*1 Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
People v. Garcia
,
Aрpellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. IVAN GARCIA, Defendant-Appellant. Caption First District, Third Division
District & No.
Docket No. 1-13-3398 Filed March 22, 2017
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 09-CR-18887; the Hon. Michael McHale, Judge, presiding. Review Affirmed; mittimus corrected.
Judgment Counsel on Michael J. Pelletier, Alan D. Goldberg, and Aliza R. Kaliski, of State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant. Appeal
Anita M. Alvarez, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg, Janet C. Mahoney, and Brian A. Levitsky, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People. JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Panel
Justices Pucinski and Cobbs concurred in the judgment and opinion. *2 OPINION
¶ 1 Following a jury trial, defendant Ivan Garcia was found guilty of the aggravated criminal
sexual abuse (720 ILCS 5/12-16(d) (West 2008)) of his 15-year-old niece, when he was nearly twice her age, and sentenced to a total of 20 years in prison. He appeals raising a number of contentions relating to the court’s compliance with Illinois Supreme Court Rules, the denial of his pretrial motions challenging the search warrant, his right to a lawyer and right to self-representation, as well as the use of propensity evidence and other trial errors. We address each in turn as we affirm. BACKGROUND Defendant was arrested and then charged with multiple counts of the above-stated sex
offense after police executed a search warrant of his home and discovered a black fireproof safe box under defendant’s bed containing a journal, memory card, letters, and a vibrating ring enclosed in a separate box. Police flipped through the journal discovering gang writing, drawings, and photographs of defendant, apparently with his niece. Defendant moved to suppress these items, which were seized and later used to establish his guilt for sexual abuse. He argued the box and its items were outside the scope of the warrant, which authorized the seizure of only drugs, drug paraphernalia, records of illegal drug transactions, money, and residency documents. Police, however, testified at the motion to suppress hearing that the black box had an
attached key inside the keyhole, which they used to open it, and they flipped through the journal in search of possible drug transaction records. This was because, in addition to the black box, officers had actually discovered drugs and $1750 of cash in defendant’s bedroom. On seeing that the journal contained photos of defendant with his niece, police then appropriately obtained consent from K.M.’s mother to search the rest of the box’s contents, as they had determined the journal belonged to K.M. The State argued the seizure of these items and review of them was consistent with the search warrant, which authorized officers to search the bedroom and the lockbox, and to peruse the journal. The State noted that officers had testified narcotics transactions can sometimes be embedded in codes. The court denied the motion to suppress the lockbox items, finding that it could have reasonably contained objects which were the subject of the search warrant. Likewise, the journal could have contained drug transaction records notwithstanding that its handwritten prose was described as visually feminine. Additionally, the police had obtained valid consent. While the public defender’s office represented defendant on his motion to suppress,
defendant requested to act
pro se
in this case and two other pending cases, and he posed further
challenges to the warrant’s validity. He ultimately filed a motion for a hearing under
Franks v.
Delaware
,
period starting when she was 15 years old. Trial evidence showed defendant repeatedly preyed on K.M. when no other adult was present, grabbing her or carrying her while she was asleep to *3 his bedroom, where he touched her breasts and vagina. K.M. would push him away, but he persisted in these actions and eventually told her that she “couldn’t be doing that to him,” at which time he placed her hand on his erect penis. Some weeks after the initial violation, defendant again took K.M. to his bed. K.M. “pushed him away and then *** just kind of gave up” because it “was happening for awhile,” and she “didn’t know what else to do.” Defendant then penetrated K.M.’s vagina digitally, performed oral sex on her, and then had sex with her. He continued to have sex with her daily for months. During this period, defendant meanwhile acted as a father-like, boyfriend-like figure to
K.M., teaching her to drive, attending her orchestra concerts along with K.M.’s siblings, and celebrating her birthday along with her siblings. Her mother, Virginia, was largely absent and thus defendant was the caretaker to Virginia’s four children and also two of his own children. [1] K.M. did not tell anyone about the abuse because she was scared of getting into trouble since she was only 15, and defendant was her uncle. K.M. identified lubricant tubes and a vibrating ring that defendant used while penetrating her. Defendant took photographs and videos of K.M., including videos of them having sex, on his cell phone. These images were recorded on a memory card stored in the lockbox. Both defendant and K.M. had a key to the box, and the two watched videos of them having sex on the computer. Some of these images and the video were published to the jury, with K.M. giving a graphic description of what occurred during their sex acts. K.M. was not his only victim. Her younger sister, D.M. [2] testified that she slept in
defendant’s bed when she was only seven years old. He touched her vagina both over and under her clothes. He took her clothing off and digitally penetrated her. On about five separate occasions, he took off D.M.’s clothes and performed oral sex on her. D.M. also did not tell her mom or sister because she was afraid she would get in trouble, and defendant had instructed her not to tell anyone. As stated, the sexual abuse eventually came to light when police executed the search
warrant and discovered the lockbox evidence. When confronted, K.M. told police the lockbox was hers, even though it was not. Initially, she attempted to hide the truth of their relationship because she did not want her uncle going to jail, she “cared for him,” and thought she “loved him.” A physical examination of K.M. revealed she was missing hymenal tissue, indicating there was an injury from pеnetrating trauma. The examining doctor testified K.M.’s injuries were consistent with a history of being sexually abused. K.M. eventually acknowledged what defendant did to her when she “found out he was raping” her sister. The jury found defendant guilty on all four counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse.
Defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was denied. At sentencing, a cousin of K.M. testified that defendant digitally penetrated her several times when she was only seven or eight years old. Defendant was sentenced to consecutive terms on the multiple counts, totaling 20 years in prison. This appeal followed.
*4 ¶ 11 ANALYSIS Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against him. Rather, he raises
a number of claimed errors, but all save one have been forfeited by failure to raise a
contemporaneous and/or posttrial objection. See
People v. Enoch
, 122 Ill. 2d 176, 186-87
(1988) (holding that generally to preserve an error, a defendant must raise both a
contemporaneous and written posttrial objection); see also
People v. Almond
,
supreme court’s recent case,
Almond
,
multiple issues in turn. Pro Se Representation As stated, defendant acted pro se for a limited period when he filed his motion for a
hearing. Defendant first contends he did not validly waive his right to counsel because the trial
court failed to admonish him of the nature of the charges against him and minimum sentence,
as required by Illinois Supreme Court Rule 401(a) (eff. July 1, 1984). Defendant argues that
the alleged error constitutes plain error and asks that we remand the matter for a new
Franks
hearing with counsel. See
United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez
, 548 U.S. 140, 147-48 (2006)
(holding that structural errors include denial of counsel);
People v. Thompson
,
was no clear and obvious error amounting to plain error because the court substantially complied with Rule 401, and that defendant’s waiver of counsel was knowing and voluntary without any demonstrated prejudice. We agree with each of these arguments. The federal constitution’s sixth amendment guarantees a criminal accused the right to
counsel and the correlative right to act
pro se
.
People v. Haynes
,
indicates that defendant was arraigned in this case
[3]
and thus made aware of the charges against
him. See
People v. Banks
, 378 Ill. App. 3d 856, 861 (2007) (any doubts arising from an
incomplete record are construed against the defendant as the appellant); 725 ILCS 5/113-1
(West 2008);
People v. Maust
,
trial court admonished defendant that he was subject to Class 1 felonies punishable by up to 15 years’ imprisonment and that he could be “found guilty of different counts and those counts could run consecutively,” meaning defendant could “possibly serve 15 years for each one of the counts alleged in the six-count indictment.” In actuality, the first two charges of criminal sexual assault were Class 1 felonies (4- to 15-year terms) (see 720 ILCS 5/12-13(b)(1) (West 2008); 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(d)(4) (West 2008)), while the next four charges of aggravated criminal sexual abuse were Class 2 felonies (3- to 7-year terms) (see 720 ILCS 5/12-16 (West 2008); 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(d)(5) (West 2008)). The court made clear to defendant that he could face substantial prison time, and defendant received a substantially shorter sentence than the provided admonishments. Defendant concedes he was advised of the most serious class of offense. The court also made clear that he had a right to a lawyer even if he was indigent. Over five
pages in the transcript, the court advised defendant of the seriousness of the charges, noting “[t]his is your life at stake,” and that defendant was at an extreme disadvantage in representing himself before an experienced State’s Attorney given the technical rules of evidence and tactical decisions involved. The court also inquired about defendant’s educational history. The record shows defendant finished high school and that he was articulate and cognizant of the proceedings. The court stated, “You have a сonstitutional right to throw your life away, and if that’s what you’re going to do, then that’s what you’re going to do. But I need to make sure that you understand that if you throw your life away and if you decide that you are going to throw your life away, you do it freely and knowingly and intelligently and voluntarily.” Defendant stated he understood that. The court stated defendant would not receive special consideration or the public defender’s investigative services. The court stated it was not inclined to appoint standby counsel, but would make that decision at a later date. The court gave defendant 12 days to contemplate, as it should not be a “snap decision” or an “emotional decision,” but rather, a “rational” one. Twelve days later, defendant made a clear and articulate statement of his desire to waive counsel, and the trial court also clearly stated that defendant would not have the public defender’s services and then allowed the public defender to withdraw. The record shows that this short waiting period, rather than vitiating the effectiveness of
