People v. Flores , 2022 IL App (2d) 210757 ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    No. 2-21-0757
    Opinion filed November 21, 2022
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Lake County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 09-CF-1874
    )
    MANUEL A. FLORES,                      ) Honorable
    ) Daniel B. Shanes,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Brennan and Justice Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Defendant, Manuel A. Flores, appeals from the order of the circuit court of Lake County
    denying him leave to file his successive postconviction petition under the Post-Conviction Hearing
    Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2020)). He claims that his petition, which sought relief
    from his plea of guilty to aggravated arson (720 ILCS 5/20-1(a), 20-1.1(a)(2) (West 2008)), set
    forth a colorable claim of actual innocence. We conclude that the trial court properly denied
    defendant leave to file his petition. Therefore, we affirm.
    ¶2                                      I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3     In June 2009, the State brought a nine-count indictment against defendant and
    codefendants, Elver H. Hernandez (Elver) and Edwin J. Hernandez (Edwin). The counts alleged
    
    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    that the three defendants threw an object containing a flammable substance at the Mundelein home
    of Virginia Estrada, causing a fire that damaged the house, killed Jorge Juarez, and injured Virginia
    Estrada and Virginia Juarez. Counts I through VI charged various theories of first-degree murder
    (id. § 9-1(a)(1)-(3)) based on Jorge Juarez’s death. The intentional murder counts alleged
    transferred intent in that the defendants acted with the intent to kill Rafael Juarez (Rafael) but
    instead caused Jorge Juarez’s death. Finally, counts VII through IX charged aggravated arson (id.
    §§ 20-1(a), 20-1.1(a)(1), (2)) based on the damage to the house and the injuries to Virginia Estrada
    and Virginia Juarez.
    ¶4     On December 5, 2011, the parties informed the court that they had reached a plea
    agreement in defendant’s case. Defendant would plead guilty to count VII, which alleged that “the
    defendants ***, while committing an Arson, *** knowingly partially damaged a building of
    Virginia Estrada, being a residence ***, and the defendant reasonably should have known that one
    or more persons was present therein.” In exchange for his plea, defendant would receive a sentence
    of 18 years’ imprisonment, and the State would nol-pros the remaining eight counts. After hearing
    the plea terms, the trial court stated that it recalled from Elver’s and Edwin’s cases that defendant
    “was not there when the arson took place” and that “[t]he plea is based upon an accountability
    liability.” Defense counsel confirmed the court’s recollection. The court asked for a factual basis
    for the plea, and this exchange occurred:
    “MR. KLEINHUBERT [(ASSISTANT STATE’S ATTORNEY)]: Judge, for the
    purposes of this plea, on May 8th of 2009, there was a meeting held at Alex Paz’[s] house
    and through the investigation, it was learned that Alex Paz was a member of the Latin
    Kings, that this defendant was present at his house for a meeting. Also, Edwin and [Elver]
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    were present, Wilmer Garcia, a Mike Puga and a Ricardo Truijillo. All were members of
    the Latin Kings.
    During the course of that meeting, one of the subjects was—some members of the
    gang, one of them, specifically, [Rafael], who, there was some trouble with them within
    the gang, and there was an SOS issued, which was Smash on Site [sic], which was a
    disciplinary action against, in this case, [Rafael]. That was ordered by [defendant], and it
    was given to [Elver], who then later recruited his brother, Edwin, and during the early
    morning hours of May 9th of 2009, they took a bottle with some accelerant in it and a wick
    and lit it and threw it at [Rafael’s] house.
    Inside the house was [sic] Rafael’s mother, Virginia Estrada, and the daughter,
    Virginia Juarez. For the purposes of this plea, both of them were injured both from the fire
    and from jumping out of the second floor window receiving injuries.
    [Defendant] was not present. He gave the order for the SOS, and during the
    investigation, there was no specific order to burn the house. There was just a general order
    to commit this SOS.
