People v. Gutierrez ( 2010 )


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  •                                                                                    THIRD DIVISION
    June 30, 2010
    No. 1-07-2516
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                    )       Appeal from the Circuit Court of
    )       Cook County, Illinois
    Plaintiff-Appellee,             )
    )       No. 04 CR 6151
    v.                                              )
    )       Honorable William G. Lacy,
    NICHOLAS GUTIERREZ,                                     )       Judge Presiding
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.            )
    PRESIDING JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the court:
    After a jury trial, defendant, Nicholas Gutierrez, was convicted of first-degree murder,
    aggravated criminal sexual assault, burglary, and concealment of a homicidal death. He was
    sentenced to natural life in prison. On appeal, defendant argues that: (1) his sentence is
    excessive; (2) his conviction for aggravated criminal sexual assault should be reversed because
    the State failed to prove that the victim was alive at the time of the sexual assault; (3) his
    conviction for burglary should be reversed because he had unlimited authority to be inside the
    funeral home; (4) the jury instructions constructively amended the burglary charge of the
    indictment; (5) the trial court erred in ruling that he failed to establish a prima facie case of racial
    discrimination during voir dire; and (6) the State made improper comments during closing and
    rebuttal arguments.
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    I. BACKGROUND
    Defendant, then 19 years old, was charged with first-degree murder, aggravated criminal
    sexual assault, burglary, concealment of a homicidal death, robbery, and armed robbery after the
    body of Mary Stachowicz was found under the floorboards of his apartment, which was located
    above the F.J. Sikorski Funeral Home. Defendant was convicted of all charges except robbery
    and armed robbery. The trial court found defendant eligible for the death penalty based on the
    murder during the commission of aggravated criminal sexual assault but sentenced him to natural
    life in prison for the murder, 30 years' imprisonment for aggravated criminal sexual assault, 7
    years' imprisonment for burglary, and 3 years' imprisonment for concealment of a homicidal
    death, all sentences to be served concurrently. The following evidence was adduced at trial.
    A. Trial
    1. Francine Sikorski
    Francine Sikorski owned the F.J. Sikorski Funeral Home, located at 3630 West George
    Street in Chicago, and lived in apartment 2 East above the funeral home. Defendant and Ray
    Scacchitti moved into the other apartment, 2 West, in December 2001. The stairwell to the
    apartments could be accessed through a door in the lobby of the funeral home; through a single
    door outside of the funeral home, just west of the main entrance on George Street; and through a
    stairwell in the backyard. Sikorski testified that she allowed them to live in the apartment rent-
    free in exchange for their services at the funeral home. Defendant and Scacchitti had keys to the
    front door of the funeral home and keys to their apartment.
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    In the fall of 2002, defendant and Scacchitti stopped working at the funeral home.
    Sikorski testified that she asked defendant and Scacchitti to stop working and move out because
    she and Scacchitti were having personality conflicts. On cross-examination, Sikorski admitted
    that she "might" have told the police the night of the murder that she had fired defendant.
    Sikorski testified that she gave defendant the option of continuing to stay there; she further
    testified that she loved defendant, she talks to him almost daily, and she visits him weekly.
    Scacchitti and defendant began looking for another place to live and packing their belongings in
    boxes. After Sikorski told Scacchitti and defendant to move out, she expected that they would
    use the same two doors to that apartment, and they had the authority to do so.
    About a month before her death, Mary Stachowicz began working part-time at the funeral
    home doing light cleaning and helping with Polish translations.
    The morning of November 13, 2002, Christopher Stachowicz asked his mother, Mary, if
    he could borrow $10. When he was taking the money from her wallet, he noticed that there was
    a $10 bill and a $20 bill, as well as 5 to 10 other bills. He took the $10 bill, left the remaining
    bills, and returned the wallet to his mother's purse.
    Sikorski testified that on November 13, 2002, Mary arrived at the funeral home at 8:30
    a.m. There was a funeral at the church across the street at 10 a.m. At 10:50 a.m., Sikorski
    returned to the funeral home to pick up her belongings and then left for the cemetery. Mary
    stayed at the funeral home to answer the phones until Sikorski returned. Mary called her
    husband, Jerry, at 11 a.m. The caller ID for the funeral home's phone showed that a call came in
    on November 13, 2002, at 11:32 a.m., from the pay phone at the Chicago Transit Authority
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    (CTA) station at Belmont and Kimball.
    Sikorski returned at 12:45 p.m. The front door to the funeral home was locked, and a
    man was standing outside with clothes for the next visitation. Sikorski looked through the
    funeral home but could not find Mary. She found Mary's purse and jacket on the chair in the
    arrangement room and her car was still in the parking lot. In addition, there was a clean dish and
    a dish towel on the table near Mary's jacket and purse.
    Sikorski went to pick up her daughter in Wilmette at 2:45 p.m. and was gone for 45
    minutes. When she returned, she called the church looking for Mary and went through Mary's
    purse looking for her husband's phone number. Sikorski called the rectory at St. Constance
    church, where Mary was scheduled to work later that day, and got her husband's number. At
    3:50 p.m., Francine Sikorski called Jerry Stachowicz and told him that Mary was missing. Jerry
    and his son went to the funeral home, arriving at 4:30 p.m. Jerry discovered Mary's jacket, scarf,
    and purse sitting on a chair. Christopher looked in his mother's wallet and discovered that the
    billfold area was empty.
    Jerry called the police and reported his wife missing. Mary's family and the police
    searched for her at the funeral home and the church across the street.
    2. Ray Scacchitti
    Scacchitti testified that he is homosexual and defendant is bisexual. In November 2002,
    he and defendant were living openly as a couple in an apartment above the funeral home. In
    January or February of 2002, shortly after Scacchitti and defendant moved into the apartment,
    they began working at the funeral home. Their wages would be deducted from their rent. In
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    October 2002, Sikorksi told Scacchitti and defendant that she did not want them working at the
    funeral home anymore. She also asked them to move out. After this time, neither Scacchitti nor
    defendant would "go into different rooms of the funeral home."
    Soon after Sikorksi terminated Scacchitti's and defendant's employment, she hired Mary
    Stachowicz, whom Scacchitti knew from St. Hyacinth, the church across the street. Scacchitti
    testified that Mary knew he was homosexual and never confronted him or questioned his beliefs.
    However, defendant and the State stipulated that Angela Ruffolo, Mary's daughter, would testify
    that her mother did not like defendant and Ray and did not approve of their lifestyle.
    The morning of November 13, 2002, defendant went with Scacchitti to Flower Fantasy,
    the flower shop where Scacchitti worked. When they arrived, Scacchitti gave defendant $4 to
    buy breakfast; defendant went to buy it and then ate while Scacchitti worked. After 10:30 a.m.,
    defendant went with the flower shop owner's sister to a fruit store half a block away, where they
    bought fruit for a fruit basket. At 11 a.m., defendant left for the Harlem and Irving Plaza mall,
    where he was to look for a job, play video games, and eat lunch. Scacchitti gave him between $4
    and $7. Scacchitti also gave defendant his cell phone.
    After defendant left the flower shop, Scacchitti tried to reach him between three and five
    times. Defendant did not respond to any of those calls, which was unusual. At 3 p.m. he heard
    from defendant, who said he was on his way back to the flower shop. When defendant arrived at
    the flower shop, he was limping and there was blood on his temple. Defendant said he injured
    himself when he played basketball at the Norridge gym and that he cut his finger. Defendant
    gave Scacchitti $30, which he claimed that he won from the basketball game. Scacchitti never
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    knew defendant to have that much money.
    Defendant changed into his Subway uniform in the bathroom of the flower shop and put
    the clothes he had been wearing in the van. Scacchitti took him to work some time after 4 p.m.
    He then returned to the flower shop and drove the owner's sister to Schiller Park. While he was
    trying to find the phone number for an apartment that was for rent, Sikorski called him and said
    that Mary was missing. Scacchitti went to the Subway where defendant was working and asked
    if he had been to the funeral home that day. Defendant responded that he had not. Because
    defendant was finished working, the two returned home.
    Mary's family asked to search defendant and Ray's apartment. After sending defendant
    first to check on their pets, Scacchitti took Mary's son upstairs to their apartment.
    On November 13 or 14, defendant burned incense while playing video games. On the
    14th, when a story about Mary was on the television news, defendant said, "God doesn't let bad
    things happen to good people." Scacchitti testified that defendant's behavior was normal.
    3. Police
    Detective Kevin McDonald testified that on November 15, 2002, he spoke to defendant at
    the police station. Defendant gave the detective his CTA card. McDonald spoke to the Norridge
    Park District and asked CTA security to fax a printout of the activity on defendant's CTA card.
    McDonald confronted defendant with the information that the CTA card had been purchased at
    the Belmont-Kimball Blue Line station at 3:02 p.m. on November 13, 2002, and was used
    seconds later to board the subway at that station. It was then used at 3:43 p.m. to board a bus at
    the Cumberland station. McDonald also informed defendant that the outdoor basketball courts in
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    Norridge were closed at that time and that the indoor basketball court did not open until 3:30 that
    afternoon. To play basketball at the Norridge Park District indoor facility, defendant would have
    been required to sign in and pay $5 or have a resident pass. Defendant did not have such a pass.
    He told defendant that he would send detectives to the locations that he mentioned to see if they
    could get video surveillance to verify where he was.
    Defendant responded that he wanted to tell the truth about what happened that day.
    Defendant stated that on November 13, 2002, he left the florist at 11:30 a.m. and took the El back
    to the funeral home, where he intended to play video games. As he walked on George Street
    approaching the funeral home, he saw two Hispanic men leave the front of the funeral home. He
    gave detailed descriptions of the two men. Defendant stated that he approached the men and
    asked if he could help them. They asked whether he knew Ray Scacchitti, and he replied that he
    did. The men responded, "If you tell anybody we were at the funeral home, we will kill you, Ray,
    and your pets." The larger man reached toward the small of his back, as if reaching for a
    weapon, but the other man stopped him. They left in a black Lincoln driven by a third man.
    Defendant then told McDonald that he entered his apartment and discovered that one of the rear
    windows was open and the safe that contained Scacchitti's jewelry had been moved. He took
    care of his pets and walked around to clear his head before taking the El back to the florist.
    McDonald asked defendant what he thought happened to Mary with those people in the
    funeral home. Defendant responded that he believed the two men climbed up the garage and
    entered his apartment through the rear window. Mary probably heard as they moved the safe and
    threatened to call the police. The offenders probably left the apartment, grabbed Mary, and
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    dragged her back to the apartment so they would not get blood on the funeral home's carpet.
    Next, he believed that the men tried to gag Mary and ended up beating her to death when she
    violently fought back. They hid the body in the funeral home in an effort to incriminate
    defendant and Ray. Possible places to hide the body included the garage, air ducts in the
    basement, a rear office, and a space in the ceiling of the basement. He also noted a crawl space
    in the den of his apartment for radiator pipes. The space was covered by boards, a rug, a table,
    and a bust of Jesus. Defendant stated that he also remembered that there had been art books on
    the table and that they were moved. He surmised, therefore, that the body had been hidden in
    that crawl space. Defendant drew a map of his apartment showing the crawl space.