the trial court’s Rule 401 admonishments as defendant argues, actually buttressed those admonishments and defendant’s knowing and intelligent waiver of counsel. See Haynes , 174 Ill. 2d at 241 (concluding admonishments given almost three months before the defendant accepted wаiver of counsel were sufficient under Rule 401) . The State concedes the court did not inform defendant of the minimum sentences but notes that even assuming it had, nothing in the record shows defendant would have changed his mind as to representation. See id. at 243-44; Johnson , 119 Ill. 2d at 134. We agree. Defendant had challenged his attorney’s strategy relating to the Franks motion for about a year. Defendant indicated he wished to proceed pro se some five months before the November 2011 hearing, which is where he declared he would represent himself. Even in the face of an extensive term, defendant chose to proceed pro se on his hearing motion. The motion itself demonstrated a degree of legal sophistication with regard to arguments and legal citations. In addition, defendant was ultimately represented by counsel at trial, sentencing, and posttrial, and he cannot establish any prejudice due to the lack of counsel on his application for a Franks hearing. In conclusion, defendant has forfeited this matter and, even putting forfeiture aside, the
record demonstrates that there was substantial compliance with Rule 401 and thus no error. To
*7
the extent there was any inadequacy in how the trial court presented the Rule 401
admonishments, it did not impede defendant from giving a knowing and intelligent waiver of
counsel on his
Franks
motion. See
People v. Maxey
,
¶ 24 Denial of Franks Motion Defendant next contends the trial court erred in denying his Franks motion and requests
remand for another hearing. Defendant asks that we review this under the constitutional-issue
exception, framing the matter as one involving the fourth amendment. Whether we view the
motion for a full
Franks
hearing under a constitutional guise or plain error, we reach the same
result. See
McDonald
,
so, no warrant shall be issued without probable cause.
People v. Caro
,
obtain a search warrant on September 25, 2009, for defendant’s person and premises, a basement apartment at 5203 South Troy Avenue in Chicago, and to seize any drugs inside. Officer Ramirez and a confidential informant, J. Doe, signed the complaint and swore to its truth before a judge. Officer Ramirez attested that Doe stated that on September 24, she went to the basement apartment in Chicago for “the purpose of purchasing cannabis.” She knocked on the apartment’s side window and walked to the back of the building. Doe then purchased weed, a large bag of which was situated on a coffee table, from “Menace” in exchange for $60. Doe had known Menace for about five years and had purchased weed from him about five times in the past month at the Troy Avenue address. Officer Ramirez and Doe later drove to the address, and she identified the drug buy apartment and also positively identified defendant from a computer-generated photo. As stated, the magistrate judge issued the warrant based on this sworn information. Defendant now challenges its veracity, denying that he sold drugs to Doe. Franks gives a defendant a limited right to attack the veracity of affidavits like that of
Officer Ramirez.
People v. Lucente
,
defendant contends evidence showed his wife, Michelle Rodriguez, was the confidential *8 informant Doe and source of the search warrant, a fact the State concedes, and that she lied to the judge about having bought drugs from defendant. Rodriguez did this at the behest of Officer Ramirez, who stated that through her lie she could get custody of their children from defendant. The State responds that defendant again forfeited this matter and even taking the affidavits
as true, defendant cannot establish that Officer Ramirez acted with reckless disregard of the
truth. For the reasons to follow, our
de novo
review reveals defendant cannot sustain his claim.
See
Chambers
,
2012. In it, Rodriguez stated she had told Officer Ramirez in August 2009 that she believed defendant was a “drug dealer” and that she wanted custody of her children back. After a failed attempt to locate defendant at another apartment, Officer Ramirez contacted Rodriguez again. Per her affidavit, they appeared in front of a judge and “Officer Ramirez told me to say that [defendant] sold me drugs so that they able [ sic ] to get a warrant to raid the house.” Officer Ramirez also requested that Rodriguez’s son draw a map of the apartment’s layout. Defendant’s son attested that Officer Ramirez asked questions about the location of the apartment, how the inside looked, and where defendant kept his money and drugs, and verified that he drew a map of the apartment for Officer Ramirez. As the circuit court in this case pointed out during oral arguments on the motion, nothing
indicates Rodriguez conveyed to Officer Ramirez that she was not telling the truth about
defendant’s drug activity, as described in the complaint for the search warrant. The deliberate
falsity or reckless disregard of the truth applies only to the affiant—here, Officer
Ramirez—and not to any nongovernmental informant like Rodriguez.
