People v. Randolph ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (1st) 191629-U
    No. 1-19-1629
    Order filed December 14, 2021.
    Second Division
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    _____________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,            )     Appeal from the
    )     Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                 )     Cook County.
    )
    v.                                        )     No. 18 CR 2536-01
    )
    TYDUS RANDOLPH,                                 )     The Honorable
    )     Thomas J. Byrne,
    Defendant-Appellant.                )     Judge Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court.
    Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Howse concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1      Held: Even assuming the State’s main witness improperly offered prior consistent
    statements in testimony, the evidence was not closely balanced and defendant was not
    prejudiced, nor was his counsel constitutionally ineffective. This court affirmed the judgment of
    the circuit court.
    ¶2     Following a jury trial, defendant Tydus Randolph was found guilty of domestic battery
    and sentenced to five years in prison. On appeal, he contends his conviction rests on the
    improper prior consistent statements and hearsay testimony of the State’s main witnesses, all of
    No. 1-19-1629
    which amounts to prejudicial error and ineffective assistance of counsel requiring a new trial. We
    affirm.
    ¶3                                      BACKGROUND
    ¶4        Defendant was arrested and then charged with aggravated domestic battery and domestic
    battery, among other offenses, after a 48-hour period in which he beat up Kiera Townsend, his
    then live-in fiancé of some two years and the mother of their young son.
    ¶5        Townsend testified that on January 20, 2018, as defendant drove Townsend and their
    three-month-old son to the currency exchange at 47th Street and Ashland Avenue, they entered
    into a verbal altercation. Defendant parked on 47th Street, and the argument continued for
    several hours, with defendant calling Townsend stupid. Eventually, Townsend exited the van
    and, as she reached for her baby in the backseat, defendant said, “Bitch, where you finna to go?
    You not gonna take my baby nowhere.” Townsend insisted she would take her baby, but he said
    “Where the fuck do you think you’re going?” The argument outside the van continued, and as
    Townsend attempted to remove her child, defendant then grabbed her, smacked her face and
    choked her, moving her towards the front passenger’s seat. Townsend relayed she couldn’t
    breath, but defendant repeated that she would not take the baby anywhere and threatened to kill
    her.
    ¶6        Townsend testified that around this time, a person walked past, since she could see
    through the back passenger door. She later learned it was a currency exchange employee, Vernon
    Bell. Townsend requested to use his phone, and Bell asked if Townsend was okay, then invited
    her inside the currency exchange to use the phone. She wanted to call someone about what
    happened between her and defendant. Defendant, abandoning their son in the car, followed them
    and attempted to persuade Townsend to leave. Defendant threatened Bell to stay out of his
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    No. 1-19-1629
    “fucking business” or else Bell would “end up getting fucked up,” but then also ordered
    Townsend to “get [her] baby” and belongings out of the apartment and “just get the fuck on.” At
    that point, Bell left for the back room.
    ¶7     Bell also testified at trial corroborating that on the day in question around 9 p.m., he was
    returning to the currency exchange when he overheard a commotion and glanced behind him.
    From about 50 feet away, he noticed a male, who was defendant, make a jerking movement as he
    shoved a woman, who was Townsend, into a minivan with such force it made the van shake.
    Bell, who was Facetiming his girlfriend, relayed he thought there was an argument and watched
    the incident for some seconds. Just then, defendant looked in Bell’s direction, and Townsend
    walked towards him. Bell offered Townsend his telephone and told her she “could step inside”
    the currency exchange, where he worked. Townsend and defendant followed Bell inside.
    Defendant stood between the two and told Townsend that Bell “needed to mind [his] own
    business.” Bell proceeded to the back area, where he told his manager to call the police because
    he saw “someone being shoved into a car” and viewed it as an altercation.
    ¶8     The State published to the jury a surveillance video of the outside and inside of the
    currency exchange. The video depicts defendant standing between the Bell and Townsend and
    speaking to Bell. Defendant paces, appearing agitated, and Bell enters a back door. Defendant
    walks toward the entrance, but then returns to Townsend. He steps close to her, encroaching on
    her personal space in a menacing way as he points towards the entryway. He is so close to
    Townsend, she steps back several times. Defendant eventually walks out, and Townsend follows.