    Detective John Callaghan testified that he checked the common areas of the funeral
    home, including the areas that defendant specified in his statement. They entered defendant's
    apartment when he consented to the search. They proceeded to the crawl space that defendant
    specified and found Mary's body. Her shirt was pulled up and her bra was protruding.
    Detective Robert Rutherford left the funeral home at 7 p.m. on November 15, 2002, and
    returned to the police station, where he spoke to defendant. Defendant stated that he and
    Scacchitti were no longer working for the funeral home and were in the process of moving out of
    their apartment. On November 13, 2002, he went to the flower shop with Scacchitti and got into
    a disagreement with him about the path his life was taking. Defendant stated that he left the
    flower shop and returned to the apartment. He entered the apartment through the door on George
    Street that leads directly up the staircase to his apartment. When he opened the door, Mary
    opened the door to the staircase from the lobby of the funeral home and said, "Oh, it's you."
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    Defendant gave her a disrespectful wave of his hand, as if to say, "Don't bother me," and
    continued up the stairs. He stated that Mary started to close the door, stopped, opened it back up,
    and asked, "Why do you fuck boys?" Defendant told her to "fuck off" and continued up the
    stairs.
    Defendant stated that Mary followed him up the stairs and asked, "Why don't you like
    girls? Why do you fuck boys?" He entered his apartment and shut the door. He heard banging
    on the door and started to lose control. He opened the door, grabbed Mary by the hair, and
    dragged her into the apartment. She slapped and kicked him, and he let her go. He backed up
    into the dining room, and Mary followed him, asking, "Why don't you like girls?" He slapped
    Mary, and she slapped him back. As he continued backing up through the kitchen to the den, he
    "lost total control of himself." He punched Mary in her jaw, knocking her to the ground. He
    grabbed a knife that was on top of some boxes and stabbed her and hit her until he became
    exhausted. He saw red while he was stabbing and beating her. He sat there for 10 minutes to
    catch his breath, then he took Mary's pulse to see if she was alive. He did not feel a pulse, so he
    got three plastic bags and wrapped them around her head to stop the blood from going onto the
    floor.
    He got a sheet off the couch in the front room and wrapped Mary's body in it. He hid her
    body in the crawl space below the den. He cleaned the floor and furniture using three rolls of
    paper towels and put the paper towels, as well as a blood-covered sheet from the couch, into a
    garbage bag. He went down the front stairs into the funeral home. As he walked through the
    funeral home, he saw Mary's purse out in the open. He took $85 from her purse, left through the
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    back door, hopped a fence, and walked down the alley, where he put the garbage bag into a
    garbage can. He walked to the El stop and went back to the flower shop. When he got to the
    flower shop, defendant gave Scacchitti $30 and told him he won it playing basketball. He
    changed into his work uniform and left his dirty clothes in the van.
    Detective Robert Carrillo testified that on November 15, 2002, defendant asked him to
    take the $52 in his wallet and give it to Mary's family. Defendant stated that he was going to take
    that money, whatever he could steal from Ray, and any valuables from the funeral home to buy a
    ticket to Las Vegas.
    Carrillo contacted the State's Attorney's office. Assistant State's Attorney Mark Hitt
    arrived at 10 p.m. and spoke to defendant. At the end of their conversation, defendant gave a
    videotaped statement, which was substantially similar to his statements to Rutherford and
    Carrillo. At the time defendant gave this statement, the autopsy had not been completed.
    After defendant finished his videotaped statement, defendant asked if he could write Ray
    a note. Hitt gave defendant a pen and some paper and allowed him to write a note. When
    defendant was done, Hitt showed it to Detective Carrillo and then took it to Ray. In the note,
    defendant expressed his affection for Scacchitti and apologized for what he had done. He asked
    Schacchitti, "Please don't think of me as a monster."
    On November 16, 2002, after learning the results of Mary's autopsy, Detective Carrillo
    told defendant that Mary's cause of death was strangulation. Defendant stated that after he beat
    and stabbed Mary until he was exhausted, he checked for a pulse and did not find one. He saw
    the telephone line for the funeral home lit up, suggesting that Francine had returned from the
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    funeral. He was afraid that Francine might be calling the police, so he decided to hide the body.
    He placed the bags over Mary's head and pressed down on the neck area for two minutes, hoping
    that the blood would coagulate and form a seal. The blood slowed down, and he placed the body
    in a blanket and then put the body in the floorboards. Defendant did not mention having sexual
    contact with Mary, and Carrillo did not ask because he was unaware at that point.
    Assistant State's Attorney Julie Egan learned the results of the autopsy on November 16,
    2002. She briefly spoke to defendant and told him that the cause of Mary's death was
    strangulation and asked if he knew anything about that. Defendant explained that he placed
    plastic bags over Mary's head to stop the bleeding, and when that did not work, he placed his
    hands around the victim's throat for two minutes.
    4. Medical Examiner
    The medical examiner, Dr. Eupil Choi, found 11 superficial stab wounds on the back and
    right side of Mary's head and on her neck. The stab wounds were inflicted from behind. The
    wound to her neck struck the cervical bone and would have caused her to lose consciousness. It
    also would have caused the knife to bend. Ten of her ribs were fractured, and there were
    abrasions on her arms and elbows. She had numerous injuries indicative of strangulation,
    including bruising on her neck and the underside of her chin and fractured neck bones. The
    strangulation injuries were consistent with being strangled with the sheet that her body was
    wrapped in.
    The doctor did not find any injuries to her vagina or rectum consistent with sexual
    assault, nor was her clothing ripped. He testified, however, that sexual assault can occur without
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    any injuries to the body. Further, Mary gave birth four times, and each time a woman gives birth,
    the elasticity of the vagina is reduced, which, in turn, makes vaginal injuries less likely. She also
    had rib fractures and a bruise to her groin, which are consistent with a sexual assault.
    Semen was present in the vaginal and rectal swabs taken from Mary Stachowicz. The
    forensic scientist working on the vaginal swab inadvertently combined the male and female
    samples after they had been previously separated. As a result, no male DNA was found in the
    vaginal sample. Defendant could not be excluded as a contributor to the male profile from the
    rectal swab. Defendant's DNA was found on Mary's underwear.
    Defendant's clothes containing Mary's blood were recovered from Scacchitti's van. A
    folding hunting knife with a bent tip was recovered from the living room of defendant's
    apartment. It contained both defendant's and Mary's DNA. The police also found a plastic bag
    containing blood-soaked towels and sheets in a nearby garbage can. Mary's DNA was found on
    the paper towels. There were no signs of forced entry into the funeral home or into defendant's
    apartment.
    5. Verdict
    The jury found defendant not guilty of robbery and armed robbery and guilty of burglary,
    murder, aggravated criminal sexual assault, and concealment of a homicidal death. Defendant
    waived a jury for the eligibility and death penalty proceedings.
    B. Sentencing
    The State sought the death penalty on the basis that the killing happened during the
    commission of an inherently dangerous crime. The trial court found that defendant was eligible
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    to receive the death penalty on the basis of the aggravated criminal sexual assault.
    During the next phase of the sentencing hearing, Sharon E. testified that in 1995, she was
    six years old and living at the Larkin Center, a residential home for children in Elgin, where
    defendant was also living. On Halloween, she was in the bathroom when defendant and two
    other boys entered. The boys put Sharon on top of the sink and defendant put his penis onto her
    vagina without penetrating it. Defendant stated that if she told anyone, he would kill her. She
    told a staff member that two boys were "messing" with her, but she did not implicate defendant at
    the time because she was afraid. Afterward, the staff told her she had to sleep on the couch. At
    night, when she slept on the couch, defendant would stand in front of her and look at her "crazy."
    Linda Nordtvedt was defendant's therapist at the Larkin Center in 1995. When
    confronted about the incident involving Sharon E., defendant admitted only that he exposed
    himself. She observed visitations between defendant and his mother; their interactions were
    positive, and she found no cause for concern. Nordtvedt testified that defendant did not make
    much progress in his therapy because he only told her what he wanted her to hear and did not
    work on his issues. When he was released from the Larkin Center, his prognosis was poor based
    on behaviors he exhibited. For example, he had difficulty taking responsibility for his own
    actions, and he frequently ran away at the beginning of his stay there. In addition, there was an
    incident involving the sexual abuse of another resident. As a result, restrictions were placed on
    defendant for the safety of other residents.
    In 1997, defendant was transferred to the juvenile sex offender program at Uhlich
    Children's Advantage Network, a residential program for children with severe behavior and
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    emotional problems. Ann Przybysz, a residential intake coordinator at Uhlich, conducted a
    violence screening with defendant as part of the intake process. During the screening, defendant
    reported carrying a knife as a weapon, using a weapon in a fight, robbing a parent and a stranger,
    and forcing his sister to have sex with him. He also reported that he saw a security guard get shot
    and killed at a mall and saw his mother beat his sister until she bled. His mother beat him until
    he was bleeding or knocked out. Further, he reported that his babysitter's friend forced him to
    have sex against his will.
    Francisco Monzon, who was a residential case manager in 1997, testified that defendant
    was in the sexually aggressive program at Uhlich. His individual plan included no unsupervised
    contact with minors. While defendant was successful in the program initially, he began to run
    away frequently, was found with pornography in his possession, and committed theft while he
    was on the run. In September 1997, defendant, then 14, was charged with possession of lost or
    mislaid credit cards, which he gave to a fellow Uhlich resident. In October 1997, he was arrested
    for retail theft. Monzon reported that defendant was resistant to staff and stopped making
    progress in therapy. Defendant's visits with his mother were normal and did not cause Monzon
    any concern. Defendant was discharged from Uhlich because of his runaway behavior.
    Lynda Moore, defendant's Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS)
    caseworker in 1999, testified that when she first took over defendant's case, he was placed at the
    Mill in Rockford, Illinois. The Mill was a residential placement for children with behavioral
    problems, and it provided services for juvenile sex offenders. Defendant, who was 15 at the
    time, lacked progress there. He was sexually inappropriate with both peers and staff, and he
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    fondled another student. He also broke into the chief executive officer's office at the Mill, where
    he accessed confidential student information, stole and broke items, and made long-distance
    phone calls. He was convicted of burglary and property damage for this incident and sentenced
    to 18 months' probation. He also ran away to high-risk areas, including the parking lot of a
    school that developmentally challenged children attended. Defendant had fantasies about raping
    women in parking lots; once, he was found crouched between cars in a parking lot with a
    crowbar. The Mill asked to have defendant removed and placed in a more restrictive
    environment because he was at "high risk of sexual re-offense" and he "terrified" the women at
    the Mill.
    The only placement more restrictive than the Mill is a locked facility; however, there
    were none in Illinois that would accept defendant. Moore found defendant, then 16, a placement
    at Piney Ridge, a locked, out-of-state facility for children with psychiatric issues and juvenile
    sex-offender behaviors. At first, defendant did well at Piney Ridge, as he moved up the level
    system quickly and gained the trust of his therapist. However, he ran away when he was
    assigned the task of taking out the trash. Defendant was discharged from Piney Ridge with a
    poor prognosis after he engaged in inappropriate sexual conduct with a peer. Defendant got mad
    at the peer and threatened to slash his throat.