Chambers
, 2016 IL
117911, ¶ 36. The affidavits attached to defendant’s motion did not supply proof that Officer
Ramirez was untruthful, let alone that Rodriguez was untruthful since both Rodriguez and her
son were aware of defendant’s drug activity, and the son knew of the location of drugs within
the apartment. Moreover, simply because Rodriguez had an ulterior motive (gaining custody
of her children) to help police does not directly support the conclusion that her search warrant
statements were false. Regardless, the affidavit falls far short of showing that Officer Ramirez
should have known her statements to be false or thаt he forced her to lie to the warrant’s issuing
judge. We agree with the State that Officer Ramirez cannot be found to have recklessly
disregarded the truth on this evidence.
Cf. Lucente
,
attached affidavit, dated December 10, 2012. This affidavit was executed about four months
after the first affidavit, and a month after the hearing on defendant’s motion. In the
second affidavit, Rodriguez disavows that the drug transaction took place as described in the
complaint and also explicitly states that Officer Ramirez told her to lie to the issuing judge.
*9
Defendant’s argument as to this affidavit suffers from sеveral glaring defects. First,
defendant fails to make any argument on appeal as to the standards involved in a motion to
reconsider, thus forfeiting an already forfeited issue. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Jan. 1,
2016) (“Points not argued are waived.”). We note that before the trial court, he did not seek to
amend or reopen proofs when he filed his motion to reconsider the judgment, nor does he
explain the discrepancy between Rodriguez’s first affidavit,
which does not directly implicate
Officer Ramirez’s truthfulness as an affiant
, and the second affidavit, which does. See
People
v. Pollitt
,
practical level the transaction could not have occurred as described in the affidavit for the warrant. To advance that he had an alibi on the day of the drug buy, defendant points to his mother’s affidavit, written in Spanish and stating defendant was with her from 8 a.m. until 2:45 p.m. but not at his apartment. Defendant also relies on a school calendar showing there was a parent open house at 6 p.m., which he claims to have attended. Defendant has appended the English-language version of his mother’s affidavit to his briеf, but it is not officially part of the appellate record, and there is no evidence that the translated version was presented to the circuit court. However, attachments to briefs cannot be used to supplement the record, and this court cannot consider evidence that is not part of the record. People v. Heaton , 266 Ill. App. 3d 469, 476 (1994). We reach the same conclusion as to the affidavit of defendant’s neighbor stating that there was a fence surrounding his apartment plus a locked gate, which tenuously suggests Rodriguez could not have entered. The Spanish-language version is attached to defendant’s motion, while he has provided the English-language version only as part of his brief. We cannot consider the affidavit. Even if we could consider the attached affidavits and take them as true, defendant’s cause
for a hearing would still fail. With regard to defendant’s own affidavit, we observe that he provides a detailed, hour-by-hour account of his day away from the apartment from 7:30 a.m. until midnight. While in some instances, detail may lend an air of credibility to a defendant’s alibi, that is not the case here. See Lucente , 116 Ill. 2d at 154 (noting that supporting affidavits need to be sufficiently detailed such that affiants can be subject to penalties of perjury if untrue). We find it incredible that three years after the date in question, defendant would remember, among other things, the order in which he chauffeured his nephew, sons, mother, and niece around town for more than 16 hours. Similarly attenuated is the suggestion that his mother, in her own affidavit, accurately recalled the precise meals she and defendant ordered for lunch that day. Moreover, in spite of his mother’s affidavit and the school calendar, the complaint for the search warrant does not specify the drug buy time, and defendant still could have been home for a short period to perform the buy after 2:45 p.m. or sometime in the evening. Indeed, his apartment was under 10 minutes away by car from the high school where he claimed to be for several hours after 5 p.m. Regardless, it cannot be said that an alibi-type showing will always be sufficient (see id. at 152), especially in a case like the present where defendant has failed to show the known confidential informant provided a false statement to the officer-affiant or one that should have been disregarded by the officer-affiant. This brings us to the final point, even taking the neighbor’s affidavit as true, it does not *10 necessarily demonstrate that Officer Ramirez knew the gate to be locked and inaccessible such that he should not have believed Rodriguez’s statement for the search warrant. It also does not preclude the possibility that Rodriguez had a key to gain entry. The affidavit simply does not prove any reckless disregard of the truth by the police officer. We have carefully balanced the statements in the warrant affidavit against those
