight,” of

defendant’s finger (or hand) “into [S.F.’s] sex organ.” 720 ILCS 5/11-0.1.

¶ 90   (The legislature has since amended the PCSA statute so that any “act of contact” with

S.F.’s sex organ, “however slight,” would suffice for a victim of her age; penetration is no longer

required. 720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a), amended by P.A. 98-370, eff. Jan. 1, 2014. But defendant’s

conduct predates this amendment, so proof of penetration, as defined above, was required.)

¶ 91   Defendant argues that the proof of penetration was insufficient. For one, he says, S.F.’s

trial testimony did not establish penetration, because she merely testified that he “rubb[ed] the

lips of [her] vagina.” During her VSI, in contrast, S.F. reportedly told Aladeen that defendant

“touch[ed] the inside of her vagina with his finger.” Defendant concedes that Aladeen’s

testimony, taken at face value, proves an act of penetration. But the significant disparity between

the two accounts, he says, renders the evidence as a whole too shaky and uncertain to add up to

proof of penetration beyond a reasonable doubt.

¶ 92   With apologies for the anatomical lesson, the details here are important. The female “sex

organ” includes (among other anatomical structures not relevant here) “the vagina as well as the

labia majora and minora, the outer and inner folds of skin of the external genital organs,” or,

simply put, the outer and inner vaginal lips. People v. Gonzalez, 2019 IL App (1st) 152760, ¶ 44;

People v. Hebel, 174 Ill. App. 3d 1, 31-32 (1988).

¶ 93   Because the vagina is an internal structure, touching the vagina, in the proper sense of the

term, necessarily entails penetration. See Hebel, 174 Ill. App. 3d at 31-32. The inner vaginal lips,

or labia minora, are also internal, and thus “[e]vidence that [the] defendant contacted this surface

is conclusive evidence of penetration,” even if it falls short of vaginal penetration. Id.

¶ 94   Evidence that the defendant touched the victim’s outer vaginal lips, or labia majora, may

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or may not prove penetration. If the evidence shows that the defendant touched “the inner surface

of the labium majora”—if, for example, he places his finger(s) between them—then at least

“slight penetration” necessarily occurred. Id. But proof that he touched only the outer surface of

the labia majora is not, on its own, proof of penetration, as opposed to mere “contact” with the

outermost surface of the female “sex organ” as a whole. See People v. Maggette, 195 Ill. 2d 336,

347, 352 (2001) (“caressing” or “rubbing” victim in “vagina area” with hand is not penetration).

¶ 95   So defendant is right about this much: S.F.’s trial testimony, read in isolation, does not

establish penetration. She did not specify whether defendant rubbed her inner or outer vaginal

lips, and if the latter, whether it was the inner or outer surface. Taken at face value, Aladeen’s

testimony about the VSI unequivocally establishes an act of penetration, but only by creating a

sharp conflict—or what seems like a sharp conflict—with S.F.’s own testimony.

¶ 96    If the accounts given by an adult were conflicted like this, we might question whether

the evidence proved penetration beyond a reasonable doubt. But S.F. was a child, all of 12 years

old, at the time of her VSI. And Dr. Fujara explained that children typically do not perceive and

describe events like these in the same way as adults. In particular, when a child says that “the

finger or penis was inside of them,” this often “doesn’t meet the adult’s perception of what inside

means;” instead, “inside of them often means just between their labia.”

¶ 97   As we noted above, a finger between the labia, including the outer labia, entails at least

“slight penetration.” Hebel, 174 Ill. App. 3d at 31. And more to defendant’s point, Dr. Fujara’s

testimony largely reconciles the apparent disparity between the VSI evidence and S.F.’s trial

testimony. To be sure, S.F. may not have described the assault with anatomical precision on

either occasion. But in light of Dr. Fujara’s testimony, and thus in the light most favorable to the

State, there is no disparity or conflict in her accounts that renders the evidence too conflicted and

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uncertain to support defendant’s conviction beyond a reasonable doubt.

¶ 98                              II. Admission of outcry evidence

¶ 99    Defendant argues that the trial court erred in admitting S.S.’s and S.F.’s various outcry

statements because the State failed to show that they were reliable. Defendant concedes that the

issue was forfeited below; he thus contends that the trial court committed first-prong plain error

and, alternatively, that his trial counsel was ineffective.

¶ 100 Section 115-10 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides for the admission of certain

out-of-court statements made by children under the age of 13 who are victims of sex offenses.

725 ILCS 5/115-10(a)(1)-(2) (West 2022). An outcry statement can be admitted as a hearsay

exception only if the “time, content, and circumstances of the statement provide sufficient

safeguards of reliability.” Id. § 115-10(b)(1). This determination is based on the totality of the

circumstances, and the burden of establishing reliability lies with the State. People v. Stechly,

225 Ill. 2d 246, 313 (2007); People v. Zwart, 151 Ill. 2d 37, 43 (1992). We review the trial

court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion, limiting our review to the record as it stood at the time

of the section 115-10 hearing. People v. Cookson, 215 Ill. 2d 194, 204-05 (2005).

¶ 101 At issue are four statements in particular: each victim’s initial outcry and VSI. A fifth

statement challenged by defendant—S.F.’s statement to Detective Rodriguez—requires no

discussion. As defendant acknowledges (in a footnote), the State did not use this statement at

trial; thus, any error in the pre-trial ruling is necessarily harmless.

¶ 102   In most (though not all) respects, the trial testimony regarding the four outcry statements

mirrored the testimony at the pre-trial hearing. And defendant’s arguments that these statements

were not sufficiently reliable to be admitted under section 115-10 largely replay his arguments

(in the context of his sufficiency challenge) that the trial testimony was unworthy of belief by the

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jury. The governing legal standard is different, but the analysis, in essentials, is the same: these

statements were reliable enough to put in front of the jury for the same sorts of reasons that the

jury was ultimately entitled to believe them. Many of defendant’s arguments thus fail for the

reasons we have already discussed. So rather than repeat our analysis point by point, we will

limit our discussion to points that are newly raised or that bear further emphasis in this context.

¶ 103                                A. S.S.’s outcry statements

¶ 104 We begin with S.S.’s initial outcry to her father. As we have recognized time and again, a

child’s sense of fear, shame, guilt, embarrassment, or revulsion will often make it difficult, if not

impossible, for the child to spontaneously discuss a traumatic experience involving sexual abuse

or assault. A child’s initial outcry—as Dr. Fujara also testified—is thus frequently delayed. In

due course, the trier of fact may decide for itself how much weight an outcry statement deserves

in light of any delay and its surrounding circumstances, but the sheer fact of a delay—here, of

roughly two years—does not render a young child’s initial outcry unreliable and thus

inadmissible under section 115-10. Zwart, 151 Ill. 2d at 46; People v. Cookson, 335 Ill. App. 3d

786, 792 (2002); People v. Booker, 224 Ill. App. 3d 542, 554 (1992) (“Promptness in reporting

the abuse is not an element of section 115-10.”).

¶ 105 Similar forces are no doubt at work when a child, like S.S., at first tiptoes her way into a

topic like this. So the fact that she later conveyed details about defendant’s conduct in her VSI

that she did not disclose to her father does not render either statement unreliable. And whatever

details were admittedly lacking when S.S. first spoke out to her father, her statement was not too

“vague” to be reliable. S.S. said that defendant “put his private in her private.” Hesitant, guarded,

perhaps a bit bashful, yes; but vague, no. The nature of the accusation is perfectly clear. And it

was consistently repeated, with some elaboration, in S.S.’s later statements.

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¶ 106 S.S.’s father testified by way of a brief stipulation at the pre-trial hearing. The stipulation,

as defendant says, did not establish what he did in response to his daughter’s outcry. But this

point merits little if any weight in the trial court’s reliability determination.

