delivered the opinion of the court:
Fоllowing a jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County, defendant, William Metcalfe, was convicted of attempted armed robbery (720 ILCS 5/8 — 4, 18 — 2 (West 1998)) and attempted aggravated robbery (720 ILCS 5/8 — 4, 18 — 5 (West 1998)). The trial court thereafter merged the attempted aggravated robbery conviction into the attempted armed robbery conviction and sentenced defendant to a term of 10 years’ imprisonment. Defendant appealed his conviction, claiming, inter alla, that he was denied his right to a fair trial when one of the members of his jury indicated during voir dire that she could not be fair and impartial.
The First District of the appellate court reversed defendant’s conviction and remanded for a new trial, holding that the trial judge had a duty to sua sponte excuse the juror even though the defendant did not challenge the juror for cause or exercise one of his peremptory challenges.
The charges against defendant arose from an incident that occurred on January 8, 1998. At defendant’s trial, the victim, Jerry Dudek, testified that defendant approached him while he was using an automated teller machine in the lobby of a Citibank branch in downtown Chicago. Defendant twice asked Dudek for money. Dudek refused to give defendant any money. Defendant then brushed against Dudek, stuck his hand into his pocket, and told Dudek that he had a gun and wanted Dudek’s money. Dudek was scared and asked defendant not to hurt him. Defendant came closer to Dudek saying he wanted Dudek’s money.
Dudek then yelled out for help, at which point defendant took a step back. Defendant tried to reach for Dudek’s wallet, which was on the ledge of the automated teller machine. Dudek grabbed defendant’s arm to prevent him from taking the wallet. Defendant threatened to kill Dudek, so Dudek released his grip on defendant’s arm. Defendant ran toward the revolving door to try to escape. Dudek, however, put his foot against the door so that defendant was trapped in the door. Several bank employees, including an armed security guard, then reached the scene. Dudek explained that defendant had a gun and had tried to rob him. One of the bank employees ran out of the bank through another door and held the revolving door from the outside to prevent defendant from escaping. Dudek then asked the employees to take his place holding the door. Dudek said he was in shock and wanted to leave, so he gave his business card to one of the employees and asked her to have the рolice call him. Dudek went to the police station approximately an hour later and signed a complaint.
Officer Timothy Halloran of the Chicago police department testified that he received a call around 3:40 p.m. on January 8, 1998, concerning a robbery in progress. Halloran arrived on the scene and saw defendant trapped in the revolving doors. Several people were yelling that defendant had a gun. The Citibank security guard told Halloran that defendant had tried to rob Dudek. Halloran asked defendant if he had a gun and defendant said “no.” Defendant’s left hand was in his pocket, so Halloran asked defendant tо take his hand out of his pocket. Halloran then asked the people holding the doors to let the doors go so defendant could exit toward Halloran. Halloran handcuffed defendant and conducted a protective pat-down search. During the search, Hallo-ran discovered a sharpened meat cleaver in defendant’s pocket.
Halloran said that Dudek was holding the revolving door when he arrived on the scene, but he did not talk to Dudek at that time. A bank employee later handed Dudek’s card to Halloran and told Halloran that Dudek had been very shaken up and had to go to an important meeting.
Defendant tеstified that on January 8, 1998, he was homeless and did odd jobs, such as washing windows and cars, to make money. On January 8, he approached Dudek, told Dudek that he was homeless and hungry, and asked him for change. When Dudek did not respond, defendant again asked Dudek for money. Defendant said that Dudek then grabbed him by the arm and called for security. Defendant tried to walk away but was caught in the revolving door. Defendant testified that a security guard arrived with his gun drawn. Defendant tried to explain that he had done nothing wrong. The police then arrived and defendant told the police there had been a misunderstanding. Defendant explained that the meat cleaver found in his рocket was a novelty item used to scrape ice off car windshields, to open cans and for eating and cooking.
As noted, the jury found defendant guilty and defendant appealed his conviction. On appeal, the appellate court held that Officer Halloran had probable cause to arrest defendant and held that the State had proven defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Nonetheless, the appellate court reversed defendant’s conviction and remanded for a new trial, finding that defendant did not receive a fair trial by an impartial jury due to the presence of a certain juror, Grevus, on the jury that convicted defendant.
In reaching its decision, the appellate court noted that, during the jury voir dire, the trial court asked the following questions of prospective juror Grevus:
“COURT: And you have not been an accused, complainant or witness in a criminal case?
GREVUS: I have not been an accused. I have been a victim.
COURT: That case go to trial?
GREVUS: I was robbed at gunpoint from my father’s business.
COURT: That’s where you have been victim [szc] of a crime?
GREVUS: Yes.
COURT: You also have a family member or close friend who was victim [sic] of a crime?
GREVUS: My mother and father.
COURT: The fact that you have been a victim and your mother and father have been victims, would that affect your ability to be fair and impartial in this case?
GREVUS: I hope not.
COURT: You believe you could listen to the evidence and make a determination from the evidence on the witness stand?
GREVUS: Yes.
COURT: You have been party to a lawsuit that’s no longer pending?
