People v. Bailey ( 2008 )


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  •                                                                              THIRD DIVISION
    October 29, 2008
    No. 1-05-2205
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                 )               Appeal from the
    )               Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                           )               Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                   )               No. 89 CR 13613
    )
    KEVIN BAILEY,                                        )               The Honorable
    )               Clayton J. Crane,
    Defendant-Appellant.                          )               Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE GREIMAN delivered the opinion of the court:
    Following a jury trial, defendant Kevin Bailey was found guilty of first degree murder,
    armed robbery and two counts of burglary and sentenced to concurrent terms of 80 years in
    prison for murder, 30 years for armed robbery and 7 years for burglary. We affirmed defendant’s
    conviction and sentence on appeal. See People v. Bailey, 
    259 Ill. App. 3d 180
    (1994).
    Defendant subsequently filed a motion for forensic testing not available at trial pursuant to
    section 116-3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (the Code) (725 ILCS 5/116-3 (West 2004)).
    The trial court denied the motion sua sponte and the court’s ruling was not appealed. Defendant
    then filed a second section 116-3 motion, which the trial court also denied sua sponte. Defendant
    appealed the denial of his second 116-3 motion, contending that he presented a prima facie case
    that he was entitled to forensic testing in his motion and that section 116-3 does not provide for
    the “summary dismissal” of a motion filed pursuant to that section. Accordingly, defendant
    asked that we remand his case for further proceedings. In People v. Bailey, No. 1-05-2205 (May
    30, 2007) (unpublished order pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 23), we found that the trial court’s
    1-05-2205
    summary dismissal of his section 116-3 motion, though improper, should be subjected to a
    harmless error analysis. In reviewing defendant’s motion, we concluded that defendant’s motion
    may have been deficient in certain respects. However, relying on People v. O’Connell, 365 Ill.
    App. 3d 872 (2006), we found we were unable to conclude that defendant’s motion was patently
    incurable, and, accordingly, remanded the case for further proceedings. Thereafter, the supreme
    court denied the State’s petition for leave to appeal, but pursuant to its supervisory authority,
    directed us to vacate our judgment and reconsider this case in light of its recent decision in
    People v. O’Connell, 
    227 Ill. 2d 31
    (2007). People v. Bailey, 
    226 Ill. 2d 618
    (2008). After
    vacating our original opinion and reconsidering in light of O’Connell, we find that a different
    result is warranted and affirm the trial court order denying defendant’s section 116-3 motion.
    On June 1, 1989, the body of the victim, 69-year-old Lula Mae Woods, was found in a
    pool of blood on the floor of her garage. Police called to the scene found two sets of keys and a
    purse strap near the victim’s body and a Domino’s Pizza ballcap under the victim’s body. Police
    also located the victim’s purse, bank passbook and deposit slips, which indicated that she had
    deposited $354 that day, and a knife later identified as the murder weapon in the alley a block
    away from the victim’s body.
    Police first spoke with codefendant Corey Batchelor regarding the murder and then
    attempted to locate defendant. Defendant was taken to the police station on June 7, 1989, where
    he signed a court-reported statement which indicated that codefendant had suggested robbing the
    victim on June 1 and had given defendant the knife, that defendant struggled with and eventually
    stabbed the victim to gain possession of her purse, and that before the incident, codefendant was
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    wearing a Domino’s Pizza ballcap but was not wearing the ballcap after the incident.
    The parties stipulated that fingerprints obtained from several items in the victim’s purse
    did not match the prints of defendant or codefendant, that no useable fingerprints were secured
    from the purse, passbook, deposit slips, purse strap or knife, and that an eyebrow hair found in
    the ballcap was not consistent with samples taken from defendant or codefendant.
    The jury found defendant guilty of first degree murder, armed robbery and burglary, and
    defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of 80 years in prison for murder, 30 years for armed
    robbery and 7 years for burglary.
    On direct appeal, defendant contended that the trial court erred in denying a pretrial
    motion to quash his arrest and to suppress his statements to the police, that he was denied a fair
    hearing on his motion to quash his arrest and suppress his statements, that the State improperly
    shifted the burden of proof during closing arguments and that his sentence was excessive. We
    affirmed defendant’s conviction and sentence.