    Moore found one private agency in Illinois that was willing to take defendant. Defendant
    was transported to Onarga Place but was rejected because of his runaway behavior. Moore had
    no choice but to take defendant to a DCFS emergency shelter for the night. A couple of hours
    later, he ran away, and Moore never saw him again. Moore stated that she was afraid of
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    defendant.
    Christiana Largent, defendant's younger sister, also testified in aggravation. Largent is
    four years younger than defendant. For the first four years of her life, she lived with her mother
    and defendant. When Largent was three, her mother hung her out a window to eliminate her fear
    of heights. Her mother also wanted defendant to hang Largent out the window, but he refused.
    During this period of time, their mother physically abused defendant. However, their mother did
    not sexually abuse her or expose her to sexual abuse. When Largent was four and defendant was
    nine, their mother broke a whiskey bottle over Largent's head. They were removed from their
    mother's home and placed in a group home called Hephzibah. Defendant was moved to another
    home a week later, while Largent stayed at Hephzibah until she was 10. Largent testified that her
    mother tried to visit when she could. When Largent was 11, she returned to her mother's home,
    and in 2003, they moved to Alabama. Largent testified that, to her recollection, defendant did
    not sexually abuse her before they were removed from their mother's home.
    While defendant was in jail, he was charged when the entire tier was involved in a fight.
    Defendant stated that he was writing a letter on the top tier when the fight occurred. After a
    hearing, he was found guilty of fighting and was sentenced to 14 days in disciplinary segregation.
    In another incident, defendant was charged with participating in a riot in the prison gym. After a
    hearing, defendant was found guilty and was sentenced to 29 days in segregation.
    In mitigation, the parties stipulated that Dr. Paul Batty would testify that he examined
    Sharon E. in the emergency room of St. Joseph's Hospital on November 1, 1995, and that his
    physical examination revealed no signs of trauma. He would further testify that Sharon E. denied
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    that the boys touched her private parts with their hands, touched her with their private parts, or
    removed her underwear.
    The parties also stipulated that Melody E., Sharon E.'s mother, would testify that during
    her visit with Sharon after the Halloween of 1995, she stated that "them boys touched me" and
    that she never mentioned defendant's name.
    David Berg, a forensic interviewer for the Child Advocacy Center in Kane County,
    testified that he interviewed Sharon E. on November 6, 1995. Sharon told him that three boys
    pulled down her pants and touched her private part. While she named Chris, Ray, and TK, she
    did not mention defendant. He testified that she was evasive and anxious and it was difficult to
    talk to her. He interviewed defendant, who denied involvement but was "overly eager" to
    implicate the other three boys.
    Carol Garza testified that she was friends with Paula Largent, defendant's mother. In the
    1980s, Garza and Largent worked at a lounge owned by Hector Gutierrez. While Hector was
    married, he had an affair with Paula; as a result, Paula became pregnant with defendant. Shortly
    after defendant was born, he and Paula lived with Garza and her family. Hector continued living
    with his wife. After a year, Paula moved to an apartment building owned by Hector's parents.
    While they worked at the lounge, Carol and Paula became alcoholics and cocaine addicts. They
    partied three or four times a week, frequently at Paula's apartment. Defendant was at the
    apartment sleeping while this occurred; however, he would wake up now and then. Paula would
    yell at defendant when he came out of his room while they were getting high. One time, Paula
    backhanded defendant because he came out of his room crying, and a few other times, she
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    slapped or spanked him for leaving his room or for crying. Another time, Paula strapped him to
    his high chair with a belt. His bedroom door was kept locked from the outside by either a belt or
    a clothes line while Paula and others got high. Carol also witnessed one of their drug dealers
    fondle defendant's crotch while he was lying on the couch wearing pajamas and a diaper.
    Defendant, then two or three, woke up crying. In addition, Carol saw Peto, an associate of their
    drug dealer, swipe his penis across defendant's mouth while he was sleeping. When defendant
    woke up, Peto took defendant to his bedroom, where they remained for 10 to 15 minutes. Carol
    did not remember whether the door was open or closed or whether Peto and defendant were
    alone in the bedroom. At some point during the 1980s, Paula told Carol that she paid for drugs
    by selling defendant for sex. Carol did not do anything to stop it, nor did she tell the authorities.
    Grace Gorski testified that she was friends with Ray and defendant. She loved defendant
    and was supportive of him. She trusted defendant and found him to be charming.
    Colleen Luckey owned the jewelry store next to Flower Fantasy. She met Scacchitti in
    2000 and then met defendant through Scacchitti. She found defendant to be charming, pleasant,
    and helpful.
    Sergeant Michael Hallihan testified that defendant started on the school wing in the jail
    and moved to the "Christian deck," where chaplains held Bible readings and worked with
    inmates on drug-abuse or anger-management issues. A stricter set of rules applied to the
    Christian deck.
    Valerie Scacchitti, Ray's sister, testified that before the murder, she saw defendant and
    Ray once a week. She considered defendant family and found him to be a "gentle soul."
    -18-
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    The trial court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment for first-degree murder; 30 years'
    imprisonment for aggravated criminal sexual assault; 7 years for burglary; and 3 for concealment
    of a homicidal death. Defendant's posttrial motion was denied, and this appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Aggravated Criminal Sexual Assault
    1. Whether the State Must Prove the Victim Was Alive at the Time of the Assault
    Defendant argues that the crime of sexual assault requires that the State prove that the
    victim was alive at the time of the sexual acts. He contends that his conviction for aggravated
    criminal sexual assault must be reversed because the State failed to prove that Mary was alive at
    the time he assaulted her.
    In support of his argument, defendant cites People v. Segara, 
    126 Ill. 2d 70
    (1988), which
    held, "To the victim, each rape was 'readily divisible and intensely personal; each offense is an
    offense against a person.' " (Emphasis in original.) 
    Segara, 126 Ill. 2d at 77
    , quoting Pruitt v.
    State, 
    269 Ind. 559
    , 565, 
    382 N.E.2d 150
    , 154 (1978). The question in that case, however, was
    whether the defendant was liable for two acts of criminal sexual assault, not whether the State
    must prove that the victim was alive at the time of the rape. Further, the Illinois criminal sexual
    assault statute does not specifically require a living victim. 720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(3), 12-12(f), 12-
    13(a)(1), 12-14 (West 2006).
    Further, People v. Hendrix, 
    250 Ill. App. 3d 88
    (1993), refutes defendant's contention. In
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    Hendrix, the body of the 71-year-old victim was found 30 to 48 hours after death, and the
    defendant was convicted of first-degree murder, aggravated criminal sexual assault, and burglary.
    On appeal, the defendant argued that he was not proven guilty of aggravated criminal sexual
    assault because the medical examiner could not conclusively establish that any sexual assault
    occurred before death. This court concluded that "we will not draw a bright line which would
    require the State in all similar cases to establish the precise time of death in order to prove a
    sexual assault upon a murder victim." 
    Hendrix, 250 Ill. App. 3d at 103
    . Accordingly, the court
    concluded that the State proved defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Hendrix, 250 Ill.
    App. 3d at 103.
    Hendrix relied on People v. Colley, 
    188 Ill. App. 3d 817
    (1989). In Colley, the defendant
    argued that he was not proven guilty of aggravated criminal sexual assault because the victim's
    stab wounds occurred too long after the sexual acts were performed to be considered part of the
    same course of conduct. The court noted that the evidence showed that the defendant stabbed the
    victim soon after the sexual acts were completed. 
    Colley, 188 Ill. App. 3d at 820
    . "Under the
    instant circumstances, we will not draw a bright line between the ending of the sexual acts and
    the bodily harm occurring afterward, as that would defeat the statutory purpose of protecting
    victims from sex offenders." 
    Colley, 188 Ill. App. 3d at 820
    . The court found that the stab
    wounds occurred "sufficiently close in time to the sexual acts that they can be said to have been
    committed during the course of the sexual assault." 
    Colley, 188 Ill. App. 3d at 820
    , citing People
    v. Ortiz, 
    156 Ill. App. 3d 170
    (1987).
    Defendant cites cases from other jurisdictions that have held that the crime of rape
    -20-
    1-07-2516
    requires that the victim be alive at the time of the sexual act. See Doyle v. State, 
    112 Nev. 879
    ,
    899, 
    921 P.2d 901
    , 914 (1996), rev'd on other grounds by Kaczmarek v. State, 
    120 Nev. 314
    , 
    91 P.3d 16
    (2004); People v. Davis, 
    10 Cal. 4th 463
    , 521 n.20, 
    896 P.2d 119
    , 151 n.20, 
    41 Cal. Rptr. 2d
    826, 858 n.20 (1995); State v. Perkins, 
    248 Kan. 760
    , 771, 
    822 P.2d 1142
    , 1150 (1991); State
    v. Holt, 
    128 Wis. 2d 110
    , 121, 
    382 N.W.2d 679
    , 685 (1985); Commonwealth v. Sudler, 
    496 Pa. 295
    , 303, 
    436 A.2d 1376
    , 1379-80 (1981); Rogers v. State, 
    890 P.2d 959
    , 969 (Okla. App. 1995);
    People v. Hutner, 
    209 Mich. App. 280
    , 283-84, 
    530 N.W.2d 174
    , 176 (1995). "These courts
    reason that rape must be accomplished against a person's will, and once one is dead has no will
    which can be overborne." Missouri v. McLaughlin, 
    265 S.W.3d 257
    , 270 (Miss. 2008), citing
    People v. Sellers, 
    203 Cal. App. 3d 1042
    , 1050, 
    250 Cal. Rptr. 345
    , 350 (1988). Defendant,
    urging this court to follow those cases, contends that a separate criminal offense of mutilation or
    sexual abuse of a corpse is more appropriate than a conviction for criminal sexual assault.
    We note, however, that a different panel of the Michigan Court of Appeals disagreed with
    Hutner. People v. Diefenbach, No. 176489, slip op at 6 n.1 (Mich. App. August 20, 1996).
    Further, Holt was superseded by Wisconsin's sexual assault statute (Wis. Stat. '940.225(7)
    (2005)), which provides, "This section applies regardless of whether a victim is dead or alive at
    the time of sexual contact or sexual intercourse." Similarly, Pennsylvania's "involuntary deviate
    sexual intercourse" statute now provides that the term "forcible compulsion" includes
    "compulsion resulting in another person's death, whether the death occurred before, during or
    after the sexual intercourse." Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. '3123(e) (2009 Supp.).
    In People v. Kelly, 
    1 Cal. 4th 495
    , 
    822 P.2d 385
    , 
    3 Cal. Rptr. 2d 677
    (1992), the trial
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    1-07-2516
    court instructed the jury, " 'It is legally possible to rape a dead body. Where a defendant attempts
    to coerce his victim into intercourse with him, fails to accomplish [this] purpose while she is
    alive and kills her to satisfy his desires with her corpse, the killing falls within the felony murder
    rule.' " (Emphasis omitted.) 
