People v. Townsend
Citation2022 IL App (1st) 200911
Date Filed2022-12-09
Docket1-20-0911
Cited0 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
2022 IL App (1st) 200911
No. 1-20-0911
Opinion filed December 9, 2022
SIXTH DIVISION
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
ILLINOIS, ) of Cook County.
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) No. 09 CR 02019
)
DELONDRE TOWNSEND, ) The Honorable
) Brian Flaherty,
Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.
JUSTICE ODEN JOHNSON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justice Walker concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice Tailor concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Defendant Delondre Townsend was convicted after a jury trial of first degree murder, for
the shooting death of Brandon Riley on December 29, 2008. The victim was driving a van at
1 a.m. when his driverâs-side rear window was shot out, and the victim sustained a gunshot
head wound from which he later died. Shortly after the offense, the 18-year-old defendant
confessed to the shooting, and two eyewitnesses identified defendant as the shooter. However,
10 years later, at the 2019 trial, defendant denied being the shooter, and the two eyewitnesses
recanted. No physical evidence connected defendant to the shooting, and he was not arrested
No. 1-20-0911
at the scene of the offense. After considering factors in aggravation and mitigation, the trial
court sentenced defendant to 45 years with the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC).
¶2 On this appeal, defendant claims, first, that the trial court erred by not suppressing his
inculpatory statements made at the station house on January 1, 2009, because his detention at
the police station was a de facto arrest and the police lacked probable cause at that time to
arrest him. (The station house questioning that occurred the day before, on New Yearâs Eve,
is not at issue on this appeal.) Second, defendant claims that we should either reduce his 45-
year sentence to the 35-year statutory minimum or vacate it and remand the case for
resentencing, because the trial court gave him a higher sentence based on the victimâs death,
which is a factor already inherent in the offense. As part of his second claim, defendant asks
this court to exercise the discretion granted to us under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 615(b) to
reduce his sentence to the statutory minimum of 35 years.
¶3 In response to the first claim, the State argues that defendantâs station house interview on
New Yearâs Day was a voluntary and consensual encounter rather than an arrest. The State
acknowledges in its brief to this court that it lacked probable cause to arrest defendant until he
confessed. 1 Since the State does not argue that this was a brief investigative detention or that
it had probable cause prior to the moment of confession, we must determine whether the
questioning at the police station was a voluntary and consensual encounter; otherwise, the
police lacked probable cause for an arrest, and the resulting confession should have been
suppressed.
1
The State asserts that âit was at that time [of the confession] the police developed probable cause
and arrested defendant.â
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¶4 If we find that the confession should have been suppressed, the State argues, in the
alternative, that any error in not suppressing it was harmless because the jury would not have
acquitted defendant after hearing the two eyewitnessesâ pretrial statements, even though they
both recanted. The State makes no argument that defendant forfeited this claim for our review,
so the harmless error standard applies.
¶5 In response to the second claim, the State argues that defendant forfeited his sentencing
claim by failing to object both at sentencing and in a postsentencing motion. Defendant
acknowledges in his brief to this court that his sentencing claim is forfeited. However,
defendant argues that his sentencing claim rises to the level of plain error because the evidence
at his sentencing was closely balanced. Defendant observes that he was only three months past
his eighteenth birthday at the time of the offense, he had only one misdemeanor battery
conviction, and he was a high school senior with a 3.2 grade point average at the time of his
arrest. Defendant also argues that the trial courtâs reliance on a factor inherent in the offense
was a fundamental error that denied him a fair sentencing hearing. Defendant asks this court
to exercise the discretion granted to it by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 615(b)(4) to reduce his
sentence to the 35-year statutory minimum. This court permitted supplemental briefing by the
parties on the Rule 615(b) issue.
¶6 With respect to defendantâs first claim, we find that the trial court did not err in denying
defendantâs pretrial motion to suppress. Since this is his sole claim regarding his conviction
and the evidence supporting it, we affirm his conviction. With respect to his second claim, we
find that the trial court committed the plain sentencing error that defendant alleges. We are
persuaded that this is the rare case that merits the exercise of our discretion under Rule
615(b)(4), and we reduce defendantâs sentence to the statutory minimum of 35 years.
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¶7 BACKGROUND
¶8 I. Pretrial Motion to Suppress
¶9 Since defendant argues on appeal that the trial court erred in denying his pretrial motion,
we provide the circumstances of this motion and the ensuing pretrial proceeding in detail
below.
¶ 10 A. Defendantâs Motion
¶ 11 On December 19, 2012, defendant filed a motion to quash his arrest and suppress
statements. The motion alleged that on January 1, 2009, at 10:30 a.m., he was taken into
custody at his home by a member of the Cook County Sheriffâs Police Department, without a
warrant or probable cause to arrest. As we noted above, the State does not argue on appeal that
the police had either a warrant or probable cause at this time.
¶ 12 The motion alleged that, initially, he was questioned at the Markham district station of the
sheriffâs police on December 31, 2008, by detectives and Assistant Stateâs Attorney (ASA)
Maureen Delahanty and released the same day. The motion moved to suppress the statements
made on January 1, 2009, but not the statements made on December 31, 2008.
¶ 13 Defendant filed a second motion to suppress, on July 10, 2015, which was later amended
on August 17, 2015, and again amended on September 16, 2015. This second suppression
motion alleged that the statements made on both December 31 and January 1 were
involuntary. 2 However, defendantâs appellate brief states: âThat second suppression motion is
not at issue on this appeal.â Thus, we do not consider it.
¶ 14 B. Suppression Hearing
2
At the hearing on this motion, the evidence established that defendant appeared to be having an
asthma attack after giving his confession, and the police called paramedics. The trial court found that the
statements were not involuntary, and defendant does not appeal this finding.
4
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 15 On September 22, 2014, the defense called in support of the first motion (1) Officer Frank
DâOronzo, with the Cook County sheriffâs police; (2) Lashanna Fulwiley, defendantâs sister;
and (3) defendant. We provide the details of both direct and cross-examination as necessary to
examine the issues of credibility in dispute.
¶ 16 1. Officer DâOronzo
¶ 17 a. Direct Examination
¶ 18 DâOronzo testified that he had been a police officer with the Cook County sheriffâs
police for 21 years. While investigating this offense, he learned that people of interest included
men nicknamed Pumkin, E.J., and Boo-man. DâOronzo was âinformed who they were by our
gang guys.â Detective Rafferty visited the home of defendant, also known as Pumkin, but
defendant was not at home. On December 31, 2008, the police received a call from defendantâs
mom indicating defendant was now at home, and DâOronzo went there with Detective Ortiz3
and gang officer Terry Tabb to bring defendant to the police station located in the Markham
Courthouse. DâOronzo and Ortizâs interview of defendant was not videotaped because, at that
time, the police âbelieved him to be a witness.â Defendant provided âa written statement as a
witness,â with ASA Maureen Delahanty present. After the statement was typed and defendant
signed it, he was released. The police then picked up the person who defendant alleged was
the offender.
¶ 19 DâOronzo testified that, on January 1, 2009, Detective Stephen Moody, dressed in âa
shirt and tie,â went to defendantâs home to pick up defendant again. Defendant traveled in the
detectiveâs car, which was a plain car. DâOronzo did not go. Although defendant arrived at the
station sometime in the morning or midday, DâOronzo did not speak to defendant until
3
No first name was provided for Ortiz at the pretrial suppression hearing.
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No. 1-20-0911
sometime in the early afternoon. While defendant was waiting at the station, he was free to go
if he had asked, as he was not handcuffed. Defendant waited in the lobby or roll-call room,
which DâOronzo described as âa big roomâ with two doors. One of the reasons for bringing
defendant back to the station was for a possible lineup.
¶ 20 DâOronzo interviewed defendant on January 1 in order âto clarify some information.â
When the police interviewed the suspect whom defendant had identified as the shooter, the
suspect adamantly denied that he was the shooter and adamantly denied that he went by the
street name provided by defendant. DâOronzoâs interview with defendant on January 1 was
videotaped.
¶ 21 b. Cross-Examination
¶ 22 On cross-examination, DâOronzo testified that, although the shooting occurred on
December 29, the victim did not die until December 31, thereby turning the investigation into
a homicide investigation at that time. DâOronzo did not learn that the victim had died until
after speaking with defendant on December 31. When defendantâs mother called the police,
she indicated that defendant needed a ride to the station. When DâOronzo, Ortiz, and Tabb
arrived at defendantâs home on December 31, DâOronzo and Ortiz both wore a shirt and tie
with their badges and firearms, while Tabb was dressed in jeans, a T-shirt, and a black tactical
vest with âPoliceâ written on it. After they knocked on the door or rang the bell, defendant
came outside to speak to them. DâOronzo asked defendant to come with them, and he agreed.
The officers did not handcuff defendant, and they did not draw their guns. There were no other
police vehicles present, except for the one unmarked car that they had arrived in. After being
patted down, defendant was placed in the back seat, without handcuffs. Prior to the interview
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No. 1-20-0911
on December 31, Ortiz advised defendant of his Miranda rights, and defendant agreed to speak
with the police. See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
¶ 23 DâOronzo testified that, on December 31, defendant first told them that he was with his
girlfriend the night of the shooting and that he did not learn of the shooting until the next day.
Defendant said that it was not until the next day that he also learned that his name was being
discussed in connection with the shooting. Defendant stated that he was going to turn himself
in, but he did not want to deal with the police station on New Yearâs Eve. DâOronzo indicated
to defendant that he did not believe him, and an âinterrogationâ ensued. Although video
equipment was available, the police were not legally required to videotape the interrogation at
that point because it was not a homicide investigation, and they did not know that the victim
was about to die. DâOronzo offered defendant the opportunity to take a polygraph test, which
was performed on December 31 but rendered âinconclusiveâ results. After the polygraph test,
the officers interviewed defendant again and told him that the polygraph did not indicate that
he was being truthful with them. At that point, defendant changed his story.
¶ 24 DâOronzo testified that, during the second interview on December 31 after the
polygraph test, defendant told the police that he was not with his girlfriend, that he received a
call from âE.J.â or Elijah White, and that, when the shooting occurred, defendant was with
White but defendant was leaving in his motherâs vehicle such that defendant did not witness
White actually shooting. DâOronzo told defendant that he did not believe him. However, at
that point, the only information that DâOronzo had regarding defendant being at the scene of
the shooting was the information that defendant had just provided.
