People v. Homme , 2022 IL App (4th) 190490-U ( 2022 )


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  •             NOTICE
    This Order was filed under                                                                       FILED
    Supreme Court Rule 23 and is                                                                  January 25, 2022
    not precedent except in the                                                                     Carla Bender
    limited circumstances allowed             
    2022 IL App (4th) 190490-U
                            4th District Appellate
    under Rule 23(e)(1).                                                                              Court, IL
    NOS. 4-19-0490, 4-19-0491, 4-19-0493 cons.
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT
    OF ILLINOIS
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                           )   Appeal from the
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                  )   Circuit Court of
    v.                                                   )   Livingston County
    CARL HOMME,                                                    )   Nos. 17CF300
    Defendant-Appellant.                                 )        17TR3676
    )        17TR3678
    )
    )   Honorable
    )   Jennifer Hartmann Bauknecht,
    )   Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Turner and Steigmann concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1       Held: (1) The trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion to suppress when, after
    the burden shifted to the State, it was able to prove the witness’s identification was
    based on his independent recollection.
    (2) The trial court did not violate defendant’s right to be present at all critical stages
    when defendant failed to prove he was prejudiced by the court’s independent
    viewing of the video recording from the officer’s onboard camera.
    (3) The State sufficiently proved defendant guilty of three counts of aggravated
    driving under the influence (DUI), where it was not required to present any
    evidence at trial establishing that defendant had prior DUI violations, as his prior
    DUI convictions were not elements of the offense.
    ¶2               After a bench trial, defendant Carl Homme was convicted of three counts of
    aggravated DUI and sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. He raises three arguments on appeal.
    First, he contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress the witness’s
    identification testimony, which was based on a showup that defendant maintains was unduly
    suggestive. Second, he argues his due-process rights were violated when he was not present during
    a critical stage of the proceedings, namely, when the trial court viewed the video recording from
    the officer’s onboard camera. Third, he contends his felony should be reduced to a misdemeanor
    when the State failed to prove he had been previously convicted of DUI. We affirm.
    ¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4             Defendant was charged by information with three counts of aggravated DUI, all
    Class 2 felonies, based on having two prior DUI convictions (625 ILCS 5/11-501(d)(2)(B) (West
    2016)). The State alleged that, on October 4, 2017, defendant (1) drove a green 1995 Ford truck
    while his alcohol concentration in his blood or breath was 0.08 or more (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(1)
    (West 2016)) (count I), (2) was under the influence of alcohol (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(2) (West
    2016)) (count II), and (3) had controlled substances in his blood, breath, or urine resulting from
    the unlawful use of controlled substances (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(6), (d)(1)(H) (West 2016)) (count
    III). The State combined the prosecution of these felonies with four traffic citations allegedly
    resulting from the same incident.
    ¶5             On August 28, 2018, defendant filed a motion to suppress and quash, specifically
    addressing defendant’s identification in a showup. Defendant asserted the witness’s identification
    of him as the perpetrator was “unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable
    misidentification” as defendant sat handcuffed alone in the back seat of a squad car. Defendant
    requested any evidence of identification from the showup be suppressed as violative of his
    due-process rights.
    -2-
    ¶6             On October 4, 2018, the trial court conducted a hearing on defendant’s motion to
    suppress. James “Bernie” Curtis testified he lived across the street from his business, the Pontiac
    Greenhouse on East Pinckney, one block from Maple Street and three blocks from Water Street.
    On October 4, 2017, around 2 p.m., Curtis was heading downtown in his white van. As he was
    driving, “a vehicle appeared on Water Street and fishtailed very quickly because it had turned onto
    Maple Street off of Water.” Curtis testified he saw the truck sideswipe a black full-sized Dodge
    pick-up truck parked on the west side of the street. The truck hesitated “for just a second” and then
    proceeded south. Curtis said he “was afraid it was going to get [him]; but instead it went past [him]
    very fast; and then in [his] rearview mirror [he] saw it go down and made a sudden turn.” The
    truck passed him on his left. Curtis saw the couple who he suspected owned the Dodge truck (the
    “Boldt people”) standing outside on their front porch.
    ¶7             Counsel asked Curtis what he was specifically looking at as the vehicle passed him.
