People v. Holloway
Citation2019 IL App (2d) 170551
Date Filed2019-12-06
Docket2-17-0551
Cited25 times
StatusPublished
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Appellate Court Date: 2021.02.02
10:10:14 -06'00'
People v. Holloway, 2019 IL App (2d) 170551
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption THOMAS HOLLOWAY, Defendant-Appellant.
District & No. Second District
No. 2-17-0551
Filed December 6, 2019
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 15-CF-2148;
Review the Hon. Liam C. Brennan, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on James E. Chadd, Thomas A. Lilien, and Phyllis J. Perko, of State
Appeal Appellate Defenderās Office, of Elgin, for appellant.
Robert B. Berlin, Stateās Attorney, of Wheaton (Lisa Anne Hoffman
and Mary A. Fleming, Assistant Stateās Attorneys, of counsel), for the
People.
Panel JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Justices Hutchinson and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 After a jury trial, defendant, Thomas Holloway, was convicted of violation of bail bond
(720 ILCS 5/32-10(a) (West 2014)) and was sentenced as a Class X offender (730 ILCS 5/5-
4.5-95 (West 2014)) to nine yearsā imprisonment. On appeal, he argues that he was denied a
fair trial because his attorney-client privilege was violated. We affirm.
¶2 I. BACKGROUND
¶3 The indictment against defendant alleged that, on April 26, 2014, he was admitted to bail
in case No. 12-CF-2466, a prosecution for unlawful delivery of a controlled substance; that,
on August 25, 2015, his bond was forfeited; 1and that he willfully failed to surrender himself
within 30 days after the forfeiture.
¶4 The State moved in limine to admit the testimony of James Murphy-Aguilu, defendantās
attorney in case No. 12-CF-2466. The motion alleged as follows. On August 25, 2015,
Murphy-Aguilu appeared for trial. He told the court that he had spoken to defendant by
telephone and defendant had said that he was in the parking lot. In the present case, the State
planned to call Murphy-Aguilu to testify about his conversation and defendantās failure to
appear that day. The attorney-client privilege did not bar this testimony, because defendant had
not been seeking legal advice and his call was not related to any such purpose. Alternatively,
the communication was within the crime-fraud exception to the privilege, because defendant
was attempting to deceive Murphy-Aguilu, as he was not in the parking lot and never appeared
for trial.
¶5 The Stateās motion attached a transcript from the August 25, 2015, hearing. Murphy-
Aguilu was present for defendant, and Assistant Stateās Attorney Claudia Fantauzzo appeared
for the State. The transcript read:
ā[THE] COURT: Well, for the record, itās 11:35, and weāre here for trial. If
everyone can identify.
MS. FANTAUZZO: Claudia Fantauzzo for the People.
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: James Murphy-Aguilu, Murphy hyphen A-g-u-i-l-u.
Your [H]onor, I actually spoke with him about 20 minutes ago. He claimed to be in
the parking lot. It would seem pretty impossible for him to be in the parking lot still. I
donāt know where he is.
THE COURT: Any luck reaching out to him since?
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: The last call I just got a hangup [sic], soā
THE COURT: All right. Well, at this time a bond forfeiture and a no bond warrant
will issue.
MS. FANTAUZZO: Thank you, [Y]our Honor.
THE COURT: And what is the judgment of forfeiture date?
MS. FANTAUZZO: 9/29.
THE COURT: Letās go to the 30th.
1
In fact, August 25, 2015, is the date defendant failed to appear. His bond was forfeited on October
7, 2015. No claim of error is raised on appeal regarding this mistake.
-2-
THE COURT: 9/30/15 for judgment on forfeiture.
MS. FANTAUZZO: Thank you, Judge.
THE COURT: All right. Thank you.
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: Is there any possibility of doing a different date? My
wife is actually due on the 28th, soā
THE COURT: Yes, sure there is.
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: Iām going to be back here a week from that date, so the
7th?
THE COURT: Thatās fine.
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: Just for a quick status.
THE COURT: All right. 10/7ā
MR. MURPHY-AGUILU: Thank you.
THE COURT : āfor judgment of forfeiture.ā (Emphasis added.)