    Through the investigation, they did not determine that this defendant actually gave
    a specific order to burn the house or to actually use fire in the form of the SOS, and that
    occurred in Mundelein, Lake County, Illinois.
    MR. WEINSTEIN [(DEFENSE ATTORNEY)]: So stipulated.
    THE COURT: So, essentially, let me summarize. The defendant, in legal terms in
    the accountability language, encouraged Mr. Hernandez to commit an offense. Mr.
    Hernandez chose to use the fire which ultimately resulted in the harm in this case.
    MR. WEINSTEIN: Yes.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    MR. KLEINHUBERT: Correct.
    THE COURT: And that constitutes accountability under the law, certainly,
    although it’s different than committing the offense, itself, and accordingly, the Court finds
    it’s an appropriate disposition.”
    ¶5     The trial court found the factual basis sufficient and, after admonishing defendant, accepted
    his plea as knowing and voluntary. Accordingly, the court imposed the agreed sentence of 18
    years’ imprisonment.
    ¶6     Defendant did not file a postplea motion or a direct appeal. In March 2013, defendant filed
    a pro se postconviction petition under the Act. In the petition. defendant sought to withdraw his
    guilty plea because defense counsel was ineffective for, inter alia, failing to investigate and present
    witnesses who would attest that someone other than defendant within the Latin Kings gave the
    “Smash on Sight” (SOS) order to Elver. Defendant named several individuals but provided an
    affidavit from only one: Hoke L. Turner III. In his affidavit, dated May 3, 2010, Turner averred
    that he became acquainted with Edwin while they were in the same prison. According to Turner,
    Edwin told him that defendant was an enforcer within the Latin Kings but was not the one who
    issue the SOS order against Rafael at the May 8, 2009, meeting. Turner stated that, based on what
    Edwin said, “the actions that ensued the night of the incident were neither of [defendant’s]
    knowledge nor consent.” However, Turner did not say that Edwin identified who did, in fact, issue
    the SOS order.
    ¶7     Defendant also attached various police reports to his petition.
    ¶8     The trial court dismissed the petition as frivolous and patently without merit. The court
    determined that defendant failed to provide the necessary factual support for his assertion that
    someone else issued the SOS order. The court discounted Turner’s affidavit because it was dated
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    almost 19 months before defendant’s guilty plea and described Turner’s discussions with Edwin
    but not defendant himself. The court also found that the police reports attached to the petition were,
    in fact, consistent with the factual basis for defendant’s plea.
    ¶9      Defendant did not appeal the dismissal of his petition.
    ¶ 10    On September 29, 2021, defendant filed the petition at issue. It was titled “Post-Conviction
    Petition Actual Innocence Under 725 ILCS 5/122-1(c).” Defendant attached to his petition (1) the
    transcript of the December 5, 2011, plea hearing; (2) an incomplete copy of an August 27, 1998,
    application for a search warrant, apparently for a residence associated with Edwin and Elver;
    (3) various police reports from 2009; (4) Turner’s affidavit of May 3, 2010 (which was attached to
    the initial petition); (5) an April 7, 2011, press release from the United States Department of Justice
    (DOJ), announcing that federal prosecutors had obtained convictions of several high-ranking Latin
    King members operating in the City of Chicago; (6) a July 26, 2016, press release from the United
    States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois (USAO), reporting that federal prosecutors had
    obtained indictments against several leaders and rank-and-file members of the Latin Kings
    operating in the Chicago metropolitan area; (7) a November 29, 2014, Orlando Sentinel article
    about the culture of the Latin Kings in central Florida; and (8) defendant’s July 23, 2021, affidavit
    claiming that Gerardo Salazar and Juan Galaviz issued the SOS order against Rafael. Defendant
    averred that “[he] did not order an SOS” and was “not legally responsible for the crimes of those
    who did.”
    ¶ 11    Defendant did not include with his petition a motion for leave to file a successive petition.