¶ 25 DâOronzo testified that defendant changed his story a third time to state that he was
present when White did the shooting and then defendant left the scene. DâOronzo testified that
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No. 1-20-0911
he believed defendant enough to have defendantâs statement memorialized in writing by an
ASA and that, based on his experience, DâOronzo would not have called for an ASA to
memorialize the statement if he thought defendant was still lying. At that time, DâOronzo
thought defendant was a witness, and he continued his investigation based on that information.
DâOronzo identified the typed statement that was taken by DâOronzo and Ortiz in the presence
of ASA Delahanty and that defendant signed. The last page, which was also signed by
defendant, contains a photograph of the person whom defendant identified as the shooter. After
the statement was taken, defendant was released and allowed to return home, because the police
believed he was a witness. DâOronzo testified that, if they had thought defendant was involved
in the murder, they would not have released him. Moody drove defendant home. Later that
night, the victim died.
¶ 26 DâOronzo testified that the next step in the investigation was to interview the person
whom he now believed was the shooter: Elijah White. After learning that the victim died,
DâOronzo asked Moody to pick up defendant again the next morning, January 1, in case they
also needed him. When defendant arrived at the station, DâOronzo was in another room where
White was being interviewed by Rafferty. Whiteâs interview was videotaped because, at that
point, it had become a homicide investigation. White was adamant that he had nothing to do
with the shooting and that his nickname was not E.J. When White was offered the opportunity
to take a polygraph test, White was â[a]damant about taking it.â White stated that he was with
his girlfriend that night.
¶ 27 DâOronzo testified that it was unusual for a suspect to be so adamant about taking a
polygraph test. Before the test was administered, DâOronzo testified that he spoke to defendant
again and defendant appeared scared. At this point, DâOronzo did not know whether defendant
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No. 1-20-0911
was hiding the identity of the real shooter. Defendant was with Moody in the roll-call room,
and they were watching a Blackhawks game on television. Defendant was not handcuffed.
When DâOronzo approached, he told defendant that he had some things that he wanted to
clarify with defendant. DâOronzo and defendant went to an interview room with Rafferty, and
the rest of their conversation was videotaped because it was now a homicide investigation.
¶ 28 DâOronzo testified that, during that interview which began at 3:49 p.m., defendant
eventually admitted to being the shooter. The officers were surprised when they realized they
had a confession rather than some clarification.
¶ 29 c. Redirect
¶ 30 On redirect examination, DâOronzo confirmed that, on December 31, defendant was âa
person of interest,â based on a âsource of informationâ who had provided the nicknames
Pumkin, E.J., and Boo-Man. The âgang teamâ said that Pumkin was defendant and E.J. was
Elijah White. The âsource of informationâ said that Pumkin shot at the van. Based on that
information, defendant was a suspect on December 31, when the officers read him his Miranda
rights and questioned him. The possible results of the polygraph test were lying, not lying, and
inconclusive. The result of defendantâs polygraph test was inconclusive, rather than lying.
Elijah White told officers on January 1 that he goes by E not E.J., and he offered no information
about the shooting.
¶ 31 2. Defendantâs Sister
¶ 32 Next, the defense called Lashanna Fulwiley, defendantâs sister, as a witness. On
January 1, 2009, Fulwiley was present at the house where defendant resided. Fulwiley did not
live there but had arrived December 31 and had stayed overnight. Their mother, who lived
there, was also present. On the morning of New Yearâs Day, Fulwiley heard a loud banging on
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No. 1-20-0911
the door and opened the door to see two men in âregularâ clothing. One of the men said that
he was an investigator and wanted to speak with Pumkin. When Fulwiley looked at him, the
man stated defendantâs full name. Fulwiley told them to âhold onâ and asked her little brother
to see if defendant was in the back of the house, and her little brother returned and said that he
was. Then she told âthemâ to tell defendant to come to the living room because people were
here to see him. The police did not enter the home, and Fulwiley ânever opened the door to let
them in.â Defendant came to the door and opened âthe screen door.â Fulwiley explained that
it was a screen door at other times of the year but that it had âglass in it *** because it was
wintertime at that time.â The police said they needed to speak with him, so defendant stepped
outside. They walked down the sidewalk from the house, and Fulwiley could see their lips
moving but could not hear the words. The officers patted defendant down, handcuffed him,
placed him in the back of their car, and left. Fulwiley did not see defendant again after he was
placed in custody.
¶ 33 On cross-examination, Fulwiley testified that she was âuncertainâ whether there were
two men. As she watched the police and defendant walk away, one door was open, and she
was looking through the glass of the âscreen door.â She stood in the same spot until the police
left. Nothing obstructed her view.
¶ 34 3. Defendant
¶ 35 a. Direct Examination
¶ 36 Defendant testified that on December 31, 2008, his mother informed him that the police
had been to their home and were looking for him. She gave him the card that they had left with
her, and he called them. They asked if they could talk to him, and he said, âsure, you can come
to the house.â The police arrived with five or six cars, but only two officers came to the house.
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No. 1-20-0911
Between 10 and 12 officers were outside. Of the cars, âa coupleâ were marked squad cars, and
âa coupleâ were regular cars. When they knocked on the door, defendant answered it, and they
asked for him by name. After he identified himself, they asked him to come to the police
station, and he complied. They did not offer him the opportunity to go to the station on his
own. Instead, the officers walked him to a car and told him to place his hands on the car, and
they searched him. After the search, they handcuffed his hands behind his back and placed him
in the back of a squad car. They drove him to the police station in the Markham courthouse,
took off the cuffs, and took him to an interview room. The door of the room was closed, and
he was not free to leave. The officer gave him a form with Miranda rights and told him to sign
it. Defendant did not understand what his rights were because he had never been in trouble
before, but he signed it because the officer told him that âthe quickerâ they got this over with,
âthe quickerâ he could leave.
¶ 37 Defendant testified that there were two officers in the interview room, and they asked
him if he knew anything about the murder at a particular intersection on December 29.
Defendant told them that he had heard E.J. was involved. The officers took the coat and hoodie
defendant was wearing and said they were testing the clothes for gunshot residue. They put
fluid on his hands and told him to place his hands on something. After defendant volunteered
to take a polygraph test, they took him to a different room, where the door was also closed.
There was never a point when he was alone without an officer or when he was free to leave.
¶ 38 Defendant testified that they typed out a statement for him to sign, which he did, and
they returned his clothes to him. Defendant signed each page of the statement. However, he
testified that it was not his signature that appeared on the final page with the photograph.
Defendant was told that he could make a phone call, and he called his sister to come pick him
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No. 1-20-0911
up, which she did, and they went home. The police did not escort him out; he exited on his
own.
¶ 39 Defendant testified that on January 1, he was in the back room of his house, when his
niece told him that his mother said to come because the police were at the door. When
defendant entered the living room, two plain-clothed police officers were already in the living
room, and they told him they needed him to come with them again for further questioning. The
officers did not give him the option of driving himself to the station. After defendant walked
outside with the officers, they âcheckedâ him for weapons, told him to put his hand behind his
back, handcuffed him, and drove him to the Markham police station. At the station, he was
taken to a conference room with one closed door. Defendant was never left alone without an
officer present, and he was not free to go. After some initial conversation, defendant was
moved to the interview room where he had been the day before. In the interview room, he was
read his rights. Three officers interviewed him, and they were not the same officers who had
transported him to the police station.
¶ 40 Defendant testified that âthe first thingâ the officers said to him was that they knew he
âhad something to do with it.â They never told him that he was there to view a lineup or a
photo array or to provide information. On January 1, there were two or three interviews, and
in between interviews, he was kept in the same room. He was in this room for a lengthy period
of time, and he provided the names of other persons who may have been present at the offense
scene.
¶ 41 b. Cross-Examination
¶ 42 On cross-examination, defendant testified that there were 10 to 12 cars outside his
home on December 31; some were marked, and some were unmarked. There were also 10 to
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No. 1-20-0911
12 officers outside; some were in uniform, and some were not. None removed a gun from a
holster. Defendant had the nickname âPumpkin,â4 but a lot of people in the neighborhood had
the same nickname. On December 31, the police asked him if he knew someone named E.J.;
defendant did not bring up E.J.; the police did. Defendant told them that he was at his
girlfriendâs house until the morning when he heard about the shooting.
¶ 43 Defendant testified that he was not anywhere near the murder scene at the time of the
murder. Since he knew he was telling the truth, he volunteered to take a polygraph test. After
the test, the police told him that the result was inconclusive and that he was probably not telling
them the whole truth. Defendant testified that, after that point, âI didnât tell them nothing else.â
Defendant acknowledged that he signed a statement on December 31 at 7:55 p.m. After the
polygraph test, the police called an ASA to come talk to him. However, after the polygraph
test, he did not have any further conversation with the police about the shooting. The ASA
arrived, and she âwas on the computer,â and âthey put [defendant] back in the holding cell.â
When the ASA was finished, they brought defendant back to the small office where the ASA
and an officer were, and the ASA showed defendant the statement. Before defendant signed
the statement, the ASA asked him if this was âeverything that [he] had told the officers,â and
he read it and said it was. The ASA also asked if he wanted to make any changes, and he did
not. After defendant signed it, the ASA told him he could call home and have someone pick
him up. Defendant confirmed that the last page contained a photo of White but denied that the
signature on the photograph page was his. All the other signatures on the statement and the
Miranda form were his.
4
During opening statements, counsels spell the nickname as âpumkinâ for the court; however
after page 246 of the record, the spelling becomes âpumpkin.â
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No. 1-20-0911
¶ 44 On the morning of January 1, after his niece came to the back room of the house to tell
him that his mother said there were âa whole lot of police out here,â defendant came to the
living room at the front of the house, looked out of the living room window and observed 10
or 12 police cars outside. Defendantâs sister was sitting on the living room couch, and the front
door was closed. Defendant sat on the couch, the police rang the doorbell, and his sister got up
to answer it. Three plainclothes officers asked to speak to defendant, identifying defendant by
his first and last name; they did not use the nickname âPumpkin.â Defendant rose and went to
the door, and the police stated: âwe need you to come back down to the station for further
questioning.â Defendant later learned that one of the officers was Detective Moody. Defendant
replied: âOkay, I go with you.â After defendant left the house with the officers, he walked
toward the police car, and he was patted down, handcuffed, placed in the back seat and driven
to the station.