For convenience, we shall refer to the emphasized passage as the āparking-lot statement.ā
¶6 Defendant did not file a written response to the motion. At a hearing on the motion, the
following colloquy ensued:
āMR. WIGELL [(DEFENDANTāS ATTORNEY)]: *** Conceptually, I have no
difficulty with the Stateās motion, especially regarding the privilege, but we know how
live witnesses are.
They could say all sorts of things. Like the attorney could say, Well, he told me he
was guilty in the underlying charge, so I didnāt even know why we wanted to go to
trial.
THE COURT: That would be, of course, what we call a mistrial.
MR. WIGELL: I understand that, Judge. But my suggestion is that if itās regarding
what was going to be the stipulated testimony or what the proffered testimony was
today by the State, then I have no difficulty with this motion in limine.
If, however, it expands to some other areas, then I might renew my objection to
violating the privilege.
THE COURT: Well, I believe in this circumstance, the caselaw does allow for the
vitiation of the privilege, and I will enter an order in that regard to protect any issues
as it relates to Mr. Murphy[-]Aguilu and licensure issues.
Obviously, the privilege is not universally vitiated. Confidential communications
that are unrelated to the material issues in this case remain, and we will, and the State
I presume will, advise Mr. Murphy[-]Aguilu of that. And if thereās a problem, weāll
address the problem at trial.
MR. WIGELL: Thank you, Judge.ā
¶7 On the morning before trial, Murphy-Aguilu told the court that the State had subpoenaed
him and he feared that he would be compelled to testify to privileged conversations with
defendant. He believed that āeven the scheduling issue might be relatedā to the privilege.
Murphy-Aguilu said that he had no problem testifying about his actions, but he believed that
testifying to any of his conversations with defendant would be an ethical violation.
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¶8 Assistant Stateās Attorney Thomas Minser told the court that he intended to elicit the
parking-lot statement. Assistant Stateās Attorney Sean Kelly added that Murphy-Aguilu had
told him that he recalled saying that he expected defendant to appear but did not recall his exact
words. The State would elicit this testimony and then use the August 25, 2015, transcript to
ask Murphy-Aguilu whether he recalled making the parking-lot statement. At that point,
Murphy-Aguilu would decline to answer, and the State would not question him further on the
matter.
¶9 Wigell then addressed the court as follows. His concern was that, if Murphy-Aguilu
invoked the attorney-client privilege, Wigell might not have a sufficient opportunity to cross-
examine him. The judge pointed out that defendant could waive the privilege and thereby give
Wigell āunfettered cross-examination.ā Wigell expressed concern that the State was ātrying to
narrowā the examination of Murphy-Aguilu to the point where it would āget out all the bad
stuff against [defendant] but not allow anything without the waiver that the Court suggests.ā
¶ 10 The judge observed that Wigell was arguing that the attorney-client privilege put him at a
disadvantage, yet defendant could control whether the privilege was waived. Wigell responded
that, if defendant chose not to waive the privilege, it would restrict Wigellās ability to cross-
examine Murphy-Aguilu āas to his refusal.ā Wigell was concerned that defendant would be
forced to choose between the privilege and his right to cross-examination and would have to
give up the former to exercise the latter.
¶ 11 The judge asked Kelly why the State needed to ask Murphy-Aguilu questions that would
prompt him to assert the privilege, as Kelly knew would happen, when what the State really
wanted was to introduce the transcript excerpt. Kelly responded that, if Murphy-Aguilu
initially testified that he did not remember what he had told the court, the State would be
entitled to use the transcript to refresh his recollection. That would be the extent of the Stateās
inquiry: Kelly would ask Murphy-Aguilu, not about the conversation with defendant itself, but
only what he had told the court.
¶ 12 Kelly said that he expected that he would ask whether Murphy-Aguilu made the parking-
lot statement to the court, Murphy-Aguilu would refuse to answer, owing to the privilege, and
that would end the Stateās questioning in that area. Again, he said, he would ask Murphy-
Aguilu what he told the court, not directly about his conversation with defendant.