¶ 107 That brings us to S.S.’s VSI with Dr. Schoeneman-Parker. As we noted above, S.S. spoke

of three separate incidents. In one of them, she said, defendant inserted his penis into her vagina,

just as she initially disclosed to her father. That was the conduct for which defendant was

charged and convicted. The details of the other alleged conduct, as revealed during the VSI, were

admittedly unclear at times. For example, Dr. Schoeneman-Parker could not sort out when and

where defendant allegedly inserted his finger into S.S.’s vagina. But the State did not charge

defendant with this other alleged conduct and therefore did not use the VSI statements pertaining

to it at trial. For this reason alone, any error in the admission of these statements is harmless. In

other words, the only VSI statements presented at trial pertained to the charged assault. And we

have already said enough about the alleged omissions and inconsistencies in S.S.’s statements

about this conduct.

¶ 108 As a general matter, defendant says, the VSI statements “were the product of suggestive

tactics.” S.S. was uncooperative, at times hostile, and evidently “hardened” by her experiences. It

was clear to Dr. Schoeneman-Parker that she did not want to be there. After the usual methods of

building rapport failed, Dr. Schoeneman-Parker, in a last-ditch effort, offered up a deal: the faster

S.S. answered questions, the faster she could leave. Dr. Schoeneman-Parker freely admitted that

the method was unorthodox.

¶ 109 This method induced an otherwise reticent child to speak. But there is no evidence that it

suggested any content of what she said. To the contrary, Dr. Schoeneman-Parker testified that in

response to the deal she offered, S.S. rapidly “spewed out information,” while Dr. Schoeneman-

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Parker largely “stay[ed] out of the way and let her say what she wanted to say.”

¶ 110 The most accurate record of a VSI is, of course, a video of the interview. Unfortunately,

as Dr. Schoeneman-Parker testified, that was not the usual practice at the time, and the lack of a

video does not mean that her testimony fails section 115-10’s threshold reliability requirement.

¶ 111 It has long been a common practice for forensic interviewers to rely on interview notes

when testifying, as Dr. Schoeneman-Parker did here. And those notes are commonly taken by a

police officer, observing the interview from behind one-way glass. The obvious point is to allow

the interviewer to fully engage with the child. (No small task here.) That doesn’t make the notes

unreliable. Nor does it impugn the testimony of the forensic interviewer who uses them to refresh

her recollection. The same point applies to Aladeen’s testimony regarding S.F.’s VSI.

¶ 112 True, the details of the VSI statements are in some ways “inconsistent with” the State’s

allegations in its section 115-10 motion. But a motion is not evidence—or, in appellate counsel’s

coy phrase, “other information in the record.” A motion is a pleading. If its allegations conflict

with the evidence, the motion might take a hit, but the evidence is not deemed unreliable on

account of the conflict. We mention this frivolous argument if only because defendant advances

it four times over, in the context of each victim’s VSI, S.F.’s initial outcry, and S.F.’s statements

to Detective Rodriguez (which were not used at trial). We will say nothing more about it.

¶ 113 Defendant was arrested after the VSI but released without being charged; thus, he says,

the “inference to be drawn” is that the police and prosecutors had doubts about the reliability of

S.S.’s outcries. For all sorts of reasons, charging decisions are not always as simple or immediate

as this blunt argument demands. And not to belabor the obvious, but defendant was charged in

due course; what inference was to be drawn from that decision? But even more to the point, the

trial court’s role is not to draw inferences from the judgments that law enforcement (purportedly)

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made at one or another point in time; the trial court’s role is to make up its own mind about the

reliability of the evidence presented at the hearing.

¶ 114 Defendant’s remaining arguments have been considered. None merit explicit discussion.

S.S.’s initial outcry and VSI statements were properly admitted.

¶ 115                               B. S.F.’s outcry statements

¶ 116 S.F.’s initial outcry to her sister, L.M., was allegedly unreliable for two reasons (beyond

those we have already discussed). First, defendant argues, “the picture L.M. painted of the family

home” on the night of the assault calls her own testimony at the pre-trial hearing into question.

As L.M. recalled, S.F. said that she was on the living-room couch when defendant climbed on

top of her, and she only got away when defendant rolled off the couch and fell to the floor. (With

a thud, defendant apparently presumes.) L.M. then heard the front door slam shut as defendant

left the house. S.F. ran into their shared bedroom, crying hysterically, and passing their mother’s

room along the way. The other two siblings were home, too. Yet L.M. was the only one who

heard anything. And that, defendant says, is unbelievable.

¶ 117 We don’t agree. L.M. testified that it was past midnight, and she was only awake at this

hour because she had homework to finish. As far as she knew, their mother was asleep in her

bedroom with their younger sibling. She did not specifically testify about their older sibling’s

activities or whereabouts in the house, but given the late hour and L.M.’s testimony generally, it

is a fair inference that L.M. was the only family member still awake. So it is not hard to believe

that she was the only one who heard any of the assault or outcry.

¶ 118   Second, L.M. waited “a lot of months” to report S.F.’s allegations because she “wanted

to be sure” that they were true. And she repeatedly asked S.F. if they were true. Thus, defendant

says, L.M. must have doubted that they were. At least initially.

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¶ 119 It is clear enough that L.M. initially found her sister’s allegations hard to take. But that is

not to say—and indeed L.M. never said—that she thought S.F. was either dishonest or somehow

wildly mistaken. L.M.’s hesitation may reflect the shocking nature of the allegations as much as

anything; surely no 14-year-old girl is eager to believe that the adult male in the house behaves

like this. And in due course, L.M. did disclose the outcry to their mother. If she had any genuine

doubts at the start, it would appear that she ultimately resolved them.

¶ 120 Defendant’s argument here replays a now-familiar theme: someone learned of a victim’s

allegations but hesitated, for a time, before taking action. That hesitation can only be ascribed to

skepticism about the veracity of the claims. The trial court should have found that (purported,

initial) skepticism compelling. For the reasons we have already given, we reject that argument.

¶ 121 At her VSI, S.F. primarily spoke about the living-room assault; this was the only incident,

according to Aladeen, that she described in any detail. But S.F. also revealed, for the first time,

that defendant groped her breasts and buttocks on other occasions. Defendant argues that none of

these VSI statements were reliable enough to be admissible. His arguments are variations on

another familiar theme: S.F. either didn’t tell L.M. what she later told Aladeen, or she told L.M.

something a bit different. We have been over many of these points already, and many of the new

ones are frankly too minor to warrant extended discussion. (What’s more, the groping allegations

pertain to the ACSA convictions, which merged at sentencing and thus are not a basis for relief

at this juncture. So that discussion would be futile, anyway.)

¶ 122 There is one detail worth pausing over. According to Aladeen, S.F. said that she was 6 or

7 when defendant assaulted her in the living room; S.F. also said that she talked to L.M. about

the assault when she was 8. This testimony would seem to imply that according to S.F. herself,

there was no immediate outcry to L.M. at all.

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¶ 123 There needn’t be an immediate outcry at all. That said, we acknowledge that if S.F. and

L.M. squarely disagreed on a point like this, we would have to wonder, at least a little, about

someone’s reliability. But the implication we noted above is not as clear as it might seem at first

blush. Aladeen testified (at the pre-trial hearing) that she never asked what S.F. did immediately

after the living-room assault. So S.F. never denied that she ran to tell L.M., and more generally

we don’t know how S.F. would have answered that question, had it been posed directly. For her

own part, L.M. said that she discussed the assault with S.F. not only on that night, but also on

multiple occasions down the road. Which is all to say: there may no genuine conflict between

S.F. and L.M. at all. The information gathered in the VSI was incomplete on this point, perhaps

regrettably so; and we are mindful, as always, that a child like S.F. is all too prone to confusion

when discussing points of chronology.