GREVUS: Right.
COURT: Would anything affect your ability to be fair and impartial?
GREVUS: I would hope not.
COURT: As I stated, you will listen to the evidence and make your determination based on what you hear from the witness stand?
GREVUS: Yes.
COURT: Did you understand the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt and presumption of innocence?
GREVUS: Yes.
***
COURT: And if at the end of all the evidence, you felt that the State had proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt, would you have any problems signing a guilty verdict?
GREVUS: No.
COURT: If on the other hand, you felt they had not, would you have any problems signing a not guilty verdict?
GREVUS: No.”
The State then questioned Grevus concerning the crime in which she was a victim. Grevus told the assistant State’s Attorney that she was a “witness and victim” in that case. She further explained that she “positively identified [the perpetrator]” and that “[h]e got off because of a technicality.”
Defense counsel also questioned Grevus as follows:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: Miss Gervus [szc], in your response to the State’s questions just a moment ago, you said something about the person that you had identified or the person getting off on a technicality. Does the result of that case in anyway bias you as you would sit on this juiy?
GREVUS: I would — I mean I would have to answer yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Which way is that?
GREVUS: I believe that the legal system, you know, when he was clearly guilty from all the evidence but based on the way that the system is, it was based on the fact that he tried to discredit me as a witness based on how many feet and inches I was away from him when I identified him or how far away I was from the gun. I felt that they gave — I felt like I was the victim in the crime. I’m sorry. He felt like he was the victim and I was the criminal.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Would that affect your ability to be fair here?
GREVUS: Yes. You ever had something like that to happen to you, it’s hard not to feel that way.”
Defense counsel, however, then excused two other prospective jurors but did not excuse Grevus. One of those prospective jurors, Nolan, had never been an accused, complainant or witness in a criminal case, had not been a victim of a crime, did not have a family member or close friend that had been a victim of crime, and had not been a party to a lawsuit. Nolan indicated that she could be fair and impartial and understood the concepts of proof beyond a reasonable doubt and presumption of innocence. The other prospective juror excused by defense counsel, Nigan, had not been an accused, complainant or witness in a criminal case, but had been beaten and mugged and her car had been stolen. In addition, one of Nigan’s friends had been raped. Nigan said, however, that the fact that she and a close friend had been crime victims would not affect her ability to be fair and impartial. Nigan also understood the concepts of proof beyond a reasonable doubt and presumption of innocence. Ultimately, defendant used five of his seven available peremptory challenges to excuse potential jurors. See 134 Ill. 2d R. 434(d) (defendant in noncapital case has seven peremptory challenges).
The appellate court acknowledged that defendant had waived review of his objection to juror Grevus because he failed to object to her presence on the jury at trial. Nonetheless, the appellate court elected to consider defendant’s claim under the plain error exceрtion to the waiver rule (134 Ill. 2d R. 615(a)), because the issue affected defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial. The appellate court concluded that Grevus’ response to defense counsel’s questions “clarified that her experience with the criminal justice system had biased her and affected her ability to be fair toward defendant” and necessitated a reversal of defendant’s conviction and remand for a new trial.
The State now contends that the appellate court erred when it held that a trial court has a duty to strike a potentially biased or prejudiced juror sua sponte. Noting that defendant waived any objection to juror Grevus when he failed to challenge her, the State argues that the appellate court improperly applied the plain error exception in this case. The State maintains that the plain error exception does not apply because the evidence was not сlosely balanced and because the trial court could have cured the alleged error by sustaining a challenge to Grevus, had defense counsel made such a challenge. In any event, the State maintains that no error occurred in this case because a trial court does not have a duty to strike a potentially biased juror sua sponte.
There is no question that defendant waived his objectian to juror Grevus when he failed to challenge her for cause or to use one of his peremptory challenges to excuse her. See People v. Maori,
Prior to the appellate court’s decision in this case, no published decision in Illinois had held that a trial judge has a duty to strike any potentially biased juror sua sponte and that the failure to do so constitutes plain error. In support of its decision, the appellate court pointed to language in two decisions of this court, People v. Williams,
At issue in both Williams and Taylor was whether the trial court had abused its discretion in allowing or denying certain challenges for cause. Thus, in Taylor, in stating that a trial judge is obliged to insure that a dеfendant receives a trial before a fair and impartial jury, we explained that where a “defendant was deprived of this right *** because of the denial of challenges for cause of individual jurors, his conviction must be reversed and he must receive a new trial.” Taylor,
Significantly, neither Williams nor Taylor addressed whether a trial court’s duty to insure that a defendant receives a trial before a fair and impartial jury includes a duty to sua sponte strike a potential juror where that juror indicates some bias or prejudice. In fact, when faced with the converse situation, the Fifth District of the appellate court held that although the trial court’s aсtions in that case did not require reversal of the defendant’s conviction, the trial court should not have dismissed two potential jurors sua sponte. People v. Beasley,
In People v. Bowman,
On appeal, however, the defendant claimed that the trial court abused its discretion when it failed to question Leeper further concerning her ability to be fair and impartial in light of the rapes of her mother and her sisters and when it failed to sua sponte dismiss her for cause. Bowman,
The appellate court rejected the defendant’s claim that the trial court should have sua sponte excused Leeper when she said the rapes of her mother and sisters would “probably” cause her to be unfair in the defendant’s case. Bowman,
“In short, for reasons that are unclear to us, defense counsel decided to keep Leeper on the jury. The defendant cannot now complain about her presence in the jury box. It would be a bad idea to allow defendants to accept a questionаble juror, proceed to trial, then, when things turn out badly, claim entitlement to reversal because that juror voted to convict.