challenging the warrant, and for all of the reasons set forth above, the evidence defendant relies on does not refute the warrant affidavit allegations. As such, defendant’s affidavit of “I didn’t do it” amounts to no more than an unsubstantiated denial, which is insufficient to garner the limited right to a Franks hearing. See id. at 153-54. We reject defendant’s contentions in support of his motion on the merits. We also note defendant has forfeited this matter and failed to establish error, let alone plain error. Motion to Suppress Defendant next contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. Defendant
does not dispute that the police lawfully entered his apartment to execute the search warrant for drugs, drug paraphernalia, money, and drug transaction records. He argues, however, that the warrant did not authorize police to search and seize the lockbox or its contents of a woman’s journal and memory card. Defendant argues the officers thus “exceeded the scope of the warrant by seizing unrelated items that were not obviously or immediately incriminating” in violation of the plain view doctrine. Defendant asserts these actions violated his federal and state constitutional right against unreasonable search and seizure (see Caro , 381 Ill. App. 3d at 1061) and notes the video was “key” to his conviction. Although the State asserts that defendant forfeited this error by failing to include it in his
posttrial motion and cannot establish plain error, we review the alleged fourth amendment
violation on the merits since it is a constitutional issue litigated at trial that can be raised in a
postconviction petition. See
Almond
,
and seizure were unlawful.
Cregan
,
residency or drug transaction records and review the journal in relation to drug transaction
records as well. We agree with the State and cannot say these factual findings were against the
manifest weight of the evidence nor the legal conclusions incorrect. Pursuant to the warrant,
officers searched defendant’s bedroom, where they discovered cannabis in the bedroom closet
and $1750 of cash in defendant’s dresser drawer. Therefore, in happening upon a
12-by-10-inch locked, fireproof box hidden under defendant’s bed in this very same bedroom
where police had found drugs, it was only reasonable that police should open the box to
determine whether it also contained evidence of drugs or drug transactions. See
Dorris
, 110 Ill.
App. 3d at 665 (police who were authorized to search car for handbag and currency could seize
and search a change purse found in a plastic bag along with the approximate amount of missing
currency). The trial court credited police testimony that they flipped through the journal in
search of narcotics-related evidence and their explanation that such items sometimes contain
hidden codes relating to drugs. Defendant argues the journal
contained
female handwriting,
which indicates it was not a record for drug transactions. We agree with the trial court that the
journal could have contained drug records, notwithstanding the author’s gender since it was
found in a locked box and drug-filled room. Moreover, as a reviewing court, we are not at
liberty to weigh witness credibility or resolve conflicts in testimony, for that is the province of
the trial court. See
People v. Hillsman
, 362 Ill. App. 3d 623, 632 (2005). We also note the
journal was not even introduced at trial.
Defendant’s reliance on
People v. Harmon
,
Harmon
court held the CB rаdio, discovered in the back of a TV set and on which defendant’s
theft conviction was based, “was unquestionably not an item named in the search warrant,”
which too generally authorized the seizure of only “large items” of “stolen railroad property.”
at 756-57. Nor was the CB radio immediately apparent under plain view as evidence of
another crime since it was consistent with the defendant’s status as a junk collector. Unlike in
Harmon
, here the officers lawfully searched and then seized the lockbox (
i.e.
, by collecting
and opening it) within the scope of the warrant. See
Horton v. California
,
¶ 45 Finally, even assuming police did not obtain consent to search and seize the lockbox
contents, we conclude they could do so under the plain view doctrine, even though this was not
argued at the motion to suppress hearing. Plain view requires (1) that an оbject’s incriminating
character be immediately apparent and (2) that the officer have a lawful right of access to the
object itself.
Hillsman
,
ruling fail. Denial of Pro Se Representation at Trial Defendant contends the trial court erroneously denied defendant his constitutional right to
represent himself at trial, in spite of his unequivocal and timely request to do so. He asks that we reverse and remand for a new trial. The State responds that defendant forfeited this issue. Defendant once again invokes the
constitutional exception to the forfeiture rule. Although this issue of self-representation is a
matter of record, it was not necessarily challenged during trial, making the exception defendant
seeks inapplicable. See
McDonald
, 2016 IL 118882, ¶ 47. Again, regardless of whether we
view this on the merits or as a matter of plain error, we reach thе same result. See
Gonzalez-Lopez
, 548 U.S. at 148-49 (holding that structural errors include denial of
self-representation);
Thompson
,
proceedings.