    Nor did his petition itself ask for leave to file a successive petition or even acknowledge that it was
    successive. Moreover, although the petition was titled “Actual Innocence,” defendant devoted
    most of the petition to claims that defense counsel denied him effective assistance. Defendant
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    argued that counsel was ineffective for (1) neglecting to challenge the facial sufficiency of the
    factual basis for defendant’s guilty plea to aggravated arson and (2) failing to “challenge any of
    the State’s wrong-minded theory [of criminal liability] in spite of the wealth of contradictory
    evidence in police reports,” Turner’s affidavit, and the other documents attached to the petition.
    Defendant did not mention “actual innocence” again until nearly the end of the petition, stating,
    “This petition sets forth a claim of actual innocence, in addition to constitutional claims of error.”
    Thus, apparently, defendant asserted that the matters counsel unreasonably neglected were also
    the bases for his actual-innocence claims.
    ¶ 12      Defendant developed his ineffectiveness/actual-innocence claims as follows. First, he
    claimed that the factual basis for his plea to aggravated arson was facially insufficient because it
    did not satisfy the mens rea element, namely that the person “knowingly” set fire to a building or
    other property (id. § 20-1(a)). Defendant noted that, in presenting the factual basis for the plea, the
    prosecutor admitted that defendant was not present when the arson occurred and gave “no specific
    order to burn the house” but “just a general order to commit this SOS.” Further, the trial court, too,
    recognized that defendant did not give a specific order to set fire to a house or kill someone.
    According to defendant, the factual basis “never bridge[d] the gap between smash on sight [and]
    arson, fire or Molotov cocktail.” Thus, he contended that the trial court could not properly find
    that defendant knowingly committed arson on an accountability basis. Defendant further noted that
    the factual basis stated that defendant gave the SOS order to Elver alone. Accordingly, defendant
    maintained that he was not liable for Elver’s decision to recruit Edwin, let alone the latter’s
    “ultra vires” decision to implement the generic SOS order by setting Virginia Estrada’s home
    ablaze.
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    ¶ 13   Second, defendant claimed that the police reports, Turner’s affidavit, and other attachments
    to the petition contradicted crucial points of the plea’s factual basis. Defendant claimed that the
    documents established that (1) Rafael was on the Latin Kings’ “SOS list” even before the May 8,
    2009, meeting at Paz’s house; (2) some Latin Kings members chased Rafael before the May 8,
    2009, meeting, showing that he was already a target; (3) no Latin King leaders were at the May 8,
    2009, meeting, and so no one had the authority to issue an SOS order; (4) even if an SOS were
    issued against Rafael at the meeting, it was by someone other than defendant, as he lacked authority
    within the Latin Kings to issue such an order (in his affidavit, defendant claimed that Salazar and
    Galaviz issued the order); and (5) an SOS order would not have been understood to command or
    authorize arson of a dwelling. 1
    ¶ 14   In a written order, the trial court denied defendant relief. The court first corrected
    defendant’s misunderstanding of the case’s procedural posture. The court noted that defendant had
    commented at a status hearing that the petition was, by default, at the second stage of proceedings
    because the first-stage, 90-day-review period had expired. See 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1 (West 2020).
    The court clarified that, because defendant previously filed a petition (in 2013), his current petition
    was successive and he needed to obtain leave to file.
    ¶ 15   The court then denied defendant leave to file the petition. First, the court determined that
    defendant’s actual-innocence claims were not supported by “new, material, noncumulative
    1
    Defendant cited Elver’s statement to the police that SOS entails an “ ‘ass kicking’ ” and
    Edwin’s statement that SOS means “ ‘break windows or trash someone’s house.’ ” Defendant
    argued: “Breaking windows or trashing [a] house does not rise to the level of telling someone to
    use fire, commit arson, or use a Molotov cocktail against an individual or their home.”