¶ 13 After a recess, the judge stated as follows. Contrary to what he had stated previously, the
attorney-client privilege was not necessarily vitiated here. However, the judge did not see how
Murphy-Aguilu could assert that it applied to a statement that he had made in open court. āTo
the extent that that reference[d] a privilege, he waived it by going there in open court.ā Thus,
the privilege did not apply to questioning about the parking-lot statement. The judge noted that
he had erred in finding āa wholesale vitiation of the privilege as to conversations.ā However,
the State was not āgoing in that direction.ā The judge reiterated that he was aware of Wigellās
argument that it was unfair to require defendant to choose between the attorney-client privilege
and his right to cross-examination.
¶ 14 The cause proceeded to trial. The State first called Murphy-Aguilu. On direct examination,
he testified that, in 2014 and 2015, he made numerous appearances for defendant. In June 2015,
with Murphy-Aguilu and defendant present in court, the case was set for trial on August 25,
2015. On August 25, 2015, Murphy-Aguilu appeared, as did Fantauzzo. Defendant did not
appear. The parties were āset to start at 9:30 that day. So, we were all here early. And then we
waited probably closer to noon before we *** finally moved on.ā
-4-
¶ 15 Murphy-Aguilu testified that, while he was waiting for defendant to appear, he attempted
to contact him by calling the number that they had been using since he started representing
defendant. He spoke with defendant. He then told the court that he expected defendant to be in
court at some point that day.
¶ 16 The direct examination continued:
āQ. You said you informed the Court that you expected him to be there.
Isnāt it true that you told the Court, quote, āYour Honor, I actually spoke with him
about 20 minutes ago. He claimed to be in the parking lot. It would seem pretty
impossible for him to be in the parking lot still. I donāt know where he isā?
A. I donāt believe I can answer that question.ā
Defendant did not object to any of the foregoing.
¶ 17 The direct examination continued as follows. After defendant failed to appear on August
25, 2015, a warrant was issued for him and a dateāOctober 7, 2015āwas set for bond
forfeiture. On that date, Murphy-Aguilu appeared, defendant did not, and the court entered a
judgment of bond forfeiture. A hearing was set for November 30, 2015. That day, Murphy-
Aguilu appeared; defendant did not. The case was set for trial on February 18, 2016. That day,
Murphy-Aguilu appeared, defendant did not, and defendant was tried and convicted. Murphy-
Aguilu had no contact with him between August 25, 2015, and February 18, 2016.
¶ 18 Murphy-Aguilu testified that, as best he could remember, defendant did not miss any court
dates until August 25, 2015.
¶ 19 On cross-examination, Murphy-Aguilu testified as follows. He and defendant probably
made 10 to 15 court appearances together. They had met numerous times in Murphy-Aguiluās
office and often discussed whether to elect a jury trial. On February 18, 2016, defendant was
found guilty in absentia, and Murphy-Aguilu continued to represent him until the case was
over.
¶ 20 Defendant asked Murphy-Aguilu whether he received any money from defendantās bond.
The State objected. In a sidebar, defendant argued that the questioning was relevant to show
that Murphy-Aguilu āwas interested in the money, not in informing his client of his rights.ā
Defendantās theory was that he had not absented himself willfully but had done so only because
Murphy-Aguilu had not properly informed him; he had called defendant only once. The court
concluded that Murphy-Aguiluās motives were irrelevant to whether defendant had acted
willfully. It sustained the Stateās objection unless and until defendant could show that Murphy-
Aguiluās motives were relevant.
¶ 21 The State next called Norman Hall. On direct examination, he testified as follows. He was
chief of investigation for the Du Page County Stateās Attorneyās office and a former police
officer. On or about October 15, 2015, Fantauzzo assigned him to locate defendant. After
checking the Law Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS), he spoke to Eula Allen,
defendantās grandmother, who lived at 150 Eastern Avenue in Bellwood. She told him that
defendant had resided with her but was no longer living there, and she gave him a phone
number to call. Hall also checked the websites of the Department of Corrections (DOC) and
the Cook, Kane, Will, and Du Page County jails. According to the websites, defendant was not
in custody in the DOC or any of those jails.
-5-
¶ 22 On October 20, 2015, Hall called the number that Allen had given him. He heard a
recording saying that the voice mail was disconnected. A few minutes later, at his office, Hall
received a call back from the number. He answered, ā[I]nvestigations.ā The caller hung up.