People v. Baez
,
declining his second request to act pro se given defendant’s back-and-forth and obstructionist conduct in this case. Some background is necessary. The public defender’s office represented defendant on his motion to suppress in 2011. Some months later, defendant cited communication problems with his attorney, and the trial court directly addressed defendant’s concerns in a hearing outside the State’s Attorney’s presence, ultimately declaring that defendant’s attorney was not ineffective. The court noted that if defendant wanted another public defender, defendant would need to address the matter to the public defender’s office. The record indicates defendant did just that, having numerous conversations with the office supervisor over some three months. At a July 2011 hearing, as the attorneys were proceeding on the other-crimes motion by the State, defendant requested a continuance to speak with the office supervisor one more time. The court denied that request and noted that another public defender was not likely to take the place of defendant’s attorney, Richard S. Kruss. The court stated that defendant could hire a private lawyer, but if indigent, the court was required to appoint the public defender assigned to defendant’s case. In November 2011, defendant firmly announced he wished to proceed pro se on the Franks motion, which his defense counsel had already filed. As set forth above, the trial court allowed defendant to do so. The cоurt admonished defendant that if he changed his mind, the court could reappoint the
public defender’s office, but then stated several times that once the matter went to trial, defendant could not change his mind and ask for a lawyer at the last minute. The court stated defendant would not receive special consideration simply because he was proceeding pro se . The court then patiently allowed defendant to review evidence and prepare his motions. As of July 2012, some eight months after defendant requested to proceed while acting pro se , the court provided defendant another month to present his Franks motion. Defendant requested standby counsel to consult with regarding his motion, but the court noted it had already declared standby counsel would not be available when defendant decided to proceed pro se . Defendant filed his motion in September and the State filed its response in October. At the November 2012 hearing, as the parties were preparing to argue on the motion, defendant requested a continuance to review photographs of his home yet again. Defendant also noted he *14 needed additional time to review the State’s cases. The court denied these requests, noting defendant had already seen the photographs and had four weeks to review the State’s response. After defendant’s Franks motion was denied at this same hearing, the court declared it would be setting the matter for trial at the next court date. It was at this point that defendant asked for a lawyer to be appointed other than the public defender. The court again stated there was no evidence the public defender had been ineffective or there was a conflict of interest. The court declared that either defendant accepted the public defender’s office or he had to represent himself. Defendant then stated he wished to have the public defender’s office represent him. Public defender Kruss appeared again on defendant’s behalf. At the next court date in January 2013, the court allowed defendant to file pro se his motion
to reconsider the Franks hearing since he had represented himself on the matter but then noted public defender Kruss had been appointed at the last court date and was representing defendant. Two days later, defense counsel in defendant’s presence noted the matter was ready to be set for trial. On February 8, 2013, the next court date, defendant stated that he was “under the impression that Mr. Kruss was going to withdraw from the case” and declared he was going to proceed pro se . The court denied defendant’s request, noting the case was to be set for trial:
“I find that the reason why you’re asking to go pro se once again is to delay the trial. Yоu have a right to have a trial, and you have a right to represent yourself, but you can’t go back and forth between representing yourself or not to delay the proceedings.” When the court asked defendant whether he wanted a bench or jury trial, defendant stated he wanted to file a motion and have a hearing on the consent to search the lockbox discovered in his room. The court again asked if defendant wanted a bench or jury trial, to which defendant responded that he would like to proceed pro se “even without any continuance.” The court indicated a jury trial. Viewing the above-stated facts and defendant’s conduct as a whole, defendant cannot
overcome the presumption against waiver. Defendant’s vacillation following the hearing actually militated against permitting him to represent himself pro se at trial. Defendant’s final request was not in the least unequivocal given all the preceded it. We further defer to the trial court’s finding that defendant was seeking to delay proceedings by flip-flopping about counsel yet again on the day the case was to be set for trial and by requesting a continuance on his long-ago decided motion to suppress. As People v. Burton , 184 Ill. 2d 1, 24 (1998), noted, the timing of a defendant’s request is also significant. A number of courts have held that a defendant’s request is untimely wherе it is first made just before the commencement of trial, after trial begins, or after meaningful proceedings have begun. ; see also People v. Rasho , 398 Ill. App. 3d 1035, 1042 (2010) (upholding the denial of self-representation where the defendant’s request to proceed pro se on the day of trial was not timely and was accompanied by an implicit motion for a continuance). Defendant’s behavior in that regard was consistent with his constant wish for continuances throughout the pretrial period. In short, defendant’s contention fails on the merits and under plain error. Voir Dire Juror Issues Defendant next argues he did not receive a fair and impartial jury trial due to errors