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    evidence that clearly and convincingly demonstrates that a trial would probably result in acquittal”
    (People v. Reed, 
    2020 IL 124940
    , ¶ 49). The court noted that the police reports, Turner’s affidavit,
    and the April 2011 DOJ press release were not new evidence, because they predated defendant’s
    December 2011 guilty plea (and defendant included Turner’s affidavit with the initial petition).
    The court also found that the evidence postdating the plea—the July 2016 USAO press release and
    the November 2014 Orlando Sentinel article—was “simply immaterial and inconclusive.”
    ¶ 16   As for the ineffectiveness claims, the trial court applied the “cause-and-prejudice test”
    (People v. Ortiz, 
    235 Ill. 2d 319
    , 330 (2009)) of section 122-1(f) of the Act (725 ILCS 5/122-1(f)
    (West 2020)). The court found that the claims failed both prongs of the test because defendant
    (1) identified no impediment that prevented him from raising the claims in his initial petition and
    (2) did not establish that, but for defense counsel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty.
    ¶ 17   Defendant filed this timely appeal.
    ¶ 18                                       II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 19   At the outset, we note defendant’s mischaracterization of the proceedings below. In its
    written order denying defendant relief, the trial court expressly corrected defendant’s false
    assumption that his current postconviction petition was his first. Properly treating the petition as a
    successive one, the trial court ultimately denied defendant leave to file the petition. Nevertheless,
    in stating the nature of the case on appeal, defendant characterizes the trial court’s action as a
    “dismissal” at “Stage One” rather than a denial of leave to file. He repeats this faulty description
    twice more, even though, at one point, he recognizes his petition as a successive one.
    ¶ 20   This leads us to the State’s request that we strike defendant’s brief and dismiss this appeal
    because he cites none of the standards governing successive petitions. As the State notes, we have
    the authority to strike an appellant’s brief for lack of conformity with our supreme court rules,
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    which require, inter alia, that an appellant support argument with citation to authority (Ill S. Ct.
    R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Oct. 1, 2020)). People v. Williams, 
    2020 IL App (3d) 180024
    , ¶ 25. We share
    the State’s frustration with defendant’s “jump[ing] into” the merits of his petition without
    acknowledging the “immense procedural default hurdles” a defendant must clear to bring a
    successive postconviction petition (People v. Davis, 
    2014 IL 115595
    , ¶ 14). However, “striking an
    appellate brief, in whole or in part, is a harsh sanction and is appropriate only when the violations
    of procedural rules hinder our review.” Hall v. Naper Gold Hospitality LLC, 
    2012 IL App (2d) 111151
    , ¶ 15. The flaws in defendant’s presentation have not impeded our review. With the aid of
    the State’s comprehensive brief, we have readily discerned that defendant’s sole argument on
    appeal—that his petition presents a colorable actual-innocence claim—is fatally deficient.
    However, we caution defense counsel that we expect compliance with our supreme court rules and
    might not deal as charitably with future infractions.
    ¶ 21   We move to the merits. “The Act contemplates the filing of a single petition” (People v.
    Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 81), and a defendant needs leave of court to file a successive petition
    (725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2020)). Leave to file will be granted “when fundamental fairness so
    requires.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 81. However, Illinois
    courts recognize only two fundamental-fairness exceptions to the bar against successive petitions.
    People v. Taliani, 
    2021 IL 125891
    , ¶ 55. The first exception is where the defendant meets the
    “cause-and-prejudice test” (Ortiz, 
    235 Ill. 2d at 330
    ) by showing that he was objectively impeded
    from raising his claim in an earlier proceeding and that the claimed error so infected his trial that
    he was deprived of due process (see 725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2020)). Taliani, 
    2021 IL 125891
    ,
    ¶ 55. The second exception is where the defendant shows that he suffered a miscarriage of justice.
    He does this specifically by making a “persuasive showing” of actual innocence. 
    Id.
