delivered the opinion of the court:
Following a jury trial, defendant Octavis Sims was convicted of first degree murder under section 9 — 1(a)(1) of the Criminal Code of 1961 (720 ILCS 5/9 — 1(a)(1) (West 2000)) and sentenced to 23 years in prison. He appeals, claiming that the trial court: (1) improperly admitted evidence in a pretrial hearing that he failed a polygraph examination; (2) allowed improper closing arguments by the prosecutor; and (3) misread the jury instructions on eyewitness identification. Defendant also claims, and the State concedes, that the mittimus incorrectly reflects 863 rather than 864 days’ credit for time served. We affirm and direct the clerk of the circuit court to correct the mittimus.
Defendant was convicted of the murder of Jacqueline Bernaugh on November 30, 1998. Codefendants Lawrence Coleman, Eddie Coleman, Kentrell Culbreath, Walter Edwards, Sam Taylor and Willie Richard were tried separately.
Defendant filed a pretrial motion to suppress the inculpatory statement he gave to an assistant State’s Attorney on December 30, 1998, claiming the statement was coerced by the police. At a hearing on the motion, Detective Daniel S. Judge testified that he advised defendant of his rights under Miranda on December 29, 1998, both when he arrested defendant and later at the Area 2 police station. Judge also testified that defendant was not handcuffed when Judge and his partners, Detectives Lynch and Graciano, spoke with defendant in an interview room at the station. Judge said defendant agreed to take a polygraph examination and Judge arranged it. The following took place during the direct examination of Judge by Assistant State’s Attorney Jack Wilk:
“Q. When the polygraph examination was completed, did you have a conversation with [the polygraph examiner]?
MR. CARR (Assistant Public Defender): *** I am going to object if there is going to be any mention of the results or of the contents of the polygraph.
THE COURT: Are you mentioning the results?
MR. WILK: I was planning on [it] ***. Just goes to the reasons for the defendant’s statement.
THE COURT: Case law doesn’t prohibit the results from coming in during a pretrial hearing. Unless you have any case law otherwise, I am going to allow it in.
BY MR. WILK:
Q. What was the nature of your conversation with the polygraph examiner ***?
A. [The examiner] informed us that the results of the exam showed signs of deception.”
Judge said he and defendant returned to Area 2 after the polygraph examination and Judge again read defendant the Miranda warnings. Defendant then agreed to give a statement. Judge said that Assistant State’s Attorneys Jake Rubinstein and Ashley Romito arrived at Area 2 at about 2 a.m. and advised defendant of his rights under Miranda. Defendant agreed to give a court-reported statement. At about 5:40 a.m., defendant gave his court-reported statement in the presence of Judge and the assistant State’s Attorneys. Defendant was allowed to review the completed statement. He then signed it. Judge testified that defendant did not request an attorney or invoke his right to remain silent. Judge denied that he or his partners physically or mentally coerced defendant, confronted defendant with illegally obtained evidence or made material misrepresentations to induce defendant to make a statement.
On cross-examination, Judge testified that when he took defendant into custody, he told defendant that the charge against him was the murder of the victim. Judge admitted that defendant was in custody for about 18 hours from the time of his arrest until he finished giving his statement.
Defendant testified that he was not advised of his rights under Miranda until he agreed to give a statement. He claimed that initially he was not told the nature of the charges against him. Defendant said he was not allowed to make a telephone call, contact an attorney or use the bathroom when he asked to do so. He said he was not given anything to eat or drink until after the polygraph test. He said he did not take the polygraph test voluntarily but agreed only after being told he could leave the police station if he passed the test. Defendant testified that he was handcuffed for most of the time in police custody except during the polygraph exam. He said the police chose the court-reporter method for taking his statement. Defendant said when he gave the statement, he was tired and hungry and felt as though he had been held for two days. He said he was first advised of his rights under Miranda while giving his statement.
On cross-examination, defendant admitted that he said nothing in his statement about being denied his rights and, in fact, he said he had been treated well by the police and the assistant State’s Attorneys. On redirect examination, defendant said he agreed to make the statement because he was “[t]ired, ready for it to be over with” and “[bjecause [the police] kept badgering [him] with the same thing over and over again” and telling him that his “rappies” had already talked to the police. See People v. Caffey,
The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress, finding that the admissibility of the statement depended on the witnesses’ credibility and that Judge was more credible than defendant.
At defendant’s jury trial, Alice Larrue testified that she was at the victim’s apartment on the night of the incident. When the victim mentioned hearing noises outside, Larrue looked out the window. She saw men whom she knew as “Frog” and “Tae” in the gangway next to the house. She testified that she had known “Tae” for about seven years and his real name was Octavis Sims. She then identified defendant in court as one of the men she saw from the victim’s apartment window. Larrue testified that the gangway was lit and she had no trouble seeing the men, who were wearing black, hooded sweatshirts. Larrue testified that, as she walked away from the window, the victim walked toward the window. Larrue then heard 10 to 20 gunshots.