By not giving the court the opportunity to prevent or correct errors at trial, a lawyer would gain the advantage of obtaining a reversal through an intentional failure to act, in effect, a free trial.” Bowman,325 Ill. App. 3d at 426 .
We find the appellate court’s analysis in Bowman to be well taken. We decline to impose a duty upon a trial court to sua sponte excuse a juror for cause in the absence of a defendant’s challenge for cause or exercise of a peremptory challengе. To hold otherwise would allow a defendant “two bites of the apple.” A defendant could allow a juror such as Grevus, whose experience with the criminal justice system was not satisfactory, to sit on his jury and gamble that the juror’s bias was directed against the State and thus would work in his favor. Then, if convicted, the defendant could claim that the trial court erred in failing to strike the juror sua sponte. In addition, if a trial court strikes a juror sua sponte and the defendant is convicted, the defendant later could challenge his conviction on the ground that the trial court erred in striking the juror. As the Missouri Court of Appeals observed in holding that a trial court did not cоmmit plain error in failing to sua sponte strike a questionable juror: “ ‘[t]he rule requiring contemporaneous objections to the qualifications of jurors is well founded. It serves to minimize the incentive to sandbag in the hope of acquittal and, if unsuccessful, mount a post-conviction attack on the jury selection process.’ ” State v. Wright, 30 S.W3d 906, 914 (Mo. Ct. App. 2000), quoting State v. Hadley,
We note that the appellate court in this case attempted to distinguish Bowman on the ground that the juror in Bowman had been rehabilitated when the juror did not respond negatively to questions about fairness, impartiality and willingness to follow the law, while Grevus equivocated concerning whеther she could be fair and impartial.
In sum, we hold that although a trial court certainly has the discretion to remove a juror sua sponte for cause (see People v. Lucas,
For example, in United States v. Torres,
In Cox v. Turlington,
Finally, in Lacy v. State,
The preceding cases do not compel a different result in this case. In fact, we observe that the majority of jurisdictions addressing this issue have declined to impose a duty on the trial court to excuse a potential juror sua sponte. See Cage v. McCaughtry, No. 01 — 3245 (7th Cir. September 6, 2002) (prisoner could not obtain habeas corpus relief on ground that trial judge had obligation to dismiss juror for cause in the absence of objection to juror by either lawyer, as such a rule is not plausible interpretation of sixth amendment); State v. Bravo,
Ultimately, a trial court abuses its discretion in the conduct of voir dire only if a review of the record reveals that the trial court’s conduct thwarted the selection of an impartial jury. Williams,
Defendant next argues that even if the trial court did not have a duty to excuse Grevus sua sponte, defendant was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his trial attorney failed to challenge Grevus. Defendant therefore contends that the appellate court’s decision reversing defendant’s conviction can be affirmed on the ground that defendant was denied his sixth amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. Defendant notеs that he raised this issue in the appellate court, but the appellate court did not reach the issue due to the disposition of the case.
In Strickland v. Washington,
The Supreme Court also has recognized, however, that there are certain “circumstances that are so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified.” United States v. Cronic,
We find no merit to defendant’s claim that prejudice must be presumed in this case. The Supreme Court recently explained that “[w]hen we spoke in Cronic of the possibility of presuming prejudice based on an attorney’s failure to test the prosecutor’s case, we indicated that the attorney’s failure must be complete.” Bell v. Cone,
In this case, as in Bell, defendant does not contend that his counsel failed to oppose the prosecution throughout the voir dire proceeding as a whole, but that his counsel failed to do so with regard to juror Grevus. In fact, defense counsel did exercise five peremptory challenges. Consequently, any alleged failure to test the prosecution’s case here was not complete, as required under Cronic. We therefore review defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under the Strickland standard.
As noted, to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under Strickland, a defendant must show both that his counsel’s performance was so seriously deficient as to fall below an objective standard of reasonableness and that the deficient performance so prejudiced defendant as to deny him a fair trial. Strickland,
In Bowman, the appellate court held that the decision to exercise an available peremptory challenge is a strategic one, and further held that the defendant had failed to show that his counsel’s decisions “questionable as they might be, were not tactical and a matter of jury selection strategy.” Bowman,
Finally, even if we were to assume that defense counsel’s actions were not objectively reasonable, defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may be disposed of on the ground that the defendant suffered no prejudice from the alleged error. See People v. Johnson,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the appellate court and affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Appellate court judgment reversed;
circuit court judgment affirmed.