    Kelly, 1 Cal. 4th at 524
    , 822 P.2d at 
    399, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 691
    .
    The California Supreme Court concluded that the first sentence of the instruction was erroneous
    because rape requires a live victim. 
    Kelly, 1 Cal. 4th at 524
    , 822 P.2d at 
    399, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 691
    . "This does not, however, mean that intercourse after death negates the felony-murder rule,"
    since felony murder includes a killing committed in the perpetration of, or attempt to perpetrate,
    rape. 
    Kelly, 1 Cal. 4th at 524
    , 822 P.2d at 
    399, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 691
    . The Kelly court held, "
    'Where a defendant attempts to coerce his victim into intercourse with him, fails to accomplish
    his purpose while she is alive, and kills her to satisfy his desires with her corpse, the killing is
    first degree murder.' " 
    Kelly, 1 Cal. 4th at 525
    , 822 P.2d at 
    400, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 692
    , quoting
    People v. Goodridge, 
    70 Cal. 2d 824
    , 838, 
    452 P.2d 637
    , 645, 
    76 Cal. Rptr. 421
    , 429 (1969).
    Accordingly, the second sentence of the instructions correctly informed the jury of the law.
    
    Kelly, 1 Cal. 4th at 526
    , 822 P.2d at 
    400-01, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 692-93
    .
    Illinois law is dispositive of this issue. In People v. Thomas, 
    137 Ill. 2d 500
    (1990), the
    defendant argued that it was not possible for the murder to occur "in the course of" arson because
    the victim was dead at the time he started the fire. Our supreme court found that the murder and
    arson occurred "essentially simultaneously." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    . "It is not imperative
    that the State prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant formed the criminal intent to
    commit arson or aggravated arson before committing murder." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    . It
    -22-
    1-07-2516
    was sufficient that the State proved the elements of the crimes and the accompanying felonies
    were part of the "same criminal episode." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    .
    Thomas declined to adopt the California Supreme Court's reasoning in People v. Morris,
    
    46 Cal. 3d 1
    , 
    756 P.2d 843
    , 
    249 Cal. Rptr. 119
    (1988), and People v. Green, 
    27 Cal. 3d 1
    , 
    609 P.2d 468
    , 
    164 Cal. Rptr. 1
    (1980), which determined that its capital punishment statute is
    inapplicable when the felony that accompanies the murder is " 'merely incidental to the murder.' "
    
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    , quoting 
    Green, 27 Cal. 3d at 61
    , 609 P.2d at 
    505, 164 Cal. Rptr. at 38
    . Thomas found that the language of the California statute is different from Illinois's statutes
    because it permits the imposition of the death penalty when the jury concluded that the defendant
    committed murder " 'during the commission or attempted commission of' " several enumerated
    felonies. 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    , quoting 
    Green, 27 Cal. 3d at 59
    , 609 P.2d at 504, 164 Cal.
    Rptr. at 37. This language contemplates a shorter time frame than does the " 'in the course of' "
    language found in the Illinois statute. 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 535
    , quoting Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch.
    38, par. 9-1(b)(6). "That is, we think that the Illinois statute recognizes that the crime of murder
    is not necessarily complete when the victim's heart stops beating, but rather the crime continues
    through the time that the perpetrator conceals the crime and flees the scene." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 535
    . "The statute imparts no significance to the precise timing of the *** various felonies
    defendant commits." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 535
    . Accordingly, the court concluded that a
    defendant is eligible for the death penalty if he commits murder and one of the specifically
    enumerated felonies either simultaneously or as part of the same criminal episode. 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 535
    .
    -23-
    1-07-2516
    Other Illinois cases have ruled similarly to Thomas. For example, in People v.
    Richardson, 
    123 Ill. 2d 322
    (1988), our supreme court addressed the applicability of the death
    penalty if the murder was committed "in the course of" an armed robbery. Richardson, 
    123 Ill. 2d
    at 359, citing Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, par. 9-1(b)(6)©). The defendant announced a
    robbery as he fired the first shot, then rifled through the cash register before he left the store. The
    court rejected the defendant's argument that the shooting was not committed "in the course" of
    the armed robbery because the shooting took place before the robbery began. The court held that
    "[j]ust as the phrase 'in the course of' does not require that defendant complete one of the other
    felonies in order to be eligible for the death sentence [citation], we also believe that it does not
    require that the armed robbery commence prior to the fatal gunshot." Richardson, 
    123 Ill. 2d
    at
    359. The court continued, "[T]he precise timing of the offenses is not necessarily indicative of
    defendant's intent. The jury concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant committed both
    a murder and an armed robbery, which offenses occurred essentially simultaneously."
    Richardson, 
    123 Ill. 2d
    at 359. See also People v. Armstrong, 
    183 Ill. 2d 130
    (1998); People v.
    Hampton, 
    149 Ill. 2d 71
    (1992); People v. Flores, 
    128 Ill. 2d 66
    (1989); People v. Ramirez, 
    98 Ill. 2d 439
    (1983) (all involving felony murder based on armed robbery). Our courts have
    applied the same reasoning to home invasion (People v. Sample, 
    326 Ill. App. 3d 914
    (2001)),
    murder "in the course of" burglary (People v. Pitsonbarger, 
    142 Ill. 2d 353
    (1990)), and murder
    "in the course of" aggravated kidnapping (People v. Nitz, 
    143 Ill. 2d 82
    (1991)).
    Here, defendant committed both murder and aggravated criminal sexual assault, and these
    crimes occurred "essentially simultaneously." It was sufficient that the State proved the elements
    -24-
    1-07-2516
    of the crimes were part of the "same criminal episode." 
    Thomas, 137 Ill. 2d at 534
    . "To parse
    the crimes out into bounded acts would contradict the reality that these crimes were intertwined
    both temporally and functionally." 
    Sample, 326 Ill. App. 3d at 928
    .
    These cases, as well as Hendrix, are consistent with the majority of jurisdictions, which
    have adopted the "ongoing criminal assault rule." For example, in McLaughlin, the defendant
    argued that he was not guilty of rape because he raped the victim after he stabbed her. Noting
    that Missouri's rape statute did not expressly address whether the victim must be alive at the time
    of penetration, the court, like "the majority of jurisdictions to address this issue," adopted the
    "ongoing criminal assault" rule. 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 268
    . "Under that rule, where the
    forcible compulsion that leads to the rape begins before the death of the victim, the defendant is
    guilty of rape even if the jury believes defendant killed the victim before penetration or before
    the sexual assault was concluded." 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 268
    . The court noted important
    policy reasons why the death of the victim during the assault should not preclude a conviction for
    rape:
    " 'We are likewise unable to embrace the notion that the fortuitous circumstance,
    for the rapist, that death may have preceded penetration by an instant, negates
    commission of the crime of aggravated rape and reduces it to a relatively minor
    offense associated with erotic attraction to dead bodies. Reading the "live only"
    requirement into the statute encourages rapists to kill their victims, in our
    opinion.' " (Emphasis in original.) 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 268
    -69, quoting
    State v. Brobeck, 
    751 S.W.2d 828
    , 832 (Tenn. 1988).
    -25-
    1-07-2516
    Accordingly, the court concluded:
    "It is rape where defendant both kills and sexually assaults a victim in a single,
    continuous act, or in a series or closely related acts, and where, as part of the
    course of conduct, defendant uses forcible compulsion against the victim, even if
    portions of the rape, including penetration, occur once the victim has already been
    killed." 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 269
    .
    See also State v. Honie, 
    2002 UT 4
    , ¶49, 
    57 P.3d 977
    ; Commonwealth v. Waters, 
    420 Mass. 276
    , 279-80, 
    649 N.E.2d 724
    , 726 (1995); State v. Gallegos, 
    178 Ariz. 1
    , 9, 
    870 P.2d 1097
    ,
    1105 (1994); 
    Brobeck, 751 S.W.2d at 832
    ; Lipham v. State, 
    257 Ga. 808
    , 809-10, 
    364 S.E.2d 840
    , 842 (1988); Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    722 S.W.2d 892
    , 894 (Ky. 1987); State v. Usry, 
    205 Conn. 298
    , 317-18, 
    533 A.2d 212
    , 222 (1987); Lewis v. State, 
    889 So. 2d 623
    , 683 (Ala. Crim.
    App. 2003); State v. Jones, 
    308 N.J. Super. 174
    , 189, 
    705 A.2d 805
    , 813 (1998); State v.
    Collins, 
    66 Ohio App. 3d 438
    , 443, 
    585 N.E.2d 532
    , 536 (1990).
    McLaughlin and Lipham analogized to when an armed robber first kills his victim and
    then takes her money. "Even though the victim is dead when the robbery is consummated, and
    thereafter can no longer be 'forced' to do anything, it is still armed robbery because the theft
    continues and is able to be accomplished due to the deadly earlier force." 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 269
    ; 
    Lipham, 257 Ga. at 809-10
    , 364 S.E.2d at 842.
    In addition, committing a rape and a murder in a single, continuous act or in a series or
    closely related acts is unlike happening upon a corpse and engaging in sex with it. 
    Collins, 66 Ohio App. 3d at 443
    , 585 N.E.2d at 536; 
    Lipham, 257 Ga. at 810
    , 364 S.E.2d at 842-43. Even
    -26-
    1-07-2516
    assuming that defendant killed Mary first and then raped her, it is illogical to assume that he
    killed her, waited around for a while as she bled profusely on his apartment floor, and then
    raped her.
    Illinois has been following the majority of jurisdictions to address the ongoing criminal
    assault rule, as exemplified by Illinois cases involving other crimes. Pursuant to Hendrix and
    the Richardson line of cases, we hold that the State was not required to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that Mary was alive at the time defendant sexually assaulted her since the
    murder and sexual assault occurred "essentially simultaneously."
    2. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Even assuming that the State was required to prove that Mary was alive at the time of the
    sexual assault, we would find that it proved beyond a reasonable doubt that she was alive at the
    time of the assault. A person commits criminal sexual assault if he "commits an act of sexual
    penetration by the use of force or threat of force." 720 ILCS 5/12-13(a)(1) (West 2006).
    "Sexual penetration" is defined as follows:
    "any contact, however slight, between the sex organ or anus of one person
    by an object, the sex organ, mouth or anus of another person, or any intrusion,
    however slight, of any part of the body of one person *** into the sex organ or
    anus of another person, including but not limited to *** anal penetration.
    Evidence of emission of semen is not required to prove sexual penetration." 720
    ILCS 5/12-12(f) (West 2006).
    Further, a person commits aggravated criminal sexual assault if he commits criminal sexual
    -27-
    1-07-2516
    assault and: uses a dangerous weapon, causes bodily harm to the victim, acts in such a manner
    as to threaten or endanger the life of the victim, or perpetrates the sexual assault during the
    course of the commission of any other felony. 720 ILCS 5/12-14(a)(1) through (4) (West 2006).