¶ 124 To be sure, all of this limits the evidentiary value of the VSI and may well lead a trier of

fact to question how much weight the VSI statements deserve. But it goes too far to say that the

statements were so unreliable that they should never have been placed in front of the jury.

¶ 125 The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the outcry evidence, in any of its

forms. So we find no error, much less reversible—and plain—error. And for the same reasons,

defendant cannot establish that he was prejudiced by trial counsel’s failure to preserve the issue.

As a matter of trial court (plain) error or ineffective assistance, defendant’s claim thus fails.

¶ 126                                III. Other-crimes evidence

¶ 127 The trial court allowed the State to “argue propensity in both directions for both victims.”

Thus, the evidence of defendant’s conduct against S.S. could be used to show his propensity to

commit similar conduct against S.F., and vice versa. Defendant argues (1) that the propensity use

of the evidence was more prejudicial than probative, and that the trial court failed to conduct any

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No. 1-19-1607

meaningful balancing inquiry; (2) that the State failed to provide adequate notice that the S.F.

evidence would be used to show propensity with respect to the S.S. charges; and (3) that the

evidence no longer qualified as other-crimes evidence once the charges were joined.

¶ 128                                    A. Undue prejudice

¶ 129 Section 115-7.3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure partially abrogates the common-law

ban against propensity evidence and thus allows other-crimes evidence to be admitted to show

propensity when the defendant is charged with one of the sex offenses enumerated in the statute.

725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(a)(1), (b) (West 2022); see People v. Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d 159, 170 (2003).

The probative value of the evidence must not be substantially outweighed by the risk of “undue”

prejudice. 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(c); People v. Walston, 386 Ill. App. 3d 598, 611 (2008). The trial

court may consider the proximity in time, and degree of factual similarity, between the charged

and other alleged conduct, along with any other relevant facts and circumstances. 725 ILCS

5/115-7.3(c)(1)-(3). We review the ruling for an abuse of discretion. Donoho, 204 Ill. 2d at 182.

¶ 130 Defendant “does not dispute” that his conduct toward S.S. and S.F. was similar enough,

and close enough in time, for the evidence to have probative value on the question of propensity.

His claim is that its probative value was outweighed by its risk of undue prejudice.

¶ 131 As a preliminary matter, defendant says, the trial court failed to conduct this balancing

test. All that defendant is really entitled to say, however, is this: the trial court did not make a

record of any balancing it may have conducted. But it wasn’t required to. People v. Cummings,

2023 IL App (1st) 220520, ¶ 36; People v. Petrakis, 2019 IL App (3d) 160399, ¶ 22. The trial

court’s failure to explain the basis for its ruling on the record is not a ground for reversal.

¶ 132 In the usual case, where no statutory exception applies, other-crimes evidence is only

admissible for purposes other than propensity. Ill. R. Evid. 404(b) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). But the

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admission of other-crimes evidence for a non-propensity purpose always carries a risk that the

jury will draw an improper propensity inference. So in the usual case, when we speak of unfair

or undue prejudice from the admission of other-crimes evidence, this risk is one of the principal

factors that we have in mind.

¶ 133 But that cannot be what “undue prejudice” means in the context of section 115-7.3, since

the whole point of the statute is to permit the propensity inference that is ordinarily the source of

prejudice. Thus, when other-crimes evidence is admitted to show propensity under section 115-

7.3, there is far less risk of unfair or undue prejudice. Walston, 386 Ill. App. 3d at 619-20; People

v. Perez, 2012 IL App (2d) 100865, ¶¶ 48-50; People v. Watts, 2022 IL App (4th) 210590, ¶ 60.

¶ 134 As a result, the “limits” on the trial court’s admission of propensity evidence under this

section are “relatively modest.” Walston, 386 Ill. App. 3d at 621. Not anything goes; the statute

itself clearly contemplates that the use of propensity evidence in a sex-crime case can, at some

point, cross the line into undue prejudice. But such cases will be rare exceptions, not the general

rule. And whatever risk of undue prejudice the defendant claims, it must be something more than

just the likelihood that the jury will draw a propensity inference.

¶ 135 Much of defendant’s argument is that the State did, indeed, argue propensity inferences

to the jury. Beyond this general point, which will not establish undue prejudice, he argues that

the State’s use of propensity inferences created “a form of circular reasoning” that “diminish[ed]

the burden of proof.” Specifically, the jury could have used the propensity evidence to convict

defendant of the offenses against both S.S. and S.F., even if it found “fatal weaknesses” in the

State’s proofs when considering each “in isolation” from the other.

¶ 136 For the sake of parsing this argument, let’s put aside, for now, that fact that the State was

allowed to argue propensity “in both directions.” Let’s consider the jury as deliberating, say, on

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the S.S. charges, and thus considering the proof of defendant’s conduct against S.F. as propensity

evidence. If the jury found this proof credible, it could infer that defendant was more likely to

commit the similar conduct that he was charged with committing against S.S. It should thus be

obvious that the jury did not need to decide whether defendant was guilty of the S.S. charges “in

isolation” from the proof of his conduct toward S.F. That purported requirement would nullify

the propensity inference that section 115-7.3 authorizes the jury to draw.

¶ 137 And suppose, further, that the jury’s finding of guilt on the S.S. charges relied critically

on the propensity inference; without it, the State’s proof would have fallen somewhat short on

the reasonable-doubt standard. Without more, this still wouldn’t show that the burden of proof

was diminished; it would simply show that the State offered relevant, admissible evidence in

partial satisfaction of that burden. The key question is whether the jury found that the charges

were proven beyond a reasonable doubt when any permissible propensity inferences were

considered, not when they were ignored.

¶ 138 It is not hard to imagine a case in which the direct evidence of the charged conduct has

serious weaknesses, and so the State piles on a wildly excessive amount of propensity evidence,

in an apparent effort to bamboozle the jury into convicting the defendant primarily on the basis

of the uncharged conduct. Such were the “extreme” facts that led to a finding of undue prejudice

in People v. Cardamone, 381 Ill. App. 3d 462, 494 (2008), cited here by defendant. See Perez,

2012 IL App (2d) 100865, ¶ 49; Watts, 2022 IL App (4th) 210590, ¶ 57. But this case is not at all

similar to Cardamone.

¶ 139 Everything we have said about a jury’s deliberations on the S.S. charges applies equally

to deliberation on the S.F. charges. Thus, if the charges were tried separately, each jury could

draw one of the two propensity inferences that the jury was allowed to draw here; the State’s

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burden would not be diminished in either case, and there would be no viable claim of undue

prejudice. So defendant’s argument must be this: allowing propensity inferences “in both

directions” at once created “circular reasoning” that diminished the burden of proof and in this

way caused him undue prejudice.

¶ 140 This sounds more like a consequence of the joinder than a reason to find error in the trial

court’s admission of propensity evidence. But that aside, we don’t agree that the deliberations

were rendered “circular” at all, for the reasons we discussed above, in the context of defendant’s

sufficiency challenge. As we explained there, two complete strangers independently accused

defendant, under oath, of conduct that was notably similar in key respects: the victims’ ages;

their relations to defendant; and the escalating pattern of conduct, starting with the same lap-

bouncing routine and culminating in a sleeping victim awaking, late at night, to find a drunk

defendant inserting either his penis or his finger between her labia.

¶ 141 In light of this evidence, a jury could find it more likely that both victims were telling the

truth—rather than wandering into an extraordinary coincidence—and that defendant is in fact

prone to such conduct. In this way, the S.S. and S.F. evidence was mutually (albeit indirectly)

corroborating, and the jury could consider this mutual corroboration in deciding whether the

State carried its burden of proof on each set of charges. As long as the jury found that the proof,

in each instance, was beyond a reasonable doubt, the deliberations were not “circular,” the

burden of proof was not diminished, and defendant suffered no undue prejudice.