On cross-examination, Larrue admitted that she only “peeked” out the window for a few seconds and that defendant and “Frog” had the hoods of their sweatshirts pulled up over their heads. She also admitted that she did not tell the police until March 2000 that she had seen defendant that night. She testified that the events leading up to her decision to testify began when she received a telephone call from an investigator for the State’s Attorney’s office. Larrue and the investigator discussed a warrant for her arrest for a probation violation. Larrue then agreed to give a statement about what she saw on the night of the murder. She gave a handwritten statement and then a prosecutor accompanied her to a probation hearing where she received a recognizance bond and was allowed to go home.
On redirect, Larrue said she initially did not tell the police about seeing “Frog” and defendant in the gangway because she was afraid she would he harmed if she did so. She said she told the truth only after she was offered protection, including relocation. Larrue said her probation was reinstated after she gave her statement. On re-cross-examination, Larrue admitted that she already had relocated to another state before she was offered protection.
Shelley Bernaugh, daughter of the victim, testified that she was in the apartment at the time of the shooting. She said after Larrue looked out the apartment window into the gangway, Larrue said “Frog” and “Tae” were outside with a gun.
Gregory Archer testified that he saw two men wearing black, hooded sweatshirts, one of whom was carrying a gun, at 8214 South Exchange Avenue just before the shooting. Seconds later, he saw gunfire coming from the area of the men’s hands. Archer said he did not see the men’s faces.
Officer Patrick Moran, an evidence technician, testified that he found 14 discharged cartridge cases, including a 9-millimeter bullet, in the gangway. He said the gangway was illuminated by a streetlight, lights mounted on the side of buildings and light shining through windows. Dr. Adrienne Segovia, an assistant medical examiner, testified that the victim died of a shotgun wound to the face and the manner of death was homicide.
Judge testified to essentially the same facts as in the pretrial motion hearing, but he did not mention that defendant took or failed a polygraph examination.
Assistant State’s Attorney Rubinstein read defendant’s statement to the jury. In it, defendant admitted he was in the Renegade Vice Lords (Renegades) street gang. At the time of the shooting, his gang was in a dispute with a rival gang, the Mafia Insane Vice Lords (Mafia), over the murder of a Renegade member with the nickname “Chubb.” The Renegades believed that the Mafia had killed “Chubb.” In retaliation, defendant and other Renegades fired shots at the victim’s apartment, where they believed three Mafia members were staying. Defendant said he fired four or five rounds from a 9-millimeter pistol and then fled. Defendant’s statement said he was treated well by the police, given food and allowed to sleep and no threats or promises were made to induce his statement.
Defense witness Nathaniel Hunter testified that he was with defendant between 11 and 11:45 p.m. on the night of the shooting. Bobbie Sims, defendant’s mother, testified that she was with defendant from about 12:15 to 12:55 a.m. when she drove defendant from her house at 7700 South Shore Drive to his house at 1340 West 64th Street. Sims said after she dropped off defendant, she saw him enter his house. Sergeant Lawrence Lynch testified that he interviewed Shelley Bernaugh, who said Larrue reported seeing “Frog,” but not defendant, in the gangway before the shooting.
In his closing argument, defense counsel presented a theory that the police detectives directed defendant to deliver rehearsed “lines” to the court reporter who took his statement. Defense counsel further impugned the testimony of the State’s witnesses, saying, “[Shelly Bernaugh] had an axe to grind. She wants someone to pay. [The police] propped [defendant] up here as the scapegoat *** and she wanted to get [defendant] so she starts tooling around with the statements.” Defense counsel also said “Alice Larrue is not to be believed,” her “testimony isn’t worth a darn,” she is “a young lady who lies,” and her “statement is not worth the air that it floated into your ears in.” Counsel argued that Moran, the evidence technician, “had a vested stake in the outcome and he wanted to twist it just a little bit.”
In the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor said:
“[I]f you believe the Defense, [defendant] is the unluckiest man in the world.
He has got Shelly Bernaugh coming in here to lie *** against him, Alice Larrue coming in here to lie against him, the evidence technician, Officer Moran coming in here to lie against him, Gregory Archer coming in here to he against him, Detective Judge coming in here to lie against him, Jake Rubinstein coming in here to lie against him ***.”
The prosecutor contradicted defense counsel’s remarks that Bernaugh had “an axe to grind” and Larrue’s testimony was not worth the air on which it floated.
Before the jury began deliberating, the judge gave the agreed instruction for evaluating the identification testimony of a witness:
“When you weigh the identification testimony of the witness, you may consider all of the facts and circumstances in evidence, including but not limited to the following: The opportunity the witness had to view the offender at the time of the offense, or the witness’s degree of attention at the time of the offense, or the witness’s earlier description of the offender, or the level of certainty shown by the witness when confronting the defendant, or the length of time between the offense and the identification confrontation.”
See Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, No. 3.15 (3d ed. 1992) (hereinafter IPI Criminal 3d No. 3.15).
The jury returned a verdict of guilty. Defendant filed a motion for a new trial, claiming that the trial court erred in denying his pretrial motion to suppress. The trial court denied defendant’s motion for a new trial and sentenced him to 23 years in prison.