    Curtis said he “first of all, saw that the Boldt people were out on their porch; but [he] observed
    that the individual was just going on. It was a young man. Remember I’m 84.” Curtis said he also
    saw two or three numbers of the license plate. He stopped to tell the Boldt people the numbers, but
    they told him they had gotten the full license plate number. Curtis described the driver as “wearing
    a cap and just looked to be in the 30’s or so and just kept driving.” He said it “all happened very
    fast.”
    ¶8             When Curtis got back to the greenhouse, Pontiac police officer Daron Bagnell
    arrived to speak with him. As they stood near the police car, Curtis relayed to Bagnell the incident
    as he described on the witness stand. Bagnell had defendant in the backseat of his police car.
    Without telling Curtis “anything about the individual or where that individual came from,” Bagnell
    -3-
    asked Curtis “if [he] recognized the individual as the one that was in the vehicle that had hit the
    truck.” Curtis said, “[Y]es.”
    ¶9              Curtis said the individual in the police car “had a cap on and had a rather bright
    plaid shirt, different colors; and at that point, it was pretty easy to recognize the individual.” Curtis
    said he also recognized the “stocky” build of the person. He said the driver “was a stocky person.
    You know, broad shoulders.” The driver had long hair going “well below” his cap with a “partial
    beard.” He was Caucasian and “rather tanned.” The following exchange occurred:
    “Q. Okay. Did you[,] in seeing a fellow seated alone in the back of the police
    car[,] assume that this must be the guy?
    A. Yes.”
    ¶ 10            On cross-examination, Curtis explained he identified the individual in the back of
    the police car as the driver because he saw the driver. He said, “It was obvious to me that that was
    the individual because that’s who I saw.” He testified as follows:
    “Q. If that wasn’t the individual, would you have told Officer Bagnell that
    that was the guy?
    A. No.
    Q. Because he’s in the back of a squad car. What would you have told him
    if it wasn’t the right guy?
    A. No, I wouldn’t have told him if it wasn’t the person that I saw.
    Q. You would have told him he needs to keep looking?
    A. Well, I’d leave that up to him.
    Q. Okay. Fair enough. Well, I won’t go through all the little things that you
    saw; but you, it was obvious to you at that time?
    -4-
    A. Yes.”
    ¶ 11            On redirect examination, Curtis testified the individual in the back of the police car
    was not wearing a cap. Nevertheless, it was “obvious” to Curtis that the driver was in the back of
    the police car based upon his build, “the physical view of the individual,” the plaid shirt, the facial
    feature, his age, and the length of his hair.
    ¶ 12            Officer Bagnell testified about the procedures involved in a showup, which, he said,
    was different than a line-up because it was a one-on-one means of identification. Bagnell said he
    activated his video and audio recording equipment in his car when he placed defendant in the back
    seat. Bagnell recalled speaking with a mail carrier, Amy Cox, who relayed to Bagnell that Curtis
    had told her he saw the incident. When he spoke with Curtis at the greenhouse, Bagnell asked him
    to describe what he saw. Bagnell recalled that Curtis described the truck and “had a very good
    description of the license plate”—“he was one digit off, and that was just from memory.”
    ¶ 13            Bagnell testified he asked Curtis if he “got a look at the driver, and he said that he
    did.” Bagnell then asked Curtis if he would recognize the driver if he saw him. Bagnell said he
    told Curtis to “come here and take a look at the guy in the back of my car.” Bagnell said he did not
    have his wireless microphone on him at the time. Bagnell did not recall whether Curtis had given
    him a description of the person driving. He did not recall the specifics of their conversation. He
    just knew that Curtis “gave a positive indication that this guy in the back of [his] car resembled
    the driver of the truck that he saw leave the scene of the crash.” Bagnell testified the officers had
    defendant in custody 18 minutes after the initial call.
    ¶ 14            After considering the evidence and arguments of counsel, the trial court found
    defendant met his burden of proving the identification was suggestive. The court noted the burden
    then shifted to the State to show by clear and convincing evidence that it was the witness’s
    -5-
    independent recollection rather than a suggestive identification. The court found Curtis was “a
    very credible witness.” However, the court was concerned about Curtis’s description of the driver
    as having long hair under a cap, which contradicted what was seen on the video recording from
    the onboard camera where defendant had no hair. The court attributed Curtis’s inaccuracy to
    counsel’s “pretty intense questioning” pushing for a description. The court noted this inaccuracy
    did not change its credibility determination, as Curtis knew the hair color because of the facial
    hair, knew it was a younger person, knew the driver was “stocky,” and was able to describe the
    driver’s shirt. The court specifically found that Curtis’s testimony that the driver had longer hair
    did not cause it to reject all of Curtis’s testimony.