¶ 142 We appreciate that defendant’s stalking horse in this argument—the demand for separate

consideration of each set of charges—does not come out of left field. In the usual case, separate

charges joined for trial do demand entirely separate consideration. (Many jurisdictions, our local

federal circuit among them, instruct the jury on this point. See The William J. Bauer Pattern

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Criminal Jury Instructions, No. 4.06 (2020 ed.). We note that the IPI has no such instruction.)

But that is because the evidence on one charge is usually not admissible as propensity evidence

on another charge. Here, it was. Defendant has not shown undue prejudice.

¶ 143                                        B. Notice

¶ 144 In February 2014, before the cases were joined, the trial court granted the State’s motion

to admit proof of defendant’s sexual abuse and assault of S.S. as propensity evidence in the S.F.

case. The cases were joined in May 2014, and the trial began in September 2015. On the first

morning of trial, right before jury selection was set to begin, the State asked the court to “double

check” its ruling on the other-crimes motion. Specifically, the State “wanted to make sure” that,

in light of the intervening joinder, it would now be allowed to “argue propensity in both

directions for both victims.” The defense objected that the request should have been made long

ago and was now untimely. The trial court disagreed and granted the State’s request. Defendant

argues that this ruling was error.

¶ 145 When the State intends to offer evidence under section 115-7.3, “it must disclose the

evidence, including statements of witnesses or a summary of the substance of any testimony, at a

reasonable time in advance of trial, or during trial if the court excuses pre-trial notice on good

cause shown.” 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(d) (West 2022).

¶ 146 In People v. Valdez, 2022 IL App (1st) 181463, ¶¶ 71-85, we construed the disclosure

provision in the related statute that governs the admission of other-acts evidence in domestic-

violence cases. See 725 ILCS 5/115-7.4(c) (West 2022). And we relied on our supreme court’s

decision in People v. Peterson, 2017 IL 120331, ¶¶ 117-129, which construed the disclosure

provision that applies to the admission of other-acts evidence under Illinois Rule of Evidence

404(c) (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). As we noted in Valdez, 2022 IL App (1st) 181463, ¶ 75, all three

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disclosure provisions are identical; thus, there is no reason to interpret them any differently, and

precedents construing the three provisions are interchangeable for this purpose.

¶ 147 Peterson and Valdez establish two points. First, it is not enough for the State to disclose

the evidence itself; it must also disclose its intent to offer the evidence as other-crimes evidence,

for a particular stated purpose. Peterson, 2017 IL 120331, ¶¶ 117-121; Valdez, 2022 IL App (1st)

181463, ¶¶ 74-83. Second, to be entitled to relief, defendant must show how the State’s failure to

provide pre-trial notice (or to show good cause for the failure) prejudiced his ability to defend

against the State’s use of the evidence. Peterson, 2017 IL 120331, ¶ 128; Valdez, 2022 IL App

(1st) 181463, ¶ 85.

¶ 148 Obviously enough, the evidence of defendant’s conduct toward both S.S. and S.F. was

disclosed to the defense. But in the pre-trial motion, the State only disclosed its intent to use the

S.S. evidence to show propensity with respect to the S.F. charges. It did not disclose its intent to

use the evidence the other way around until the first day of the trial. The State had more than a

year, since the charges were joined, to clarify this point. It has not shown good cause for its

failure to do so. The State did not comply with the pre-trial disclosure provision.

¶ 149 But defendant cannot show how this lack of pre-trial disclosure prejudiced his ability to

defend against the State’s use of the S.F. evidence to show propensity. Nor does he even try. The

S.S. evidence was admitted to show propensity because the relevant conduct was close enough in

time, and similar enough in fact, to have probative value with respect to S.F. charges. See 725

ILCS 5/115-7.3(c)(1)-(3) (West 2022).

¶ 150 It follows, as a matter of basic logic, that the S.F. evidence was exactly as probative with

respect to the S.S. charges—and for exactly the same reasons. No matter which “direction” the

State would argue in, its propensity arguments would be the same: defendant’s alleged conduct

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toward the two victims was close enough in time, and similar enough in fact, that evidence

supporting one set of allegations was probative with respect to the other. The defense’s responses

(if any) would also be the same: the incidents were too remote in time, or different enough on

their facts, to be probative in this way. Turning the inference around did not give rise to any new

arguments that the defense did not already have to prepare for, in light of the ruling on the other-

crimes motion.

¶ 151 Thus, if counsel was prepared to defend against the State’s use of the S.S. evidence to

show propensity, counsel would have been equally prepared to defend against the State’s use of

the S.F. evidence for the same purpose. While all intended uses of other-crimes evidence should

be settled in advance of trial, and not as the venire is knocking on the courtroom door, the last-

minute ruling here did not prejudice the defense.

¶ 152                      C. Effect of joinder on other-crimes evidence

¶ 153 Defendant argues that once the S.S. and S.F. cases were joined for trial, neither victim’s

testimony qualified as other-crimes evidence in the first place. The law, he says, “implicit[ly]”

limits other-crimes (or bad acts) evidence to uncharged conduct. But once the cases were joined,

all of the evidence involved charged conduct for which defendant was on trial. Thus, the State

now had to forego any propensity (or more generally, other-crimes) use of its evidence.

¶ 154 The question is not what premises are supposedly “implicit” in the law of other-crimes

evidence in general. The question is what the controlling statute actually says. Which is this: “If

the defendant is accused of an [enumerated offense], evidence of the defendant’s commission of

another [enumerated offense or offenses] * * * may be admissible” and considered for any

relevant purpose. 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(b) (West 2022).

¶ 155 For example: PCSA is an enumerated offense Id. § 115-7.3(a)(1). Defendant was accused

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of committing PCSA against S.S. To show his propensity to commit this offense, the State could

offer evidence that he committed “another” enumerated offense. Defendant allegedly committed

PCSA against S.F., and the State surely had evidence to this effect. Thus, the State could use that

evidence to show propensity. We could have S.S. and S.F. switch places, or substitute ACSA for

PCSA as the enumerated offense, all with the same result. The point being: the statute allows for

the use of “evidence of * * * another” enumerated offense. (Emphasis added.) Id. § 115-7.3(b).

It does not say that this offense must be uncharged—or, if charged, separately tried.

¶ 156 Defendant reads into the statute an “implicit” limitation that does not exist. He does so by

quoting general statements to the effect that “[o]ther-crimes evidence encompasses misconduct

or criminal acts that occurred either before or after the alleged criminal conduct for which the

defendant is standing trial.” E.g., People v. Johnson, 2013 IL App (2d) 110535, ¶ 61.

¶ 157 In the typical case, that is a fair description. But we are not convinced that such general

statements (in Johnson or other similar cases) are intended to preclude the State from using the

proof of one charged offense as other-crimes evidence with respect to another charged offense.

Such general statements, which typically address Rule 404(b) or its common-law antecedents,

simply do not contemplate the rare scenario in which this possibility might arise outside of the

context of statutory exceptions like section 115-7.3. (If there are cases directly addressing that

issue, defendant has not cited them.) Even less are these general statements meant to impose a

limitation on a statute that was never at issue.

¶ 158 Since defendant has not shown any error in the use of the other-crimes evidence, we need

not consider his plain-error or ineffective-assistance arguments.

¶ 159                                      IV. Misjoinder

¶ 160 After the trial court granted the State’s section 115-10 and other-crimes motions (in the

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S.F. case), the State moved to join the S.S. and S.F. charges for trial. Notably, shortly after the

two evidentiary motions were granted, counsel told the court, at a status hearing, that the defense

was contemplating a joinder motion. But the State beat it to the punch.