¶ 23 Hall testified that, on February 10, 2016, he again investigated defendantās whereabouts,
checking the DOC and county jail websites and another law-enforcement database. There was
no indication of defendantās location. Hall called the number that Allen had given him in
October. A male answered. Hall asked whether he was āThomas.ā The man said yes. Hall told
him that he was with the Stateās Attorneyās office, that the office had a case pending in Du Page
County court, and that Thomas needed to attend it. The man said, ā āYouāve got the wrong
Thomas,ā ā and hung up.
¶ 24 Hall testified that, later on February 10, 2016, he called Tamika Richards, an associate of
defendant. Hall left a message identifying himself, explaining that he had a case involving
someone whose whereabouts she might know, that she was in no trouble, and that he wanted
her to call him. He did not receive a call back. Also that month, Hall called Allen. He left a
message telling her that he needed to talk to her about defendant. He did not receive a call
back.
¶ 25 Hall identified two State exhibits as bail-bond slips. Each, which identified defendant,
specified the bail and the bond required, gave defendantās court date, and provided a space for
defendant and someone posting bond for him to sign. The first slip gave defendantās name and
listed his address as ā150 Eastern Avenue, Chicago [sic], Illinois 60104.ā It was signed,
āThomas Holloway.ā The second one gave the same name and address and ā12-CF-2466,ā the
number of the pending case. It also stated that the next court date was August 25, 2015, at 10
a.m. Hall testified that he had filled out bail-bond slips thousands of times. When officers do
this, they forward the original form and the money to the circuit court clerkās office, keep a
copy in police files, and give a copy to the person they just arrested.
¶ 26 Hall identified another exhibit as a certified copy of a driverās license abstract. It provided
the name āThomas Hollowayā and the address ā150 Eastern Avenue[,] Bellwood[, Illinois]
60104ā and stated that on August 25, 2015, he had a valid license.
¶ 27 Hall testified that, to aid in locating defendant, he contacted Dean Balesteri, a Chicago
police officer. On February 17, 2016, Hall left phone messages for Allen and Richards.
¶ 28 Hall testified on cross-examination as follows. He had never met defendant and had not
been involved in his arrest or in filling out the bond forms. Hall searched the jail websites for
Cook, Du Page, Kane, and Will Counties, but not for other nearby counties, such as Kendall.
On redirect examination, Hall testified that, although the bail-bond slips referred to āEastern
Avenueā in Chicago, there was no such street in Chicago.
¶ 29 Balesteri testified as follows. On March 24, 2016, he and several other officers went to a
residential building on South Wood Street in Chicago in connection with the outstanding
warrant in case No. 12-CF-2466 (and warrants in other cases). Balesteri had several
photographs of defendant. He rang the doorbell. Defendant answered. Balesteri took him into
custody.
¶ 30 The trial court admitted the bail-bond slips and several orders from case No. 12-CF-2466.
Defendant put on no evidence.
¶ 31 In argument, the State observed that it needed to prove that defendant had been admitted
to bail for appearance before the court, that he had forfeited the bail, and that he had willfully
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failed to surrender himself within 30 days following the forfeiture. The State contended that
the bail-bond slips proved the first proposition by showing that in June 2015 defendant was
admitted to bail for an appearance before the court on August 25, 2015. The order of October
7, 2015, entering the judgment of forfeiture, proved the second proposition.
¶ 32 Finally, the State argued, it had proved that defendantās failure to surrender himself in time
had been willful. Defendant had known about the August 25, 2015, court date: he was in court
when it was set, and the bail-bond slips, which he signed, told him the date. Murphy-Aguilu
had testified credibly that, on August 25, 2015, he appeared in court but defendant did not.
Murphy-Aguilu had also testified that he called defendant that day and, based on the call, he
expected him to appear. Moreover, the bail-bond slips told defendant in detail what would
happen if he did not show up, including forfeiting the bond and incurring a debt for the rest of
the bail, which was thousands of dollars. Common sense dictated that defendantās failure to
appear again in the case was not an oversight.
¶ 33 In his argument, defendant contended solely that the State had not proved willfulness. He
stressed Murphy-Aguiluās limited efforts to contact him and remind him of his obligation to
appear. All the State had shown was that he called defendant once. Defendant continued:
āMr. Murphy [sic] says *** I called him. He said he was in the parking lot or something
like that. And he reports that to the Judge. What effort did he make to protect his client?