    When a court considers a challenge to a criminal conviction based on the sufficiency of
    the evidence, its function is not to retry the defendant. People v. Milka, 
    211 Ill. 2d 150
    , 178
    (2004). Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
    the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Woods, 
    214 Ill. 2d 455
    , 470 (2005). Under this
    standard, a reviewing court must draw all reasonable inferences from the record in favor of the
    prosecution. People v. Bush, 
    214 Ill. 2d 318
    , 326 (2005). A court of review will not overturn
    the fact finder's verdict unless "the proof is so improbable or unsatisfactory that there exists a
    reasonable doubt of the defendant=s guilt." People v. Maggette, 
    195 Ill. 2d 336
    , 353 (2001).
    Defendant's semen was present in Stachowicz's underwear, and he could not be excluded
    as a contributor to the male profile from the rectal swab. The vaginal swab showed the presence
    of sperm, and while there was a mistake with that sample, Mary's husband testified that they last
    had sex a week before her death. In addition, the side zipper on her pants was not zipped, which
    suggested that she did not dress herself. The evidence also showed that defendant used force
    during the sexual assault. See 720 ILCS 5/12-13(a)(1) (West 2006). Mary was stabbed 11
    times in her head and neck. She was strangled, 10 of her ribs were fractured, and there were
    abrasions on her arms and elbows. The medical examiner testified that her rib fractures and the
    bruise to her groin were consistent with a sexual assault.
    -28-
    1-07-2516
    Defendant nevertheless claims that his conviction should be reversed because there was
    no proof that Mary was alive when he raped her. Defendant contends that Mary must have been
    dead when he raped her because there was no evidence of vaginal or rectal tearing or bruising,
    her clothing was not torn, and he confessed to the murder but not to a sexual assault.
    While there was no evidence of injuries to Mary's vagina or rectum, the medical examiner
    testified that sexual assault can occur without any injuries to the body. Further, Mary gave birth
    four times, and each time a woman gives birth, the elasticity of the vagina is reduced, which, in
    turn, makes vaginal injuries less likely. See People v. Shum, 
    117 Ill. 2d 317
    , 356 (1987)
    (medical evidence is not required to prove rape).
    More important, there would have been no need for defendant to compress Mary's torso
    and break 10 of her ribs had she not been alive and struggling. In People v. Fisher, 
    169 Ill. App. 3d
    915 (1988), blood was found on the victim's pubic hair, and her bra was damaged, as if it had
    been forcibly removed. There was no evidence of injury to her breasts or genitalia, but there
    was blood on the defendant's underwear. The defendant was convicted of murder and attempted
    rape. On appeal, the defendant argued that his attempted rape conviction should be reversed
    because the victim was dead when he attempted to rape her. This court rejected the defendant's
    argument, finding that "if the victim was dead at the time of the attempted rape there would
    have been no need to engage in a violent struggle to disrobe and bind her." Fisher, 
    169 Ill. App. 3d
    at 922. As in Fisher, if Mary was dead when defendant sexually assaulted her, he would not
    have needed to compress her torso and break 10 of her ribs.
    3. Jury Instruction
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    1-07-2516
    Defendant next argues that, assuming the evidence was sufficient to show Mary was
    alive at the time of the sexual assault, the trial court erred in refusing defense counsel's
    instruction on this point. Defendant sought to have the jury instructed as follows: "When
    considering the charges involving sexual acts, you may not convict the defendant of Aggravated
    Criminal Sexual Assault or any murder charges referencing Aggravated Criminal Sexual
    Assault if you believe from the evidence that the sexual acts occurred after the death of Mary
    Stachowicz."
    The purpose of a jury instruction is to " ' "convey to the minds of the jury the correct
    principles of law applicable to the evidence submitted to it." ' " People v. Harris, 
    225 Ill. 2d 1
    ,
    43 (2007), quoting People v. Salazar, 
    126 Ill. 2d 424
    , 464 (1988), quoting People v. Gambony,
    
    402 Ill. 72
    (1948). Further, Supreme Court Rule 451(a) (210 Ill. 2d R. 451(a)) provides that
    whenever the pattern jury instructions contain an instruction applicable in a criminal case and
    the court determines that the jury should be instructed on the subject, the pattern instruction
    shall be used, unless the court determines that it does not accurately state the law. 210 Ill. 2d R.
    451(a); 
    Harris, 225 Ill. 2d at 43
    . An appellate court applies an abuse-of-discretion standard
    when reviewing a trial court's decisions relating to instructions. People v. Roberts, 
    351 Ill. App. 3d
    684, 690 (2004).
    There is no dispute that the jury was properly instructed as to aggravated criminal sexual
    assault. The court gave the jury Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, Nos. 7.01, 7.02,
    11.57, 11.58, 11.65, 11.65C, 11.65E, and 11.65F (4th ed. 2000), which adequately informed the
    jury of the definitions and elements of felony murder and aggravated criminal sexual assault.
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    1-07-2516
    Therefore, under Supreme Court Rule 451(a), the instructions were sufficient. While defendant
    contends that these instructions do not specify whether sexual acts committed on a deceased
    person qualify as criminal sexual assault, we found above that the State was not required to
    prove that Mary was alive at the time of the sexual assault.
    B. Burglary
    1. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    A person commits burglary "when without authority he knowingly enters or without
    authority remains within a building ***, or any part thereof, with intent to commit therein a
    felony or theft." 720 ILCS 5/19-1(a) (West 2006). Defendant contends that because the
    evidence showed that he had unlimited authority to be in the funeral home, the State failed to
    prove a lack of authority, as the statute requires. Defendant cites the testimony of Francine
    Sikorski that on November 13, 2002, defendant still had the keys to the funeral home and had
    the authority to be anywhere within the funeral home. Therefore, defendant argues, he had
    unlimited authority to be inside the funeral home. See People v. Reid, 
    179 Ill. 2d 297
    , 316-17
    (1997); People v. Taylor, 
    318 Ill. App. 3d 464
    , 473 (2000) (reversing home invasion conviction
    where defendant was an overnight guest at the apartment); People v. Moulton, 
    282 Ill. App. 3d 102
    (1996) (reversing conviction for home invasion where defendant was joint tenant of the
    dwelling).
    We note, however, that Sikorski's testimony was impeached by her admission that she
    "might" have told the police the night of the murder that she had fired defendant and Scacchitti,
    and other evidence was presented showing that she had fired the two men. Scacchitti also
    -31-
    1-07-2516
    testified that he and defendant had been fired and no longer entered the funeral home. We find
    that this conflicting testimony on the issue of authority was one for the jury to decide.
    Furthermore, Sikorski's testimony is insufficient to allow defendant to escape the
    parameters of the limited authority doctrine. The limited authority doctrine "states that authority
    to enter a building for a specific lawful purpose is vitiated when the wrongdoer departs from
    that purpose and commits a felony or theft." People v. Wilson, 
    155 Ill. 2d 374
    , 376 (1993). This
    is because if the entrant's intent to commit criminal acts therein had been "communicated to the
    owner at the time of entry, it would have resulted in the individual's being barred from the
    premises ab initio." People v. Bush, 
    157 Ill. 2d 248
    , 253-54 (1993).
    In People v. Woolsey, 
    24 Ill. App. 3d 1079
    (1975), the defendant, using a key given to
    him by his employer, entered his place of employment after working hours and took materials
    therefrom. The court affirmed the defendant's conviction for burglary and rejected his argument
    that he had authority to enter the building: " 'While unlimited consent to enter is always a
    defense against a charge of burglary ***, a consent limited as to place, time, or purpose is not a
    defense where entry occurs outside the limitations stated or implied.' " 
    Woolsey, 24 Ill. App. 3d at 1082
    , quoting Annot., 
    93 A.L.R. 2d 531
    , 537 (1964). The evidence supported the conclusion
    that the defendant's authority to enter the building was limited to those occasions necessary to
    further the employer's activities. 
    Woolsey, 24 Ill. App. 3d at 1082
    -83. Similarly, here,
    Sikorski's testimony could not support an acquittal on the basis that defendant had authority to
    enter or remain in the funeral home because any consent that may have been given was vitiated
    by defendant's series of criminal activities. The fact that defendant once worked at the funeral
    -32-
    1-07-2516
    home and sometimes used the door to the public business did not provide a blanket consent
    because whatever consent that remained was insufficient to excuse his unauthorized entry or
    remaining for the purposes of committing a theft.
    Defendant, citing People v. Meeker, 
    86 Ill. App. 3d 162
    (1980), and People v. Baker, 
    59 Ill. App. 3d 100
    (1978), contends that the limited authority doctrine does not apply to this case.
    However, Baker and Meeker are distinguishable on the basis that no evidence was presented to
    show the defendants' unauthorized entry in those cases. Here, on the other hand, the State
    presented evidence that defendant no longer worked at the funeral home, that the funeral home
    was not open to the public, and that the funeral home remained locked at all times except during
    visitations. In addition, defendant lived in an apartment above the funeral home, with a separate
    access door, not within the funeral home. Further, Scacchitti testified that he and defendant had
    been fired and no longer entered the funeral home.
    2. Jury Instruction
    Defendant argues that if this court finds the evidence sufficient to support his burglary
    conviction, it should still remand for retrial on that charge because an erroneous burglary
    instruction was given to the jury. Defendant was charged with one count of burglary based on
    an unlawful entry into the funeral home and predicated on an intent to commit theft. However,
    the jury was instructed that defendant was guilty of burglary if he "without authority remain[ed]
    within" the funeral home "with intent to commit therein the offense of theft or concealment of a
    homicidal death." Defendant contends that this instruction constructively amended the
    indictment because it changed the method of committing the burglary and broadened the
    -33-
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    possible mental states. He maintains that his fifth amendment rights have been violated, since
    "a person's right to notice of a charge and an opportunity to mount a defense in court is basic to
    our system of jurisprudence."
    The State contends that defendant waived this argument. At trial, defendant objected to
    the State's burglary instruction only on the basis of the limited authority doctrine, not because it
    broadened the indictment. See People v. Eyler, 
    133 Ill. 2d 173
    , 219 (1989) (specific objections
    waive all grounds not specified). Further, he did not raise this specific issue in his posttrial
    motion. To preserve a question for appellate review, both a trial objection and a written
    posttrial motion raising the issue are required. People v. Pinkney, 
    322 Ill. App. 3d 707
    , 715
    (2000).
    The doctrine of plain error serves as a " 'narrow and limited exception' " to the general
    rule of procedural default. People v. Szabo, 
    113 Ill. 2d 83
    , 94 (1986), quoting People v.
    Pastorino, 
    91 Ill. 2d 178
    , 188 (1982); 134 Ill. 2d R. 615(a). The plain-error doctrine bypasses
    normal forfeiture principles and allows a reviewing court to review an unpreserved error when
    either (1) the evidence is close, regardless of the seriousness of the error, or (2) the error is
    serious, regardless of the closeness of the evidence. People v. Herron, 
    215 Ill. 2d 167
    , 186-87
    (2005). Under the first prong, "the defendant must prove 'prejudicial error.' That is, the
    defendant must show *** that the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone threatened
    to tip the scales of justice against him." 
    Herron, 215 Ill. 2d at 187
    . Under the second prong,
    "the defendant must prove that there was plain error and that the error was so serious that it
    affected the fairness of the defendant’s trial and challenged the integrity of the judicial process."