¶ 161 When the State’s joinder motion came up for consideration, counsel stated on the record

that the defense had no objection. But more than that, in light of the rulings on the evidentiary

motions, joinder was now part of the “defense strategy.” (And it served “judicial economy” to

boot.) Counsel discussed the “pros and cons” of joinder with defendant, who acknowledged, in

open court, that he agreed with counsel’s determination.

¶ 162 Defendant argues on appeal that the joinder, to which he agreed, was error. Since there

was obviously no objection, he alleges first-prong plain error and ineffective assistance.

¶ 163 Plain-error review is not appropriate here. The defense did not just fail to object to any

alleged misjoinder. The defense affirmatively agreed to the joinder, and counsel represented to

the trial court that joinder was now a matter of “defense strategy.” (So much so that counsel was

considering a joinder motion when the State filed one of its own.) Defendant cannot argue on

appeal that a ruling to which he expressly agreed was trial-court error. See People v. Villarreal,

198 Ill. 2d 209, 228 (2001) (“invited error” doctrine precludes this tactic).

¶ 164 And our cases have long held that the trial court may join charges if the defense agrees to

it, even though the statutory criteria for joinder are not satisfied. People v. Zirko, 2012 IL App

(1st) 092158, ¶ 58; People v. Marts, 266 Ill. App. 3d 531, 542 (1994); People v. House, 202 Ill.

App. 3d 893, 907 (1990); People v. Benka, 117 Ill. App. 3d 221, 223 (1983). The defense, in

other words, may affirmatively waive—as opposed to merely forfeit—any claim of misjoinder.

As it did here.

¶ 165 But neither an express waiver nor an invitation to error, so to speak, precludes a claim of

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ineffective assistance. See Villarreal, 198 Ill. 2d at 228. Counsel’s agreement to the joinder may

have been the result of deficient performance. By the same token, defendant’s own agreement to

the joinder may have been the result of deficient advice from counsel. We thus review his claim

under the deficiency-and-prejudice framework of Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984).

¶ 166 When possible, a reviewing court may deny a Strickland claim based on the absence of

prejudice, without deciding whether counsel’s representation was deficient. People v. Haynes,

192 Ill. 2d 437, 473 (2000). We will do so here. Whatever strategic reasons counsel perceived for

agreeing to the joinder—and the record predictably fails to disclose them—we remain confident

in the verdicts that the jury returned on the joined charges. We find no reasonable probability

that separate trials would have yielded any different outcomes. See People v. Johnson, 2013 IL

App (2d) 110535, ¶¶ 57-58.

¶ 167 We have often noted that a misjoinder is harmless if “the evidence of all the charged

crimes would have been admissible in the separate trials that would have taken place if not for

the misjoinder.” People v. Walston, 386 Ill. App. 3d 598, 609 (2008). This same principle guides

our Strickland analysis: if the same evidence would have been admitted at separate trials, then

counsel’s agreement to the joinder (or misjoinder, as the case may be) was not prejudicial.

¶ 168 For the reasons we have already discussed, the testimony of the victims, S.S. and S.F.,

was properly admitted as propensity evidence. Thus, at a trial in the S.S. case, S.F. could testify

about the incidents of her own sexual abuse and assault, and vice versa. Defendant concedes as

much in his brief. And the named victim’s own outcries, obviously enough, would be admissible

at a trial in that victim’s case. The only difference between a joint trial and separate trials is this:

at each separate trial, the outcry statements of the propensity witness would not be admissible.

¶ 169 Propensity evidence in a sex-offense case must be “otherwise admissible under the rules

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of evidence.” 725 ILCS 5/115-7.3(b) (West 2022). Outcry statements are hearsay, so they are

admissible only if a hearsay exception applies. Ill. R. Evid. 802 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). Section 115-

10, the primary exception for outcry statements, only applies to the outcry statements of the

victim(s) of the charged offense(s), and not to those of a section 115-7.3 propensity witness.

People v. Hayden, 2018 IL App (4th) 160035, ¶¶ 109-126. Thus, for a propensity witness, the

State must show that another hearsay exception applies. But the State has not relied on any

hearsay exceptions in this case other than section 115-10.

¶ 170 (We note that Justice Steigmann thoughtfully dissented in Hayden. But the only case to

consider the question after Hayden sided with the majority. People v. Redmon, 2022 IL App (3d)

190167, ¶ 35. In any event, given the facts of this case, we don’t think that Hayden compels a

finding of prejudice. So we have the luxury of staying above the fray.)

¶ 171   Separate trials would thus proceed as follows. In the S.S. case, S.F. could testify about

her own sexual abuse and assault, but she could not testify about her out-of-court statements to

L.M. or her VSI statements to Aladeen. Nor could those witnesses testify about the statements

S.F. made to them. Similarly, in the S.F. case, S.S. could testify about her own sexual abuse and

assault, but her statements to her father and her VSI statements to Dr. Schoeneman-Parker would

not be admissible. Joinder of the charges, defendant argues, thus introduced a substantial amount

of otherwise inadmissible hearsay that “bolstered each complainant’s weak testimony.”

¶ 172 The use of the word “complainant” in this context creates an impression that the joinder

allowed “each complainant’s testimony” to be “bolstered” in a way that it would never have been

bolstered had the charges been tried separately. That impression is misleading. The State could

have fully availed itself of any bolstering value, so to speak, that each “complainant’s” outcry

statements offered when that “complainant” testified as the victim of the charged offenses. It is

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only when that “complainant” testified as a propensity witness, at a separate trial in the other

“complainant’s” case, that her outcry statements could not have been used to bolster her (other-

crimes) testimony.

¶ 173 The question, then, is how much the State had to gain from this limited bolstering. Not

much, in our view. Recall what separate trials would look like: the victim would take the stand

and tell the story of her sexual abuse and assault at defendant’s hands. Her outcry statements, for

whatever they were worth, would be laid out in full detail. A complete stranger would then take

the stand and tell the story of how she was sexually abused and assaulted by defendant, when she

was of a similar age and relation to defendant as the victim. And their stories would share an

unnervingly similar narrative arc, one that begins with the same lap-bouncing routine and

progresses over time to vaginal penetration.

¶ 174 The probative value of the propensity evidence derives, overwhelmingly, from the ability

of two complete strangers to independently confirm a repeating pattern of conduct by defendant.

That probative value would not have been diminished at separate trials. If anything, the probative

commonalities between their stories would have been presented even more starkly, without the

defense chipping away at them through impeachments that the joinder made possible.

¶ 175 Here’s what we mean by that. We grant defendant that admitting the outcry statements of

a propensity witness had some tendency to bolster that witness’s credibility. But this evidence

also expanded the scope of impeachments that the defense could readily pursue. Without the

outcry statements in evidence, counsel would have been limited to whatever impeachments may

have been possible under the prior-inconsistent-statement rule. See 725 ILCS 5/115-10.1 (West

2022). We will not attempt to enumerate those possibilities here. Suffice it to say there would

have been far fewer opportunities to attack the credibility of the propensity witness.

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¶ 176 And those attacks were a key element of the defense strategy. Counsel sought to make

hay out of the delays in informing a concerned adult, the various omissions and disparities in

detail in the statements over time, the differences in S.F.’s and L.M.’s recollections of the night

of the assault, the procedural irregularities in S.S.’s VSI, and other topics that we have discussed.

¶ 177 One might note that if a propensity witness’s outcry statements were not in evidence,

these impeachments would not have been necessary. True, but the impeachments also afforded

counsel more ammunition to cast doubt on the veracity of the accusations against defendant. The

jury did not find those reasons for doubt compelling, and neither do we. But at separate trials,

there would have been fewer reasons of this kind to offer. The testimony of each propensity

witness, in all of its stark and probative detail, would have stood largely unimpeached.