    ¶ 15            The trial court found Curtis “had a very good opportunity to observe the [d]efendant
    or the suspect at the time the criminal conduct occurred,” as they “were driving right at each other.”
    The court also found Curtis was paying attention to details. Although the court noted it “[m]ight
    have been easier” had Bagnell had his audio recording device turned on during his conversation
    with Curtis and Curtis’s identification of defendant, it was “not a strike against him,” as it
    “certainly doesn’t suggest that there was some improper conduct going on on the part of law
    enforcement because they could have audioed it and didn’t audio it.” The court further noted
    Curtis’s level of certainty was “very high.”
    ¶ 16            In sum, the trial court found “the evidence show[ed] pretty clearly and convincingly
    that the, to the extent that the identification was suggestive that, in fact, the identification was made
    on the independent recollection of Mr. Curtis as to what he saw and not based upon any suggestion
    or suggestive identification.” The court denied defendant’s motion to suppress.
    ¶ 17            On April 2, 2019, the trial court conducted a bench trial. The State called Bagnell,
    who testified consistently with his testimony at the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress.
    -6-
    However, Bagnell testified at trial that, while talking to defendant in his living room, Bagnell noted
    the odor of alcohol on defendant’s breath. The State next called Curtis, who also testified
    consistently with his prior testimony.
    ¶ 18           The State admitted the video recording, asking the court “to take notice of that.”
    The court stated: “You asked me that I would consider the DVD which there’s no objection to that,
    and of course I recall that very clearly.” Defendant presented only a copy of his booking photo,
    showing defendant in a black shirt and with a “kind of stubbly bald head.”
    ¶ 19           The trial court found defendant guilty of three counts of aggravated DUI and three
    traffic citations. Defendant filed a posttrial motion, renewing his arguments from his previously
    filed motion to suppress.
    ¶ 20           On July 9, 2019, the trial court conducted a hearing on defendant’s posttrial motion
    and sentencing. After considering arguments of counsel, the court denied defendant’s motion and
    proceeded to sentence defendant, merging felony counts II and III with count I, to four years in
    prison plus a two-year mandatory-supervised-release term. The three traffic citations were
    disposed of with a judgment of conviction and costs. When pronouncing the sentence, the court
    found defendant’s “two prior DUI’s [were] built into the charge” and noted it was “not going to
    double enhance.”
    ¶ 21           This appeal followed.
    ¶ 22                                        II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 23                                     A. Motion to Suppress
    ¶ 24           Defendant claims the trial court erred when it denied his motion to suppress Curtis’s
    eyewitness identification of defendant as the driver. He claims, when considering the relevant
    factors used to evaluate the reliability of the identification, the State failed to show with clear and
    -7-
    convincing evidence that Curtis’s identification was the product of his independent recollection.
    Instead, defendant claims, the evidence showed that Curtis’s identification was the result of unduly
    suggestive procedures.
    ¶ 25           The State maintains that the trial court properly denied the motion to suppress
    where defendant failed to meet his burden to prove Curtis’s identification was unduly suggestive.
    We agree with the State.
    ¶ 26           Criminal defendants have a due-process right to be free from identification
    procedures that are unduly suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification. People
    v. Jones, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 143766
    , ¶ 27. Our supreme court “ ‘has approved prompt showups
    near the scene of the crime as acceptable police procedure designed to aid police in determining
    whether to continue or to end the search for the culprits.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting People v. Lippert, 
    89 Ill. 2d 171
    , 188 (1982)).
    ¶ 27           Courts employ a two-part test to determine whether an identification procedure
    comports with due process. First, when challenging the propriety of a pretrial identification
    procedure, the defendant bears the burden of proving the procedure was unduly suggestive and
    created a substantial likelihood of misidentification. People v. Corral, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 171501
    ,
    ¶ 95. Second, the State may rebut defendant’s showing by “clear and convincing evidence that the
    witness is identifying the defendant based on his or her independent recollection of the incident.”