     A defendant
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    can claim actual innocence even after pleading guilty. Reed, 
    2020 IL 124940
    , ¶ 41. However, “a
    successful actual innocence claim requires a defendant who pleads guilty to provide new, material,
    noncumulative evidence that clearly and convincingly demonstrates that a trial would probably
    result in acquittal.” Id. ¶ 49.
    ¶ 22    “Where, as here, a petitioner raises an actual innocence claim in a successive
    postconviction petition, the trial court should deny leave [to file] only where, as a matter of law,
    no colorable claim of actual innocence has been presented.” Taliani, 
    2021 IL 125891
    , ¶ 52. Since
    this is a question of law, we review de novo the trial court’s denial of leave to file. 
    Id.
    ¶ 23    Defendant’s challenge on appeal is significantly narrower than what he brought below.
    First, he no longer claims that his counsel was ineffective. Second, he abandons reliance on the
    evidence he submitted with his petition. In his briefs, he claims that his plea was not intelligent
    and voluntary, citing Boykin v. Alabama, 
    395 U.S. 238
    , 242 (1969), as his primary authority. In
    Boykin, the United States Supreme Court held that a trial court violates a defendant’s due process
    rights when it accepts the defendant’s guilty plea “without an affirmative showing that it was
    intelligent and voluntary.” 
    Id.
     Defendant’s briefs appear to link two issues: (1) whether the plea’s
    factual basis was sufficient and (2) whether the plea was intelligent and voluntary. At oral
    argument, defense counsel confirmed that defendant’s claim on appeal is that the plea was not
    intelligent and voluntary precisely because the factual basis did not satisfy the elements of
    aggravated arson based on accountability.
    ¶ 24    As framed, this claim fails on more than one level. To begin with, the claim is simply not
    one of actual innocence under Illinois law. An actual-innocence claim “does not depend on—and
    is separate from—a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence or an allegation of error in the
    court below.” Reed, 
    2020 IL 124940
    , ¶ 29. Thus, a claim of actual innocence following a guilty
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    plea “is not based on the defendant’s misapprehension of the quality of the State’s case nor an
    error of the court in finding defendant guilty.” (Emphasis added.) Id. ¶ 40. “Rather, it is a request
    for the additional due process that is triggered by new and compelling evidence demonstrating
    defendant’s innocence.” (Emphasis added.) Id. “New means the evidence was discovered after the
    court accepted the plea and could not have been discovered earlier through the exercise of due
    diligence.” Id. ¶ 49. Defendant’s argument on appeal abandons any pretense of relying on new
    evidence—or, indeed, anything outside the four corners of the factual basis. His attack on the
    sufficiency of the factual basis asserts nothing but “an error of the court in finding defendant
    guilty” based on the stipulated facts. Id. ¶ 40.
    ¶ 25   Since defendant’s claim is not one of actual innocence and he does not assert that his claim
    meets the cause-and-prejudice test, 2 he has failed to overcome the bar against successive
    postconviction petitions. We could affirm on that basis alone, but we also note that defendant’s
    claim is not even a constitutional claim and, thus, cannot be brought in a postconviction
    proceeding.
    ¶ 26   The Act provides a means for a defendant to claim that “in the proceedings which resulted
    in his or her conviction there was a substantial denial of his or her rights under the Constitution of
    the United States or of the State of Illinois or both.” 725 ILCS 5/122-1(a)(1) (West 2020); see
    People v. House, 
    2021 IL 125124
    , ¶ 15 (“Postconviction relief is limited to constitutional
    deprivations that occurred during the original trial.”). “Questions as to the sufficiency of the
    evidence have been held not to present a constitutional question and therefore are not properly
    2
    Since defendant’s claim is based entirely on matters appearing on the face of the record,
    he likely could not show cause for omitting the claim in earlier proceedings.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    considered in post-conviction proceedings.” People v. Dunn, 
    52 Ill. 2d 400
    , 402 (1972). In
    particular, “[a] postconviction proceeding is not a direct appeal or a continuation of a criminal case
    but is an independent, collateral attack on a judgment of conviction.” People v. Vasquez, 
    307 Ill. App. 3d 670
    , 673-74 (1999). A collateral attack is not designed to relitigate guilt or innocence
    (People v. Ligon, 
    239 Ill. 2d 94
    , 103 (2010))—which is precisely what defendant would have us
    do by reevaluating the sufficiency of the factual basis.