***
Thomas is facing a serious charge, has an attorney. Thatās all true. But whatās the
attorney going to say when his client doesnāt show up? Heās going to say, oh yeah, he
was in the parking lot. We donāt have a verification. We donāt know what number he
called.ā (Emphases added.)
¶ 34 Defendant continued, āThe communication here just didnāt exist.ā He maintained that
Murphy-Aguilu had lied because he did not want defendant to appear. Defendant also argued
that, even if he had received copies of the bail-bond slips informing him of the August 25,
2015, court date, it did not follow that he actually read them or understood what they said.
¶ 35 In rebuttal, the State argued that the issue was not what Murphy-Aguilu did or why he did
it, but what defendant did, i.e., fail to appear in court on August 25, 2015, or anytime thereafter.
The State noted that, on the day that trial was set for August 25, 2015, defendant was in court
with his attorney and āposted thousands of dollarsā to secure his presence on that date. The
bail-bond slips had told him that he would forfeit his bond if he did not appear. It defied
common sense to suggest that he simply forgot to appear and then forgot to surrender himself
within 30 days after the judgment.
¶ 36 While deliberating, the jury sent the court a note reading, ā[I]s the Defendant responsible
to surrender within 30 days of forfeiture regardless of communication with his attorney or the
Court?ā With the partiesā agreement, the court responded, āThe law necessary to reaching your
verdict is contained in the instructions you have been provided. Please continue to deliberate.ā
¶ 37 The jury found defendant guilty. He filed a motion for a new trial. It contended in part that
the court had erred in limiting the cross-examination of Murphy-Aguilu. Specifically,
āMurphy-Aguilu bizarrely claimed that he believed he was prohibited by rules [of]
professional conduct from testifying as to a remark he previously made on the record in open
courtā while he was representing defendant in case No. 12-CF-2466. The motion contended
that āit had been suggested that the limits of the cross-examination would be relaxed if
-7-
[defendant] waived his right to attorney-client privilege.ā However, the motion argued, his
right to cross-examination should not have been conditioned on his relinquishment of his
privilege. The trial court denied the motion. After it sentenced defendant as noted, he timely
appealed.
¶ 38 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 39 On appeal, defendant contends that the State violated his attorney-client privilege by asking
Murphy-Aguilu whether he had made the parking-lot statement. Defendant argues that the
privilege belonged to him and that he never waived it (and Murphy-Aguilu had no authority to
do so unilaterally), that the parking-lot statement came within the privilege, and that the Stateās
improper recitation of the statement prejudiced him. Defendant concedes that he did not raise
this specific claim of error at the trial level, but he asks that we address it as plain error.
¶ 40 The State responds in three ways. First, defendant forfeited or waived his present claim of
error by failing to raise it in the trial court. Second, there was no error, because the parking-lot
statement was not privileged. Third, any error was harmless, given the strength of the Stateās
evidence on the sole contested issue of willfulness.
¶ 41 In reply, defendant contends in part that he did not forfeit the issue. He argues that, in
opposing the Stateās motion in limine, he invoked the attorney-client privilege, that he did not
need to object at trial, and that he renewed the objection in his posttrial motion.
¶ 42 For the reasons that follow, we hold that defendant not only forfeited his claim but invited
the alleged error and may not raise it now. We also hold that there was neither error nor
prejudice.
¶ 43 We first turn to forfeiture and invited error. First we set out general rules. To preserve a
claim of error, a defendant must both make a timely objection and raise the claim in his posttrial
motion. People v. Enoch, 122 Ill. 2d 176, 186 (1988). However, in a criminal case, a defendant
who raises his objection in a proceeding on a motion in limine need not object again during the
trial. People v. Denson, 2014 IL 116231, ¶¶ 19-20, 24.
¶ 44 Invited error differs from mere forfeiture. A defendant might not merely forgo objecting to
an alleged error but actively invite or acquiesce in it. People v. Harding, 2012 IL App (2d)
101011, ¶ 17. To allow the defendant to use a ruling or action that he secured at trial as the
basis of a reversal on appeal would be unfair to the State and encourage defendants to become
duplicitous. Id. Thus, invited error does not raise a mere forfeiture to which the plain-error
exception might apply; it creates an estoppel that precludes plain-error analysis. Id.