    ¶9     Meanwhile, at some point Townsend testified she had called her cousin for a ride, but he
    was unavailable, so she returned to defendant’s apartment because he had told her she could “get
    her baby.” There, she grabbed the necessary belongings and informed defendant she would go to
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    No. 1-19-1629
    her mother’s. Defendant responded, “You’re not taking my son over there,” they argued, and
    then defendant charged at Townsend, pushed her against the wall, and smacked her face.
    ¶ 10   Noting a mark by the side of her eye that was swelling, Townsend telephoned her mother.
    After that, defendant, who was upset that she phoned her mother, punched her in the right jaw,
    nose, and lip. Townsend cried, and defendant asserted she was “trying to take” his baby around
    “them people” (meaning her family) and punched her in the forehead some five times, thereby
    creating marks. Townsend called her mother again, but defendant snatched the phone and yelled
    that Townsend was “trying to have them people come to my house,” and to make him lose his
    apartment. He told Townsend to “get the fuck out” even though moments later as she grabbed
    her belongings he contrarily told her “you’re not going nowhere,” and to sit her “stupid ass
    down.” When Townsend attempted to leave the bedroom, defendant punched her in her right
    eye. Defendant then calmed and told her he loved her, he wanted his family, and asked her if she
    still wanted to leave. She replied she did, and defendant became irate. She grabbed her son, they
    argued, and defendant then punched her while stating “bitch, you better not drop him.” She fell
    on the bed, and he punched her in the forehead again.
    ¶ 11   Townsend lay the baby down and attempted to call her mother again, but defendant took
    her phone, hit her in the back of the head with a broom and said, “Bitch I’ll kill you. I’ll beat
    your brains out.” Townsend snatched the broom and swung it, also creating a mark on
    defendant’s face, but defendant took the broom back and said, “All right, bitch. *** Do you want
    to fight?” Townsend’s father subsequently called her, but defendant took Townsend’s phone. He
    told her not to give their address because she was going to “get him locked up.” As she then left
    the apartment, defendant repeated that they were supposed to be a family and they needed to
    “just sleep” and put the matter behind them. However, when she went back inside, defendant
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    No. 1-19-1629
    punched her in the forehead, knocking her down and kicked her in the left arm and choked her as
    she lay on the floor. Defendant beat her throughout the night. The two had only been in their
    apartment about a week, and her parents did not know the address. According to Townsend,
    defendant also would not let her call the police. At one point, as Townsend cried, defendant
    noted she had to work the next day at Dunkin’ Donuts, he called her “babe,” and offered to get
    some ice for her swollen face. He again said they needed to “put this in the past.”
    ¶ 12   That morning, Townsend decided not to work and texted her boss that she “needed help”
    and said that her son’s father had “beat [her] all night.” She also sent her boss photos of her face,
    but she quickly erased the message in case defendant grabbed her phone. Following this
    testimony, the court sustained the defense’s objection. Townsend then left the apartment as if she
    were going to work, got in the van, and immediately called the police. She ultimately relayed the
    events, and requested that police come without sirens because she didn’t know how defendant
    would react or “what he would do with” her baby. In addition, when police arrived, they saw her
    face and one said, “I hope this is it. And he just said he’s going to wait for - -,” at which point
    defense counsel objected, and the objection was sustained. Police accompanied Townsend back
    to the apartment, where she knocked on the door while officers stood aside. Defendant opened
    the door, asked Townsend why she wasn’t at work, and she placed her foot inside as defendant
    tried to close the door. Police then arrested defendant and took photographs of Townsend’s
    injuries. They also took photos and a video two days later, on January 22.
    ¶ 13   These images were published to the jury, and Townsend testified to the injuries that
    resulted from the battery, including bruises and knots on her forehead, and scratches and/or
    bruises on her lip, cheeks, temple, neck, elbow, fingers, and the back of her head. She had a
    broken, bloody, swollen nose, and her ear and brow were “busted,” meaning bloody. The photos
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    No. 1-19-1629
    taken two days after the incident also showed swelling and bruising, specifically of her face and
    around her eyes, as having “set in.” In spite of these injuries, Townsend acknowledged writing
    defendant letters thereafter and visiting him in jail twice and testified that she still loved him.