    People v. Brooks, 
    187 Ill. 2d 91
    , 126 (1999). Courts look to the totality of circumstances when
    deciding whether the identification was unduly suggestive as the defendant claims. Corral, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 171501
    , ¶ 95. We review the trial court’s factual determination on the suggestibility
    of the identification procedure under a manifest-weight-of-the-evidence standard. 
    Id.
    -8-
    ¶ 28           In this case, both the trial court and the State conceded, after hearing Curtis’s
    testimony, that there was “some suggestion” in his identification. That is, Curtis testified he
    assumed defendant was “the guy” after seeing him seated alone in the back of the police car.
    However, the prosecutor tried to “clear up” Curtis’s testimony with further questioning on
    cross-examination. Curtis then testified it “was obvious” to him it was the driver in the back of the
    police car “because that’s who [he] saw.” Curtis clarified he would have told the officer otherwise
    if it was not the driver regardless of him being seated alone in the back of the police car.
    ¶ 29           Accepting the trial court’s finding that defendant had met his burden of showing
    the identification was suggestive and the State’s concession that there was “some suggestion,” we
    shift our focus to determine whether the State sufficiently met its burden of showing the
    identification was based not on the suggestive nature of the procedures but on Curtis’s independent
    recollection. See Brooks, 
    187 Ill. 2d at 126
     (stating that even if a defendant can meet his burden
    and prove that an identification was suggestive, the State may overcome this showing by clear and
    convincing evidence that the eyewitness identified the defendant based on his or her independent
    recollection of the incident).
    ¶ 30           When assessing identification testimony, courts generally rely on five factors
    established in Neil v. Biggers, 
    409 U.S. 188
    , 199-200 (1972). People v. Slim, 
    127 Ill. 2d 302
    , 307
    (1989). Those are (1) the witness’s opportunity to view the suspect, (2) the witness’s degree of
    attention, (3) the accuracy of the witness’s prior description, (4) the witness’s level of certainty,
    and (5) the length of time between the crime and the identification. Slim, 
    127 Ill. 2d at 307-08
    .
    “The conditions need not be perfect and the observation need not be prolonged.” People v. Benson,
    
    266 Ill. App. 3d 994
    , 1005 (1994).
    -9-
    ¶ 31             First, the record shows Curtis, while in broad daylight, had the opportunity to
    observe this entire incident. Curtis testified he saw the Ford truck fishtail as it turned onto the same
    street and hit the parked pickup truck. Curtis saw the Ford truck hesitate, back up, and drive right
    past him going the opposite direction. He testified he saw the driver and described his appearance
    as best he could. We agree with the trial court’s assessment that Curtis “had a very good
    opportunity to observe [d]efendant or the suspect at the time the criminal conduct occurred.”
    ¶ 32             Second, Curtis had a heightened degree of attention after seeing the Ford truck
    fishtail at a high rate of speed as it turned onto the residential street. It was likely this uncommon
    incident caused Curtis to pay closer attention than normal to this particular vehicle. As evidenced
    by his testimony, Curtis was obviously paying close attention, as he was able to identify several
    correct numbers from the Ford’s license plate and was able to provide a good general description
    of the driver.
    ¶ 33             As to the third factor, the accuracy of the description, the trial court noted this was
    not a factor that favored the State. The court was troubled that Curtis testified the driver had long
    hair when it was obvious on the recorded video that he did not. However, the court found the rest
    of Curtis’s description accurate. Curtis said the driver was in his thirties or forties, had a stocky
    build, had facial hair, and was wearing a ball cap and a plaid shirt. The only inaccuracy in Curtis’s
    description was that he described the driver as having brown hair that fell below his cap. We find
    it was not completely unreasonable to miss this identifying characteristic when the driver wore a
    baseball cap and had facial hair, potentially blocking Curtis’s actual view of the driver’s hair. The
    court noted Curtis had accurately described the color of defendant’s hair, which he could have
    ascertained from the facial hair. It was also possible that defendant had removed the plaid shirt,
    leaving the dark colored shirt shown in the video, prior to the officers detaining him. There was
    - 10 -
    no evidence presented to explain the discrepancy. Overall, as the State suggests, defendant’s
    description of defendant “was pretty accurate.”
    ¶ 34           Fourth, Curtis’s testimony suggested he was confident defendant was the driver.