    On February 10, 2004, defendant filed a first pro se motion for DNA testing pursuant to
    section 116-3 of the Code of “certain articles of the victim’s clothing.” On March 19, 2004, the
    court denied defendant’s motion, noting that “there is no indication that any fluid of any
    perpetrator in this act would be available ***. There is no indication of blood, no indication of
    any cuts on the perpetrator. The defendant did in fact confess *** and it was affirmed by the
    Appellate Court.”
    Meanwhile, on February 28, 2005, defendant filed a pro se petition under section 2-1401
    (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2004)). The parties agree that the motion was never ruled upon.
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    On March 31, 2005, defendant filed a second pro se section 116-3 motion for DNA
    testing of “(1) a baseball cap and the victim’s clothes and purse (for traces of blood and/or
    perspiration); (2) a knife for same; (3) the victim’s nailclippings; (4) eyebrow and head hairs.” In
    the motion, defendant alleged that “identity was the issue in the trial which resulted in his
    conviction,” that the evidence he sought to have tested was admitted into evidence, was in the
    circuit court clerk’s custody, had been subject to a sufficient chain of custody and “the result of
    the testing has the scientific potential to produce ‘conclusive’ findings that movant was not the
    donor and that a third-unknown party was[,] which would wholly exonerate movant altogether.”
    Defendant specifically requested “short-tandem-repeats,” “polymerase chain reaction” and
    “mitochondrial” testing.
    On April 22, 2005, the trial court docketed the matter and appointed the public defender
    to represent defendant. On June 2, 2005, at a hearing at which the State’s attorney was present
    but the public defender was not present, the court denied defendant’s second section 116-3
    motion, noting, as it had in its denial of defendant’s first section 116-3 motion, that “there is no
    indication of any fluid of any perpetrator would be available in this case” and that “defendant, in
    fact, confessed to this matter.”
    On June 29, 2005, defendant filed a notice appealing the dismissal of his second section
    116-3 motion.
    As a preliminary matter, we must address the State’s contention that this appeal is
    procedurally barred. The State notes that the court’s March 19, 2004, order denying defendant’s
    first section 116-3 motion was a final, appealable order. See People v. Savory, 
    197 Ill. 2d 203
    ,
    4
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    210-11 (2001). It further observes that the order was not appealed, nor was a motion directed
    against the order filed in the trial court within 30 days as is required by Supreme Court Rule
    606(b) (188 Ill. 2d R. 606(b)). The State argues:
    “Therefore, when defendant filed a second motion for forensic testing over a year
    later on March 31, 2005, and the basis for the motion remained the same as his
    first motion for DNA testing, it does not serve to toll the notice of appeal deadline
    that expired in April of 2004. In the alternative, defendant should not be allowed
    to circumvent the Supreme Court rule by filing the exact same motion one year
    later and then appealing therefrom.”
    Defendant correctly notes that, contrary to the State’s assessment, his second section 116-
    3 motion is not identical to his first. Defendant further responds that section 116-3 does not
    restrict the number of motions for forensic testing that may be filed. Defendant’s second section
    116-3 motion, he argues, was a permissible successive motion. Because he filed a notice of
    appeal of the dismissal of that motion within 30 days, defendant argues that he is not
    procedurally barred from bringing this appeal. We agree with defendant’s assessment.
    Neither party has cited and our independent research has not revealed a case considering
    whether successive section 116-3 motions are permissible. We must, therefore, begin our
    analysis of this issue with an examination of the statutory language.
    “The cardinal principle of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to
    the intention of the legislature. [Citation.] The language used by the legislature is
    the best indicator of legislative intent, and thus a court’s inquiry appropriately
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    begins with the statutory text. [Citation.] The statutory language must be given its
    plain and ordinary meaning, and when the terms used by the legislature are clear
    and unambiguous, it is not necessary to resort to other aids of construction.”
    People v. Schutz, 
    344 Ill. App. 3d 87
    , 91 (2003).
    Section 116-3 provides:
    “(a) A defendant may make a motion before the trial court that entered
    judgment of conviction in his or her case for the performance of *** forensic
    DNA testing *** on evidence that was secured in relation to the trial which
    resulted in his or her conviction, but which was not subject to the testing which is
    now requested because the technology for the testing was not available at the time
    of trial. Reasonable notice of the motion shall be served upon the State.
    (b) The defendant must present a prima facie case that:
    (1) identity was the issue in the trial which resulted in his or
    her conviction; and
    (2) the evidence to be tested has been subject to a chain of
    custody sufficient to establish that it has not been substituted,
    tampered with, replaced, or altered in any material aspect.