    ¶ 14    Chicago Police Officer Matthew Ruppert testified that he and his partner responded to a
    “domestic service call,” and on seeing Townsend, found she was very distraught, “shaken up,”
    and had a large contusion on her forehead. Townsend and the officers proceeded to the
    apartment, where Townsend knocked on the apartment door while the officers stood aside
    because she feared defendant wouldn’t open the door if he saw the officers. When defendant
    opened the door, he was arrested. The State published the body camera of another officer present
    at the scene, which was consistent with Officer Ruppert’s testimony.
    ¶ 15    Trial evidence further revealed that in April 2019, some four months after the domestic
    disturbance, and while defendant was in jail, he called his sister. In the recorded conversation,
    published to the jury, defendant asks her to secure an affidavit from Townsend recanting the
    abuse allegations. Defendant states that his “life is on the fuckin’ line with this bitch,” and asks
    that Townsend in the affidavit simply state: she was in a “jealous rage,” she was “was mad,” and
    “thought he was cheatin’ on [her],” so she “got jealous” and “that didn’t really happen.” He asks
    that the affidavit be sent to his judge and asserts the State would then drop the case against him
    because Townsend’s “statement will be discredible. I know the law.” He again states that his life
    is on the line and repeatedly refers to Townsend as a bitch. Following this evidence, the State
    then rested its case.
    ¶ 16    Defendant testified on his own behalf that it was Townsend who was the aggressor in the
    relationship. On the day in question, as the two drove to the currency exchange, Townsend asked
    defendant if he thought her to be “stupid,” to which he responded sarcastically, and she began
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    No. 1-19-1629
    “cursing and hollering and being disrespectful.” When they arrived, defendant received a
    telephone call from his female friend, then he exited the van, and Townsend “charged” at him
    “swinging, cussing,” and inquiring “who was that bitch on the phone.” Townsend punched
    defendant in the face and attempted to wrest his phone from him. Townsend followed him as he
    returned to the van still “yelling, cursing, being adamant” about the female caller. She never
    leaned into the car and attempted to take the baby out.
    ¶ 17   Townsend exited the van again and entered the currency exchange. Defendant followed
    attempting to explain that the female was just a friend. Other than the currency exchange
    employee’s compliment to defendant’s Looney Tunes jacket, defendant and the employee had no
    interaction. Defendant ultimately waited by the van and when Townsend returned, said she
    needed “to get her things and leave” the apartment. Defendant denied choking or striking her at
    that time. Townsend exited the van with their child and began walking along Ashland Avenue.
    The two eventually returned to the currency exchange. He drove away but then pursuant to her
    call, returned to pick her up and they returned to the apartment. Defendant told her to take the
    baby and leave, but Townsend became angry and refused.
    ¶ 18   Defendant’s female friend called, and Townsend charged into the room in a rage
    swinging at him and asked who was that “bitch” on the phone. She smacked defendant’s phone
    from his hand and swung an empty liquor bottle at his face. He blocked it, took the bottle and
    threw it in the closet. Townsend ran to the kitchen and returned with a mop and hit defendant in
    the right forearm. He grabbed it, and she then returned from the kitchen, only this time with a
    broom, swinging it at defendant. He also took the broom. Townsend eventually calmed after the
    two spoke with her mother, and defendant prepared the baby for sleep and then dozed with the
    baby next to him as Townsend sat on the edge of the bed giving him an “evil look.”
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    No. 1-19-1629
    ¶ 19   Defendant denied striking Townsend or choking her and testified he never saw her
    injured in any way. He did not leave a mark on Townsend’s forehead, temple, nose, or mouth or
    cause her nose and mouth to bleed; similarly, defendant did not know how the forehead mark
    appeared. He only grabbed her hands to calm her down. Rather, he insisted he was injured in the
    jaw during the altercation. He acknowledged he possibly called his sister from jail attempting to
    have Townsend prepare an affidavit because he claimed “she didn’t want anything else to do
    with the case.” Defendant explained he wanted Townsend to tell the truth in the affidavit,
    meaning that she had gotten mad and believed he was cheating on her. Defendant asserted
    Townsend visited him in jail and said she would accept money to prepare the affidavit. He
    acknowledged he intended to pay her for the affidavit, and believed it was “perfectly legal” to do
    so. He did not want her coming to court, yet denied that he wanted Townsend to lie in the
    affidavit. Defendant acknowledged he was previously convicted of armed robbery and a
    weapons offense.
