People v. Shorty ( 2010 )


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  •                             No. 3--08--0994
    Filed August 19, 2010
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    THIRD DISTRICT
    A.D., 2010
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF      )     Appeal from the Circuit Court
    ILLINOIS,                       )     of the 10th Judicial Circuit,
    )     Peoria County, Illinois
    Plaintiff-Appellee,        )
    )
    v.                    )     No.     06--CF--882
    )
    LLOYD SHORTY,                   )
    )     Honorable James E. Shadid,
    Defendant-Appellant.       )     Judge, Presiding.
    JUSTICE SCHMIDT delivered the opinion of the court:
    Via indictment, the State charged defendant, Lloyd Shorty,
    with unlawful possession of heroin and possession with intent to
    deliver heroin in violation of sections 402(c) and 401(c)(1) of
    the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.       720 ILCS 570/401(c)(1),
    402(c) (West 2006).    A jury found defendant guilty of both
    charges and the circuit court of Peoria County sentenced him to
    19 years' incarceration.   Defendant appeals, claiming he was
    denied a fair trial by the introduction of improper hearsay
    evidence and the trial court's failure to properly ask the
    potential jurors if they understood and accepted fundamental
    principles of criminal law as mandated by Supreme Court Rule
    431(b) (Official Reports Advance Sheet No. 8 (April 11, 2007), R.
    431(b), eff. May 1, 2007).
    FACTS
    Defendant's case proceed to trial on July 14, 2008.   At the
    beginning of voir dire, the court spoke to the venire as a group
    and told prospective jurors that the defendant was presumed
    innocent.   The court further informed the jury pool that the
    State had the burden of proving defendant's guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt, that defendant was not required to prove his
    innocence or present evidence, that defendant was not required to
    testify, and finally that defendant's choice not to testify could
    not be used against him.
    After announcing those principles, the court stated that
    "all jurors must be willing to accept this basic principle."
    When individual questions were posed to the prospective jurors,
    2
    the court asked all but one if they accepted those basic
    principles.    Each juror asked responded in the affirmative.
    The case proceeded to trial, and in opening arguments, the
    State informed the jury that Officer Batterham would testify that
    a confidential informant told him that "defendant was going to be
    going to Chicago later that evening to buy heroin and that he
    would be going in a certain vehicle, which was a blue Toyota
    Solara, and going with a female who was supposed to be his
    girlfriend."    The court overruled defendant's objection to this
    statement, noting that opening statements only indicate what the
    State believed its evidence would show.
    During Officer Batterham's testimony, he indicated that he
    received information from a confidential informant about
    defendant.    The State asked Batterham to detail the circumstances
    surrounding his receipt of that information and defendant
    objected, claiming that any testimony concerning what the
    informant told Batterham was impermissible hearsay.    The court
    allowed Batterham to testify that he "received information from
    an individual that defendant was supposed to be making a trip to
    Chicago that evening to pick up a large quantity of heroin."    The
    3
    informant told Batterham that defendant was at the Townehouse
    hotel and the type of vehicle that would be used.
    Batterham testified that based on that information, he set
    up surveillance on the Townehouse hotel.       He witnessed the
    described vehicle arrive at the location, then leave minutes
    later with Holly Felton driving; defendant was in the front
    passenger seat, and the informant was in the backseat.         The
    police followed the vehicle to Morton, then called off surveil-
    lance.
    Batterham continued his testimony by noting that shortly
    after midnight on July 13, 2006, he received information
    regarding defendant.    When Batterham was asked to summarize that
    information, defendant objected.       The State claimed the
    information was essential to explain the officer's further
    conduct and the trial court overruled defendant's objection.
    Batterham then testified that the information he received
    indicated that defendant "did, in fact have the heroin" and that
    he would be returning to the Townehouse hotel in the vehicle
    previously described.
    During this testimony, the trial court instructed the jury
    4
    that "the information the officer is testifying to that he
    received is allowed for the purpose of explaining the actions of
    the officer and not for the truth of the matter that might have
    been told to the officer, but to explain the officer's actions
    then."   Batterham concluded his testimony by noting that he,
    again, set up surveillance at the Townehouse hotel and witnessed
    the described vehicle pull into the parking lot.
    Officer John Couve testified that he was driving a van
    carrying "an arrest team."   He parked the van on the passenger
    side of the a blue Toyota in the Townehouse hotel parking lot.
    Defendant was opening, or had just opened, the passenger door as
    Couve parked.