committed during
voir dire
. He first asserts an Illinois Supreme Court Rule 431(b) (eff. July 1,
2012) violation. Rule 431(b) requires the trial court during
voir dire
to ask each potential juror
individually or in a group whether they understand and accept certain basic criminal law
*15
principles, including that the State must prove defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt
before he can be convicted. Defendant contends, and the State concedes, that the court failed to
ask the jurors whether they
accepted
this principle (although both agree the court did inquire
whether they understood it). Therefore, the court did not comply with Rule 431(b) in that
specific regard. See
Thompson
,
forfeited error because the record betrays no prejudice. We agree. In plain error review, the burden of persuasion rests with the defendant, and failure to conduct Rule 431(b) questioning does not necessarily result in a biased jury. at 613, 614. Here, defendant has not demonstrated juror bias tied to the trial court’s noncompliance with Rule 431(b). He has not pointed to evidence showing any juror did not accept the State’s burden of proof. The trial court gave the jury instructions during voir dire , and on inquiry, none raised their hands to indicate a lack of understanding or acceptance. Contrary to defendant’s argument, the error was not so serious that it compromised the fairness of defendant’s trial or challenged the integrity of the judicial process. See id. Defendant’s second claimed error relates to an interchange between the judge and one jury
member who expressed discomfort with English, an error he claims was compounded by the Rule 431(b) noncompliance. The interchange occurred just after the final jurors were selected and told to return the following day for the trial. One of those jurors, Sylwia Ogrodnik, raised her hand asked whether they had to stay until 3:30 p.m. or 4 p.m. the next day as well. The court responded he would attempt to finish by 5 p.m. It was then that she stated, “I don’t feel very comfortable with my English. I understand but not everything. That’s why I don’t know. I’m like, you know. No, I want to be fair for you guys, you know. I want to understand everything, but really some words I don’t understand.” The judge responded, “Miss Ogrodnik, I do understand your concern. I appreciate that. But we went through about 20 questions together and you seemed to do very well with English.” He then stated, “If you don’t understand a certain word here or there, you will be able to rely on your fellow jurors when it comes time to deliberate.” Defendant argues that this juror’s responses during voir dire did not establish her English proficiency. He maintains the court should have further questioned this juror and replaced her with an alternate if the court concluded she lacked English proficiency such that it affected her ability to serve as a juror. This very argument betrays the speculative nature of defendant’s claim and the reason why we have the preservation of error rules in the first place. Matters relating to jury selection and management are generally within the discretion of the
trial court.
People v. Roberts
, 214 Ill. 2d 106, 121 (2005). It is not the job of this court to
second-guess the trial judge’s estimation of a juror’s adequacy when the defense counsel
himself has declined to challenge that juror for cause. See
People v. Metcalfe
,
¶ 62 We thus reject defendant’s argument that the alleged errors relating to Rule 431(b) and
juror Ogrodnik were so egregious individually or cumulatively that he was denied a fair and impartial jury, when the record simply does not support his forfeited contention. Defendant’s claim fails. Hearsay Evidence Claim Defendant next contends the State’s witness testified to impermissible hearsay, which is an
out-of-court statement made by someone other than the declarant offered to prove the truth of
the matter asserted. See
People v. Caffey
,
statement only on foundational grounds and did not raise the issue in his posttrial motion, thus forfeiting the matter. See People v. Hayes , 319 Ill. App. 3d 810, 818-19 (2001) (noting preservation requires both a contemporaneous objection on the specified grounds and also a posttrial objection). Defense counsel, however, did object to the court’s issuance of the Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, Nos. 3.06-3.07 (4th ed. 2000) (hereinafter, IPI Criminal 4th) relating to defendant’s statement. Counsel argued the statement was “vague” and “may have been relating to the alleged marijuana sales and not, certainly not to anything else.” The trial court rejected this argument, concluding the statement betrayed a consciousness of guilt. The IPI Criminal 4th Nos. 3.06-3.07, which was submitted to the jury, stated evidence had been presented that defendant made statements relating to the charged offenses and further, “It is for you to determine whether the defendant made the statements, and, if so, what weight” to give the statements. It called for the jury to consider all the circumstances under which the statement was made. Defendant included the alleged jury instruction error in his posttrial motion and contends that matter is thus preserved. We think it is questionable that defendant preserved the jury instruction issue, when the
basis for his objection was that defendant’s statement was vague, which is a matter he had already forfeited by failing to lodge that objection before the jury. Regardless, we find no error. The State responds that this statement was proper under the party admission doctrine and the jury could infer defendant’s guilt from the statement because it demonstrated his *17 knowledge of the incriminating evidence in the box. The court’s instruction was thereby properly presented to the jury. We agree. The party-admission doctrine is an exception to the hearsay rule. People v. Ramsey , 205 Ill.