    ¶ 20   Following evidence and argument, the jury deliberated for about six hours. During that
    time, it sent six notes. The first asked whether, in order to be found guilty of aggravated battery,
    a defendant must also be found guilt of battery; the second asked if jury members could view the
    police video camera again; the third asked for a definition of reasonable doubt; the fourth asked
    for a transcript of the State’s Attorney’s argument defining domestic battery, as well as Bell’s
    transcript; the fifth asked about the time schedule for the jury members if they could not reach a
    unanimous verdict. The court allowed the jury to rewatch the police video camera and sent back
    only Bell’s transcript. In addition, the court referred the jury to the instructions and asked them to
    continue deliberating, adding “[w]e will make available to you whatever time you need to reach
    a verdict.” Last, in the sixth note, sent around 4 p.m., the jury essentially asked to stop at 5:30
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    No. 1-19-1629
    p.m. and resume on Monday. The court responded that the jury should continue to deliberate and
    if necessary reconvene on Monday. Nevertheless, at 4:30 p.m., the jury reached a verdict. It
    found defendant guilty of domestic battery (Count 6), although not guilty of aggravated domestic
    battery predicated on strangulation (Count 1), and defendant was sentenced to five years in
    prison. Defendant appealed.
    ¶ 21                                    ANALYSIS
    ¶ 22    Defendant first contends the State improperly bolstered Townsend’s testimony through
    multiple prior consistent statements. The State responds that defendant forfeited this matter by
    failing to raise it in a posttrial motion. See People v. Thompson, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 122265
    , ¶ 34
    (noting that a defendant must object contemporaneously and in a posttrial motion to preserve an
    issue for review). While defendant acknowledges forfeiture, he maintains we may review the
    case pursuant to the plain error doctrine because the evidence was closely balanced. See id.;
    People v. Williams, 
    147 Ill. 2d 173
    , 226-27 (1991) (courts may take cognizance of an issue via
    the plain error rule despite a defendant’s failure to object at trial and in a written posttrial
    motion). However, in the absence of any error, there can be no plain error, so we begin by
    considering whether any error occurred with respect to Townsend’s claimed prior consistent
    statements. See Thompson, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 122265
    , ¶ 34.
    ¶ 23    Generally, a prior consistent statement made by a witness constitutes inadmissible
    hearsay, which cannot be used to bolster a witness’s testimony or unfairly enhance the credibility
    of the witness. People v. Johnson, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 091730
    , ¶ 60; People v. Stull, 
    2014 IL App (4th) 120704
    , ¶ 99; see also People v. Lawlor, 
    142 Ill. 2d 548
    , 557 (1991) (noting that hearsay is
    an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted, and is generally
    inadmissible unless it falls within an exception). Prior consistent statements create a danger
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    No. 1-19-1629
    insofar as a jury is likely to attach disproportionate significance to them because people tend to
    believe that which is repeated most often. Johnson, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 091730
    , ¶ 60. However,
    credibility should not depend upon the number of times a witness has repeated the same story, as
    opposed to its inherent trustworthiness. People v. Lambert, 
    288 Ill. App. 3d 450
    , 457 (1997). An
    exception to the rule barring prior consistent statements is if such statements are introduced to
    rebut an allegation that the witness was motivated to testify falsely, or otherwise to rebut an
    allegation of recent fabrication. Johnson, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 091730
    , ¶ 61. However, such a prior
    consistent statement is permitted solely for rehabilitative purposes and not as substantive
    evidence. Lambert, 288 Ill. App. 3d at 457.
    ¶ 24   Defendant complains of Townsend’s testimony on direct examination. He maintains the
    first prior consistent statement occurred when the State asked Townsend what she did instead of
    going to work the morning after the altercation, and she responded:
    “I text my boss. I sent him - - I told him that I needed help. I asked him can he
    please help me. I told him my son’s father had beat me all night. And I sent the pictures
    of my face.