    (c) The trial court shall allow the testing under reasonable conditions
    designed to protect the State’s interests in the integrity of the evidence and the
    testing process upon a determination that:
    (1) the result of the testing has the scientific potential to
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    1-05-2205
    produce new, noncumulative evidence materially relevant to the
    defendant’s assertion of actual innocence even though the results
    may not completely exonerate the defendant;
    (2) the testing requested employs a scientific method
    generally accepted within the relevant scientific community.” 725
    ILCS 5/116-3 (West 2004).
    There is no language in section 116-3 indicating that the legislature intended to limit the
    number of motions for forensic testing that a defendant could file. If the legislature had wished
    to impose such a limit, it could have easily done so. “It is not the prerogative of this court to read
    into the statute limitations that the legislature chose not to include.” People v. Rokita, 316 Ill.
    App. 3d 292, 303 (2000). Accordingly, we conclude that section 116-3 simply does not impose a
    limit on the number of forensic testing motions a defendant may file. We find, therefore, that
    defendant’s second section 116-3 motion was permissible and, because he filed a notice of appeal
    within 30 days of its dismissal, this appeal is not procedurally barred.
    We will next address defendant’s contention that the court erred in “summarily
    dismissing” his motion without providing him notice of its sua sponte motion to dismiss or an
    opportunity to respond to that motion. Defendant asks that we remand his case for further
    adversarial proceedings on his section 116-3 motion.
    In O’Connell, the supreme court clarified that “the term ‘summary dismissal’ is unique to
    the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (725 ILCS 5/122-2.1 (West 2004)).” 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 38
    , citing People v. Vincent, 
    226 Ill. 2d 1
    , 11 (2007). Accordingly, when the trial court
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    1-05-2205
    dismisses a section 116-3 motion based on the deficiency of the allegations raised on the face of
    the motion without receiving responsive pleadings from the State or providing notice to the
    defendant, it does not rule in a summary fashion; rather, it sua sponte denies the motion.
    
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 38
    . The court confirmed the propriety of this practice, stating “ ‘[a] trial
    court may, on its own motion, dispose of a matter [sua sponte] when it is clear *** that the
    requesting party is not entitled to relief as a matter of law.’ ” 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 38
    , quoting
    
    Vincent, 226 Ill. 2d at 12
    .
    Accordingly, having determined that the trial court did not summarily dismiss defendant’s
    section 116-3 motion but rather denied the motion sua sponte, we must now consider whether his
    motion was defective. Our review is de novo because “the trial court’s decision regarding such a
    motion is not based upon its assessment of the credibility of the witnesses but on its review of the
    pleadings and the trial transcripts.” People v. Jones, 
    334 Ill. App. 3d 61
    , 63 (2002); see also
    
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 35
    .
    “Section 116-3 allows a defendant to have physical evidence subjected to
    scientific testing that was not available at the time of trial if certain requirements
    are met. To obtain testing, a defendant must present a prima facie case that
    identity was the issue at his trial and that the evidence to be tested has been under
    a secure chain of custody. Testing is permitted if, among other requirements, ‘the
    result of the testing has the scientific potential to produce new, noncumulative
    evidence materially relevant to the defendant’s assertion of actual innocence.’ ”
    
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 208
    , quoting 725 ILCS 5/116-3(c)(1) (West 1998).
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    1-05-2205
    Pursuant to O’Connell, before we review defendant’s motion to see if he has met his
    burden of presenting a prima facie case that identity was at issue and the items that he seeks to
    test were subjected to a secure chain of custody, we must first determine whether the statute
    applies. 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 36
    (“Before any analysis of the statutory requirements to allow
    DNA testing, the initial issue is the applicability of the statute”). The O’Connell court clarified
    that section 116-3 applies only to defendants who have contested their guilt at trial and not to
    those who have pled guilty. 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 37
    (concluding that “the appellate court
    erroneously determined section 116-3 permits a defendant who pleads guilty to argue that
    identity was at issue, despite his guilty plea”). In this case, although defendant confessed and
    admitted his role in the robbery and shooting death of Lula Mae Woods, he never pled guilty;
    rather, he contested his guilt at trial. Accordingly, we find that the statute applies and, thus,
    defendant is entitled to seek relief pursuant to section 116-3 of the Code. 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 37
    .