¶ 178 Admitting the propensity witness’s outcry statements thus cut both ways: the evidence

had bolstering value for the State and impeachment value for the defense. (Counsel’s “pros and

cons” to joinder?) We need not conclude that these countervailing effects were a wash, though

that is probably the truth, or at least close to it. Even if the evidence somewhat favored the State,

on balance, the effect was clearly not enough to swing any of the verdicts in its favor.

¶ 179 We emphasize that our ruling is narrow and fact-bound. It is not hard to imagine a case in

which a misjoinder, or counsel’s agreement to a joinder, proves to be prejudicial. For instance, a

propensity witness’s allegations might seem incredible on their face, but the outcry evidence

improperly introduced at a joint trial might go a long way toward alleviating the first-blush

qualms about their credibility. That is how the Hayden majority viewed the facts of its case. See

Hayden, 2018 IL App (4th) 160035, ¶ 134.

¶ 180 But we don’t see our own facts in that light. Putting aside the outcry evidence, neither

S.S.’s nor S.F.’s story is inherently unbelievable, and considering them side by side makes it that

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much harder to believe that either one of them was spun out of whole cloth or somehow wildly

mistaken. And far from being straightforwardly corroborative, the outcry evidence was a mixed

bag—offering the State some corroborative value, to be sure, but also introducing many of the

“inconsistencies” on which the defense has always sought to capitalize. In these circumstances,

defendant was not prejudiced by the joinder.

¶ 181 One last point. We have sidestepped the question, addressed at some length in the briefs,

whether the statutory criteria for joinder were satisfied. See 725 ILCS 5/111-4(a), 114-7, 114-8

(West 2022). This is a complex issue on which the appellate cases have sharply disagreed. The

basic fault line is exemplified by the trenchant disagreement between the majority and

concurrence in Walston, 386 Ill. App. 3d 598. We do not mean to suggest that the issue of

joinder demands anything less than careful scrutiny in both the trial and appellate courts, and we

caution that our decision today should not be read “as an invitation to overlook the joinder statute

on the ground that even a misjoinder will not lead to reversal.” Id. at 623. But the defense agreed

to the joinder below, as it was entitled to do, subject to ineffectiveness review. That defense

tactic, and the availability of a narrow ground of decision, leads us to conclude that the

complexities of this topic are best left for another day.

¶ 182                                V. Other alleged trial errors

¶ 183 Defendant alleges three additional points of trial-court error and “pervasive” misconduct

by the prosecutors. We can dispose of these claims relatively quickly.

¶ 184                                 A. Dr. Fujara’s testimony

¶ 185 First, defendant argues that the trial court erred in allowing Dr. Fujara to testify about one

topic: the phenomenon of delayed outcry by children who are victims of sexual abuse or assault,

particularly at the hands of familial or other close relations.

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¶ 186 Defendant claims that Dr. Fujara’s testimony did not comply with People v. Butler, 377

Ill. App. 3d 1050, 1064-65 (2007), which supposedly holds that expert testimony on this topic is

admissible only in a “limited, narrow set of circumstances,” namely, where there is factual

support for the expert’s opinion in the lay witnesses’ testimony; the expert has not spoken with

the victim or made a determination about the victim’s credibility; and the expert testifies in the

State’s rebuttal case, not its case-in-chief.

¶ 187 Defendant misreads Butler. Of course there must be factual support for an expert opinion.

But beyond that, Butler merely reiterated that expert testimony must not “constitute improper

commentary on the credibility” of the victim or another witness. Id. at 1064.

¶ 188 To this end, Butler cited the remaining “circumstances” on defendant’s list as factors that

supported the admissibility of the expert’s testimony and, more specifically, distinguished the

case from People v. Simpkins, 297 Ill. App. 3d 668 (1998), the facts of which are too far afield

from our own to bear much discussion. The point is that Butler never purported to harden these

factors into rules of evidence, and defendant cites no other authority that does.

¶ 189 True, Dr. Fujara spoke to S.F.—though not to S.S.—during the medical exam. Unlike the

psychologist in Butler, Dr. Fujara did not expressly deny that she formed an opinion as to S.F.’s

credibility. But if she formed any such opinion, she never told the jury what it was; she did make

clear, however, that she did not delve into the particulars of S.F.’s allegations during the exam.

(Thus suggesting her neutrality.) So Dr. Fujara’s testimony can hardly be called an “improper

commentary on the credibility” of either victim. And if her testimony was relevant and helpful,

insofar as there was evidence of one or more delayed outcries, we see no reason why the State

could not offer the testimony in its case in chief.

¶ 190 To the extent that S.S.’s outcry was delayed, Dr. Fujara’s testimony had a factual basis in

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the evidence and was thus relevant and helpful to the jury. As defendant points out, S.F’s initial

outcry (to her sister) was immediate, not delayed. To that extent, Dr. Fujara’s testimony was not

relevant. But it didn’t have to be relevant to both victims’ outcries to be admissible. And since

the evidence showed that S.F.’s outcry was not delayed, Dr. Fujara’s testimony that delayed

outcries are a matter of course did not improperly bolster S.F.’s credibility. Thus, her testimony

had at least some relevance, and it was not prejudicial to the defense at all.

¶ 191                               B. Pattern instruction 11.66

¶ 192 IPI 11.66 should be given whenever section 115-10 outcry statements are admitted into

evidence. 725 ILCS 5/115-10(c) (West 2022); Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal No.

11.66 (4th ed. 2000); People v. Sargeant, 239 Ill. 2d 166, 190. That instruction was not given

here. The State concedes the error, and we appreciate and accept the concession. The question is

whether this unpreserved error warrants reversal under a theory of plain error or ineffective

assistance.

¶ 193 While trial courts have no discretion to omit IPI 11.66 when the instruction is called for,

the error will frequently, if not usually, be deemed harmless—at least when IPI 1.02, the similar,

though more general, instruction on witness believability, is given. Sargeant, 239 Ill. 2d at 192-

94; see also People v. Marcos, 2013 IL App (1st) 111040, ¶¶ 68-73; People v. Richmond, 341 Ill.

App. 3d 39, 50 (2003); People v. Booker, 224 Ill. App. 3d 542, 556 (1992).

¶ 194 IPI 11.66 provides tailored guidance for the jury in deciding whether a child’s outcry

statement is credible, and how much (if any) weight the statement deserves: the jury should

consider the age and maturity of the child, along with the nature and circumstances of the

statement. Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal No. 11.66 (4th ed. 2000).

¶ 195 IPI 1.02 provides guidance in assessing the believability of a witness in general: the jury

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may consider “his ability and opportunity to observe, [his age,] his memory, his manner while

testifying, any interest, bias, or prejudice he may have, and the reasonableness of his testimony

considered in the light of all the evidence in the case.” Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal

No. 1.02 (4th ed. 2000).

¶ 196 Linguistic differences aside, these two instructions “convey similar principles regarding

the jury’s role in assessing witness credibility and the various criteria jurors may consider when

making that assessment.” Sargeant, 239 Ill. 2d at 192. This is especially true when the optional,

bracketed factor of “age” is included in the version of IPI 1.02 given to the jury, though, unlike

in Sargeant, that did not happen here.

¶ 197 Even still, it is hard to imagine that a reasonable juror, abiding by the principles set forth

in IPI 1.02, would fail to grasp that the age and maturity of a child declarant are key factors in

assessing his or her ability to accurately observe and recount the events in question. This is not to

deny that the obvious sometimes bears emphasis, and IPI 11.66 should be used for that intended

purpose—especially when the believability of an outcry statement is a likely focal point of

deliberations. But barring that (or some other unusual) circumstance, the use of IPI 1.02 in its

stead will not necessarily undermine our confidence in the verdict.