    He described his level of certainty as “obvious” and “pretty easy to recognize the individual.” He
    neither indicated any uncertainty nor questioned his identification. In fact, he testified he “wouldn’t
    have told [Bagnell] if it wasn’t the person that [he] saw.” Based on Curtis’s testimony, we agree
    with the trial court that the “level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation ***
    [was] very high.”
    ¶ 35           And fifth, the evidence suggested the identification occurred only approximately
    45 minutes after the crime. Courts have found identifications to be reliable even where they were
    made a considerable time after a crime. See Corral, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 171501
    , ¶ 81. In this case,
    the short period of time between the crime and Curtis’s identification was a factor that weighed in
    favor of the State.
    ¶ 36           After viewing the totality of the circumstances, weighing each factor, and deferring
    to the trial court’s assessment of Curtis’s testimony as “very credible,” we conclude the manifest
    weight of the evidence supported the court’s determination that Curtis positively identified
    defendant as the driver through his independent recollection and not as a result of an unduly
    suggestive procedure. We affirm the court’s order denying defendant’s motion to suppress. See
    People v. Underwood, 
    263 Ill. App. 3d 780
    , 786 (1994) (concluding a “possibly suggestive
    procedure” did not require reversal where the eyewitness made a positive identification of the
    defendants).
    ¶ 37                          B. Right to Be Present at Critical Stage
    - 11 -
    ¶ 38               Defendant next contends his due-process rights were violated when the trial court
    viewed substantive evidence against him in his absence, namely the video recording. In support of
    his motion to suppress, defendant presented as an exhibit, the video recording from Officer
    Bagnell’s onboard camera. Without objection, the court viewed the evidence privately in
    chambers. The video recording was also admitted as substantive evidence at trial. For purposes of
    the bench trial, the court indicated it specifically recalled the contents of the video.
    ¶ 39               In support of his argument, defendant cites People v. Lucas, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 160501
    , ¶ 14, where the appellate court found the defendant’s absence during the trial court’s
    viewing of the traffic-stop video affected the fairness of the trial because the defendant “was unable
    to view the evidence against her and aid in her own defense.” The court further found that because
    the defendant was not advised of her right to be present, she could not have effectively waived that
    right. 
    Id. ¶ 14
    .
    ¶ 40               Defendant concedes he forfeited his right to raise this issue by not objecting to his
    claimed error in the trial court proceedings. However, he asks that we review this error despite his
    forfeiture under the second prong of the plain-error doctrine because, he claims, this error was so
    serious that it affected the fairness of his trial. He argues his decision whether to testify at trial was
    affected by his absence. We note the first step in any plan-error analysis is to determine whether a
    clear or obvious error occurred. People v. Piatkowski, 
    225 Ill. 2d 551
    , 565 (2007).
    ¶ 41               As this court did in People v. Myles, 
    2020 IL App (4th) 180652
    , ¶ 62, and for the
    same reasons, we find Lucas distinguishable. In Lucas, the trial court explicitly relied on the video
    of the traffic stop in determining the defendant’s guilt. Lucas, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 160501
    , ¶ 15.
    Here, as in Myles, the video recording was not a significant portion of the evidence in determining
    defendant’s guilt. Myles, 
    2020 IL App (4th) 180652
    , ¶ 64. Although the trial court indicated it had
    - 12 -
    reviewed the video recording, the court clearly decided the case on the basis of witness
    testimony—witnesses who were present and subject to cross-examination. In this case, the video
    recording was not of the incident itself. The recording showed only the defendant in custody and
    had no audio. Therefore, the recording was of little value in making any credibility or guilt
    determinations.
    ¶ 42           In Myles, the defendant argued his constitutional rights were violated when the trial
    court viewed recordings of the victims’ statements. This court cited with approval the First
    District’s decision in People v. Groebe, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180503
    , a factually similar case to the
    case at bar. In Groebe, the appellate court rejected the defendant’s right-to-be-present claim where
    the trial court reviewed a video of a DUI traffic stop in chambers. Groebe, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180503
    , ¶¶ 46-52. The court found the defendant failed to demonstrate the video evidence was
    significant, stating, “There is no argument or anything to suggest the trial court’s procedure
    prejudiced defendant’s ability to aid in her defense or to decide whether to testify.” Groebe, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180503
    , ¶¶ 51-52. And there was no indication the trial court gave the video any
    weight in making its findings. Groebe, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180503
    , ¶ 52.