    Having reviewed the threshold issue regarding the applicability of the statute, we must
    now determine whether defendant has established a prima facie case that identity was at issue in
    his trial and that the evidence which he seeks to test was subject to a secure chain of custody.
    Concerning identity, in his motion, defendant simply provided a conclusory statement that
    identity was the central issue at his trial. While case law suggests that this conclusory statement
    was not sufficient to satisfy defendant’s obligation to present a prima facie case, evidence and
    argument presented at a hearing on the motion would have conclusively demonstrated that
    identity was, in fact, a central issue at trial. See People v. Gibson, 
    357 Ill. App. 3d 480
    (2005)
    9
    1-05-2205
    (appellate court acknowledged that the defendant’s bare assertion that identity was a central issue
    at trial in his motion rendered the motion deficient but found that evidence and argument
    presented at a hearing on the motion, that found support in the record, was sufficient to fulfill the
    defendant’s obligation to present a prima facie case that identity was the central issue at trial).
    Indeed, the record reflects that at trial, defense counsel adamantly contested defendant’s guilt
    notwithstanding defendant’s confession. During closing argument, defense counsel argued that
    “[defendant] was not there” and suggested that defendant’s confession was the product of police
    coercion. Accordingly, although defendant’s motion makes a conclusory statement about
    identity, a review of the record conclusively shows that identity was at issue in his trial.
    Similarly, concerning the chain of custody, in his motion, defendant stated that the
    evidence to be tested had been kept under a proper chain of custody. He further stated that each
    piece of evidence to be tested was admitted at trial. Though these assertions are certainly
    conclusory, case law suggests that they were sufficient to establish a prima facie case that the
    evidence had been kept under a proper chain of custody. See People v. Johnson, 
    205 Ill. 2d 381
    ,
    394 (2002) (finding that the defendant had presented a prima facie case that the Vitullo rape kit
    he sought to have tested had been under a secure chain of custody, reasoning “[t]hough the State
    contends that the defendant has presented no evidence of the kit’s location since his 1984 trial,
    such evidence would not be available to the defendant. The Vitullo kit, as a piece of real
    evidence admitted at trial, would have remained in the custody of the circuit court clerk after the
    defendant’s conviction”); People v. Travis, 
    329 Ill. App. 3d 280
    , 285 (2002) (noting that “[i]t
    asks too much to require petitioning defendant in these cases to plead and prove proper chain of
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    1-05-2205
    custody at the outset, for the evidence at issue will undoubtedly have been within the safekeeping
    of the State, not the defendant. A trial court may allow limited discovery in an appropriate
    case”); People v. Sanchez, 
    363 Ill. App. 3d 470
    , 478 (2006) (relying on Johnson and Travis,
    finding that the defendant’s motion, which simply stated that the evidence to be tested had been
    in the continuous possession of law enforcement agencies “is facially sufficient with respect to
    the chain-of-custody requirement”); cf. 
    Jones, 334 Ill. App. 3d at 65
    (in his motion, the defendant
    stated that the murder weapon, a knife, had been subjected to a sufficient chain of custody, and to
    the motion, he attached a request addressed to the medical examiner’s office for the knife, a
    nightgown and the victim’s fingernail clippings; appellate court found that the defendant had not
    established a sufficient chain of custody and distinguished the case before it from Johnson, in
    which the Vitullo kit had been introduced into evidence at trial; on the contrary, in the case
    before the Jones court, the evidence to be tested “may or may not have been collected and ***
    may or not be in the custody of the State”).
    We now address the issue of material relevance. In accordance with the statute, if a
    defendant can establish his prima facie case, it is then incumbent upon the circuit court to
    determine whether “the result of the testing has the scientific potential to produce new,
    noncumulative evidence materially relevant to the defendant’s assertion of actual innocence.”
    725 ILCS 5/116-3(c)(1) (West 2004); see also 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 208
    ; People v. Urioste, 
    316 Ill. App. 3d 307
    , 311 (2000). “[E]vidence which is ‘materially relevant’ to a defendant’s claim of
    actual innocence is simply evidence which tends to significantly advance that claim” and “section
    116-3 is not limited to situations in which scientific testing of a certain piece of evidence would
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    completely exonerate a defendant.” 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 213-14
    . A determination of whether
    materially relevant evidence of actual innocence would result from forensic testing “ ‘requires a
    consideration of the evidence introduced at trial, as well as an assessment of the evidence
    defendant is seeking to test.’ ” 
    Travis, 329 Ill. App. 3d at 284
    , quoting 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 214
    .