2d 287, 294 (2002). A statement by a party-opponent is not hearsay if it “is offered against a
party and is *** the party’s own statement.” Ill. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(A) (eff. Oct. 15, 2015); see
also
People v. Aguilar
,
evidence of defendant’s sex offenses. Defendant did not present any evidence to the contrary through tеstimony or cross-examination. Moreover, Sergeant Ferrer testified that prior to overhearing defendant’s statement, police had discovered the lockbox containing the sex offense evidence, they had obtained consent to search the box from Virginia, and they had confronted defendant with evidence of the memory card—all of this was before defendant made his statement. This provided adequate context to show defendant was attempting to hide the incriminating evidence in the box. The jury was entitled to make this inference of guilt taking all the facts together. Neither the admission of the statement nor the jury instruction was improper. Even assuming it was improper, defendant’s contention still fails in light of the
overwhelming evidence of his guilt based on K.M. and D.M.’s testimony and the video evidence. His incriminating statement, and the resultant instruction, was not a material factor in his conviction. See Jose Rodriguez , 291 Ill. App. 3d at 61. Nor was it an error of such magnitude that it rose to the level of plain error. Other-Crimes Evidence Defendant next contends the trial court improperly allowed the State to introduce
other-crimes evidence relating to the sexual abuse of D.M., K.M.’s younger sister. See 725
ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2008). He urges us to review the forfeited matter for plain error
affecting the fairness of his trial. See
People v. Norwood
,
be avoided by carefully limiting the details of the other crime to what is necessary to illuminate
the issue for which the other crime was introduced.
People v. Boyd
,
argues defense counsel was improperly limited from questioning Virginia about D.M.’s meeting with the examining physician, wherein D.M. initially denied the sex abuse. Defendant contends his questions to Virginia were aimed at showing that Virginia suggested the sex abuse to D.M., thus casting doubt on D.M.’s testimony. This matter is forfeited. Regardless, having reviewed the record, there was no error since defendant sought to introduce impermissible hearsay. Even assuming any error, it could never be plain error since defendant *19 could have gone about introducing the information through other means, and it did not affect his right to a fair trial. It merits no further mention. Defendant’s second assertion, which is one of the few that he preserved, is that the court in
error declined to instruct the jury under IPI Criminal 4th No. 3.11 on prior inconsistent
statements. Defendant asserts D.M.’s initial denial of the sex abuse conflicted with her later
statements and testimony of abuse. Here, D.M. testified that she did not report the sex abuse by
defendant because she was scared that her mother or sister would scream at her. After
defendant was arrested, D.M. went to the doctor. D.M. testified that she lied to the treating
physician, denying that she had been sexually abused. Her testimony suggests she did this
because she was overwhelmed. D.M. eventually revealed the abuse to her mother in a letter.
An instruction on a witness’s credibility in light of inconsistencies is a cautionary one, and
a trial court has considerable discretion in deciding whether or not to give such an instruction,
particularly where the inconsistency is doubtful.
People v. Luckett
,
mittimus corrected to reflect 1438 days of presentence custody credit, rather than 1428 days.
See
People v. Williams
,
of the sex offenses against K.M. Affirmed; mittimus corrected.
Notes
[1] The record indicates two of defendant’s three children lived with him.
[2] Defendant was separately charged with the predatory criminal sexual assault and aggravated criminal sexual abuse of D.M. in case No.10 CR 12153.
[3] The date of the hearing in the report of proceedings that references defendant’s prior arraignment is December 7, 2007. This date cannot be correct since it is before defendant’s actual crime was committed. In addition, the common law record indicates a hearing took place on December 7, 2009.
[4] While we know that case No. 10 CR 12153 related to defendant’s acts against D.M. and involved the Department of Children and Family Services, the record does not contain the exact charges, nor does it make clear the charges in case No. 09 CR 18886 (which we presume involved the drugs discovered in defendant’s home).