¶ 198   The only case cited by defendant in which this error led to reversal is People v. Mitchell,

155 Ill. 2d 344 (1993). But Mitchell was an unusual case, in that the failure to give IPI 11.66 was

embedded in a larger pattern of error. The trial court’s “more fundamental failure” in Mitchell

was admitting the outcry evidence without conducting the evidentiary hearing necessary (and so

required by section 115-10) to determine the reliability of this hearsay evidence. Id. at 354; see

Sargeant, 239 Ill. 2d at 193. The combination of this error and the “serious contradictions” on

the face of the victim’s trial testimony heightened the “prejudicial” effect of the outcry evidence,

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which in turn heightened the need for the tailored instructions set forth in IPI 11.66. Mitchell,

155 Ill. 2d at 354-55. And it was against this backdrop that our supreme court found the evidence

in Mitchell closely balanced enough to warrant reversal on a theory of plain error. Id.

¶ 199 That pattern of compounding errors is not present here. Still, defendant says, the evidence

was closely balanced, and thus the instructional error alone may have swung the verdicts against

him. See Sargeant, 239 Ill. 2d at 189. (Strictly speaking, defendant’s claim arises under Illinois

Supreme Court Rule 451(c), but that rule is “coextensive” with the plain-error rule, so we will

stick with this terminology. Id.; see 177 Ill.2d R. 451(c).) His Strickland prejudice arguments are,

necessarily, to the same effect. See, e.g., People v. White, 2011 IL 109689, ¶ 133.

¶ 200 Defendant asserts, without qualification, that “[w]hen a conviction necessarily involves

determining issues of credibility, the evidence is closely balanced.” He attributes this overbroad

proposition to People v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445, ¶¶ 60-63, but our supreme court said no such

thing. In one fell swoop, defendant indiscriminately renders most cases closely balanced—and

thus robs the term of any real meaning—since “determining issues of credibility” is the jury’s

stock in trade, a function it is routinely, almost inevitably, called upon to perform.

¶ 201 And even when a case boils down to “the prosecution witnesses say this, the defense

witnesses say that,” it still doesn’t follow, as a matter of necessity, that the evidence is closely

balanced. One side’s story might make little (or no) sense. The evidence in Sebby was closely

balanced not because the jury had to choose between competing accounts, but because the

competing accounts on offer were both internally consistent and plausible, and “clouded” by

only “[m]inor inconsistencies” to a similar extent. Id. ¶ 61.

¶ 202 This case was not a close credibility contest in the mold of Sebby. For one, there were no

competing accounts on offer; there was only the State’s version of events. To call the evidence

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“closely balanced” in a one-sided presentation like this is to say that the outcry statements were

critical to the State’s case because its evidence was otherwise weak. The credibility of the outcry

statements would thus become a key question for the jury, one on which the verdict(s) could very

well turn. That’s the Mitchell case, in a nutshell, if we put aside the compounding error of failing

to hold a section 115-10 hearing.

¶ 203 But it’s not this case. Neither victim’s trial testimony was inherently incredible or

internally contradictory. And when their stories are heard together, it becomes mountingly

difficult to dismiss either one as fabrication or error. The victims were mutually, if indirectly,

corroborating; that is the effect of the propensity inference that the jury was permitted to draw.

The facially plausible testimony of two unrelated victims, bolstered by this inference, adds up to

a reasonably strong case for the State.

¶ 204 The outcry evidence, to the extent it was bolstering, added some further probative value

for the State. But that value was limited, and, in the ways we described above, the defense made

liberal use of the perceived impeachment value of this evidence as part of its own strategy. More

than the outcry evidence, it was the propensity inference that bolstered each victim’s testimony

and credibility. That was the heart of the State’s case. All things considered, the evidence was

not closely balanced, such that an IPI 11.66 instruction might have changed any of the verdicts.

¶ 205                      C. Judge’s comment on defendant’s absence

¶ 206 In its introductory remarks to the prospective jurors, the trial court addressed the elephant

in the room, defendant’s absence from his own trial: “Also on an earlier date, I made a finding

that the defendant had willfully absented himself from trial and this is why we are proceeding

today in his absence.”

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¶ 207 Defendant argues that this remark was error. The State is reluctant to concede the error,

but it also does not seriously contest that it was error. And (unpreserved) error it was. The only

question is whether it warrants reversal, on a theory of first-prong plain error or ineffective

assistance.

¶ 208 To be clear, it is proper for the trial court to preemptively address a defendant’s absence

from trial, in an effort to forestall any speculation from the jurors that the State might be taking

unfair advantage of the defendant by having him tried in his absence. People v. Brown, 172 Ill.

App. 3d 1044, 1047 (1988). But the court’s remarks should remain neutral about the reasons for,

and the “willfulness” of, the defendant’s absence. Id. To the extent that these reasons are thought

to be probative on the question of “consciousness of guilt,” they should be presented to the jury

by the prosecution; the trial court should not allow the considerable weight its own word carries

with the jury to color the issue from the start. Id.; see also People v. McDonald, 227 Ill. App. 3d

92, 95 (1992). And of course, whatever the prosecution might introduce on this subject would be

subject to Rule 403 balancing by the court.

¶ 209 The trial court’s comment was error, but it does not warrant reversal. This case was not

an especially close one, for reasons already given. We are confident that the jury convicted

defendant based on the proof of his conduct toward S.S. and S.F. So we are confident that the

jury would have convicted him, anyway, if the trial court had not improperly announced its

finding that his absence from court was willful.

¶ 210                               D. Prosecutorial misconduct

¶ 211 Defendant’s last claim of trial error is “pervasive” prosecutorial misconduct throughout

opening statement, closing and rebuttal argument, and the introduction of evidence. Since none

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of the alleged instances of misconduct met with a defense objection at trial, defendant claims

first- and second-prong plain error and, in the alternative, ineffective assistance.

¶ 212   To begin, we find no merit in defendant’s argument that the State committed misconduct

by introducing three benign photographs depicting S.S. and S.F. as the children they were at the

time of the charged conduct. (One was S.S.’s first-grade school photo; the others were of S.F., at

the ages of 5 or 6, and 8 or 9.) Because S.S. and S.F. were, respectively, 26 and 17 years of age

when they testified, these photos served a legitimate demonstrative purpose.

¶ 213 The victim’s age is an element of the PCSA and ACSA offenses with which defendant

was charged. 720 ILCS 5/12-14.1(1), renumbered as 720 ILCS 5/11-1.40(a)(1) by P.A. 96-1551

(eff. July 1, 2011); 720 ILCS 5/12-6, renumbered as 720 ILCS 5/11-1.60 by P.A. 96-1551 (eff.

July 1, 2011). Thus, we cannot agree that the State improperly harped on S.S.’s and S.F.’s ages

in a bald attempt to garner sympathy or otherwise inflame the jury. The childhood photos were

proper, as were the various remarks that highlighted their ages throughout the State’s opening,

closing, and rebuttal. We see no need to catalog those remarks at this juncture.

¶ 214 Defendant objects to several other (at times overlapping) themes woven throughout the

State’s presentations to the jury. For example, he says, the State portrayed the case as a “contest

between good and evil”—not overtly, but by branding him as a “predator,” who thus “preyed” on

the victims, and as a “coward.”

¶ 215 Unlike in People v. Mpulamasaka, 2016 IL App (2d) 130703, ¶ 109, cited in the opening

brief, defendant was charged with predatory criminal sexual assault. Minor linguistic variants of

the name of the charged offense can hardly be deemed misconduct. And the term “coward” was

a reference to defendant’s failure to appear for his own trial: his lack of “courage,” that is, to face

the charges, the victims, and the jury. References to the “empty chair” next to counsel were in

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the same vein. To the extent that defendant’s absence was properly at issue—a point he never

disputes—this was a fair argument, albeit one couched in occasionally hard-hitting language.