¶ 45 Defendant testified that, at the station, he was taken to a conference room, with a big
table and a television, where Moody introduced himself. Moody asked defendant questions
such as what he did for a living, but Moody did not ask about the case because, as Moody
explained, he was waiting for one of the detectives. Defendantâs handcuffs were still on.
Moody was watching hockey on television, but defendant was not paying attention because he
does not follow hockey. They did not talk about the game, and Moody never left the room. At
some point the detective who Moody was waiting for came in, and defendant was taken to the
interview room, where he was the day before. They removed the handcuffs, and Moody, Ortiz
and DâOronzo were all there. They started off by saying that they knew defendant had
something to do with it. Defendant had more than one conversation with the officers in that
room that day. During these conversations, defendant admitted to being the shooter.
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No. 1-20-0911
¶ 46 c. Redirect Examination
¶ 47 On redirect examination, defendant testified that, on both days, he did not believe that
he could refuse to go with the police; on both days, he was handcuffed, placed in the back seat,
and not given the option to go to the station on his own. While at the station, he was in rooms
with closed doors, with officers present, and not free to leave. The handcuffs were not removed
until he was placed in an interview room. Defendant was not asked to view a lineup or photo
array. Defendant did not tell the officers on December 31 that E.J. was Elijah White, and he
was not shown the photograph on December 31 that was attached to his statement.
¶ 48 4. The Stateâs Case
¶ 49 At the close of defendantâs evidence, the State moved for a directed finding that the
encounter was voluntary and, thus, the burden had not shifted to the State to show probable
cause. While listening to the partiesâ arguments on the motion, the trial judge informed them
that defendantâs release from the station âwould lead me to believe that heâs not a suspect.â
The judge explained: âIâve been doing this long enough to know that the police keep him there
for days at a time if they believe somebody is a suspect. So, I will let you know that, that
weighs heavily on me.â The proceedings adjourned to permit the trial court to read the
transcripts. On January 8, 2015, despite the trial judgeâs earlier statements, the trial court
denied the Stateâs motion for a directed finding and found that the burden had, indeed, shifted
to the State.
¶ 50 On March 18, 2015, the hearing resumed with the Stateâs case. The State called Officer
Moody, who testified that, in the evening of December 31, 2009, DâOronzo and Rafferty asked
Moody to drive a witness back home. Moody went with Detective Bernson to a conference
room and said to defendant: â âHey, Delondre, Iâm here to take you home.â â Defendant was
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No. 1-20-0911
not handcuffed when Moody entered the conference room, and Moody did not cuff him or pat
him down. They walked to an unmarked, white Chevy Impala, and defendant entered the back
seat. There was no âcageâ; the car had regular front seats and a regular back seat. 5 There was
no conversation during the ride except for directions.
¶ 51 Moody testified that, the next day, at about lunch time, Rafferty and DâOronzo asked
him and Bernson to go back to defendantâs house and pick up defendant so they could ask him
some more questions. Only one car went to defendantâs house, which was the car carrying
Moody and Bernson. After Moody knocked on the door, a woman answered, and Moody asked
for defendant by defendantâs full name. It was Moodyâs practice to ask for people by their full
name rather than by a nickname. The woman shut the door, and then defendant came to the
door. Moody told defendant that the detectives who defendant spoke with yesterday wanted to
speak to him again, and Moody asked defendant âif he minded coming back with us to the
police station.â Defendant replied âokay.â The officers did not place any restraints on
defendant; they did not pat him down; and they did not have their guns drawn. Once at the
station, Moody asked defendant to wait in the foyer or entrance area. This area has a door to
either enter the station or âgo back outside.â In the area were âwarrant clerksâ and âan
administrative assistant.â The area has a front desk where citizens can ask for information.
After Moody and Bernson left defendant to speak with DâOronzo and Rafferty, no one stayed
with defendant. DâOronzo and Rafferty instructed Moody to bring defendant to the conference
room and turn on the television, which Moody did.
5
On cross-examination, Moody added that there was also no glass separating the front from the
back seat. It was just empty space. Moody also clarified that he used the same unmarked police car on
both December 31 and January 1.
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No. 1-20-0911
¶ 52 Moody testified that they did roll call in this conference room, so the room had a
podium and a chalkboard, as well as the television. While defendant was in the roll-call room,
he was not restrained in any way, and Moody was the only other person present. Moody turned
on the Blackhawks game and explained to defendant why the hockey game was at Wrigley
Field, since defendant seemed confused about that. There was no conversation about the case.
During the afternoon, Moody was âin and outâ of the room. Moody would come in, watch a
bit of the game, talk to defendant about it, and then leave. When Moody was out of the room,
defendant was not restrained in any way, and defendant was in there by himself. After a few
hours, defendant asked when the officers were going to talk to him, and Moody asked
DâOronzo and Rafferty, and then Moody relayed to defendant that they had said that they
would be there in a minute. When the other officers came to escort defendant out of the room,
they did not handcuff him.
¶ 53 On cross-examination, Moody explained that, since he was a detective at that time,
rather than on patrol, he did not have to pat down everyone he placed in his car and that he
generally did not pat someone down unless the person was âa suspect or possible offender.â
After Moody asked defendant if he would mind coming back to the station, Moody did not ask
defendant if defendant wanted to bring himself down to the station, because âhe just walked
out and followed us to the car.â Defendant did not mention driving himself. Moody and
Bernson were both dressed in plainclothes, with a badge and gun that readily identified them
as police officers. The roll-call room had two doors: one that led directly into the foyer and
one that led into the rest of the station. When defendant was waiting there, the door to the foyer
was open, and the door to the rest of the station was closed. If defendant had asked to go, he
could have left. If defendant had asked Moody, Moody would have told DâOronzo and Rafferty
17
No. 1-20-0911
âhey, this guy is leaving. If you want to talk to him, talk to him now.â Moody never said to
defendant: âhey, do you want to go?â
¶ 54 5. The Trial Courtâs Ruling
¶ 55 On April 23, 2015, after listening to argument, the trial court denied defendantâs
motion. Prior to ruling, the court observed that, âcontrary to what the defense argues, petitioner
argues the defendant freely goes to the police station on the second time.â The trial court found:
âI believe that there is no Fourth Amendment violation despite what I ruled earlier
at the motion for directed finding. There is no Fourth Amendment violation at any time.
Defendant is not a suspect. They are treating him as a witness throughout this matter
until he then gives his videotaped statement to Rafferty.
So the motion is denied.â
¶ 56 II. Trial
¶ 57 In this appeal, defendant does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence against him
and does not challenge the admission of any exhibit or piece of evidence at trial other than his
pretrial statement on January 1, 2009. Thus, we only summarize the trial evidence below.
¶ 58 In sum, the governmentâs evidence at trial consisted primarily of statements by
defendant and two eyewitnesses. Prior to trial, two eyewitnesses stated to the police and before
a grand jury that they had observed defendant walk to the middle of the street and open fire at
the victimâs van as the van drove away. The pretrial statements of both witnesses were
memorialized in writing and in their grand jury testimony. However, at trial, both witnesses
recanted. Similarly, defendant confessed before trial to being the shooter and then recanted at
trial.
18
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 59 An assistant medical examiner confirmed that the victim, who was the driver of the
van, died from a gunshot wound to the head. A police investigator testified that he recovered
10, 9-millimeter spent cartridge cases at the scene, all fired from a semiautomatic weapon, and
that one of the vanâs windows had been shot out. The State did not argue a motive for the
shooting, and the victimâs girlfriend, who was a passenger in the van, did not see who fired the
shots.
¶ 60 III. Sentencing
¶ 61 One of the two issues that defendant raises on this appeal concerns the trial courtâs remarks
at the sentencing hearing. Defendant argues that, at sentencing, the trial court considered a
factor inherent in the offense, namely, the death of the victim.
¶ 62 At the sentencing hearing on July 2, 2019, the State presented in aggravation a statement
from the victimâs daughter and the testimony of the victimâs sister, who testified that the 23-
year-old victim was âa father, a son, a brother and a friend.â In aggravation, the State argued
that defendant lacked remorse, that the murder appeared to be unprovoked, and that defendant
had tried to implicate someone else. The State argued defendantâs âlack of remorse,â and the
defense objected. The trial court overruled the objection, stating â[i]tâs argument.â In
mitigation, defense counsel argued that defendant was a good student, 6 came from a good
family, had âno prior criminality,â and had already served 11 years in jail.
¶ 63 The presentence investigation report (PSI) indicated that, at the time of his arrest,
defendant had a 3.2 grade point average in school, was on the basketball team, had completed
the eleventh grade, and was a senior in high school. At the time of the offense, he was just
6
Defense counsel asserted that defendant graduated high school. However, the PSI does not state
that defendant graduated but rather indicates that defendantâs studies were interrupted by this case. The
PSI states that defendant reported being a high school senior at the time of his arrest.
19
No. 1-20-0911
three months past his eighteenth birthday. For two years during high school, defendant had
been employed at Subway, earing $400 per week, at $8.25 per hour, but he had to leave due to
his basketball commitment. As such, the PSI indicated that the âsourceâ of defendantâs
âemployment statusâ and âincomeâ was âSubway.â Defendant had no gang involvement,
fathered no children, and spent his free time playing basketball and attending church.
Defendant had no juvenile adjudications of delinquency, and he received time served for one
misdemeanor battery on February 11, 2018, which was years after this case. Although he
reported drinking alcohol on the weekend at parties and a âcasual useâ of cannabis, he denied
having a problem with either alcohol or drugs. Defendant reported a close relationship with
both parents and his extended family and that his friends were a close-knit group on the
basketball team. The PSI author noted that defendant was âvery cooperativeâ and answered
âall questions without hesitation.â
¶ 64 During the hearing, defendant addressed the court and denied that he was the âkiller.â
Defendant stated: âEverything is an assumption, because wasnât none of us present that night
when this all happened.â Defendant asked the court to consider that, similar to the victimâs
family, he had also been separated from loved ones:
DEFENDANT: âThe same way how they deal with their father, I have to deal with
that with my father and my mother, too. Me not being able to see my mama, me not
being able to talk to my brothers, me not being able to talk to my nieces, me not being
able to talk to my nephew, that is that [sic] the same thing[.]â
¶ 65 After listening to defendantâs remarks and arguments by the prosecutor and defense
counsel, the trial court pronounced sentence. The parties agreed that the applicable sentencing
20
No. 1-20-0911
range was 35 to 75 years.7 In his brief to this court, defendant argues that, in pronouncing a
sentence â10 years above the minimum, the trial court found precisely one fact in aggravation:
[defendantâs] âconduct caused serious harmâ in that the victimâs âfamily lost a loved one.â â
We present below the trial courtâs entire two pages of sentencing remarks, so that the trial
courtâs comment about âa loved oneâ may be placed in context:
THE COURT: âOkay. First of all, itâs not an assumption as to what happened. The
jury found you guilty, and I think the jury did the right thing. I think the evidence
against you was overwhelming, as far as Iâm concerned.