    Officer Erin Baraisch testified that he was part of the
    arrest team at the Townehouse hotel on July 13, 2006.   When he
    arrested defendant, the front passenger door to the Toyota was
    open and defendant was turned in the seat talking to the backseat
    passenger.   Barisch stated that defendant had a purple cloth
    Crown Royal bag in his right hand and he dropped the bag onto his
    seat when he saw the officers.   The cloth bag held a plastic bag
    containing a substance believed to be heroin, a bottle of Dormin
    5
    pills, and a digital scale.
    The parties stipulated that $225 was found in defendant's
    pocket and that no fingerprints were found on the items in the
    purple bag.    Denise Hanley, an Illinois State Police forensic
    scientist, testified that the substance recovered from inside the
    purple bag contained heroin and weighed 7.9 grams.
    Officer Batterham was qualified as an expert in narcotics
    investigation and then testified that, based on his opinion, the
    heroin was to be sold and not for personal use.    Batterham came
    to this conclusion based on the quantity of the heroin, the
    presence of the digital scale, and the presence of Dormin.
    Batterham noted Dormin is a sleep aid used to cut heroin.
    After putting on its expert testimony, the State rested its
    case.   Defendant chose not to testify or put on any testimony in
    his defense.    The jury found defendant guilty of both possession
    of a controlled substance and possession with intent to deliver a
    controlled substance.    Defendant filed a timely posttrial motion,
    alleging error in allowing statements of the confidential
    information into evidence.    The trial court denied defendant's
    motion.   This timely appeal followed.
    6
    ANALYSIS
    Defendant raises two claims of error on appeal.    Initially,
    defendant claims the circuit court erroneously allowed the State,
    during opening, to reference impermissible hearsay statements
    made by a confidential informant.    Specifically, defendant
    alleges it was reversible error to allow the prosecutor to inform
    the jury that the police received information indicating
    defendant planned a trip to Chicago to buy heroin.    Defendant
    claims the court compounded this error by allowing a police
    officer to testify that the confidential informant told him
    defendant did, in fact, purchase the heroin and was on his way
    back to Peoria with it.   The State responds that the opening
    statements made by the prosecutor were proper, as was the
    testimony of the officer. The State notes that parties are given
    great latitude when making opening statements and that the
    officer's statements were not made to prove the truth of the
    matter asserted but, rather, to properly explain investigatory
    proceedures.   Alternatively, the State proffers that any error
    that may have occurred was harmless.
    I. Hearsay v. Nonhearsay Purpose
    7
    Defendant claims People v. Singletary, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 1076
    , 
    652 N.E.2d 1333
    (1995), is on all fours with the case at
    bar, supports his position, and belies that of the State.     In
    Singletary, the police received a tip from an informant that
    defendant would be driving to a specific address to pick up a
    package of cocaine.   
    Singletary, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 1078
    .    The
    police surveilled the address, witnessed the defendant arrive as
    a passenger in an autombile, exit the vehicle, go into the
    building, and return minutes later to the vehicle.   
    Singletary, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 1079
    .   The police stopped the vehicle after
    it left the location and a drug dog alerted to narcotics under
    the seat in which defendant was riding.   Singletary, 273 Ill.
    App. 3d at 1079.   A police officer testified that a confidential
    informant told him about defendant's intentions.   The officer
    specifically stated that the informant provided "a description, a
    brief description of [defendant], type of auto that he would be
    riding in, and that he was going to go to 2971 South Dearborn and
    pick up a package of cocaine."   
    Singletary, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 1082
    .   The informant also provided the officer with defendant's
    first name.   The appellate court held such testimony "went beyond
    8
    what was necessary to explain investigatory procedures and [was]
    used to establish defendant's guilt rather than explain police
    conduct."    
    Singletary, 237 Ill. App. 3d at 1085
    .
    Our research reveals that three reported decisions have
    discussed this holding from Singletary, and all have done so
    favorably.    See People v. Jura, 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 1080
    , 1086, 
    817 N.E.2d 968
    (2004) ("The prosecution merely needed to demonstrate
    that the officer was on duty, received a radio call, and as a
    result of that call proceeded to the alley behind 38th Street.