¶ 216 Commenting on defendant’s absence and apparent flight, the State concluded its opening

with this rhetorical flourish: “But you know what. Justice is patient. It waits. And it has arrived

in the form of your guilty verdict.” The comment was premature and better left until closing (or

rebuttal) argument. But we cannot imagine that the jury was misled into thinking that its verdicts

were already a fait accompli and hence that there was no need to maintain an open mind and the

presumption of innocence until the all the evidence was in.

¶ 217 Defendant objects to the State’s use of “sarcasm” in rebuttal, but “[c]ountless cases have

reiterated that the use of mild sarcasm or invective is not misconduct, that reviewing courts do

not act as the ‘speech police’ in reviewing closing arguments, and that unflattering ‘appellations’

are not improper where they are supported by the evidence or a reasonable inference from the

evidence.” (Citations omitted.) People v. Potts, 2021 IL App (1st) 161219, ¶ 291.

¶ 218 It was sarcastic, indeed, but not misconduct, for the prosecutor to remark that there is “no

textbook * * * for first graders * * * that says, ‘This is what you should do if someone tries to

rape you in the middle of the night. Turn to Page 12.” Putting aside the use of the word “rape,” to

which we will return, the remark was in the service of a fair argument that “[l]ittle girls are not

equipped to handle anything like this.” Nor was it out of bounds for the prosecutor to argue that

“[c]hild molesters pick children because they’re easy targets,” who often “don’t even know how

old they are.”

¶ 219 While there is no textbook for first-graders, the State continued, “there is a textbook on

pedophiles and their behavior, and this defendant fits that classic textbook definition to a ‘T’.” In

defendant’s view, this remark was improper, because “[n]o such definition or textbook” was ever

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“introduced as evidence at trial.” The objection is literal-minded to an unreasonable degree. The

very next sentence of the prosecutor’s argument made clear that the reference was to Dr. Fujara’s

expert testimony on the subject of grooming, and the substance of the argument was that

defendant’s escalating conduct was, so to speak, a “textbook” example of the phenomenon. This

common idiom was not misconduct.

¶ 220 The same point applies to the State’s characterization of a “child molester” as someone

“with a sick head.” The remark may have been intemperate, but it’s not much of an objection to

point out that “there was no evidence presented that [defendant] suffered from a mental illness.”

That wasn’t the point. The remark was not tantamount to “unsworn testimony” by the prosecutor.

See People v. Watson, 94 Ill. App. 3d 550, 557 (1981).

¶ 221 Defendant claims that the State “mischaracterized the applicable law” when it repeatedly

described the conduct underlying the PCSA charges—namely, sexual penetration—as “rape.”

Section 115-11.1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure specifically provides that “[t]he use of the

word ‘rape’, ‘rapist’, or any derivative of ‘rape’ by any * * * State’s attorney * * * in any

prosecutions of offenses in Sections 11-1.20 through 11-1.60 or 12-13 through 12-16 of the

Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 is not inadmissible.”

¶ 222 That section applies to the offenses charged here. Of course, the use of the term must be

justified by the evidence and reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence. People v. Jackson,

2012 IL App (1st) 092833, ¶ 45. Here, it was justified by the evidence that defendant committed

acts of sexual penetration against both S.S. and S.F.

¶ 223 Lastly, defendant argues that the prosecutor misstated evidence. Referring to the lap-

bouncing incident with S.F., the prosecutor described defendant as “grinding on a five-year-old

girl.” But S.F. said she was somewhere between the ages of 6 and 9 when this happened. So the

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comment was in error. But inconsequentially so. The corresponding ACSA charge required proof

that the victim was under 13 years of age. 720 ILCS 5/12-6(c)(1)(i), renumbered as 720 ILCS

5/11-1.60(c)(1)(i) by P.A. 96-1551 (eff. July 1, 2011).

¶ 224 At various points, the State described the lap-bouncing routine as a “game” and said that

S.F. and S.S. both saw it as one. Neither witness, defendant says, offered that description in their

own testimony. That is true of S.F., though S.S. did testify that at first, she thought this routine

was “a joke” of some kind.

¶ 225 More importantly, we think the context of the State’s remarks makes clear that they were

argument, based on Dr. Fujara’s testimony about grooming, rather than a literal summary of the

victims’ words. Dr. Fujara described grooming as a process of increasingly sexualized touching

through which an abuser seeks to build trust and affection with the child. It typically begins with

conduct that the child may see as innocent or “appropriate,” and eventually escalates into sexual

abuse or assault. The term “game” was a gloss on Dr. Fujara’s description of the early stage of

the grooming process as defendant, in the State’s view, engaged in it with S.S. and S.F. Having

heard Dr. Fujara’s testimony, the jury could decide for itself what to make of the conduct.

¶ 226 In its closing argument, the State said that S.F. ran into her bedroom and told L.M. that

“[h]e touched me.” But S.F. could not recall what she said, and according to L.M., S.F. said that

defendant “was trying” to touch her, not that he did touch her. So the State’s recounting of the

evidence was less than fully accurate. The jury heard the testimony and was instructed that “any

statement or argument made by the attorneys which is not based on the evidence should be

disregarded.” Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal No. 1.03 (4th ed. 2000).

¶ 227 Defendant has more examples to offer, but we will leave it at that. In sum, most of the

challenged remarks were not improper at all. The few that were improper were not so serious

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that they denied defendant a fair trial, and thus they do not add up to a pattern of “pervasive”

misconduct that qualifies as second-prong plain error. See People v. Blue, 189 Ill. 2d 99, 127

(2000). Nor do the limited errors undermine our confidence in the verdicts, given our assessment

of the arguments and, more importantly, the evidence as a whole. So they do not amount to first-

prong plain error or ineffective assistance, either.

¶ 228                                      VI. Sentencing

¶ 229 At the sentencing hearing, the trial court imposed two natural-life sentences: one for the

PCSA conviction in the S.S. case, 13 CR 5937; and one for the PCSA conviction in the S.F. case,

13 CR 5936. (The mittimus reflects only one sentence, imposed in case 13 CR 5936, but “the

court’s oral pronouncement is the judgment of the court and controls over the mittimus” in the

event of a disparity. People v. Lucious, 2016 IL App (1st) 141127, ¶ 62.)

¶ 230 Defendant does not raise any challenge to his life sentence in the S.F. case. But he does

argue that his life sentence in the S.S. case was error. Because the State concedes the error, and

we accept the concession, we will be brief.

¶ 231 The PCSA statute provides that “[a] person convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault

of a child committed against 2 or more persons regardless of whether the offenses occurred as

the result of the same act or of several related or unrelated acts shall be sentenced to a term of

natural life imprisonment.” 720 ILCS 5/12-14.1(b)(1.2), amended by Pub. Act 91-238 § 5 (eff.

Jan. 1, 2000).

¶ 232 The trial court imposed both natural-life sentences pursuant to this provision, which was

enacted after defendant committed the offense of PCSA against S.S. (but before he committed

the offense against S.F.) Thus, applying this provision in the S.S. case violates the ex post facto

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clause. There is no dispute that other provisions authorizing a natural-life sentence for PCSA do

not apply to this conviction.

¶ 233 We vacate defendant’s natural-life sentence in case 13 CR 5937, for the offense of PCSA

against S.S., and remand to the circuit court for resentencing in that case only. His natural-life

sentence in case 13 CR 5936, for the offense of PCSA against S.F., is affirmed.

¶ 234                                     CONCLUSION

¶ 235 For these reasons, we vacate defendant’s sentence in case 13 CR 5937 and remand that

case only for resentencing. The judgement of the circuit court is affirmed in all other respects.

¶ 236 Affirmed in part; reversed in part; vacated and remanded.

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