What I find interesting here is how you turn yourself into the victim. You have been
convicted of murder. You shot this young man senselessly, for no reason whatsoever
thatâs ever been presented to me, but all of a sudden, you are the victim in this case,
because you said you are gone from your family. They will never see their son again
and their brother or their father, whatever the case may be. You can still have contact,
albeit you will be in jail for a long period of time, but you can still see your family and
talk to your family and write letters to your family. So donât turn yourself into the
victim. That is the last thing you are is the victim.
As far as Iâm concerned, you are a cold-blooded killer, and as I sit here on the bench
for as many years as I have been sitting on the bench, these shootings, they make no
sense whatsoever. Everybody is brave when they have an illegal gun, but face someone
7
Normally, the sentencing range for first degree murder is 20 to 60 years. 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-20(a)
(West 2018). However, defendant was charged with committing the offense while armed with a firearm,
which enhances the sentence by 15 years. 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(d)(i) (West 2018) (15-year sentencing
enhancement when âthe person committed the offense while armed with a firearmâ).
21
No. 1-20-0911
face to face and go fight them? Thatâs something different. Itâs the cowards that shoot
them in the back and fire as the van is going by.
But to say that you are the victim is preposterous. They lost somebody they loved.
They will never see him. All they have is memories. You still have your family[;] you
can talk to and write to and say things to and write letters to. Thereâs nothing more I
can say, because itâs so outrageous, itâs so outrageous.
I had an opportunity to review the factors in aggravation and mitigation, review the
presentence investigation, consider the arguments of the lawyers, and the defendantâs
conduct caused serious harm. [The victimâs] family lost a loved one. And I read here
in the presentence investigation you were raised by a loving family. Itâs not like you
were thrown out on the street when you were 10 years old. You were raised by a loving
family. You had all the advantages of the world. I see presentence investigations where
people have not seen their parents where they were 15 and they are now 25 and they
have no relationship. You had the relationship and you chose to just throw it all away
and be the murderer that you are.
Considering factors in mitigation, the defendant had one prior conviction for a
battery, so, as far as Iâm concerned, he has no history of prior delinquency or
criminality.
Based on that, the sentence of the Court will be 45 years [IDOC], 3 years mandatory
supervised release.â
¶ 66 On July 30, 2019, defendant filed a timely notice of appeal, and this appeal followed.
¶ 67 ANALYSIS
¶ 68 I. Pretrial Statements
22
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 69 A. No Forfeiture
¶ 70 Defendant argues, first, that the trial court erred by failing to suppress the inculpatory
pretrial statement that he made on January 1, 2009. As a threshold matter, we observe that he
has preserved this issue for our review. To preserve an error for review on appeal, a party must
both (1) object at trial and (2) raise the issue again in a posttrial motion. People v. Piatkowski,
225 Ill. 2d 551, 564 (2007). This requirement âencourages a defendant to raise issues before
the trial court, thereby allowing the [trial] court to correct its [own] errorsâ and âconsequently
precluding a defendant from obtaining a reversal through inaction.â Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d at
564. When a criminal defendant has preserved an issue for our review, the burden is on the
State to show that the error, if there was one, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. People
v. McLaurin, 235 Ill. 2d 478, 495 (2009). An error is considered harmless if it appears beyond
a reasonable doubt that it did not contribute to the verdict. People v. King, 2020 IL 123926,
¶ 40. Thus, if we find that the trial court erred, the burden would switch to the State to show
that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
¶ 71 B. Fourth Amendment
¶ 72 Defendant claims a violation of his constitutional right against unreasonable seizures.
¶ 73 Both the Illinois Constitution and the fourth amendment of the United States
Constitution protect citizens from unreasonable searches and seizures by police officers.
People v. Holmes, 2017 IL 120407, ¶ 25; U.S. Const., amend. IV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6.
Article I, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution provides, in relevant part: âThe people shall
have the right to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and other possessions against
unreasonable searches[ and] seizures ***.â Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 6. Similarly, the fourth
amendment of the United States Constitution provides: âThe right of the people to be secure
23
No. 1-20-0911
in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall
not be violated ***.â U.S. Const., amend. IV. Through the due process clause of the fourteenth
amendment (U.S. Const., amend. XIV) the federal protection of the fourth amendment applies
to searches and seizures conducted by the states. People v. Hill, 2020 IL 124595, ¶ 19.
¶ 74 With respect to article I, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution, the Illinois Supreme
Court has chosen to âfollow decisions of the United States Supreme Court regarding searches
and seizures.â Holmes, 2017 IL 120407, ¶ 25. â[T]he âessential purposeâ of the fourth
amendment is to impose a standard of reasonableness upon the exercise of discretion by
government officials,â such as police officers. People v. Jones, 215 Ill. 2d 261, 269 (2005);
People v. Bahena, 2020 IL App (1st) 180197, ¶ 55.
¶ 75 If a search or seizure occurs in violation of the fourth amendment, the fruits of that
search or seizure may be suppressed. The purpose of the fourth amendmentâs exclusionary rule
is to protect all of us by deterring fourth amendment violations by the police. Terry v. Ohio,
392 U.S. 1, 12 (1968) (âthe rule excluding evidence seized in violation of the Fourth
Amendment has been recognized as a principal mode of discouragingâ unreasonable seizures
for all citizens); People v. Flunder, 2019 IL App (1st) 171635, ¶ 40 (âThe fourth amendment
is a blunt-edged sword, but it protects the privacy of us all, both the ones with contraband and
the ones without it.â).
¶ 76 C. Prima Facie Showing
¶ 77 On a motion to suppress, such as the one at issue here, the defendant bears the initial
burden of coming forward with proof. People v. Cregan, 2014 IL 113600, ¶ 23. If the defendant
makes a prima facie showing that the evidence or statement was obtained in an illegal search
or seizure, the burden then shifts to the State to produce evidence to counter the defendantâs
24
No. 1-20-0911
prima facie showing. Id. ¶ 23. âThe ultimate burden of proof remains with the defendant,
however.â Id. ¶ 23.
¶ 78 In the case at bar, the trial court found that the burden had shifted to the State.
Subsequent thereto, Moodyâs testimony established the voluntariness of the encounter, as we
explain below.
¶ 79 D. Standard of Review
¶ 80 The standard of review for a motion to suppress is well established. In People v. Johnson,
237 Ill. 2d 81, 93-94 (2010), as in our case, the defendant moved to suppress statements that
he made at a police station following an alleged illegal arrest, and the supreme court explained
the appropriate standard of review, as follows:
âIn reviewing a trial courtâs ruling on a motion to suppress evidence, we apply the
two-part standard of review adopted by the [United States] Supreme Court in Ornelas
v. United States, 517 U.S. 690, 699 *** (1996). [Citation.] Under this standard, we give
deference to the factual findings of the trial court, and we will reject those findings only
if they are against the manifest weight of the evidence. [Citation.] However, a
reviewing court â ââremains free to undertake its own assessment of the facts in relation
to the issues,â â â and we review de novo the trial courtâs ultimate legal ruling as to
whether suppression is warranted.â Johnson, 237 Ill. 2d at 88-89.
âThus, we apply a bifurcated standard of review: (1) rejecting a trial courtâs factual findings
only if they are against the manifest weight of the evidence (2) but reviewing de novo the trial
courtâs conclusion as to whether those facts satisfy the legal standard to warrant suppression.â
People v. Hernandez, 2017 IL App (1st) 150575, ¶ 90(citing Johnson,237 Ill. 2d at 88-89
).
25
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 81 âA factual finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence only if the finding
appears to be unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on the evidence or if the opposite conclusion
is readily apparent.â Id. ¶ 91. âDe novo review means that we perform the same analysis a trial
court would perform.â Id. ¶ 92.
¶ 82 The case at bar required a credibility determination by the trial court, acting as the fact
finder, at the suppression hearing. Defendant described the January 1 encounter as practically
an invasion of 10 to 12 police vehicles and numerous officers. He claimed that he was
handcuffed and watched by an officer at all times. By contrast, Moody testified that only one
car with two officers arrived at defendantâs home on January 1, that defendant was not
handcuffed or even patted down, and that, while waiting at the station, defendant was
frequently left alone in a room with an open door, leading to the outside. The trial court noted
the difference in the factual claims and stated that he âbelieve[d]â there was no fourth
amendment violation. This ruling indicates that the trial court resolved the credibility dispute
in favor of the police.
¶ 83 E. Encounters
¶ 84 âEncounters between police officers and citizens have been divided by the courts into
three tiers: (1) arrests, which must be supported by probable cause; (2) brief investigative
detentions, commonly referred to as âTerry stops,â which must be supported by a police
officerâs reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity [citation]; and (3) consensual
encounters that involve no coercion by the police and, thus, do not implicate the fourth
amendment.â Bahena, 2020 IL App (1st) 180197, ¶ 56; Flunder,2019 IL App (1st) 171635, ¶ 25
. The last category, which is at issue here, requires drawing a line between voluntary
encounters, on the one hand, and fourth amendment seizures, on the other.
26
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 85 â[A] person has been seized when, considering the totality of the circumstances, a
reasonable person would believe he was not free to leave.â People v. Oliver, 236 Ill. 2d 448,
456 (2010). For a seizure to occur, the officer must have âin some manner restrained the
citizenâs liberty by physical force or show of authority.â People v. Williams, 2016 IL App (1st)
132615, ¶ 36(citing People v. Luedemann,222 Ill. 2d 530, 550
(2006)). Distinguishing
between a voluntary encounter and a seizure requires a court to analyze how an officerâs
conduct would objectively appear to a reasonable and innocent person. Id. ¶ 37. The
âsubjective perceptionâ of either the subject or the officer involved is not the determining
factor. Id.