    The three police witnesses went beyond explaining the
    investigative steps taken by testifying to the substance of the
    radio call, including the description of the offender"); People
    v. Williams, 
    289 Ill. App. 3d 24
    , 34, 
    681 N.E.2d 115
    (1997) (The
    court held that the State's "repeated references to" an anonymous
    citizen's statements to an officer in which the citizen provided
    the defendant's given and street names, gave a physical
    description of defendant and described defendant's gun, "in an
    effort to convince the jury of defendant's guilt[,] was error";
    the Williams court did find it to be harmless error, however);
    People v. Rivera, 
    277 Ill. App. 3d 811
    , 820, 
    661 N.E.2d 429
    9
    (1996) ("Hearsay testimony identifying the defendant as the one
    who committed the crime cannot be explained away as 'police
    procedure,' even where the trial judge limits the evidence to a
    nonhearsay purpose").
    In People v. Gacho, 
    122 Ill. 2d 221
    , 
    522 N.E.2d 1146
    (1988),
    our supreme court acknowledged the investigatory procedure
    exception to the hearsay rule.   The officer in Gacho testified
    that he talked to the victim "at the hospital for three or four
    minutes *** and he and his partner then went to Chicago to look
    for Robert Gacho, [the defendant]."   
    Gacho, 122 Ill. 2d at 247
    -
    48.   The court held such testimony was permissible but stated,
    "[h]ad the substance of the conversation that [the officer] had
    with [the victim] been testified to, it would have been
    objectionable as hearsay.   The testimony of [the officer],
    however, was not of the conversation with [the victim] but to
    what he did and to investigatory procedure."   
    Gacho, 122 Ill. 2d at 248
    .
    Thereafter, our supreme court elaborated on its language
    from Gacho in People v. Jones, 
    153 Ill. 2d 155
    , 
    606 N.E.2d 1145
    (1992).   The State convicted the Jones defendant of armed robbery
    10
    and aggravated unlawful restraint.    
    Jones, 153 Ill. 2d at 157
    .
    The Jones victim testified that two armed men, one being the
    defendant, forced her into her car at gunpoint, drove her to an
    alley, stole her possessions then ordered her out of the car and
    drove away with her car.    
    Jones, 153 Ill. 2d at 158
    .   An officer
    testified that he received a report of a car stripping in
    progress, and when officers arrived on the scene, two men were
    stripping the victim's car.    
    Jones, 153 Ill. 2d at 159
    .   The men
    ran and one was captured while the other escaped.     Officers'
    testimony made it clear that they learned defendant's name after
    speaking with the man they apprehended, named Colvin, the night
    of the car stripping.    
    Jones, 153 Ill. 2d at 159
    .   The Jones
    defendant claimed the officers' testimony constituted
    impermissible hearsay.
    Our supreme court disagreed, and in doing so stated as
    follows:
    "It is undisputed that an officer may
    testify to his investigatory procedures,
    including the existence of conversations,
    without violating the hearsay rule.   This
    11
    is true even if a logical inference may
    be drawn that the officer took subsequent
    steps as a result of the substance of that
    conversation. [Citation.]
    The defendant argues that the testimony
    in this case exceeds that allowed by Gacho,
    since [the officers] testified to the
    substance of Colvin's statements.   Gacho
    stated that, '[h]ad the substance of the
    conversation *** been testified to, it
    would have been objectionable as hearsay.'
    [Citation.]   However, this language is
    not applicable to the facts of this case.
    In Gacho, the defendant was convicted
    of murder, aggravated kidnapping, and armed
    robbery, and was sentenced to death.    The
    defendant challenged the sufficiency of his
    trial, inter alia, because of alleged hearsay
    in a police officer's testimony and improper
    references to this testimony during closing
    12
    argument.   This occurred when the officer,
    while detailing his investigation, testified
    to a conversation he had with the surviving
    victim in which the victim identified the
    defendant as the perpetrator of the crime.
    This is the dispositive factual
    difference between Gacho and the instant case.
    In Gacho, the substance of the conversation
    would have gone to the very essence of the
    dispute: whether the defendant was the man who
    committed the crime.    Thus, if the substance
    of the conversation came into evidence it would
    inevitably go to prove the matter asserted.
    The substance of the conversations with
    Colvin, on the other hand, could in no way go
    to prove any matter relevant to the trial.
    If offered to prove the matter asserted, the
    testimony would show that the defendant was
    involved in the car stripping, or at least
    present at the scene.    This provides nothing
    13
    to the State to help prove the defendant's
    guilt in the armed robbery.   Rather, this
    simply showed the jury how the officer and
    the detective came to suspect the defendant."
    
    Jones, 153 Ill. 2d at 160-61
    .