    Once I did that, I hurried up and erased it just in case if [defendant] grabbed my
    phone so he wouldn’t see it. So I sent him the pictures and then I text him. And then after
    that, he said - - he said, What happened to you? And he said that - -[.]”
    ¶ 25   Defendant maintains the second prior consistent statement occurred after Townsend left
    in the van and called the police. She testified, “I called the police. I was talking to the police
    officer. I was telling him what happened with me and I was asking them to please come, but
    don’t have no sirens on or none of that because I don’t want him to hear the police or none of
    that because my son is still up there and I don’t know what he would do with my baby.”
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    No. 1-19-1629
    ¶ 26    And, finally, defendant maintains the third prior consistent statement occurred when she
    testified that when the police arrived, “[t]hey saw my face and he just was like, I hope this is it.
    And he just said he’s going to wait for - -[.]”
    ¶ 27    Defendant writes, the “incessant repetition via consistent statements that [he] was the
    offender, the aggressor, and a danger to his own son was improper” and prejudicial. In response,
    the State does not argue the well-known exception to the rule for prior consistent statements,
    cited above, nor can we discern its application since there was no motive to testify falsely or
    charge of recent fabrication that arose after the incident. See Johnson, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 091730
    ,
    ¶ 61 (noting that to qualify for this exception, the prior consistent statement must have been
    made before the alleged motive to testify falsely or the alleged fabrication). Rather, the State
    maintains Townsend’s aforementioned testimony does not even constitute a prior consistent
    hearsay statement because in each instance the statements were offered for their effect on the
    listener or to explain the subsequent course of Townsend’s conduct. See People v. Carroll, 
    322 Ill. App. 3d 221
    , 223 (2001) (noting that such statements are not hearsay). Thus, the statements
    were not offered for the truth of the matter asserted, that defendant beat Townsend and she was
    fearful of him as a result. See 
    id.
    ¶ 28    We reject the State’s argument out of hand. For example, that Townsend feigned going to
    work did not necessitate relaying she texted her boss that defendant beat her all night. Nor did it
    necessitate relaying she sent her boss photos of her beaten face and then erased them. Likewise,
    that Townsend called the police and requested assistance did not necessitate telling police to
    arrive without sirens because she was fearful for her son because of defendant. In other words,
    Townsend’s testimony was above and beyond what was necessary to describe her course of
    conduct or the effect on the listener to satisfy the hearsay exception.
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    No. 1-19-1629
    ¶ 29   Nonetheless, for the reasons to follow we find no basis for reversal. Following the first
    and third statements, the defense objected, and the court sustained the objections. The court later
    instructed the jury members that they “should disregard questions which were withdrawn or to
    which objections were sustained.” Contrary to defendant’s contention, these statements were not
    submitted as substantive evidence of defendant’s guilt, as they were completely stricken. Where
    a timely objection is made and the court sustains the objection or instructs the jury to disregard
    the answer, any arguable error can usually be cured. People v. Fierer, 
    260 Ill. App. 3d 136
    , 146
    (1994); see also People v. Edwards, 
    309 Ill. App. 3d 447
    , 455-56 (1999) (noting that the
    sustaining of defendant’s objections and the giving of the instruction to the jury cured any
    arguable errors). Thus, those two statements did not bolster Townsend’s testimony, as they were
    not even in evidence, a fact defendant declines to recognize. Moreover, the police officer’s
    statement on seeing Townsend’s face, “I hope this is it,” is not entirely clear. While one might
    infer he believed her injuries to be severe, we do not know what “this” or “it” refers to or what
    his exact hope is.