¶ 86 âOur supreme court has identified different tests for determining whether a person is
seized based uponâ the different types of encounters. Id. ¶ 37. For example, â[w]here police
approach a person sitting in a parked vehicle, the appropriate test is whether a reasonable
innocent person would believe that he is â âfree to decline the officerâs requests or otherwise
terminate the encounter.â â â Id. ¶ 37 (quoting Luedemann, 222 Ill. 2d at 550-51, quoting
Florida v. Bostick, 501 U.S. 429, 436 (1991)). âHowever, when the person is walking down
the street, the appropriate test is whether a reasonable innocent person would feel free to leave
***.â Id. ¶ 37.
¶ 87 As far as we know, there is no separate articulation of the test when the encounter
involves a police station. Citizens enter police stations every day of the week, to ask or answer
questions, to view lineups or photo arrays, and to receive or provide information. Not every
encounter with a police officer inside a police station is a seizure. People v. Gomez, 2011 IL
App (1st) 092185, ¶ 60 (the defendant was not under arrest, although he was waiting at a police
station to speak to detectives). What makes this case so close to the line between voluntary
27
No. 1-20-0911
encounters and seizures is the fact that the police transported defendant to the station, rather
than defendant voluntarily proceeding there on his own, and the fact that he remained there for
several hours. Id. ¶ 59 (the length of the encounter and whether the defendant was transported
in a police car are factors a court may consider). Our supreme court has found:
âGenerally, the following Mendenhall factors indicate a seizure without the person
attempting to leave: (1) the threatening presence of several officers; (2) the display of
a weapon by an officer; (3) some physical touching of the person; or (4) using language
or tone of voice compelling the individual to comply with the officerâs requests.â
People v. Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 57(citing Oliver,236 Ill. 2d at 456
, citing United
States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544, 554 (1980))).
Based on these factors and the unique facts of the case that we list below, we find that this
encounter falls on the voluntary side of the line.
¶ 88 First, Officer Moody testified that he asked defendant if defendant âmindedâ coming
to the station again, and defendant agreed. Even defendant in his testimony admitted that the
officers had asked, and he had agreed to go. 8 Id. ¶ 58 (there was âno evidence that either officer
used language or a tone of voice compelling defendant to complyâ). Second, Moody testified
that defendant was not handcuffed or even patted down, before entering the back seat of the
officersâ car. DâOronzo testified that, the day before, on December 31, defendant had been
patted down before entering the police vehicle. However, Moody did not pat defendant down
on January 1. This action would communicate to a reasonable innocent person that he was not
being regarded with suspicion. Id. ¶ 58 (â[t]he officers did not physically touch defendantâ).
Third, Moody testified that only one police vehicle arrived at defendantâs home. Id. ¶ 60 (âthe
8
Defendant testified that he had replied: âOkay, I go with you.â
28
No. 1-20-0911
police officersâ arrival in [one] marked car, standing alone, is insufficient to create [a]
threatening presenceâ). Fourth, this vehicle, which defendant rode in, had no cage. It was a
regular vehicle, with a regular back seat and regular front seats. Gomez, 2011 IL App (1st)
092185,¶ 60 (âDefendant was not handcuffed or otherwise restrained and accompanied the
detectives in an unmarked police car without a cage.â). Fifth, only two officers were involved
in the encounter at defendantâs home and, immediately after arriving at defendantâs home
around lunchtime, they knocked on the front door and used defendantâs proper name, as would
any other normal visitor. No guns were drawn; the officers did not arrive in the middle of the
night; and Moody was dressed in a shirt and tie, with a badge that communicated his office.
Defendant corroborated that the officers who came to the door were in plainclothes. 9 Almond,
2015 IL 113817, ¶ 58 (the two âofficers wore plain clothes, and neither displayed a weaponâ);
Gomez, 2011 IL App (1st) 092185, ¶ 60 (the arrival of officers at 5 a.m. at a private home is
âsuggest[ive]â of an arrest). Sixth, after arriving at the station, Moody asked defendant to wait
in a foyer, where citizens could walk in and out and speak to someone at the front desk. When
Moody and Bernson left defendant to find another officer, no officer stayed behind in the foyer
to watch defendant. Nothing physically stopped defendant from walking out the door to the
street. Almond, 2015 IL 113817, ¶ 60 (after the officersâ arrival, nothing stopped defendant
and others from moving about the store). Seventh, after Moody escorted defendant to the
conference or roll-call room, Moody turned on the Blackhawks game and talked about the
game. Moody testified that defendant was not asked any questions about the case and was not
handcuffed. During his testimony, defendant corroborated that, while in the roll-call room with
9
DâOronzo, testified that, on January 1, 2009, Moody was dressed in âa shirt and tie.â Moody
testified that, in addition to the shirt and tie, he also wore a badge and gun on his belt.
29
No. 1-20-0911
Moody, defendant was not asked any questions about the case and Moody watched the
Blackhawks game.
¶ 89 Eighth, Moody testified that, during the afternoon of January 1, he was in and out of
the roll-call room where defendant waited. When Moody was out of the room, defendant was
by himself and was not restrained in any way. Gomez, 2011 IL App (1st) 092185, ¶ 60 (The
defendant was left alone and âwas not handcuffed at the station and was kept in a room with
the door open.â). Ninth, Moody testified that one of the doors of the roll-call room opened
directly to the foyer and that this door was open. Again, nothing physically stopped defendant
from walking out the door, through the foyer, to the street, and then heading home. Tenth,
defendant waited a few hours before the interview with DâOronzo began, but it was in the early
afternoon. Moody testified that he had picked up defendant around lunch time, and the
videotaped interview began at 3:49 p.m. But see id. ¶ 61 (âDefendant was only at the police
station for approximately one hourâ prior to his arrest.). Eleventh, DâOronzo testified that,
when he approached defendant in the roll-call room on January 1, defendant was watching
television and DâOronzo told defendant that he had some things that he wanted to clarify with
defendant. DâOronzo testified that, during the interview that began at 3:49 p.m., defendant
eventually admitted to being the shooter and that the officers were surprised when they realized
they had a confession rather than some clarification.
¶ 90 This is a close case. In Williams, 2016 IL App (1st) 132615, for example, this court
found that an officerâs demand to âcome hereâ was enough to transform a street encounter into
a fourth amendment seizure. Id. ¶¶ 6, 11, 41. The State points to defendantâs release the day
before as evidence that defendant was free to go. However, the issue is not whether the police
thought he was, or was not, a suspect. The question is whether a reasonable person in
30
No. 1-20-0911
defendantâs shoes would have thought he was free to go. If we considered just the
circumstances of the detention on December 31, a reasonable person in defendantâs shoes may
have believed that he was not free to go until he was told he could go. However, a consideration
of all the facts and circumstances on January 1 leads us to a different conclusion.
¶ 91 In sum, we find that the facts listed (supra ¶¶ 87-88) above show that this encounter
falls on the voluntariness side of the line. The release on December 31 would communicate to
a reasonable innocent person that he was not under arrest at that time. On the morning of
January 1, when the officers returned, they asked, rather than demanded, that defendant come
to the station for further questioning. They did not frisk or pat him down, they did not handcuff
or restrain him in any way, and, for multiple stretches of time, they left him by himself, near
an open door with direct access to the street, without anything or anyone to prevent him from
leaving. After all, he had been released the day prior. Thus, the trial court did not err in denying
defendantâs pretrial motion to suppress.
¶ 92 II. Sentencing Error
¶ 93 Defendant claims that the trial court erred at sentencing by relying on an improper
factor: that a family lost a loved one, which was inherent in the offense.
¶ 94 A. Standard of Review
¶ 95 Choosing the appropriate sentence within a prescribed sentencing range is normally
within a trial courtâs discretion. People v. Abdelhadi, 2012 IL App (2d) 111053, ¶ 8. On review,
appellate courts treat the trial courtâs choice with great deference and presume that the trial
court based its decision on proper legal reasons. Id. ¶ 8. This presumption that the trial court
relied on proper reasons is overcome only by an affirmative showing of evidence to the
31
No. 1-20-0911
contrary. Id. The defendant bears the burden of proof and persuasion in showing that the
sentence was based on improper considerations. Id. ¶ 9.
¶ 96 âAlthough sentencing is normally within the trial courtâs discretion, whether the court
relied on an improper aggravating factor is a question of law, which we review de novo.â
People v. Matute, 2020 IL App (2d) 170786, ¶ 53; see People v. Phelps,211 Ill. 2d 1, 11-12
(2004); Abdelhadi, 2012 IL App (2d) 111053, ¶ 8. In the case at bar, both sides agree that this
is the appropriate standard of review for this issue. Although a trial court has broad discretion
when imposing a sentence within the prescribed range, it may not consider a factor inherent in
the offense as an aggravating factor at sentencing. Abdelhadi, 2012 IL App (2d) 111053, ¶ 9;
see People v. Rissley, 165 Ill. 2d 364, 390 (1995) (âa factor implicit in the offense for which
[the] defendant is convicted cannot be used as an aggravating factor at sentencingâ). A single
fact or factor may not be used both as an element of the offense and as a basis for imposing a
harsher sentence. Phelps, 211 Ill. 2d at 11-12; Abdelhadi,2012 IL App (2d) 111053
, ¶ 9. Such
a dual use of a single fact or factor is considered a â âdouble enhancement,â â because the
legislature must have already considered this fact or factor when determining the applicable
sentencing range for the offense. Phelps, 211 Ill. 2d at 11-12; Abdelhadi,2012 IL App (2d) 111053
, ¶ 9. Thus, for example, in defendantâs case, where he was convicted of murder and
received an additional firearm enhancement, the fact that the offense involved either the death
of a person or a firearm cannot be considered as an aggravating factor. See, e.g., People v.
Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d 256, 272 (1986) (the death of the victim is a factor implicit in the offense
of voluntary manslaughter and, thus, cannot be considered as a factor in aggravation).
¶ 97 B. Forfeiture
32
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 98 The State argues that defendantâs sentencing claim is forfeited, and defendant agrees.
âIt is well settled that, to preserve a claim of sentencing error, both a contemporaneous
objection and a written postsentencing motion raising the issue are required.â People v. Hillier,
237 Ill. 2d 539, 544-45 (2010). In the case at bar, defendant did neither. However, we may still
review the alleged error pursuant to the plain error doctrine. People v. Sebby, 2017 IL 119445,
¶ 48. Under the plain error doctrine, we may provide relief if the error was clear or obvious
and if one of the two following prongs is satisfied: either (1) the evidence was so closely
balanced that the error alone threatened to tip the scales of justice against the defendant or
(2) the error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the proceeding and challenged the
integrity of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence. Sebby, 2017 IL
119445, ¶ 48. In the case at bar, defendant argues for plain error under both prongs of the plain
error doctrine. However, â[t]he initial analytical step under either prong of the plain error
doctrine is determining whether there was a clear or obvious errorâ in the lower court
proceeding. Id. ¶ 49.