    In the case at bar, however, the alleged improper statements
    go directly to the matter in controversy: whether defendant
    possessed the heroin found in the vehicle.    Undoubtedly, the
    prosecution could have elicited testimony from Officer Batterham
    that explained his investigatory procedures without disclosing
    the substance of the conversations had between the officer and
    the informant and without hearsay as to defendant's guilt.    By
    way of explanation, the prosecutor could have simply elicited
    testimony from the officer that a confidential informant (CI)
    provided information that at the time and place in question, a
    blue Toyota Solara would appear with three occupants and the
    vehicle would contain drugs.   This would explain why the officers
    were at the Townehouse hotel and why they stopped defendant's
    vehicle.   There was no need to go beyond that if the only goal
    was to explain police conduct.
    14
    There is another reason we cannot accept the prosecutor's
    stated reason for offering the disputed testimony.     The testimony
    elicited by the prosecutor clearly identified the CI to the
    defendant.   (Hint: it was the guy in the backseat.)   It strains
    our credulity to accept that this was anything more than a
    prosecutor's successful attempt to put on the not-so-confidential
    informant's testimony as to defendant's guilt without subjecting
    the witness to cross-examination and impeachment.    The CI's
    shopping trip to the heroin store with defendant on the day in
    question provided fertile ground for cross-examination.    We
    cannot reconcile telling the defendant who dropped the dime on
    him while arguing that the snitch is a CI.   The prosecutor was
    clearly not worried about protecting the CI's identity.    One
    would not have to be a cynic to conclude that the State did not
    call the witness because it did not want the witness exposed to
    cross-examination.
    In discussing the issue before us, the Fourth District in
    People v. Cameron, 
    189 Ill. App. 3d 998
    , 
    546 N.E.2d 259
    (1989),
    favorably cited the following language from Professor McCormick's
    treatise on evidence:
    15
    "'In criminal cases, an arresting or
    investigating officer should not be put in
    the false position of seeming just to have
    happened upon the scene; he should be allowed
    some explanation of his presence and conduct.
    His testimony that he acted "upon information
    received," or words to that effect, should be
    sufficient.   Nevertheless, cases abound in
    which the officer is allowed to relate
    historical aspects of the case, replete with
    hearsay statements in the form of complaints
    and reports, on the ground that he was entitled
    to give the information upon which he acted.
    The need for the evidence is slight, the
    likelihood of misuse great.'"   
    Cameron, 189 Ill. App. 3d at 1004
    , quoting E. Cleary,
    McCormick on Evidence §249, at 734 (3d ed.
    1984).
    The court went on to suggest:
    "When an objection was first raised to [the
    16
    officer's] testifying about what he was told
    by the confidential informant, the court should
    have conducted a hearing out of the presence of
    the jury to determine both the scope of these
    third-party out-of-court statements and the need
    for the jury to hear them.   Had such a hearing
    been conducted in this case, the court could
    have directed that the improper portions of [the
    officer's] testimony be deleted, thereby
    permitting the State to provide its legitimate
    explanations for police conduct, while protect-
    ing the defendant against prejudicial hearsay
    statements."   (Emphasis in original.)   
    Cameron, 189 Ill. App. 3d at 1005
    .
    Courts cite Cameron with approval.   See, e.g., People v.
    Singletary, 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 1076
    , 
    652 N.E.2d 1333
    (1995); People
    v. Warlick, 
    302 Ill. App. 3d 595
    , 
    707 N.E.2d 214
    (1998).      When
    faced with the prospect of hearsay testimony to explain police
    conduct, a brief Cameron hearing makes perfect sense.    The
    hearing, outside the presence of the jury, need only take a few
    17
    minutes.   The court could simply ask the prosecutor, What witness
    (CI or otherwise) testimony do you intend to elicit through a
    police officer to explain police conduct?   The prosecutor answers
    and then the court can quickly decide how much of that is
    actually necessary to explain why the police did what they did
    and exclude unduly   prejudicial testimony that the jury might
    reasonably misuse to determine the defendant's guilt.   This very
    brief process will protect both the State's right to explain to a
    jury why the police did what they did in any given circumstance
    and, at the same time, protect a defendant's right to a fair
    trial and his or her right not to be convicted with the use of
    incompetent hearsay.   An explanation by the prosecutor that he or
    she is only offering the testimony to show why police officers
    did what they did should not be the end of the discussion.