    ¶ 30   As to the second statement, while improper for Townsend to testify she told officers to
    arrive absent sirens due to her fear of defendant with the baby, it certainly did not rise to the level
    reversible or plain error. The most critical fact in determining the degree to which a prior
    consistent statement deprived a defendant of a fair trial is whether the statement itself had a
    bearing upon his guilt or innocence. People v. Smith, 
    139 Ill. App. 3d 21
    , 34 (1985). While
    Townsend’s statement conveyed her fear and distrust of defendant, especially with respect to his
    care for their child, it did not bear directly on the issue at hand: whether he grabbed, struck, and
    beat Townsend (with whom he had a dating or engagement relationship) throughout the evening
    in question, thus causing her bodily harm. See 720 ILCS 5/12-3.2(a)(1) (West 2018) (noting that
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    No. 1-19-1629
    a person commits domestic battery if he knowingly without legal justification causes bodily
    harm to any family or household member); cf. Smith, 139 Ill. App. 3d at 34 (finding that in a
    murder trial, a questionable witness’ statement to another that the defendant had shot the victim
    bore directly on the defendant’s guilt). Other factors militate against a finding that the
    improperly admitted evidence affected the case’s outcome. See People v. Miller, 
    302 Ill. App. 3d 487
    , 493-94 (1998) (noting factors). For example, defendant fails to demonstrate this statement
    was mentioned in opening or closing argument; the statement instead was merely cumulative of
    Townsend’s claim that defendant lacked due care for the baby; the statement was attested to by
    the party who made the statement (Townsend) rather than a third party, creating less damage;
    and the evidence was not closely balanced, as discussed immediately below.
    ¶ 31   For first-prong plain error, the defendant must show both that there was plain error and
    that the evidence was so closely balanced that the error alone severely threatened to tip the scales
    of justice against him. People v. Herron, 
    215 Ill. 2d 167
    , 187 (2005). Prejudice rests not on the
    seriousness of the error but on the closeness of the evidence. People v. Sebby, 
    2017 IL 119445
    , ¶
    68. “An error is prejudicial because it occurred in a close case where its impact on the result was
    potentially dispositive.” People v. Lee, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 162563
    , ¶ 67. The burden of
    persuasion remains with the defendant. 
    Id.
     In determining whether the closely balanced prong
    has been met, we must make a “commonsense assessment” of the evidence within the context of
    the circumstances of each individual case. People v. Adams, 
    2012 IL 111168
    , ¶ 22. As such, we
    must assess the elements of the charged offense or offenses, along with any evidence regarding
    the witnesses’ credibility. Lee, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 162563
    , ¶ 67.
    ¶ 32   Here, Townsend’s testimony that the abuse began at the currency exchange was
    corroborated by its employee, Bell. Like Townsend, Bell testified that he invited Townsend into
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    No. 1-19-1629
    the currency exchange after seeing defendant shove her into the car, and Bell was essentially
    threatened by defendant “to mind [his] own business.” Bell testified this altercation was serious
    enough to prompt him to direct his boss to call the police. The video corroborated their testimony
    and showed defendant conducting himself in a menacing fashion. While the jury acquitted
    defendant on the charge of aggravated domestic violence, apparently determining the evidence
    insufficient to find defendant strangled Townsend, the jury was not precluded from considering
    the currency exchange testimony and video as buttressing Townsend’s overall account of the
    events that night.
    ¶ 33   Likewise, Townsend’s testimony that defendant later knowingly caused her bodily harm
    by repeatedly beating her was also validated by the photos taken after the incident and entered
    into evidence at trial, which showed bruises and knots on her forehead, and scratches and/or
    bruises on her lip, mouth, cheeks, arm, fingers, and the back of her head. See 720 ILCS 5/12-
    3.2(a)(1) (West 2018). She had a broken, bloody, swollen nose, and her ear and brow were
    “busted,” meaning bloody. The photos taken two days after the incident showed swelling and
    bruising, specifically of her face and around her eyes, as having “set in.” Police verified that on
    responding to Townsend’s call, they found her distraught, shaken up, and with a large contusion
    on her forehead. Townsend’s credibility was further enhanced by the recorded jailhouse call and
    testimony revealing defendant attempted to pay Townsend off in exchange for her affidavit
    recanting her abuse allegations so that defendant could avoid prison (a matter Townsend testified
    he was specifically concerned about during the altercation at home). Thus, Townsend’s
    testimony was corroborated by two witnesses, as well as photographic, video, and sound record
    evidence.