¶ 99 For the reasons explained below, we find that the error alleged by defendant was clear
and obvious.
¶ 100 C. Clear and Obvious Error
¶ 101 Defendant argues that, in imposing a sentence 10 years above the statutory minimum,
the trial court found âprecisely one fact in aggravation: [defendantâs] âconduct caused serious
harmâ in that the victimâs âfamily lost a loved one.â â While we disagree that this was the only
factor considered in aggravation, it was nonetheless a factor and, as such, was improper.
¶ 102 The trial courtâs two pages of sentencing remarks are quoted in full above and show
that the trial court found more than âone fact.â
33
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 103 In addition to the factors discussed above, the trial court did consider, as defendant
argues, that the offense involved a death, which is an impermissible factor to consider since it
is already a factor inherent in the offense of murder. Initially, in the first four paragraphs of his
sentencing remarks, the trial judge clearly reacted to the defendantâs immediately prior
statement at sentencing. In these first few paragraphs of its sentencing remarks, the court
commented on (1) defendantâs lack of remorse; (2) the fact that defendant came from âa loving
familyâ and, thus, did not suffer from the disadvantages and hardships afflicting numerous
other defendants who had appeared before the trial court; (3) the manner of death, namely, that
he shot the victim in the back as the victimâs van was driving by; and (4) the alleged
senselessness of the murder. The court observed that the victimâs family âwill never see their
son again and their brother or their father.â The court emphasized: âThey lost somebody they
loved. They will never see him. All they have is memories.â The court did not indicate however
whether the aforementioned statements were intended to be aggravating factors.
¶ 104 After providing four paragraphs of said introductory remarks, the trial court returned
to the typical format of a sentencing, stating: âI had an opportunity to review the factors in
aggravation and mitigation, review the presentence investigation, consider the arguments of
the lawyers, and the defendantâs conduct caused serious harm.â The court then specifically
listed factors in aggravation. We know that these were factors in aggravation because, after he
finished stating them, the trial court immediately switched to â[c]onsidering factors in
mitigation.â
¶ 105 The factors in aggravation that the trial court listed at this point in the sentencing were
(1) the victim familyâs loss of âa loved oneâ and (2) the advantages defendant had from
growing up with a loving family. After mentioning these two facts, the trial court turned to
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No. 1-20-0911
factors in mitigation, where the trial court found that, as far as it was âconcerned,â defendant
had âno history of prior delinquency or criminality.â Weighing these factors in aggravation
and mitigation, the trial court picked a sentence in the lower half of the applicable range.
¶ 106 In sum, our reading of the trial judgeâs sentencing remarks shows that he mentioned
the fact of death, first, when setting forth the aggravating factors that he had found and that he
also referred to this fact repeatedly throughout his introductory remarks: (1) âThey will never
see their son again and their brother or their fatherâ; (2) âThey lost somebody they loved. They
will never see him. All they have is memoriesâ; and (3) the victimâs âfamily lost a loved one.â
¶ 107 To determine whether this shows a clear and obvious error, we discuss the following
cases cited by the parties: Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d 256; People v. Kelley,2019 IL App (4th) 160598
; People v. Sanders,2016 IL App (3d) 130511
; and People v. Benford,349 Ill. App. 3d 721
(2004).
¶ 108 In Saldivar, the supreme court determined, first, that the forfeiture rule should not
apply, despite the defendantâs failure both to object after the sentence was pronounced and to
file a postsentencing motion. Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 266. The court found that forfeiture should
not apply under the unique circumstances of the case where, prior to the pronouncement of
sentence, the prosecutor had stressed that the defendant had killed the victim and the defense
counsel replied that, â â[b]y definition,â â manslaughter involves a death. Id. at 266. The trial
court apparently ignored defense counselâs argument when it then went on to find that the
death was the primary aggravating factor. Id. at 266. Our supreme court found: âit was not
necessary for counsel to interrupt the judge and point out that he was considering wrong factors
in aggravation, especially in light of the argument that had preceded the ruling.â Id. at 266. By
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No. 1-20-0911
contrast, in the case at bar, there is no dispute that the issue is forfeited for our review and,
thus, defendant must establish plain error to obtain relief.
¶ 109 After finding no forfeiture, the Saldivar court proceeded to consider the requirement in
the Illinois Constitution that â[a]ll penalties shall be determined both according to the
seriousness of the offense and with the objective of restoring the offender to useful
citizenship.â Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11; Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 268. From this constitutional
directive is derived the statutory requirement to consider, as an aggravating factor, whether
defendantâs conduct caused serious harm. 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.2(a)(1) (West 2018) (the
following factor âmay be considered by the court as [a] reason[ ] to impose a more severe
sentence *** (1) the defendantâs conduct caused or threatened serious harmâ). Balancing, on
the one hand, the constitutional and statutory directives to consider the seriousness of the
offense and the degree of harm with, on the other hand, the principle that one cannot consider
a fact inherent in the offense as an aggravating factor, our supreme court found: âit is
permissible for the trial court, in applying the statutory aggravating factor that the defendantâs
conduct caused serious harm to the victim, to consider the force employed and the physical
manner in which the victimâs death was brought about.â Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 271. However,
the supreme court drew a line between considering, on the one hand, the force employed and
the physical manner of the death and, on the other hand, focusing âprimarily on the end result
of the defendantâs conduct, i.e., the death of the victim, a factor *** implicit in the offense.â
Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 271-72.
¶ 110 Applying the principles of Saldivar to the case before us, we find that the trial courtâs
repeated comments about the loss of a loved one showed a focus on the end result of
defendantâs conduct, i.e., the death of the victim, which is an impermissible factor under
36
No. 1-20-0911
Saldivar. We find that this was a clear and obvious error, although it was not preserved as it
was in Saldivar, because it was repeated and listed as the first and, hence, primary aggravating
factor. Similarly, in Saldivar, the trial court found the death to be the primary aggravating
factor and repeated the fact of the death in its remarks. Id. at 264 (the trial court mentioned that
defendantâs conduct caused death and that a human life was taken). In Saldivar, the trial judge
mentioned other factors, but the reviewing court still found error where the fact of death was
listed by the sentencing judge as the first or primary aggravating factor. Id. at 264, 271. The
same is true in the case at bar. Thus, applying the binding principles of our supreme courtâs
Saldivar opinion, we find a clear and obvious error.
¶ 111 In addition to the binding supreme court case of Saldivar, we also consider more recent
cases from our fellow districts and divisions, as cited by the State, such as Kelley, 2019 IL App
(4th) 160598, Sanders,2016 IL App (3d) 130511
, and Benford,349 Ill. App. 3d 721
.
¶ 112 In Kelley, the murder victimâs bones and skull were found apart from each other near
a dried-up tributary of a river. Kelley, 2019 IL App (4th) 160598, ¶¶ 11-12. An anthropologist
testified that she found 29 straight-line incisions on the victimâs bones, âas if someone had
attempted to dismember her with a knife.â Id. ¶ 15. Although the anthropologist was unable to
determine how the victim died, she found that the cuts were inflicted âaround the time of
death.â Id. At sentencing, the trial court found: â âThe knowledge that the family has as to the
circumstances of her death and how her remains were treated is something that theyâll have to
bear as well, and that exceeds what would be inherent in the definition of murder itself.â â Id.
¶ 72. On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court had improperly considered the pain
caused to the victimâs family as an aggravating factor, because it is implicit in the offense of
murder. Id. ¶ 116. The appellate court found:
37
No. 1-20-0911
âThe death of the victim and serious harm to the victim are implicit inâthat is, are
always to be found inâthe offense of murder. By contrast, the grief of surviving family
members, though a common result of murder, is not implicit in murder itself. The
murder victim might have no family, or the family might be indifferent. A deleterious
effect on the murder victimâs family is a frequent consequence of murder, not
something inherent in murder itself.â Id. ¶ 117.
¶ 113 The appellate court did not cite or consider Saldivar. If it had, it would have seen that
âthe force employed and the physical manner in which the victimâs death was brought aboutâ
(Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 271) are factors that a sentencing court may consider, separate and
apart from the death itselfâand that was what the lower court in the Kelley case expressly
found (Kelley, 2019 IL App (4th) 160598, ¶ 72). Thus, we understand the dicta, quoted above,
in the Kelley case to be limited to the particular and horrifying facts of this murder, where
someone, around the time of the murder, attempted to dismember the victim with a knife.
Kelley, 2019 IL App (4th) 160598, ¶ 15. In terms of its ultimate finding, the Kelley case is
completely in line with Saldivar.
¶ 114 In Sanders, the murder victim was shot several times in the back. Sanders, 2016 IL
App (3d) 130511, ¶ 4. The defendant was found guilty both of murder and of personally
discharging the firearm that proximately caused the death. Id. ¶ 5. At sentencing, the trial court
stated: â â[a]mong other things, the defendantâs conduct did cause or threaten serious harm. It
may be inherent in the actual fact that he committed a murder, but it did occur.â â Id. ¶ 6. On
appeal, defendant acknowledged that he had forfeited the issue by failing to object in the court
below but sought review under the second prong of the plain error doctrine. Id. ¶ 11. The
appellate court observed that, while resentencing is not necessary where the record is clear that
38
No. 1-20-0911
the trial court gave only insignificant weight on the improper factor, â[t]he cause must be
remanded for resentencing where a reviewing court is unable to determine the weight given to
an improper factor.â Id. ¶ 13 (citing People v. Beals, 162 Ill. 2d 497, 509 (1994)). The appellate
court noted that, in the case before it, âthe trial court expressly stated, in aggravation, that the
defendantâs conduct did cause harm.â Id. ¶ 14. Reversing the sentence and remanding for
resentencing, the appellate court found:
âSpecifically, the trial courtâs express finding that the defendantâs conduct caused or
threatened serious harm, a factor inherent in the offense of first degree murder,
impinged on the defendantâs right not to be sentenced based on an improper factor and
affected his fundamental right to liberty.â Id. ¶ 17.