    The testimony elicited by the prosecutor went far beyond
    that necessary to explain police conduct.   Therefore, it was
    hearsay.   We hold the trial court erred by overruling defendant's
    objections.   We further find that the trial court's limiting
    instruction to the jury did not cure the error and agree with the
    Rivera court's statement that, in this instance, the "[h]earsay
    18
    testimony identifying the defendant as the one who committed the
    crime cannot be explained away as 'police procedure,' even where
    the trial judge limits the evidence to a nonhearsay purpose."
    
    Rivera, 277 Ill. App. 3d at 820
    .     The limiting instruction was
    only given in response to the testimony that defendant had
    acquired the heroin and was on his way back from Chicago.     No
    limiting instruction was given in response to the testimony that
    "defendant was going to be going to Chicago later that evening to
    buy heroin."
    II. Harmless Error
    The State argues that even if we find the trial court erred
    by allowing the statements into evidence, the error was harmless.
    The admission of hearsay evidence is harmless error where there
    is no reasonable probability that the jury would have acquitted
    defendant absent the hearsay testimony.     People v. Sims, 
    192 Ill. 2d
    592, 
    736 N.E.2d 1048
    (2000); People v. Nevitt, 
    135 Ill. 2d 423
    , 
    553 N.E.2d 368
    (1990).   The State notes that it is
    undisputed that the substance contained within the purple cloth
    Crown Royal bag contained heroin and that Officer Baraisch's
    testimony indicating he witnessed defendant holding that bag is
    19
    uncontradicted.   Therefore, the State submits, even had the
    informant's statements been excluded, there is no reasonable
    probability that the jury would have acquitted defendant.    We
    agree.   It is undisputed that the police caught defendant
    literally "holding the bag."
    Defendant offers no plausible explanation of why this error
    is anything but harmless.   Defendant simply claims it cannot be
    harmless given the fact that the testimony "went straight to the
    heart of the guilt or innocence of defendant and therefore should
    not be considered harmless."   However, defendant cites no
    authority for this proposition and fails to comment on the true
    standard to be applied when determining whether introduction of
    such statements is harmless: is there a reasonable probability
    that a jury would have acquitted absent the hearsay testimony.
    Our research failed to identify a single case, and defendant
    cites none, that holds hearsay testimony that comments directly
    on the matter at issue cannot be harmless error.
    III. Supreme Court Rule 431
    Finally, defendant claims the trial court failed to comply
    with Supreme Court Rule 431(b) (Official Reports Advance Sheet
    20
    No. 8 (April 11, 2007), R. 431(b), eff. May 1, 2007) and, as
    such, he is entitled to a new trial.    The State responds that
    defendant has forfeited this issue.    In the alternative, the
    State argues the trial court properly complied with Rule 431(b).
    We review issues concerning the compliance with a Supreme Court
    Rule de novo.   People v. Graham, 
    393 Ill. App. 3d 268
    , 
    913 N.E.2d 99
    (2009); People v. Reed, 
    376 Ill. App. 3d 121
    , 
    875 N.E.2d 167
    (2007).
    Rule 431(b) states as follows:
    "The court shall ask each potential
    juror, individually or in a group, whether
    that juror understands and accepts the
    following principles: (1) that the defendant
    is presumed innocent of the charge(s) against
    him or her; (2) that before a defendant can
    be convicted the State must prove the defendant
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; (3) that the
    defendant is not required to offer any evidence
    on his or her own behalf; and (4) that the
    defendant's failure to testify cannot be held
    21
    against him or her ***.
    The court's method of inquiry shall provide
    each juror an opportunity to respond to
    specific questions concerning the principles
    set out in this section."    (Official Reports
    Advance Sheet No. 8 (April 11, 2007), R. 431(b),
    eff. May 1, 2007).
    The record indicates the trial court announced these
    principles to the entire jury venire.    Then, while announcing the
    final principle, the court stated, "He [the defendant] is not
    required to testify, and if he does not do so, that cannot be
    used against him.    All jurors must be willing to accept this
    basic principle."    Defendant acknowledges that, "in one form or
    another," the court asked all but one juror individually if they
    accepted the principles of law outlined in Rule 431(b).    The
    State acknowledges that the court failed to ask juror
    Krishnamoorthi whether or not he accepted these four basic
    principles of law.    The State argues, however, that defendant has
    forfeited this alleged error.    We agree.
    To properly preserve an issue for appellate review, the
    22
    defendant must object at trial and raise the issue in a posttrial
    motion.   People v. Allen, 
    222 Ill. 2d 340
    , 
    856 N.E.2d 349
    (2006).