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    No. 1-19-1629
    ¶ 34   On the other hand, defendant’s testimony not only lacked corroboration but was utterly
    implausible. See People v. Lopez, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 101395
    , ¶ 87 (noting that evidence is not
    “closely balanced” whenever the defense’s version of events differs from the State’s version,
    especially where the defendant’s version of events strained credulity); People v. Williams, 
    209 Ill. App. 3d 709
    , 721 (1991) (noting that “[w]hen a defendant elects to explain the circumstances
    of what has occurred he is bound to tell a reasonable story or be judged by its improbabilities.”).
    First, defendant testified that at the currency exchange his only interaction with Bell occurred
    when Bell complimented defendant’s Looney Tunes jacket. This directly contradicted Bell’s
    testimony and lacked any further support. Second, defendant’s testimony that it was Townsend
    who beat him in a jealous rage likewise lacked any corroboration in the form of text, email, or
    photographic evidence. His testimony that he never saw Townsend injured in any way and that
    he merely grabbed her hands to calm her also contradicted the photos showing her injuries and
    was therefore incredible. Finally, his denials about the jailhouse call and proposed affidavit defy
    belief; evidence showed he thought his freedom more important than the crime he committed.
    ¶ 35   Therefore, this case did not present a credibility contest, as defendant argues. Cf. Sebby,
    
    2017 IL 119445
    , ¶¶ 61-62 (finding evidence closely balanced where the State’s witnesses and
    defendant’s version of events were equally consistent and neither account was fanciful or
    supported by corroborating evidence). While defendant attacks Townsend’s credibility because
    she did not call 911 soon enough or ask her family to intervene, and he maintains this rendered
    her account implausible and the evidence closely balanced, we find such behavior actually
    supports Townsend. It’s common knowledge that many victims of domestic violence live with
    abuse long before getting help. Regardless, Townsend testified that defendant repeatedly took
    her phone when she spoke with her parents or was about to, he threatened her, and he beat her
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    No. 1-19-1629
    thereafter. Her parents did not know her new address, and defendant also would not allow her to
    call police. The very hearsay principles defendant now complains about precluded Townsend
    from testifying about the specific content of her conversations with her parents. Defendant’s
    assertion also does not take into account the physical evidence identified above. In short, a
    common sense evaluation shows the evidence most certainly was not closely balanced such that
    any error threatened to tip the scales of justice against defendant.
    ¶ 36   Citing Lee, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 162563
    , ¶ 67, defendant also argues the jury notes here
    reflect its struggle to reach a verdict and the closely balanced nature of the evidence. In Lee, this
    court found that lengthy, 10-hour-long jury deliberations lasting until the next day, paired with
    notes demonstrating the jury had reached an impasse, supported the closely balanced nature of
    the evidence. 
    Id. ¶ 67
    . Significantly, apart from the jury deliberations, Lee also found the
    evidence was in fact closely balanced because both the State and the defendant’s versions were
    plausible without any extra corroboration. 
    Id. ¶¶ 69-70
    .
    ¶ 37   Here, in contrast, the jury never indicated it had reached an impasse, and it reached its
    guilty verdict as to Count 6, domestic battery, by day’s end. As set forth, the evidence itself also
    was not closely balanced. The most that can be said is that the jury notes might reflect closely
    balanced evidence as to Count 1, aggravated domestic battery predicated on strangulation. The
    State alleged that in the van by the currency exchange and at the apartment, defendant had
    choked Townsend. Consistent with its notes and deliberations, the jury ultimately acquitted
    defendant on that count, but then found him guilty of domestic battery. 1 See People v. McBride,
    1
    Defendant maintains that we must discount Bell’s testimony and find Townsend incredible
    because the jury acquitted him of Count 1. In that count, the State alleged that defendant committed
    aggravated domestic battery in that he strangled Townsend by grabbing her about the neck and impeding
    her breathing while she and defendant had a dating or engagement relationship. Townsend testified that
    defendant choked her by the currency exchange and also in the apartment. Contrary to defendant’s
    - 16 -
    No. 1-19-1629
    
    2020 IL App (2d) 170873
    , ¶¶ 42-43. Regardless, defendant fails to cite any case supporting the
    notion that jury notes and long deliberations alone can demonstrate evidence is closely balanced.