    In his motion, defendant indicated that he sought testing of: “(1) a baseball cap and the
    victim’s clothes and purse (for traces of blood and/or perspiration); (2) a knife for same; (3) the
    victim’s nail clippings; (4) eyebrow and head hairs.” He further asserted that the testing had the
    potential to produce materially relevant evidence, explaining: “the result of the testing has the
    scientific potential to produce ‘conclusive’ findings that movant was not the donor and that a
    third-unknown party was which would wholly exonerate movant altogether.”
    The State, relying on People v. Savory, 
    197 Ill. 2d 203
    (2001), contends that the evidence
    defendant seeks to test is not materially relevant to his claim of actual innocence. In Savory, the
    defendant, following a second jury trial, was convicted of two counts of murder. At trial, the
    State had presented evidence that defendant had made incriminating admissions to three of his
    friends as well as to the police about the murders. 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 206-07
    . In addition, the
    State presented physical evidence that connected the defendant to the crimes, including evidence
    that hairs consistent with the defendant’s were found in the bathroom sink and tub at the crime
    scene, that a knife recovered from the defendant’s home was covered in blood, and that a
    bloodstain found on a pair of pants recovered from the defendant’s home was the same blood
    type as one of the victims. 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 207
    . Following his conviction, the defendant
    filed a motion pursuant to section 116-3 of the Code, seeking forensic testing of the bloodstained
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    pants, contending that testing would show that the blood did not match the victim’s blood type
    and would thus have eliminated one of the pieces of physical evidence that the State used to
    secure his conviction. 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 208
    . In denying testing, the supreme court found
    that the evidence that the defendant sought to test was not materially relevant to his claim of
    innocence, explaining that its
    “examination of the record shows that the testimony regarding the possible source of the
    bloodstain on the pair of trousers was only a minor part of the State’s evidence in this
    case. A far greater portion of the State’s case consisted of [the] defendant’s [admissions,
    which demonstrated his] knowledge of certain features of the crime scene *** which only
    the offender could have known.” 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 214
    -15.
    Accordingly, the court found that “a test result favorable to defendant [on the bloodstained pants]
    would not significantly advance his claim of actual innocence, but would only exclude one
    relatively minor item from the evidence of guilt marshaled against him by the State.” 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 215
    .
    The State contends that like Savory, it is clear “that the majority of this case was based
    upon defendant’s confession and his knowledge of the crime scene, and not on the pieces of
    evidence defendant seeks to have tested.” We agree. In this case, the State relied on defendant’s
    detailed confession to secure his conviction. As in Savory, the physical evidence which
    defendant seeks to subject to forensic testing played a “minor” role in the State’s case against
    him. 
    Savory, 197 Ill. 2d at 215
    . Indeed, at trial, the parties stipulated that fingerprints obtained
    from several items in the victim’s purse did not match the prints of defendant or codefendant,
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    and that an eyebrow hair found in the baseball cap found near the victim’s body was not
    consistent with samples taken from defendant or codefendant. See, e.g., 
    Travis, 329 Ill. App. 3d at 284
    -85 (finding that DNA testing of the semen found on the victim of a criminal sexual assault
    would not materially advance the defendant’s claim of actual innocence where the defendant
    confessed to the assault and the State relied heavily on that confession to secure his conviction
    and the jury had been informed that the semen the defendant sought to subject to additional
    testing did not come from the defendant). The parties further stipulated that no useable
    fingerprints were secured from the purse, passbook, deposit slips, purse strap or knife and no
    further testing was done on these items. Based on the evidence presented at trial, we thus find
    that forensic testing would not materially advance defendant’s claim of actual innocence.
    Accordingly, because the evidence defendant seeks to test is not materially relevant to his
    claim of innocence, we find that the trial court did not err in denying his pro se section 116-3
    motion sua sponte. 
    O’Connell, 227 Ill. 2d at 38
    (holding that a trial court does not err in sua
    sponte denying a defendant’s motion for section 116-3 testing when the motion is insufficient as
    a matter of law).
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court order denying defendant’s pro se
    section 116-3 motion.
    Affirmed.
    KARNEZIS, J., and CUNNINGHAM, J., concur.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1-05-2205 Rel

Filed Date: 10/29/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2015