¶ 115 The Sanders case is similar to our case in many respects and supports our finding. Like
in our case, the offense was first degree murder, with a shooting in the back. Like in our case,
the defendant forfeited the issue and sought plain error review, thereby requiring a showing of
clear and obvious error to obtain relief. Like in our case, the trial court made a finding while
considering the factors in aggravation. Per the principles discussed in Sanders, if we cannot
determine from the cold record the weight placed on this factor, then a remand is necessary.
Id. ¶ 13. Thus, Sanders supports our finding of clear and obvious error.
¶ 116 In Benford, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 723, the 21-year-old defendant was convicted of first
degree murder for the street shooting of a fellow gang member and sentenced to 40 years in
prison, which was 20 years over the minimum. At sentencing, the trial court stated that â âthe
minimum sentence here would really deprecate the seriousness of the offense as well as the
fact that you killed a man. You armed yourself with a handgun, walked onto the streets of
Chicago and shot a man dead.â â Id. at 734. On appeal, the State argued, first, that the defendant
39
No. 1-20-0911
had forfeited the issue for review by failing to raise it below. Id. at 734. However, the appellate
court observed that waiver was a limitation on the parties but not on a courtâs right to consider
an argument. Id. at 734. Citing Saldivar and stating that it had conducted âa thorough review
of the totality of the circuit courtâs comments at the sentencing hearing,â it found that the trial
courtâs quoted comments were merely an acknowledgement of the seriousness of the offense
and not an indication that it had considered the murder as an aggravating factor. Id. at 735.
¶ 117 Benford does share some similarities with the case at bar. Like our case, the young
defendant in Benford shot someone on the streets of Chicago and received a sizeable number
of years over the minimum. Like our case, the Benford defendant forfeited the issue for review.
Like we do, the Benford court applied Saldivar to the facts before it. However, Benford carries
little precedential weight since we, unlike the Benford reviewing court, are not privy to âthe
totality of the circuit courtâs commentsâ at sentencing and, thus, lack a basis for comparison.
Benford, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 735.
¶ 118 Based on our consideration of Saldivar, Kelley, Sanders, and Benford, we find clear
and obvious error.
¶ 119 D. Closely Balanced
¶ 120 Having found a clear and obvious error, we turn next to the question of whether the
evidence at the sentencing hearing was closely balanced. After first establishing a clear and
obvious error, a defendant who alleges a forfeited sentencing error must then show that âthe
evidence at the sentencing hearing was closely balanced,â in order to obtain relief under the
first prong of the plain error doctrine. Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d at 545. There are several issues of
particular concern to this court.
40
No. 1-20-0911
¶ 121 In the case at bar, except for the offense itself and defendantâs protest of innocence,
there was hardly a negative fact in the whole PSI or at the sentencing proceeding. As we noted
above in the Background section, the PSI indicated that, at the time of his arrest, defendant, a
high school senior, had a 3.2 grade point average and was on the basketball team. At the time
of the offense, he was just three months past his eighteenth birthday. For two years during high
school, he worked at Subway, as verified by Subway, until he had to leave due to basketball.
Defendant had no gang involvement, no children, no juvenile adjudications, no drug or alcohol
abuse, and no convictions other than one misdemeanor on February 11, 2018, almost a decade
after this case. He had a close relationship with his family and his close-knit group of friends
on the basketball team. Even the PSI author noted how âvery cooperativeâ defendant was.
¶ 122 The trial judgeâs remarks at sentencing suggest that he was angered by defendantâs
assertion of innocence, 10 by the fact that defendant had a loving family, and by the lack of
motive evidence. The State contends on appeal that the trial court found âdefendantâs lack of
remorseâ and defendantâs âloving familyâ to be aggravating factors. The State argues that the
trial court âfound that the fact that defendant chose to engage in criminal activity despite having
had the advantage of being raised by a loving family was an aggravating factor.â
¶ 123 First, lack of remorse is a double-edged sword, and secondly a teenagerâs loving family
is simply not an aggravating factor. On the one hand, a defendant who later asserts his
10
In sentencing defendant to 10 years above the statutory minimum, the trial courtâs
pronouncementâwhether intentional or coincidentalâresulted in a greater sentence than the Stateâs plea
offer and a de facto 10-year penalty for going to trial. Prior to trial, on April 9, 2018, the trial court
reviewed a plea offer with defendant, where the court noted several times that the âminimumâ defendant
was facing was 45 years, while the State was offering him 35 years, or 10 years less. Defense counsel
interjected to emphasize that 45 was the minimum only if defendant was convicted of the more serious
charge of personally discharging a firearm. At trial, this more serious charge was not presented to the
jury. Thus, defendant received 10 more years on the less serious charge. However, the plea bargain has no
effect on our finding of plain error.
41
No. 1-20-0911
innocence in a postconviction petition may be lauded where he has consistently protested his
innocence. Yet at sentencing, a defendant may be penalized for showing a lack of alleged
responsibility or remorse. People v. Ward, 113 Ill. 2d 516, 527-28 (1986); People v. Cross,
2021 IL App (4th) 190114, ¶ 144. But see People v. Donlow,2020 IL App (4th) 170374, ¶ 84
(a trial court cannot impose a more severe sentence simply because a defendant refuses to
abandon a claim of innocence).
¶ 124 In support of its argument that a loving family can be an aggravating factor, the State
cites People v. Thurmond, 317 Ill. App. 3d 1133, 1143(2000), and People v. Tatum,181 Ill. App. 3d 821
(1989). However, those cases are inapposite. Neither caseâThurmond nor
Tatumâstands for the proposition that a loving family is a factor to be held against a youthful
defendant. Neither Thurmond nor Tatum involved a youthful, 18-year-old offender, as in the
case at bar. Thurmond involved a foster dad who sexually assaulted his 12-year-old foster child
and niece, and Tatum involved a well-off defendant who nonetheless chose to sell drugs.
Thurmond, 317 Ill. App. 3d at 1136; Tatum,181 Ill. App. 3d at 826
. A teenager lacks the
maturity to appreciate the benefits of a loving family, whereas the adults in Thurmond and
Tatum were certainly old enough to know better.
¶ 125 Lastly, the Stateâs decision not to offer a motive cannot be held against defendant. 11
The State is under no burden to prove a motive. However, its decision not to argue a motive
cannot be held against the defendant either. Yet that seems to be what happened in this case at
11
On appeal, the State argues that the trial court ârecognized that defendantâ acted âwithout
provocation or purposeâ and that defendant had âno reason.â
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No. 1-20-0911
sentencing. The trial court stated: âYou shot this young man senselessly, for no reason
whatsoever thatâs ever been presented to me[.]â 12
¶ 126 For the foregoing reasons, we find that the evidence at sentencing was closely balanced
and, thus, constitute error under the first prong of the plain error doctrine. We proceed next to
consider the appropriate remedy.
¶ 127 III. Rule 615(b) Discretion
¶ 128 As a final matter, defendant asked this court to exercise the discretion given to it by
Illinois Supreme Court Rule 615(b) to reduce his 45-year sentence to the 35-year statutory
minimum. Illinois Supreme Court Rule 615(b)(4) provides that, on appeal, a reviewing court
may âreduce the punishment imposed by the trial court.â
¶ 129 Normally, a trial courtâs sentencing decision within a permitted sentencing range is
entitled to great deference, and a reviewing court will not reverse the exercise of that discretion
unless an abuse has occurred. People v. Jackson, 375 Ill. App. 3d 796, 800-01 (2007). A
reviewing court may not reverse simply because it would have weighed the factors differently
than the trial court did. Id. Although the authority to reduce punishment under Rule 615(b)(4)
should be exercised sparingly, we choose to exercise it here. In the case at bar, we have already
found plain error, and the question is merely one of remedy.
¶ 130 In light of defendantâs complete lack of prior criminality, delinquency, gang
involvement, or drug issues, the already-existing 15-year statutory enhancement due to use of
a firearm, the Stateâs indication that 35 years was an appropriate sentence when an even more
12
On appeal, both parties acknowledge that, at sentencing, the trial court characterized the murder
as senseless. The parties argue about whether the trial courtâs remark was or was not a specific finding of
an aggravating factor. This is an argument without a difference. What matters is the impact of this
characterization on sentencing.
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No. 1-20-0911
serious charge was on the table, and the fact that defendant was only three months past his
eighteenth birthday and still a high school student, we exercise our discretion under Rule
615(b) to reduce defendantâs sentence by 10 years to the statutory minimum of 35 years.
¶ 131 CONCLUSION
¶ 132 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm defendantâs conviction, but we reduce his
sentence to the statutory minimum of 35 years.
¶ 133 Affirmed as modified.
¶ 134 JUSTICE TAILOR, concurring in part and dissenting: in part
¶ 135 I agree with the majority that, although close, the circuit courtâs decision to deny
Townsendâs motion to suppress his pretrial inculpatory statement of January 1, 2009, was not
error. However, I dissent from the majorityâs decision to reduce Townsendâs sentence to 35
yearsâ imprisonment under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 615(b) because I do not believe that
the circuit court relied on the victimâs deathâa factor inherent in the offense of murderâto
aggravate his sentence.
¶ 136 In reducing his sentence, the majority accepts and relies on Townsendâs contention that
the circuit court found â[Townsendâs] âconduct cause[d] serious harmâ in that the victimâs
family lost a loved one.â (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Supra ¶ 101. The circuit courtâs
actual words were: âdefendantâs [(Townsendâs)] conduct caused serious harm. Brandonâs [(the
victim)] family lost a loved one.â Section 5-5-3.2 of the Unified Code of Corrections (Code)
provides that a sentencing court may consider certain factors as reasons to impose a more
severe sentence, including whether âthe defendantâs conduct caused or threatened serious
harm.â 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3.2(a)(1) (West 2018). However, a factor implicit in the offense cannot
be used by the sentencing judge in aggravation to justify a more severe sentence than might
44
No. 1-20-0911
otherwise be imposed. People v. Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d 256, 266-67 (1986) (citing People v.
Conover, 84 Ill. 2d 400, 404 (1981)). Of course, serious harm is inherent in the offense of
murder. Id. at 271.