    Such a principle would be too speculative (see People v. Johnson, 
    408 Ill. App. 3d 157
    , 172-73
    (2010)), where it’s commonplace for juries to request a definition of “reasonable doubt” (see
    People v. Downs, 
    2015 IL 117934
    ) and the notes might simply reflect a “holdout juror” (see
    People v. McCoy, 
    405 Ill. App. 3d 269
    , 278 (2010)).
    ¶ 38    Defendant also complains that Officer Ruppert’s testimony on direct examination was
    impermissible hearsay. Defendant cites as improper Officer Ruppert’s testimony that he
    proceeded to the apartment because “Ms. Townsend said that’s where the offender was
    (emphasis added).” Defendant also complains about Officer Ruppert’s testimony that when
    responding to the domestic violence call, Townsend first knocked on the apartment door as the
    two officers stood aside because Townsend “was fearful that if” defendant saw police, “he
    wouldn’t open the door.”
    ¶ 39    The State responds that these statements fall under the course-of-investigation exception
    to the hearsay rule, which permits statements detailing the progress of a police investigation and
    why police arrested a defendant or took other action. See In re Jovan A., 
    2014 IL App (1st) 103835
    , ¶ 23; People v. Rush, 
    401 Ill. App. 3d 1
    , 15 (2010). Such testimony is not hearsay,
    because it’s offered to show the steps an officer took rather than for the truth of the matter
    asserted. 
    Id.
     We agree with the State that Officer Ruppert’s statements were merely intended to
    convey his course of investigation and why officers declined to knock and announce their
    presence at the apartment door, as is customary. This evidence thus satisfied a relevant
    contention otherwise, an acquittal of Count 1 did not diminish testimony by Townsend, corroborated in
    part by Bell, that defendant shoved and beat her that evening, causing bodily harm (Count 6). It simply
    meant the jury found the evidence that defendant specifically strangled her to be insufficient.
    - 17 -
    No. 1-19-1629
    nonhearsay purpose. See People v. Jura, 
    352 Ill. App. 3d 1080
    , 1086 (2004). The passing
    reference to defendant as the “offender” was not unduly prejudicial, as it was clearly a synonym
    for “defendant” or “the accused” and also served to explain the progress of the police
    investigation after conversing with Townsend.
    ¶ 40   Defendant, moreover, has not shown the State repeatedly relied on these statements
    during argument, or that they directly reflected the essence of the dispute: whether defendant
    beat Townsend. Cf. Jura, 352 Ill. App. 3d at 1086-89 (finding reversible error where the State
    repeatedly relied on police hearsay statements of a radio call that the defendant matched the
    description of the person with the gun, which was the essence of the dispute). Defendant likewise
    did not seek any limiting instruction, asking the jury to consider the statements for their limited
    purpose and not the truth of their contents, thus waiving that matter. See Rush, 401 Ill. App. 3d at
    15-16. These statements by the police investigating the scene were not hearsay and therefore
    were not error, nor did they improperly corroborate Townsend’s testimony. However, even if
    they did flirt with error, for the reasons stated above, they did not constitute plain error because
    the evidence was not closely balanced.
    ¶ 41   Last, defendant argues his counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to object to
    the various statements (only one of which we have found came close to error). Under Strickland
    v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984), a defendant must demonstrate both that counsel’s
    performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and that there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for those unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different. People v. Dupree, 
    2018 IL 122307
    , ¶ 44. Notably, plain-error review under the closely-
    balanced-evidence prong is similar to an analysis for ineffective assistance of counsel based on
    evidentiary error, insofar as a defendant in either case must show he was prejudiced. People v.
    - 18 -
    No. 1-19-1629
    White, 
    2011 IL 109689
    , ¶ 133. Given that defendant cannot establish plain error prejudice
    because the evidence here was not closely balanced, he likewise cannot establish Strickland
    prejudice, and his claim therefore must fail.
    ¶ 42   To the extent the parties raise additional arguments, our holding disposes of the need to
    address them.
    ¶ 43                                  CONCLUSION
    ¶ 44   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    ¶ 45   Affirmed.
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