¶ 45 The invited-error doctrine applies when a defendant claims error in the admission of
evidence but deliberately acquiesced in the alleged error as a matter of trial strategy. See People
v. Stewart, 2018 IL App (3d) 160205, ¶¶ 19-21 (as a matter of strategy, defendant explicitly
acquiesced in admission of evidence); People v. Cox, 2017 IL App (1st) 151536, ¶ 76
(defendant repeatedly told court he had no objection to admission of evidence); People v.
Martinez, 62 Ill. App. 3d 7, 14-15 (1978) (so as to attack State witnessās credibility, defendant
acquiesced in admission of evidence of witnessās attempts to negotiate immunity for
defendant); People v. Robinson, 20 Ill. App. 3d 777, 783 (1974) (defendant not only acquiesced
in admission of alleged hearsay but attempted to use testimony to attempt to weaken Stateās
case).
-8-
¶ 46 Both forfeiture and the invited-error doctrine apply here. The latter is more important.
Defendant not only acquiesced in the Stateās use of the parking-lot statement to refresh
Murphy-Aguiluās recollection of August 25, 2015, but attempted to use the statement to
discredit Murphy-Aguilu and advance the theory that he deliberately neglected to remind
defendant of the trial date or any future proceedings. Defendant pursued this strategy in order
to suggest to the jury that his failure to appear on August 25, 2015, was not willful but
inadvertent.
¶ 47 At the hearing on the motion, Wigell initially said that he had āno difficulty with the Stateās
motion, especially regarding the privilege.ā Wigell expressed concern that Murphy-Aguiluās
testimony could range beyond the parking-lot statement, but that was a different matter.
¶ 48 At the hearing immediately before trial, Wigell expressed further concern that the existence
of the attorney-client privilege could limit his cross-examination of Murphy-Aguilu. But he
never directly opposed the questioning that the State anticipated. This was the closest that the
defense ever came to raising the argument that defendant raises on appeal.
¶ 49 At trial, when the State confronted Murphy-Aguilu with the parking-lot statement,
defendant did not object at all, much less raise the attorney-client privilege. Although this does
not establish forfeiture, it supports applying the invited-error rule. In cross-examining Murphy-
Aguilu, defendant sought to elicit evidence that the former attorney had had a financial interest
in defendantās nonappearance. He explained to the court that the questioning was relevant to
proving that Murphy-Aguilu had had an ulterior motive to lull defendant into failing to appear,
which, he asserted, would cut against the willfulness element. The court sustained the Stateās
objection to this line of inquiry. But in his closing argument, defendant returned to the theoryā
and he used the parking-lot statement to bolster it.
¶ 50 Although the Stateās closing argument did not mention the parking-lot statement, defendant
did, and not to contend that it violated his privilege by revealing what he had told Murphy-
Aguilu. Quite the opposite: defendant twice quoted the parking-lot statement because he
wanted to persuade the jury that Murphy-Aguilu fabricated a remark that defendant never
made. Wigell told the jury, āMr. Murphy [sic] says *** I called him. He said he was in the
parking lot or something like that.ā (Emphasis added.) He then suggested that the statement
had been Murphy-Aguiluās ruse to mislead the trial court and that it was uncertain that he had
even called defendant. Finally, Wigell stated flatly, āThe communication here just doesnāt
exist.ā
¶ 51 Thus, at trial, defendant did not neglect to object to the Stateās recitation of the parking-lot
statement; there was no mere procedural default. He consciously decided that the jury should
hear the parking-lot statementāand should hear it again in his closing argument, where he
used it to bolster his theory that Murphy-Aguilu lulled him into failing to appear in court.
¶ 52 We note that defendantās strategy was not without effect, although the jury eventually
rejected it. The jurorsā note to the court showed serious interest in defendantās theory that
Murphy-Aguiluās deliberate neglect cast doubt on whether defendantās absence had been
willful. And that theory was explicitly based partly on the proposition that the parking-lot
statement proved that Murphy-Aguilu used trickery to lull defendant into not appearing. The
last thing that defendant wanted the jurors to believe about the parking-lot statement was that
it conveyed what he actually said to Murphy-Aguilu. Defendant does not now claim that the
attorney-client privilege applies to a communication that he never made.