    "The violation of a Supreme Court Rule does not mandate reversal
    in every case."   People v. Glasper, 
    234 Ill. 2d 173
    , 193, 
    917 N.E.2d 401
    (2009).   Defendant failed to object to the manner in
    which the trial court conducted voir dire.   Thus, the issue has
    been forfeited.
    Nevertheless, defendant asks that we review the matter as
    plain error.   "Plain errors or defects affecting substantial
    rights may be noticed although they were not brought to the
    attention of the trial court."   134 Ill. 2d R. 615(a).   Under
    this rule, a reviewing court is permitted to consider a forfeited
    issue where: (1) the evidence in a case is so closely balanced
    that the jury's guilty verdict may have resulted from the error
    and not the evidence; or, (2) the error is so serious that the
    defendant was denied a substantial right, and thus a fair trial.
    People v. Herron, 
    215 Ill. 2d 167
    , 
    830 N.E.2d 467
    (2005).    As
    noted above, the evidence in this matter was not closely
    balanced.   Moreover, we find the alleged error was not so serious
    that defendant was denied a fair trial.
    23
    In People v. Amerman, 
    396 Ill. App. 3d 586
    , 
    919 N.E.2d 1068
    (2009), this court was called upon to analyze a similar situation
    regarding Rule 431(b) admonishments.       The trial court in Amerman
    did not strictly comply with Rule 431(b) as it failed to ask all
    potential jurors if they understood and accepted the principle
    that the defendant's failure to testify could not be used against
    him.    
    Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 588
    .    In reviewing the matter,
    we stated:
    "In this case, the jurors were instructed of
    the Rule 431(b)(4) principles prior to their
    deliberations, albeit not in the proper manner.
    As the supreme court stated in Glasper, '[w]e
    reject the idea that the trial court's failure
    to conduct Rule 431(b)(4) questioning makes it
    inevitable that the jury was biased,' particularly
    where the record demonstrates that the jury was
    instructed of the principles before its
    deliberations.   [Citation.]   'To do so would
    require us to presume that citizens sworn as
    jurors ignore the law and the jury instructions
    24
    given to them.   This notion is contrary to our
    precedent which instructs us to make the opposite
    presumption.'"   
    Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 594
    -
    95, quoting 
    Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 201
    .
    We further noted in Amerman that the alleged error was not
    "so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant's
    trial" and ultimately held "that the trial court in this case did
    not commit plain error under either prong of the rule by failing
    to strictly comply with Rule 431(b).    The failure to follow a
    supreme court rule in this case, standing alone, was not per se
    plain error.   [Citations.]"   
    Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 595
    .
    Similarly, in the case at bar, the jurors were instructed on
    the Rule 431(b) principles prior to their deliberations.    Not
    only were they instructed en masse during voir dire as to the
    four principles, but all but one were individually instructed and
    asked if they accepted the principles.    The record indicates that
    the entire jury venire was in the court room when the trial judge
    first stated the Rule 431(b) principles and indicated that each
    juror "must be willing to accept" them.    Then, the court called
    groups of four jurors to the jury box for questioning.    There is
    25
    no notation in the record that the remaining prospective jury
    members were asked to leave the courtroom during this
    questioning.
    While juror Krishnamoorthi was not individually asked if he
    accepted the four principles set forth in Rule 431(b), the record
    indicates that juror Krishnamoorthi heard the judge instruct at
    least seven other jurors individually on these principles and ask
    those jurors if they accepted the principles.    Moreover, before
    deliberations began, the trial court instructed the jury as
    follows:
    "The fact that the defendant did not testify
    must not be considered by you in any way in
    arriving at your verdict. ***
    The defendant is presumed to be innocent of
    the charges against him.   This presumption remains
    with him throughout every stage of the trial and
    during your deliberations on the verdict and is
    not overcome unless from all the evidence in this
    case you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt
    that he is guilty.
    26
    The State has the burden of proving the
    guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt,
    and this burden remains on the State throughout
    the case.   The defendant is not required to prove
    his innocence."
    Not only did the trial court verbally instruct the jurors as
    to these principles, but it gave them written instructions on
    these principles to take with them into deliberations.     As we
    found in Amerman, while the trial court failed to strictly comply
    with Rule 431(b), we find its failure to do so did not deprive
    the defendant of a fair trial.   As the evidence in this case is
    not closely balanced, we hold that defendant cannot meet his
    burden of showing the trial court committed plain error and, as
    such, we must honor his procedural default.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court
    of Peoria County is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    CARTER and LYTTON, JJ., concur.
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