    ¶ 43           As the courts determined in Groebe and Myles, we too determine defendant’s
    presence at the video viewing would not have contributed to his opportunity to defend himself
    against the charges where he had no objection to the court viewing the videos outside of his
    presence, the witnesses in the video testified in open court where defendant had the opportunity to
    confront and cross-examine them, and defendant was aware of all the State’s evidence in
    determining whether to testify in his own defense. Because we conclude defendant’s right to be
    present was not violated, we conclude no error occurred. See Piatkowski, 
    225 Ill. 2d at 565
    .
    Accordingly, we must honor defendant’s procedural default.
    - 13 -
    ¶ 44                               C. Proof of Prior Convictions
    ¶ 45           Finally, defendant contends his felony conviction of aggravated DUI should be
    reduced to a Class A misdemeanor where the State presented no evidence to establish the necessary
    element of prior convictions. Defendant contends this sufficiency-of-the-evidence claim involves
    a question of statutory construction and, therefore, our review is de novo. We agree. See People v.
    Newton, 
    2018 IL 122958
    , ¶ 14.
    ¶ 46           Defendant claims the structure of the aggravated DUI statute indicates a clear
    legislative intent to make a defendant’s prior convictions necessary elements of the offense itself.
    Indeed, section (d)(1) lists 11 alternatives for enhancing a misdemeanor DUI into a felony
    aggravated offense. See 625 ILCS 5/11-501(d)(1)(A) to (L) (West 2016). One such alternative is
    the section under which defendant was charged and convicted. That is, the State alleged defendant
    committed aggravated DUI because this was his third or subsequent violation. 625 ILCS
    5/11-501(d)(1)(A) (West 2016).
    ¶ 47           Defendant relies on Zimmerman, where the supreme court addressed the “very
    similarly structured 2006 version of the aggravated unlawful use of a weapon [(UUW)] statute.”
    See People v. Zimmerman, 
    239 Ill. 2d 491
     (2010). The Zimmerman court concluded that the
    structure of the statute showed the legislature clearly intended to make a previous adjudication of
    delinquency an element of the offense—an element that the State was required to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt. 
    Id. at 500
    . The court rejected the claim that a prior adjudication was merely a
    sentencing enhancement for the misdemeanor offense of UUW. The court found “[h]ad the
    legislature intended to make the delinquency adjudication a sentencing enhancement for
    misdemeanor [UUW], it likely would have placed it in the sentencing subsection of the statute
    describing that offense.” 
    Id. at 500-01
    .
    - 14 -
    ¶ 48           Here, the State distinguishes Zimmerman by noting the difference in the structure
    of the aggravated UUW statute and the aggravated DUI statute. The aggravated UUW statute (720
    ILCS 5/24-1.6 (West 2016)) is a separate and distinct statute from the UUW statute (720 ILCS
    5/24-1 (West 2016)), whereas the aggravated DUI subsection is codified within the same statute
    as DUI. We agree with the State.
    ¶ 49           This court recently addressed this issue when similar challenges and arguments
    were made. We reiterate here our prior analysis and holding in response to those challenges. See
    People v. May, 
    2021 IL App (4th) 190893
    .
    ¶ 50           Defendant acknowledges our interpretation of section 11-501 is supported by a line
    of cases that found the existence of prior DUI violations is not an element under section 11-501.
    See, e.g., People v. Thompson, 
    328 Ill. App. 3d 360
    , 364 (2002) (“[T]he prior convictions are not
    elements of the [aggravated DUI] offense.” (Emphasis omitted.)); People v. Robinson, 
    368 Ill. App. 3d 963
    , 977 (2006) (“Prior DUI violations are not an element of an aggravated DUI charge.”).