-9-
¶ 53 Finally, defendantās posttrial motion shows not merely forfeiture but the pursuit of a theory
that depended on his decision to invite the alleged error. The motion did not contend that the
court had violated the attorney-client privilege. Indeed, it ridiculed the very idea that the
privilege applied, arguing that Murphy-Aguilu had ābizarrelyā believed that it did. Instead of
contending that the court had given the State too much latitude in questioning Murphy-Aguilu,
it contended that the court had given him too little.
¶ 54 In sum, we hold that defendantās present claim of error is foreclosed by both forfeiture and
the invited-error doctrine. In the interests of justice and sound doctrine, however, we proceed
to the merits of the claim of error. For the following reasons, we hold that there was no violation
of the privilege and that the alleged error was in any event harmless.
¶ 55 We turn first to whether the attorney-client privilege was violated. When legal advice of
any kind is sought from a professional legal adviser in his capacity as such, the communications
relating to that purpose, made in confidence by the client, are at his instance permanently
protected from disclosure unless the client waives the privilege. People v. Radojcic, 2013 IL
114197, ¶ 40. The privilege belongs to the client and cannot be waived by the attorney (id.
¶ 39) but can embrace communications by the attorney to the client as well as vice versa (id.
¶ 40). The purpose of the privilege is to encourage full and frank communications between
attorneys and clients without the fear that confidential information will be disseminated. Id.
¶ 39. Because the privilege prevents otherwise relevant and admissible evidence from being
disclosed, it must be confined within its narrowest possible limits. Id. ¶ 41. As no pertinent
facts are disputed here, our review is de novo. See id. ¶ 35.
¶ 56 The parking-lot statement does not meet the criteria for the privilege. First, it cannot be
said that legal advice was being sought. Defendant did not initiate the call; Murphy-Aguilu
did. Murphy-Aguilu did not offer legal advice or discuss trial strategy; he merely asked
defendant where he was when he should have been in court. In response, defendant did not
seek legal advice: he told Murphy-Aguilu that he was in the parking lot. Although defendant
sought legal advice from Murphy-Aguilu on many prior occasions, he did not do so on the
morning of August 25, 2015.
¶ 57 Second, it cannot be said that what defendant told Murphy-Aguilu was confidential.
Murphy-Aguilu called defendant from court, with the judge, jury, and prosecutor present and
awaiting the start of trial. He asked where defendant was, obviously hoping that he would show
up or fearing that he would be unable to make it. Defendant could not reasonably expect that
what he told Murphy-Aguilu would remain a secret between them.
¶ 58 We also clarify that whether the statement was within the privilege was determined when
it was made. To the extent that defendant is arguing that the statement was not privileged when
it was made, but somehow became privileged in the context of the present prosecution, the
argument fails. Thus, we conclude that introducing the parking-lot statement did not violate
the attorney-client privilege.
¶ 59 We hold next that any error was harmless. There is no reason to think that the recitation of
the parking-lot statement, even if improper, affected the result of the trial. (This is even aside
from the fact that the juryās note to the court suggests that it had the potential to affect the result
in defendantās favor.) The sole disputed issue at trial was whether defendantās absence for the
requisite period had been willful. There was no dispute, however, that, at a previous hearing,
defendant was told plainly that his trial would be held on August 25, 2015; that he signed a
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bail-bond form telling him so; 2 that he posted bond; that, after August 25, 2015, he never
appeared in court or, as far as the record shows, attempted to get in touch with the court or
Murphy-Aguilu; that he moved out of his grandmotherās residence without disclosing his new
residence to her; and that, several months after his bond was forfeited, he was discovered in
Chicago, where he was served with a warrant for his nonappearance in case No. 12-CF-2466
and other cases as well. Also, when Hall twice called what he had been told was defendantās
number, he received no reply or an evasive one. The evidence of willfulness was extremely
strong, and the nondisclosure of the parking-lot statement would not have negated it.
¶ 60 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 61 The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
¶ 62 Affirmed.
Defendant argues that the bail-bond slips should not be considered, because they were hearsay.
2
However, the trial court did admit them into evidence, and there is no reason that we may not consider
them in assessing the strength of the Stateās case.
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