Defendant appeals, claiming: (1) the results of his polygraph examination were inadmissible at the pretrial hearing on his motion to suppress because polygraph results are unreliable and prejudicial; (2) the prosecutor misstated the law and the burden of proof in his closing arguments; (3) the trial court erred in reading IPI Criminal 3d No. 3.15 with the disjunctive “or” between the five factors in evaluating identification evidence; and (4) defendant’s credit for time served should have been 864, not 863, days.
Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of his polygraph exam results at the pretrial hearing. He claims that Judge’s testimony about the polygraph results was improper because such evidence is inadmissible as inherently unreliable and prejudicial, citing People v. Baynes,
The record shows that defendant’s posttrial motion contained a general objection to the denial of his motion to suppress but did not specify improperly admitted polygraph evidence as grounds for a new trial. Even so, we decline to regard this argument as waived. Waiver is a rule of administration, not of jurisdiction or power. People v. Burson,
A circuit court’s ruling on a motion to suppress presents a mixed question of fact and of law. People v. Thomas,
Here, the trial court at the pretrial hearing heard contradictory accounts of the circumstances surrounding defendant’s inculpatory statement. The court chose to believe Judge’s testimony that defendant was advised of his rights and treated well by the police, voluntarily took a polygraph examination and voluntarily gave a court-reported statement. The court disbelieved defendant’s testimony that his statement was the product of police abuse and coercion. Because the trial court was in a position to observe the witnesses’ demeanor, resolve conflicting testimony and weigh credibility, we defer to those conclusions. Gherna,
As to the legal question of whether the polygraph evidence was improperly admitted and prejudicial to defendant, we begin our analysis with the general rule that polygraph examination results, “in any manner and at any stage of the defendant’s trial, are inadmissible as proof of guilt or innocence.” People v. Eaton,
Here, Judge’s testimony that defendant took and failed a polygraph examination was introduced only after defendant claimed in his pretrial motion that his inculpatory statement was coerced. The administration and results of the exam offered a reasonable alternative to defendant’s explanation that he gave the statement because he was mistreated during his detention.
Defendant urges us to revisit the holdings in Montgomery and McClellan. In his brief, defendant argues “[t]he rule against the admission of polygraph results during trial is also applicable in the context of [pretrial] hearings because the same concerns of unreliability and misuse by the trier of fact are present.” (Emphasis added.) He cites no authority for this statement, and concedes that Montgomery and McClellan are contrary, but suggests that we should not follow them because they deviate from the spirit of People v. Triplett,
Defendant also cites People v. Yarbrough,
Here, the court did not admit the polygraph evidence to assess the strength of the evidence at trial or the jury’s conclusion. The only issue addressed by the polygraph evidence at the suppression hearing was whether the exam result, not police coercion, could have prompted defendant to make a voluntary statement. The results did not influence the judge or jury’s decision as to whether defendant was innocent or guilty, whether the evidence was sufficient or whether defendant was entitled to a new trial. The conclusions in Yarbrough are not applicable here.
Defendant also cites as authority cases in which defendants were granted new trials after juries heard improper polygraph evidence: Triplett,
Defendant next argues that the prosecutor misstated the law and distorted the State’s burden of proof in closing arguments when he said, “if you believe the [djefense, [defendant] is the unluckiest man in the world” because the State’s witnesses came to court to “lie against him.” Defendant relies on People v. Miller,
The State argues that the prosecutor’s remarks were a justified response to defense counsel’s assertions that Judge, Larrue and Bernaugh lied, citing People v. Reed,
In general, a prosecutor has a great deal of latitude in his or her closing argument. People v. Blue,
Here, defense counsel made several remarks in his closing argument, challenging the credibility of witnesses Bernaugh, Larrue and Moran. The prosecutor in rebuttal countered defense counsel’s theories of how and why the State’s witnesses were lying. In viewing the prosecutor’s remarks in the context of both arguments, we do not believe that his comments were improper. Nor can it be said that the prosecutor’s remarks so prejudiced defendant in the eyes of the jury that he would have been acquitted if the remarks had not been made. The prosecutorial comments at issue here do not warrant reversal.
Defendant next claims the trial judge misread the jury instructions on eyewitness identification by reading the bracketed word “or” in IPI Criminal 3d No. 3.15. The supreme court has determined that “giving IPI Criminal No. 3.15 with the ‘ors’ is indeed plain error.” People v. Herron,
But the seriousness of the risk of an improper conviction due to the erroneous reading of “or” in the instruction “depends upon the quantum of evidence presented by the State against the defendant.” Herron,
Finally, defendant and the State agree that the mittimus incorrectly shows that defendant accrued 863 days’ credit for time served when he, in fact, is entitled to 864 days’ credit. Remand is unnecessary because this court has the authority to order the clerk of the circuit court to make the appropriate corrections. People v. McCray,
Affirmed; mittimus corrected.
BURKE and GARCIA, JJ., concur,