¶ 137 However, the record in this case does not establish that the circuit court used the fact
of the victimâs death to aggravate Townsendâs sentence. First, the circuit court did not say
âTownsendâs âconduct caused serious harmâ in that the victimâs âfamily lost a loved one,â â
nor do I believe that the court intended to make this finding. Second, the circuit court never
used the term âdeathâ and never referenced âthe victimâ or the âdeath of the victim.â Third,
the record does not support Townsendâs contention or the majorityâs finding that, when the
circuit court remarked âBrandonâs family lost a loved one,â it was referring to the victimâs
death as the serious harm caused by Townsend.
¶ 138 To the contrary, the more logical and reasonable inference to be drawn from the
statement that Brandonâs family lost a loved one is that the circuit court was acknowledging
the familyâs victim impact statements expressing their sadness and profound loss, especially
at the thought of the victim missing the important milestones in his daughterâs life, and
rebuking Townsendâs statement in allocution where he failed to take responsibility for his
actions and attempted to cast himself as the victim of the justice system because, among other
things, he would be separated from his loved ones. In response to Townsendâs statement at
sentencing, the court stated, âWhat I find interesting here is how you turn yourself into the
victim. You have been convicted of murder. You shot this young man senselessly, for no reason
whatsoever thatâs ever been presented to me, but all of a sudden, you are the victim in this
case, because you said you are gone from your family.â The court went on to say, â[the victimâs
family] will never see their son again and their brother or their father, whatever the case may
45
No. 1-20-0911
be. You can still have contact, albeit you will be in jail for a long period of time, but you can
still see your family and talk to your family and write letters to your family. So donât turn
yourself into the victim.â The court further chastised Townsend, âBut to say that you are the
victim is preposterous. They lost somebody they loved. They will never see him. All they have
is memories. You still have your family you can talk to and write to and say things to and write
letters to.â
¶ 139 Section 5-5-3.2 allows a court to consider the serious harm caused to people other than
the victim. In People v. Brown, 2019 IL App (5th) 160329, ¶ 22, it was held not to be error
when the court stated at sentencing, â âThe statutory factors in aggravation, I find that the
defendant threatened harm and caused harm by his actions,â â where the evidence and
argument before the court was that the defendantâs actions threatened serious harm to innocent
bystanders and caused serious harm to the victimâs mother and his four children. The court
stated, âSection 5-5-3.2(a)(1) does not state that the serious harm to be considered is restricted
to the serious harm to the victim, and we decline to judicially recraft the plain language of the
section.â Id.
¶ 140 The courtâs consideration of the serious harm caused to a victimâs family in a murder
case may also be properly considered as a factor in aggravation under section 5-5-3.2, as
serious harm to the victimâs family is not considered a factor inherent in the offense of murder.
People v. Kelley, 2019 IL App (4th) 160598, ¶ 117 (âBy contrast, the grief of surviving family
members, though a common result of murder, is not implicit in murder itself. The murder
victim might have no family, or the family might be indifferent. A deleterious effect on the
murder victimâs family is a frequent consequence of murder, not something inherent in murder
itself.â (Emphasis added.)). I do not agree with the majorityâs conclusion that this statement in
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No. 1-20-0911
Kelley is dicta (supra ¶ 113), nor do I agree that its application is limited to the particular and
horrifying facts of the murder and dismemberment of the victimâs body in that case. The
majority does not explain why it believes Kelleyâs finding is dicta, nor does it articulate any
reason (and I see none) to limit Kelley to the particularly horrifying conduct at issue in that
case. Although in Brown, the defendant shot the victim in the head and chest, causing his death,
Brown did not involve the kind of gruesome conduct to which the majority claims Kelleyâs
application is limited.
¶ 141 Moreover, as the majority recognizes, Saldivar teaches that, while the fact of the
victimâs death may not be used to aggravate a sentence, the force and physical manner used to
cause the death may. Thus, even if the majorityâs construction of the circuit courtâs comments
is reasonable, it was not error for circuit court to state at sentencing that Townsendâs conduct
caused serious harm âin thatâ the victimâs family lost a loved one.
âWhile the classification of a crime determines the sentencing range, the severity of the
sentence depends upon the degree of harm caused to the victim and as such may be
considered as an aggravating factor in determining the exact length of a particular
sentence, even in cases where serious bodily harm is arguably implicit in the offense
for which a defendant is convicted.â (Emphases in original.) Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at
269.
â[I]n applying the statutory aggravating factor that the defendantâs conduct caused serious
harm to the victim, [the court may] consider the force employed and the physical manner in
which the victimâs death was brought about.â Id. at 271. On the other hand, it is improper to
aggravate a sentence based on the end result of the defendantâs conduct, the victimâs death. Id.
at 272.
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No. 1-20-0911
¶ 142 Here, the trial court did not expressly consider that âdefendantâs conduct caused serious
harmâ or âBrandonâs family lost a loved oneâ as factors in aggravation, much less label them
as â â[t]he number one factor in aggravationâ â (id.) or as a factor that it âmust considerâ
(People v. Willis, 210 Ill. App. 3d 379, 388 (1991)), comments found to be impermissible.
Rather, reading the entire exchange between Townsend and the circuit court at sentencing, a
more reasonable construction of the courtâs comments was that it considered as an aggravating
factor the serious harm caused by âthe force employed and the physical manner in which the
victimâs death was brought about.â Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 271. To provide context for the
circuitâs court statement, the Cook County assistant medical examiner testified, without
contradiction, that the cause of the victimâs death was a gunshot wound to the right side of his
head and that a projectile was removed from the victimâs head. When discussing the offense,
the circuit court remarked,
âAs far as Iâm concerned, you are a cold-blooded killer, and as I sit here on the
bench for as many years as I have been sitting on the bench, these shootings, they make
no sense whatsoever. Everybody is brave when they have an illegal gun, but face
someone face to face and go fight them? Thatâs something different. Itâs the cowards
that shoot them in the back and fire as the van is going by.â
¶ 143 The court found that Townsend killed the victim in cold blood when Townsend shot
the victim in a moving van with an illegal firearm. Contrary to the majorityâs finding, such
comments are permissible under Saldivar because they focus on the force and physical manner
of the victimâs death, not on the fact of the victimâs death. Indeed, in one of the cases cited
with approval, and followed, by Saldivar, People v. Hughes, 109 Ill. App. 3d 352 (1982), our
supreme court explained that the appellate court in that case placed considerable weight on the
48
No. 1-20-0911
fact that the trial court noted that the defendant carried a gun, took deliberate aim at the victim,
and fired two shots. The appellate court reasoned that these considerations lent support to the
trial courtâs conclusion that the defendant intentionally caused or threatened serious harm to
the victim. Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at 271.
¶ 144 In addition, even if I were to accept the majorityâs reading of the circuit courtâs
comments at sentencing, I still would not find error because the comments about the
consequences of Townsendâs actions were general in nature and made in passing. Courts
recognize that no thoughtful sentencing hearing for a defendant convicted of murder can avoid
mention of the victimâs death. In People v. Brewer, 2013 IL App (1st) 072821, the court stated,
â âFactors in aggravation, the defendantâs conduct did cause or threaten serious harm, the
ultimate serious harm, murder.â â Id. ¶ 56. We found no abuse of discretion where the
defendantâs sentence was well within the statutory range for first degree murder, holding:
âThe record does not indicate the trial court emphasized a factor inherent in the
offense during sentencing. Contrary to [defendantâs] assertions, the fact his conduct
threatened or caused serious harm is not a factor inherent in the crime itself but is a
proper aggravating factor to be considered during sentencing even in cases where
serious bodily harm is implicit in the offense.â Id. ¶ 57 (citing Saldivar, 113 Ill. 2d at
269, People v. Solano,221 Ill. App. 3d 272, 274
(1991), and People v. Spencer,229 Ill. App. 3d 1098, 1102
(1992)). ¶ 145 Similarly, in People v. Beals,162 Ill. 2d 497
(1994), during sentencing, the court stated:
âIn aggravation the first guideline indicated in the statute is âwhether the conduct of the
defendant caused or threatened serious harm.â Well, we all know that your conduct caused the
ultimate harm. It caused the loss of a human life.â (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at
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No. 1-20-0911
508-09. Our supreme court held that the trial court never considered the victimâs death as an
aggravating factor; rather, âthe record suggests that the trial court statement was simply a
general passing comment based upon the consequences of the defendantâs actions.â Id. at 509.
The Beals court further noted that even if âthe trial courtâs comment may be construed in the
manner that the defendant suggests,â it would still affirm his sentence because the record
indicated that the trial court had placed little weight on the fact that his conduct caused the
victimâs death and had instead relied on other aggravating factors including the victimâs age,
the fact that the offense was drug related, the need to punish and deter him, and the need to
protect society. Id. As such, the court rejected the defendantâs argument that the case should
be remanded for resentencing. Id.
¶ 146 Like the comments made by the courts in Brewer and Beals, the circuit courtâs
comments that Townsend caused serious harm and Brandonâs family lost a loved one were
isolated, passing comments made about the consequences of Townsendâs actions. The record
establishes that the circuit court was focused on the loss that the victimâs family suffered rather
than on the victimâs death itself.
¶ 147 A sentence imposed by the trial court that falls within the prescribed statutory range is
considered presumptively proper and will not be disturbed unless it is greatly at variance with
the purpose and spirit of the law or is manifestly disproportionate to the offense. People v.
Cabrera, 116 Ill. 2d 474, 493-94 (1987). In this case, Townsend was convicted of first degree
murder with a firearm, which has a sentencing range of 35 to 75 years. 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-20(a)
(2018). Townsend was sentenced to 45 yearsâ incarceration, 10 years above the mandatory
minimum sentence and 30 years below the maximum sentence, and accordingly his sentence
is presumptively proper. See People v. Hauschild, 226 Ill. 2d 63, 90 (2007) (a sentence within
50
No. 1-20-0911
statutory guidelines is presumptively valid). The circuit court, in my view, did not consider
any improper factor to undermine this presumption.
¶ 148 For the foregoing reasons, I find that no error occurred at sentencing and therefore plain
error analysis is unnecessary. I would therefore affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
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No. 1-20-0911
People v. Townsend, 2022 IL App (1st) 200911
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 09-CR-
02019; the Hon. Brian Flaherty, Judge, presiding.
Attorneys James E. Chadd, Douglas R. Hoff, and Gavin J. Dow, of State
for Appellate Defenderâs Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
Appellant:
Attorneys Kimberly M. Foxx, Stateâs Attorney, of Chicago (Enrique
for Abraham, Joseph Alexander, and Gerrard R. Burch Jr., Assistant
Appellee: Stateâs Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.
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