    ¶ 27   As noted, defendant attempts to cast his attack on the plea’s factual basis as a claim that
    the plea was not intelligent and voluntary. If defendant were raising his plea’s voluntariness, the
    claim would be constitutional and thus cognizable in a postconviction proceeding. See People v.
    Stroud, 
    208 Ill. 2d 398
    , 403 (2004). However, defendant’s characterization fails. He cites the
    Supreme Court’s comment in Boykin, that, “because a guilty plea is an admission of all the
    elements of a formal criminal charge, it cannot be truly voluntary unless the defendant possesses
    an understanding of the law in relation to the facts.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Boykin,
    
    395 U.S. at
    243 n.5. To that end, Illinois Supreme Court Rule 402(a)(1) (eff. July 1, 2012) requires
    that the trial court inform the defendant of the nature of the charge to which the defendant is
    pleading guilty. People v. Ingeneri, 
    7 Ill. App. 3d 809
    , 811 (1972). In fact, all the specified Rule
    402(a) admonitions are designed “to insure [sic] that [the] guilty plea is intelligently and
    understandingly made, as required by Boykin.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 402, Committee Comments (rev. May
    1997). But our supreme court has drawn a clear distinction between (1) Rule 402(a)’s admonitions
    and (2) Illinois Supreme Court Rule 402(c) (eff. July 1, 2012) requirement for the trial court to
    determine a factual basis for the plea. The supreme court has maintained that Rule 402(c) is not
    derived from Boykin. See People v. Nardi, 
    48 Ill. 2d 111
    , 115 (1971) (“Boykin does not touch on
    the necessity of the court to make an inquiry as to the factual basis for the defendant’s plea of
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    guilty.”). What is more, “[Rule 402(c)’s] requirements are not constitutionally mandated.” Id. at
    116. 3 Defendant had a constitutional right to be informed of the nature of the charge to which he
    was pleading guilty. In essence, defendant’s claim is not that the trial court inadequately informed
    him of the charge or the governing law but that the court itself drew the wrong legal conclusion
    from the stipulated facts. As Nardi holds, a defendant has no constitutional claim if the trial court
    accepts his plea without receiving any factual basis. See id. at 115. In that light, it follows that
    defendant’s claim here—that the factual basis received was insufficient—is necessarily not
    constitutional in scope.
    ¶ 28   Given our conclusion that defendant’s claim is not constitutional in scope, much less an
    actual-innocence claim, we do not decide whether the factual basis for the plea satisfied the
    elements of aggravated arson based on accountability.
    ¶ 29                                      III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 30   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County.
    ¶ 31   Affirmed.
    3
    Defendant criticizes People v. Wiser, 
    27 Ill. App. 3d 208
    , 209 (1975), for holding that “the
    requirements of Rule 402(c) are not constitutionally mandated.” Defendant urges us not to follow
    Wiser, but he fails to acknowledge that Wiser relied squarely on Nardi (see id.). Thus, we have no
    authority to depart from Wiser insofar as it followed our supreme court. We caution defense
    counsel to be more careful in representing precedent to this court.
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    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    People v. Flores, 
    2022 IL App (2d) 210757
    Decision Under Review:        Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, No. 09-CF-1874;
    the Hon. Daniel B. Shanes, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                     Jed Stone, of Stone & Associates, Ltd., of Waukegan, for
    for                           appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                     Eric F. Rinehart, State’s Attorney, of Waukegan (Patrick Delfino,
    for                           Edward R. Psenicka, and Lynn M. Harrington, of State’s Attorneys
    Appellee:                     Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
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