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    Herron, 215 Ill. 2d at 187
    . "In both instances, the burden of persuasion remains with the
    defendant." 
    Herron, 215 Ill. 2d at 187
    . Defendant contends that both prongs of the plain-error
    rule apply because the evidence of burglary was closely balanced and he was convicted based on
    a theory of burglary that was never presented to the grand jury.
    We agree with the State that the evidence of burglary, discussed above, was
    overwhelming. Defendant had been fired from the funeral home, he and Ray had a fight that
    morning about defendant's life path, defendant admitted that he planned to take money and
    anything valuable from Ray and the funeral home to buy a ticket to Las Vegas, and he entered
    the funeral home and took money from Mary's purse.
    As for the second prong of the plain-error rule, both the United States and Illinois
    constitutions provide a criminal defendant with the fundamental right to be informed of the
    nature and cause of the charges against him. People v. Likar, 
    329 Ill. App. 3d 654
    , 660 (2002),
    citing U.S. Const., amend. VI; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, '8. "When the sufficiency of a charging
    instrument is challenged for the first time on appeal, this court is called upon to determine
    whether the charging instrument apprised the defendant of the precise offense charged with
    enough specificity to allow preparation of his defense and to allow pleading of the judgment as a
    bar to future prosecution arising out of the same conduct." 
    Likar, 329 Ill. App. 3d at 660
    . In the
    instant case, the indictment sufficiently apprised defendant of the offense charged with enough
    specificity to allow preparation of his defense and to plead the judgment as a bar to future
    prosecution for the same conduct.
    C. Batson
    -35-
    1-07-2516
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in determining that he failed to show a
    prima facie case of discrimination under Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 
    90 L. Ed. 2d 69
    , 
    106 S. Ct. 1712
    (1986), in the State's use of peremptory challenges to exclude four African
    American venirepersons.
    Jury selection took place over two days; the parties each had 14 peremptory challenges,
    and on each day, 28 prospective jurors were questioned. On the first day, the State exercised
    peremptory challenges against three venirepersons: Susan Farese, who was Caucasian, and Juan
    Munoz and Judith McCain Brown, whose races are not known. On the second day, the State
    exercised peremptory challenges against three African American venirepersons: Patricia
    Wilkerson, Robert Joyner, and Richard Monroe. After the jury was seated, the State exercised a
    peremptory challenge against a potential venireperson for one of the four alternate positions,
    Clifford Haywood, an African American.
    Defense counsel made a Batson challenge. The assistant State's Attorney argued that
    defendant failed to make a prima facie case of discrimination because defendant is Hispanic and
    Caucasian, there were no African American attorneys or witnesses in the case, and the defense
    had used its six previous peremptory challenges against Caucasians. The court noted that "by
    my count there are four African Americans, one Hispanic, and I believe there are two of Asian
    descent." The court denied the Batson motion, concluding, "I think *** you're looking at what
    we are doing today, not the entire jury selection process." In its response to defendant's motion
    for new trial, the State represented that the final jury consisted of six Caucasians, four African
    Americans, one Hispanic, and one Asian American.
    -36-
    1-07-2516
    In Batson, the United States Supreme Court "held that in a criminal case the fourteenth
    amendment=s equal protection clause prohibits the State from using a peremptory challenge to
    exclude a prospective juror based solely on the basis of his or her race." People v. Macias, 
    371 Ill. App. 3d 632
    , 645 (2007). The Batson Court established a three-step process for evaluating
    claims of discrimination in jury selection. The defendant must first make a prima facie case
    showing that the State exercised its peremptory challenges on the basis of race. People v.
    Easley, 
    192 Ill. 2d 307
    , 323 (2000). If the defendant makes a prima facie showing, the burden
    shifts to the State to articulate a race-neutral reason for excusing the venireperson. 
    Easley, 192 Ill. 2d at 323-24
    . When the State has articulated its reasons for excusing the venirepersons, the
    trial court determines whether the defendant has satisfied his burden of establishing purposeful
    discrimination. 
    Easley, 192 Ill. 2d at 324
    .
    "It is settled that a Batson prima facie case cannot be established merely by the numbers
    of black venirepersons stricken by the State." People v. Peeples, 
    155 Ill. 2d 422
    , 469 (1993).
    Rather, the issue is whether, in consideration of "all relevant circumstances," a prima facie case
    of discrimination has been established. People v. Coulter, 
    230 Ill. App. 3d 209
    , 222 (1992).
    "Relevant circumstances" include, but are not limited to, the following: (1) racial identity
    between the defendant and the excluded venirepersons, (2) a pattern of strikes against African
    American venire members, (3) disproportionate use of strikes against such members, (4) the
    level of African American representation in the venire as compared to the jury, (5) prosecutorial
    questions and statements during voir dire and while exercising challenges, (6) whether the
    excluded venirepersons were a heterogeneous group sharing race as their only common
    -37-
    1-07-2516
    characteristic, and (7) the races of the defendant, victim, and witnesses. People v. Williams, 
    173 Ill. 2d 48
    , 71 (1996). The trial court's determination as to whether a prima facie case of
    discrimination has been shown will not be disturbed on appeal unless it is against the manifest
    weight of the evidence. 
    Williams, 173 Ill. 2d at 71
    .
    The first relevant circumstance is whether defendant and the excluded venirepersons
    share the same race. Here, there is no racial identity between defendant and the stricken jurors.
    Defendant is Caucasian and Hispanic, while the excluded jurors are African American.
    Although this factor is relevant, it is not dispositive in determining whether a prima facie case
    exists. 
    Williams, 173 Ill. 2d at 72
    .
    The next relevant circumstance is whether the State used a disproportionate number of
    peremptory challenges to exclude African Americans. Four of the seven panel members struck
    by the State were African American. In People v. Hughes, 
    257 Ill. App. 3d 633
    (1993), and
    People v. Nicholson, 
    218 Ill. App. 3d 273
    , 283 (1991), the use of five out of seven strikes
    against African Americans constituted a pattern of strikes. Defendant also cites cases where the
    State's use of five of six peremptory challenges against African Americans constituted a pattern
    of strikes. These cases are distinguishable, however, where the State in those cases used all but
    one of its strikes on African Americans versus just over half here. See People v. Nicholson, 
    218 Ill. App. 3d 273
    , 283 (1991); People v. Lockhart, 
    201 Ill. App. 3d 700
    , 710 (1990).
    Next, it must be determined whether there was a pattern of strikes against African
    American venire members. This inquiry is different from the question of whether the State used
    a disproportionate number of peremptory challenges to exclude African Americans. While the
    -38-
    1-07-2516
    proportionality analysis compares the number of peremptories used against African Americans
    versus the number used against Caucasians, the pattern analysis compares the number of African
    Americans that could have been, but were not, struck by the State. People v. Lann, 
    261 Ill. App. 3d
    456, 463 (1994). Before exercising peremptory challenges against Wilkerson, Joyner,
    Monroe, and Haywood, the State had accepted two panels that included four African Americans.
    Our supreme court has previously found that when a Batson claim is made regarding
    discrimination against a particular race, the unchallenged presence of jurors of that race on the
    seated jury tends to weaken the basis for a prima facie case of discrimination. People v. Rivera,
    
    221 Ill. 2d 481
    , 513 (2006).
    The fourth factor is the level of African American representation in the venire as
    compared to the jury. We first note a discrepancy in the record as to the racial makeup of the
    final jury. The trial court stated that the final jury consisted of four African Americans, one
    Hispanic, and two Asians. In its response to defendant's motion for new trial, the State claimed
    that the jury consisted of six Caucasians, four African Americans, one Hispanic, and one Asian
    American; on appeal, the parties continue to cite these numbers. Even applying the proportions
    cited by the parties on appeal, however, we still find that the empaneled jury had higher
    percentage of African Americans than the venire.
    Excluding those venirepersons excused for cause (People v. Evans, 
    125 Ill. 2d 50
    , 65
    (1988)), the venire contained 39 prospective jurors. Of those 39, 21 were Caucasian (53.8 %);
    11 were African American (28.2 %); 6 were Hispanic (15.4 %); and 1 was Asian American (2.6
    %). According to the parties, the final 12-person jury consisted of 6 Caucasians (50 %); 4
    -39-
    1-07-2516
    African Americans (33.3 %); 1 Hispanic (8.3 %); and 1 Asian American (8.3 %). Thus, a larger
    percentage of African Americans served on the jury than were present in the venire. See 
    Evans, 125 Ill. 2d at 65
    (empaneled jury had higher percentage of African Americans than the venire).
    This court must also analyze questions and statements made during he prosecutor during
    voir dire and while exercising challenges. Defendant does not allege, and the record does not
    indicate, that the assistant State's Attorneys' statements or questions to the jury were racially
    motivated.
    Another factor that has been taken into consideration in determining whether a defendant
    has presented a prima facie case is the race of the defendant, the victim, and the witnesses.
    
    Williams, 173 Ill. 2d at 71
    . The victim was Caucasian, and defendant is Caucasian and
    Hispanic. The attorneys were Caucasian, and the witnesses were Caucasian, African American,
    Hispanic, and Asian. There were no racial overtones in the case. See 
    Evans, 125 Ill. 2d at 65
    -
    66 (any racial issue inherent in the selection of the jury was minimal where the case did not
    involve "an interracial crime in which specific racial groups would be prone to take sides of
    prejudice").
    The final relevant circumstance is whether the excluded venirepersons were a
    heterogeneous group sharing race as their only common characteristic. Defendant claims that
    the four stricken jurors shared race as their only common characteristic, as one was widowed,
    one was married, one was single, and one had a domestic partner; two had been victims of
    property offenses, while two had not been victims of any crimes; and "they each had different
    kids of jobs and interests." Defendant also compares the four stricken jurors= qualifications to
    -40-
    1-07-2516
    those of the seated jurors; he claims that Joyner was similar to Anthony Magnifico, a seated
    juror, because both were married with children, worked as skilled laborers, and had been a
    victim or married to a victim of a property offense for which no one was arrested. He compares
    Joyner and Monroe, who had food-service experience, to seated juror Loretta Jackson, who was
    studying to be a chef. However, three of the four stricken jurors had children, none had been
    convicted of a crimes, and both Joyner and Haywood were in security-type jobs without formal
    law enforcement training.
    While defendant makes much of the fact that the State used its final four challenges
    against African Americans, he cites no case law holding that this pattern suggests
    discrimination. In addition, it is well established that the court must consider "the totality of the
    relevant facts" and "all relevant circumstances" surrounding the strikes. People v. Davis, 
    231 Ill. 2d 349
    , 360 (2008). Thus, it was proper for the trial court to consider the entire jury
    selection process, not only, as the trial court noted, "what we are doing today." Further, the
    State argued in response to defendant's Batson challenge at trial that defendant used 13 of his 16
    peremptory challenges to strike Caucasians, and after the eleventh juror was accepted, defendant
    struck 10 Caucasians.