    ¶ 51           Nevertheless, defendant contends our interpretation of section of 11-501 and any
    authority supporting that interpretation cannot withstand the supreme court’s more recent analysis
    in Zimmerman. We disagree. Contrary to defendant’s assertion, the statute construed in
    Zimmerman, section 24-1.6 of the Criminal Code of 1961 (Criminal Code) (720 ILCS 5/24-1.6
    (West 2006)), is not structurally similar to section 11-501. Section 24-1.6 sets forth the offense of
    aggravated UUW, an offense separate and distinct from the offense of UUW set forth in section
    24-1 of the Criminal Code (id. § 24-1). Zimmerman, 
    239 Ill. 2d at 500
    . Conversely, aggravated
    DUI is not a separate and distinct criminal offense from simple or misdemeanor DUI. See People
    v. Quigley, 
    183 Ill. 2d 1
    , 10 (1998) (“[A]ggravated DUI occurs when an individual commits some
    form of misdemeanor DUI, in violation of paragraph (a), and other circumstances are present. The
    - 15 -
    legislature added aggravating factors that change the misdemeanor DUI to a Class 4 felony. The
    essential and underlying criminal act, however, remains the same: driving while under the
    influence.”). As such, we find the analysis in Zimmerman does not change our interpretation of
    section 11-501.
    ¶ 52            Defendant also contends our interpretation and any authority supporting that
    interpretation are illogical, given the supreme court’s previous finding in People v. Martin, 
    2011 IL 109102
    , that subsection (d)(1)(F) sets forth an essential element of the offense of aggravated
    DUI, and its previous pronouncement in Zimmerman, 
    239 Ill. 2d at 500
    , that “it would be illogical
    for the General Assembly to include a sentence-enhancing factor in a list with eight other factors
    which constitute an element of the offense.” We disagree. Contrary to defendant’s assertion,
    Martin did not find subsection (d)(1)(F) set forth an essential element; instead, the court merely
    found the proximate cause requirement of that subsection was proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Martin, 
    2011 IL 109102
    , ¶¶ 20, 28. As discussed above, sentencing enhancement factors must be
    proven beyond a reasonable doubt. In fact, we note the supreme court in Martin emphasized its
    position that aggravated DUI is not a separate offense—“aggravated DUI is simply misdemeanor
    DUI with an aggravating factor, which turns the offense into a felony.” Id. ¶ 24.
    ¶ 53            Defendant also cites People v. Mumaugh, 
    2018 IL App (3d) 140961
    , in support of
    his contention that the factors set forth in subsection (d)(1) are essential elements. In that case, the
    dispute concerned whether the State proved the proximate cause requirement under section
    11-501(d)(1)(C). 
    Id. ¶ 24
    . In addressing that dispute, the court stated the proximate cause
    requirement was an element of the offense of aggravated DUI. 
    Id. ¶¶ 24, 37
    . To the extent the court
    in Mumaugh found section 11-501(d)(1)(C) set forth an essential element as opposed to a
    sentencing enhancement factor that had to be proven, we disagree with that position. In fact, we
    - 16 -
    note another panel of that district issued a recent order rejecting that position and interpreting
    section 11-501 in the same manner set forth in this order and in our opinion in May. See People v.
    Brose, 
    2021 IL App (3d) 180630-U
    , ¶ 18 (“[T]he unambiguous structure reveals the legislature’s
    intent that subsections (c) and (d) provide sentence enhancements for successive DUI convictions
    rather than additional elements of the offense.”).
    ¶ 54           In a final attempt to discredit our interpretation, defendant quotes the following
    statement and parenthetical citation from the supreme court in People ex rel. Glasgow v. Carlson,
    
    2016 IL 120544
    , ¶ 23:
    “[T]he DUI statute ‘operates just as any other statute which initially sets forth the
    elements of the offenses, and then, in a separate section, provides sentencing
    classifications based on other factors.’ [Id.] (citing People v. Van Schoyck, 
    232 Ill. 2d 330
    , 337 (2009)).”
    Defendant contends “[t]he various types of aggravated DUI offenses are contained in one
    subsection, and the corresponding penalties are contained in a separate subsection. [Citations.]”
    Thus, he claims, his prior DUI violations were not mere sentencing enhancements but were
    elements of the crime that the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. We disagree. The
    characterization of subsection (d)(1) as setting forth a list of “alternative elements” is not a
    pronouncement that those “alternative elements” are, in fact, essential elements that must be
    proven at trial as opposed to sentencing enhancement factors.
    ¶ 55           In summary, we reject defendant’s position that the State was required to present
    evidence at trial establishing that he had prior DUI violations in order to prove him guilty of counts
    I, II, and III. Defendant has otherwise not presented any alternative basis to attack the sufficiency
    of the evidence to sustain his convictions.
    - 17 -
    ¶ 56                           III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 57   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    ¶ 58   Affirmed.
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