    Defendant also argues that the trial court used the incorrect standard in ruling on his
    Batson motion. He contends that the trial court made a conclusory determination that no
    discrimination had occurred without first considering whether he had presented a prima facie
    case of discrimination. He cites People v. Hogan, 
    389 Ill. App. 3d 91
    (2009), which concluded
    that the trial court did not follow the three-step procedure delineated by Batson as to the
    -41-
    1-07-2516
    defendant's first Batson motion where it failed to ask the defendant to make a prima facie
    showing before making a judicial determination. 
    Hogan, 389 Ill. App. 3d at 101
    . Unlike the
    defendant in Hogan, defendant in the instant case first argued that a prima facie case of
    discrimination was established because he was a minority, the last four peremptory challenges
    used by the State were against minorities, and there was nothing in their backgrounds that
    distinguished them from the seated jurors. The State responded that a prima facie case had not
    been established because defendant was not a minority, the State did not engage in a pattern of
    strikes against African Americans, and the last six jurors struck by defendant were Caucasian.
    The trial court analyzed the "entire jury selection process" and denied the motion. Therefore,
    the trial court did not collapse the three-step Batson procedure.
    D. State's Closing
    Next, defendant argues that he was denied a fair and impartial trial by the State's closing
    arguments, which argued facts not in evidence, urged the jury to reach a verdict out of outrage,
    and disparaged defendant and his counsel. He contends that the cumulative effect of the
    prosecutor's improper comments requires reversal of his convictions.
    "[D]efendant faces a substantial burden in attempting to achieve reversal [of his
    conviction] based upon improper remarks made during closing argument." People v. Williams,
    
    332 Ill. App. 3d 254
    , 266 (2002). Prosecutors enjoy wide latitude in closing arguments. People
    v. Caffey, 
    205 Ill. 2d 52
    , 131 (2001). In reviewing comments made at closing arguments, this
    court asks whether they "engender substantial prejudice against a defendant such that it is
    impossible to say whether or not a verdict of guilt resulted from them." People v. Wheeler, 226
    -42-
    1-07-2516
    Ill. 2d 92, 123 (2007). A reviewing court will not reverse a jury=s verdict based on improper
    remarks made during closing arguments unless the comments resulted in substantial prejudice to
    the defendant and constituted a material factor in his conviction. People v. Brooks, 
    345 Ill. App. 3d
    945, 951 (2004).
    Defendant contends that the State engaged in speculation and misstated evidence when it
    argued: (1) that Mary was washing dishes when she caught defendant going through her purse,
    (2) that she threatened to call the police; (3) that he grabbed her and dragged her upstairs, and
    (4) that Sikorski removed any evidence of a struggle by cleaning the funeral home. "To be
    proper, closing argument comments on evidence must be either proved by direct evidence or be
    a fair and reasonable inference from the facts and circumstances proven." People v. Hood, 
    229 Ill. App. 3d 202
    , 218 (1992).
    The argument that defendant was caught going through Mary's purse was supported by
    several facts, including that money was missing from her purse, that defendant admitted taking
    money from her purse, and that her purse was in an area where cash was hidden inside the
    funeral home. The evidence also supported the argument that Mary was washing dishes when
    something interrupted her, as Sikorski testified that there was a clean dish and a dish towel on
    the table near Mary's jacket and purse.
    The State further responds that the argument that defendant grabbed Mary and dragged
    her upstairs after she threatened to call the police was based on defendant's fictional account of
    two Hispanic men trying to burglarize his apartment, portions of which were truthful if
    "defendant's name [is] inserted into that story." For example, defendant told Detective
    -43-
    1-07-2516
    McDonald that he believed the two men climbed up the garage and entered his apartment
    through the rear window. Defendant stated that Mary probably heard them as they moved the
    safe and threatened to call the police. The offenders, according to defendant's fictional account,
    probably left the apartment, grabbed Mary, and dragged her back to the apartment, where they
    beat her to death when she violently fought back. Defendant also eventually admitted to
    Detective Rutherford that he grabbed Mary by her hair and dragged her into the apartment.
    Similarly, the prosecutor's "desperate inference" that there were scuff marks based on a
    photograph of the staircase leading to defendant's apartment was supported by defendant's story
    that the two Hispanic men dragged Mary up the stairs; the photo showing black marks on the
    staircase; and defendant's admission that he "dragged" Mary into his apartment.
    As for defendant's contention that the prosecutor speculated as to why Mary had to have
    been brought upstairs to be killed, we note that, in his "fictional" account, defendant stated that
    the Hispanic men brought Mary upstairs to avoid getting blood on the funeral-home carpet. In
    addition, the front doors are made of glass and face a busy road and a church; the crime was
    committed in broad daylight; and a funeral, for which clothes were being dropped off, was
    scheduled for the next day. Furthermore, the argument in rebuttal that Sikorski removed
    evidence of a struggle in the funeral home could be construed as a response to defendant's
    closing argument that "there wasn't one speck of evidence to even suggest that a struggle took
    place anywhere on the first floor of that funeral home." The State noted that the funeral home
    was going to be used for a wake the next day, and "Don't you think Francine is going to clean
    that funeral home?" In his confession, defendant said he used three rolls of paper towels to
    -44-
    1-07-2516
    clean up the victim's blood, put three plastic bags over her head, and wrapped her body in a
    sheet to staunch the flow of her blood.
    Finally, defendant contends that the State ignored uncontested evidence when it argued
    that the struggle occurred in the kitchen. However, defendant himself admitted in one of his
    statements that part of the struggle occurred in the kitchen. Furthermore, Mary had injuries to
    her elbows consistent with friction with a hard surface, and it is reasonable to assume that if
    defendant had raped and stabbed Mary in the den, there would have been more blood on the
    furniture, boxes, and rug.
    Defendant argues that the State ignored the "one account of events" that was in
    evidence--i.e., defendant's videotaped statement--and created a scenario that was unsupported,
    or even contradicted by, the trial evidence. However, the jury was not required to believe the
    entirety of defendant's videotaped statement, especially when defendant previously lied to the
    police and the evidence contradicts his statement. See People v. Washington, 
    375 Ill. App. 3d 243
    , 259 (2007).
    Defendant also argues that the State urged the jury to reach a verdict out of outrage when
    it repeatedly disparaged defendant and defense counsel. See People v. Blue, 
    189 Ill. 2d 99
    , 129-
    30 (2000); People v. Hope, 
    116 Ill. 2d 265
    , 278 (1986). For example, the prosecutor twice
    asked the jury to consider what was going through the minds of Mary's family members. First,
    he stated, "Can you imagine the worst fears for a loved one who has gone missing? The worst
    fears you can ever imagine. Take the worst fears of all the loved ones of Mary combined and
    you can't even begin to imagine the horror this man inflicted on her." The court sustained
    -45-
    1-07-2516
    defendant's objection. Seconds later, the prosecutor stated, "Think about what was going
    through the family members' minds while she was in those floor boards. Think about and
    contrast it to defendant's own actions." The trial court's sustaining defendant's objection to the
    first comment and instruction the jury to disregard the comment cured any prejudice. People v.
    Martinson, 
    89 Ill. App. 3d 66
    , 68 (1980). Further, defendant did not object to the second
    comment, nor did he include it in his posttrial motion. The second comment, which was brief,
    can also be considered a reasonable inference in support of defendant's consciousness of guilt,
    particularly about the concealment of a homicidal death.
    The second brief reference was both shorter and less prejudicial than the arguments in
    Blue and Hope, the cases that defendant relies on. In Blue, the State argued that the victim's
    parents " 'need to hear from you that even though they suffered the worst nightmare a parent
    could suffer, that they had to bury their child, they need to hear from you that they will get
    justice.' " 
    Blue, 189 Ill. 2d at 128
    . The State also argued that the victim's daughter " 'needs to
    hear *** that daddy didn't die in vain.' " 
    Blue, 189 Ill. 2d at 128
    . In Hope, the State elicited
    testimony from the victim's wife that she had three children, age 10 or younger, and identified
    photos of the victim and his family. In closing, the State referred to the victim's family, stating,
    " 'Little did [the victim] know that when he said good-bye to his wife, that would be the last
    time he saw her alive ***.' " 
    Hope, 116 Ill. 2d at 277
    .
    Defendant also argues that the prosecutor improperly invited the jurors to put themselves
    in Mary's mind during the rape. This argument was relevant to rebut consent to the sexual
    assault, as well as Mary's submission to the assault, as illustrated by her mental state at the time
    -46-
    1-07-2516
    of the assault.
    Defendant next argues that the prosecutor improperly called him a "monster" five times.
    After the first reference, the trial court overruled defendant's objection. The State proceeded,
    "Right here over here is the monster, folks. Not because I'm saying it, because he's saying it.
    And he's never been more right." Later, the prosecutor said, "You can take confidence in
    knowing it's this monster who deposited that DNA." The trial court sustained defendant's
    objection to calling him a monster this time, and the State went on to say, "He called himself a
    monster. That's the evidence." The State further argued, "When you look at this evidence, you
    come to one conclusion and that is he is evil." The State also accused defendant of "playing the
    blame game" by attempting to "blame mommy" after Mary's body was found: "Okay, I had a bad
    childhood. Great, I guess I can rape, rob, and kill now and blame mommy if I get caught."
    "A closing argument must serve a purpose beyond inflaming the emotions of the jury."
    People v. Nicholas, 
    218 Ill. 2d 104
    , 121 (2005). Therefore, a prosecutor may not "characterize
    the defendant as an 'evil' person or cast the jury's decision as a choice between 'good and evil.' "
    
    Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d at 121
    . A prosecutor may, however, "comment unfavorably on the evil
    effects of the crime and urge the jury to administer the law without fear, when such argument is
    based on competent and pertinent evidence." 
    Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d at 121
    -22. In Nicholas, the
    court found no error when the prosecutor argued, " 'And when she screams, please, don't, he
    pulls the trigger, and pulls the trigger again, and pulls the trigger again, and pulls the trigger
    again, pure evil.' " 
    Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d at 113
    . "Pure evil" referred to the defendant's actions of
    getting his gun, hunting his mother in the street, shooting her four times, stashing the gun,
    -47-
    1-07-2516
    returning to bed, and displaying little concern about her death. 
    Nicholas, 218 Ill. 2d at 113
    .
    Here, the State claims that the words "monster" and "evil" accurately describe
    defendant's actions. Further, defendant injected the term "monster" into the proceedings by
    calling himself that in his note to Scacchitti and in his videotaped statement. Indeed, the
    prosecutor stated more than once in closing that it was defendant who called himself a monster.
    In addition, the comment about the "blame game" was directed at defendant's statement that he
    saw his mother's face immediately before he stabbed Mary, and it responds to a major theme in
    his case, i.e., that he was less culpable because of the abuse he suffered as a child. The State
    clarified this position when it next stated, "Really? That's an insult to anybody who ever had a
    tough childhood."
    Defendant also argues that the State mocked his defense and ridiculed defense counsel.
    The prosecutor commented regarding defense counsel's cross-examination of the State's DNA
    expert, "In this case you heard a lot of questions about DNA ad nauseum" and, "So for all future
    rapists out there make sure you kill your victim." The State responds that the first comment was
    an accurate description of the cross-examination because defense counsel spent a considerable
    amount of time questioning the forensic scientist regarding the statistical information linking
    defendant's DNA profile to the material recovered from Mary's body. It further contends that it
    was responding to the defense theory by conveying the strength of the scientific evidence that
    defendant was ignoring. Regarding the second comment, it was made in response to defendant's
    argument, which was the same as that before this court, that sexually assaulting a dead person
    does not constitute sexual assault. The assistant State's Attorney's argument expressed the same
    -48-
    1-07-2516
    concern as did the court in 
    McLaughlin, 265 S.W.3d at 268
    -69, as previously discussed. In any
    event, the trial court sustained defendant's objection.
    Defendant also contends that the State "mocked the very idea to raising defenses to the
    non-murder charges." For example, the prosecutor argued:
    "If Nicholas Gutierrez or when Nicholas Gutierrez murdered Mary
    Stachowicz and stuck her in the floor boards, Mary Stachowicz still–the only one
    that could have stopped Nicholas Gutierrez from taking that purse was Mary
    Stachowicz. How did he stop her from doing that? By killing her and putting her
    in the floor boards. That doesn't give you a free robbery to go down--a free crime
    to go down and take the property."
    Defendant argues that characterized the defense mounted as a "request for a free crime." See
    People v. Kuntu, 
    196 Ill. 2d 105
    , 145 (2001) (the trial court erred in allowing the State to argue
    that not sentencing the defendant to death would be like giving him five free murders). The
    State contends that it was simply responding to defendant's theory and explaining that the
    application of force can occur before or after the taking of the property as long as it is part of a
    continuous course of conduct. Further, the jury acquitted defendant of robbery and armed
    robbery, so it is unclear how this comment could have prejudiced him.
    Finally, defendant claims that the State twice improperly referred to his defense as
    "splitting hairs." The State responds that it was properly challenging the credibility of his theory
    as he attempted to parse out the force requirement of different offenses in an effort to eliminate
    his guilt on all offenses. People v. Kirchner, 
    194 Ill. 2d 502
    , 549 (2000).
    -49-
    1-07-2516
    We find that the comments that the state made during closing arguments were not
    improper. Further, they did not result in substantial prejudice to the defendant, nor did they
    constitute a material factor in his conviction. See Brooks, 
    345 Ill. App. 3d
    at 951.
    E. Sentence
    Defendant argues that the trial court, in sentencing him to life imprisonment for the
    murder, failed to give adequate weight to the mitigating factors of his age, lack of significant
    criminal history, abusive childhood, mental illnesses stemming from that abuse, and
    rehabilitative potential. Defendant requests that this court reduce his sentence pursuant to
    Supreme Court Rule 615(b)(4) (134 Ill. 2d R. 615(b)(4)).
    The sentencing decisions of a trial court are entitled to great deference and weight
    because "a trial judge is in a far better position than an appellate court to fashion an appropriate
    sentence" based on firsthand consideration of the defendant's credibility, demeanor, moral
    character, and other relevant factors. People v. Govea, 
    299 Ill. App. 3d 76
    , 91 (1998), citing
    People v. Perruquet, 
    68 Ill. 2d 149
    , 154 (1977). Accordingly, a trial court has wide latitude in
    determining and weighing factors in mitigation or aggravation in imposing a sentence. People
    v. Madura, 
    257 Ill. App. 3d 735
    , 739 (1994). When the imposed sentence falls within the
    statutory guidelines, it will not be disturbed unless its imposition constitutes an abuse of
    discretion. 
    Madura, 257 Ill. App. 3d at 739-40
    .
    A reviewing court will not engage in the reweighing of sentencing factors. People v.
    Cagle, 
    277 Ill. App. 3d 29
    , 32 (1996). "We will presume the trial court considered all
    mitigating evidence before it, absent a contrary indication other than the sentence." Cagle, 277
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    1-07-2516
    Ill. App. 3d at 32. Additionally, mitigating factors do not automatically require the sentencing
    judge to give less than the maximum sentence. 
    Cagle, 277 Ill. App. 3d at 32
    . Where the
    sentencing court examines the presentence report, it is presumed that the court took into account
    the defendant's potential for rehabilitation. 
    Madura, 257 Ill. App. 3d at 739
    .
    First, defendant argues that the trial court did not give sufficient weight to his age. At
    the time of the murder, he was 19 years old and was, according to defendant, "finally on the path
    to maturity and independence." He contends that a defendant's youth, standing alone, is an
    important mitigating factor. He cites People v. Clark, 
    374 Ill. App. 3d 50
    , 75 (2007) (reducing
    sentence for murder from 44 to 36 years particularly in light of the defendant's age, 18 at the
    time of the murder, and lack of significant criminal background), People v. Brown, 
    243 Ill. App. 3d
    170, 176 (1993) (reducing sentence for murder from 45 to 30 years because the defendant
    was 20 at the time of the murder and lacked any prior criminal history), and People v.
    Maldonado, 
    240 Ill. App. 3d 470
    , 484 (1992). However, the supreme court has rejected the use
    of comparative sentencing from unrelated cases as a basis for claiming that a particular sentence
    is excessive or that the judge abused his discretion. People v. Fern, 
    189 Ill. 2d 48
    , 62 (1999).
    "We hold that a claim that a sentence is excessive must be based on the particular facts and
    circumstances of that case. If a sentence is appropriate given the particular facts of that case, it
    may not be attacked on the ground that a lesser sentence was imposed in a similar, but unrelated,
    case." 
    Fern, 189 Ill. 2d at 62
    .
    Next, defendant argues that his childhood was characterized by abuse and neglect, which
    further mitigated his sentence. While the State minimizes the evidence of abuse, claiming that
    -51-
    1-07-2516
    Carol Garza testified about five acts of "possible abuse or neglect," the evidence seems clear
    that he had a tumultuous, abusive childhood. The evidence also showed that after defendant
    was taken away from his mother, he spent time at nine difference facilities.
    In the presentence investigation (PSI) report, defendant reported being sexually abused
    by a babysitter and his mother's boyfriends. A few times, his mother made him drink until he
    passed out, and when he was nine, his mother beat him until he passed out. He had to observe
    his mother having sex and saw two men murdered by his mother's boyfriend.
    Defendant cites People v. Margentina, 
    261 Ill. App. 3d
    247 (1994), in support of his
    argument. In Margentina, the Third District found that the trial court abused its discretion in
    sentencing the defendant to 50 years for murder where he was 18 years old at the time of the
    murder, was raised in a "terrible" environment, and was provoked. While defendant here had a
    tumultuous childhood and was only 19 at the time of the murder, it is doubtful that he was
    provoked. In his statements to the police, defendant claimed that Mary followed him up the
    stairs to his apartment and asked, "Why don't you like girls? Why do you fuck boys?" Mary's
    family, however, testified that they never heard Mary use such language. Even assuming that
    events unfolded as defendant claimed, his action of grabbing Mary and dragging her into the
    apartment was disproportionate to what she did. Therefore, Margentina is distinguishable.
    Defendant also claims that he shows "promising rehabilitation potential" because the
    only tickets he received in jail arose from instances where an entire tier was ticketed; he was
    housed in the "Christian deck"; and at the time of the offense, he had helped out at the funeral
    home for two years and then found his own job at Subway. He also touts his lack of significant
    -52-
    1-07-2516
    criminal history. However, while he was not charged with and convicted of a plethora of violent
    crimes, his background shows violent tendencies.
    Most important, the trial court specifically discussed the evidence that defendant
    presented in mitigation. The judge noted defendant's age at the time of the murder; his good
    behavior in jail; his early placements in DCFS, where "there was very little, if any, supervision
    of these young children"; the impeachment of Sharon E.; and the physical and sexual abuse he
    experienced as a child. The court found, however, that the most significant factor in aggravation
    was "the actual facts of the case." In determining a sentence, the trial court must balance the
    interests of society against the ability of a defendant to be rehabilitated. People v. Tye, 323 Ill.
    App. 3d 872, 890 (2001). However, a trial court is not required to give greater weight to the
    rehabilitative potential of a defendant than to the seriousness of the offense. Govea, 299 Ill.
    App. 3d at 91. In fact, the seriousness of the crime committed is considered the most important
    factor in fashioning an appropriate sentence. 
    Tye, 323 Ill. App. 3d at 890
    . The trial court
    correctly noted the seriousness of the crime.
    Because defendant's sentence is within the statutory requirements and the trial court
    considered all factors in sentencing defendant, we affirm his sentence of life imprisonment.
    F. Mittimus
    In a supplemental brief, defendant argues that his mittimus should be corrected to reflect
    the three-year sentence for concealment of a homicidal death that was orally imposed by the
    court. The State concedes that the mittimus should be corrected. Accordingly, pursuant to
    Supreme Court Rule 615(b)(1) (134 Ill. 2d R. 615(b)(1)), we order the clerk of the circuit court
    -53-
    1-07-2516
    to make the necessary correction. See People v. Jones, 
    376 Ill. App. 3d 372
    , 395 (2007).
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm defendant's convictions and sentence. We also
    order that defendant's mittimus be corrected to reflect a sentence of three years for concealment
    of a homicidal death.
    Affirmed; mittimus corrected.
    QUINN and COLEMAN, J.J., concur.
    -54-
    1-07-2516
    Please Use                     REPORTER OF DECISIONS – ILLINOIS APPELLATE COURT
    Following                                (Front Sheet to be Attached to Each Case)
    Form:
    Comple te
    TITLE
    of Case                  THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    NICHOLAS GUTIERREZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Nos. 1-07-2516
    Docket No.                                                    Appellate Court of Illinois
    First District, THIRD Division
    COURT
    June 30, 2010
    Opinion                                                         (modified upon rehearing)
    Filed                                                            (Give month, day and year)
    PRESIDING JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the court:
    JUSTICES
    Quinn   and Coleman, JJ.,                                                      concur [s]
    Lower Court and T rial Judge(s) in form indicated in the margin:
    APPEAL from
    the Circuit Ct. of              The Honorable             William G. Lacy                                      , Judge Presiding.
    Cook County,
    Criminal Div.
    Indicate if attorney represents APPELLANTS or APPELLEE S and include
    For                                     attorneys of counsel. Indicate the word NONE if not represented.
    APPELLANTS,
    John Doe, of             Attorneys for Petitioner-Appellant:       Michael J. Pelletier, State Appellate Defender
    Chicago.
    Patricia Unsinn, Deputy Defender
    Christopher Kopacz, Asst. Appellate Defender
    203 N. LaSalle Street, 24th Floor
    Chicago, IL 60601
    Phone: (312) 814-5472
    Attorneys for Respondent-Appellee:        Anita Alvarez, State’s Attorney of Cook County
    Of counsel: James E. Fitzgerald, Ashley A. Romito, Jessica
    R. Ball, Asst. State’s Attorneys
    For                                                                309 Richard J. Daley Center
    APPELLEES,                                                         Chicago, IL 60602
    Smith and Smith                                                    Phone: (312) 603-3362
    of Chicago,
    Joseph Brown,
    (of Counsel)
    -55-