People v. Vatamaniuc ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    No. 2-18-0379
    Opinion filed January 29, 2021
    _____________________________________________________________________________
    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. 13-CF-1611
    )
    PHILIP VATAMANIUC,                     ) Honorable
    ) Victoria A. Rossetti,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Schostok and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Following a bench trial, defendant, Philip Vatamaniuc, was convicted of first-degree
    murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1) (West 2012)) and sentenced to 54 years’ imprisonment. He was 17
    years old at the time of the offense. Defendant appeals, arguing that (1) Robert Ritacca, one of the
    attorneys who represented him in pretrial proceedings, was ineffective for failing to properly
    inform him concerning the details of the State’s 25-year plea offer prior to its expiration, and
    (2) his sentence is a de facto life sentence that violates the eighth amendment to the United States
    Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. VIII) and the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois
    Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11). We affirm defendant’s conviction and reject his
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim because defendant provided no independent, objective
    
    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    confirmation that he did not timely accept the State’s offer due to his counsel’s erroneous advice.
    However, because the record bears no indication that the circuit court evaluated whether defendant
    was among the rarest of juvenile offenders whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility, we
    vacate his sentence and remand for a new sentencing hearing.
    ¶2                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3     For clarity, before detailing the plea negotiations and the testimony of the witnesses at trial,
    we begin with a broad overview of the facts developed at trial. The evidence demonstrated that on
    the afternoon of June 3, 2013, defendant, age 17, and codefendants, Michael Coffee and Benjamin
    Schenk, ages 17 and 20, respectively, were together at Lauren Hahn’s house, where they passed a
    firearm back and forth between them. Coffee called Colin Nutter, age 20, and set up a meeting
    with him to buy marijuana. The trio walked to the meeting spot and got into Nutter’s blue Dodge
    Stratus when he pulled up. Coffee sat in the front passenger seat, Schenk sat in the backseat, behind
    Coffee, and defendant sat in the backseat, behind Nutter.
    ¶4     Within moments of the trio entering the vehicle, Nutter was shot in the back of the head
    and killed. Schenk and defendant put Nutter’s body into the trunk. The trio then drove the Dodge
    Stratus to Hahn’s house, where Schenk and Coffee cleaned the inside of it with bleach. They
    eventually drove to Schenk’s residence, where they obtained towels, gardening gloves, and a
    shovel, before driving to a secluded spot where they dumped Nutter’s body and covered it with
    leaves and sticks. Shortly thereafter, they returned to the area where they left Nutter’s body and
    took his wallet. The body was found later that evening by a woman walking her dog.
    ¶5     Early the next morning, Schenk and Coffee used Nutter’s key to enter his house while
    Nutter’s mother was sleeping upstairs. They took marijuana from his dresser drawer, prescription
    medication for Nutter’s dog from the kitchen counter, and a silver Ford Focus from the garage.
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    Police later located the Dodge Stratus on a street in Chicago, the Ford Focus in Hahn’s driveway,
    and the murder weapon in Schenk’s backyard, wrapped in a pair of men’s briefs inside a bag of
    charcoal. The only fingerprint evidence was a single fingerprint that matched defendant, taken
    from the inside of the rear driver’s-side window of the Dodge Stratus. Defendant, Schenk, and
    Coffee were all arrested within a matter of days in connection with the murder.
    ¶6     Defendant was indicted by a grand jury on multiple counts, including four counts of first-
    degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3) (West 2012)) (counts I through IV), three
    counts of armed robbery (id. § 18-2(a)(2)) (counts V, VI, and VII), two counts of unlawful
    possession of a stolen motor vehicle (625 ILCS 5/4-103(a)(1) (West 2012)) (counts VIII and IX),
    and one count of concealment of a homicidal death (720 ILCS 5/9-3.4(a) (West 2012) (count X).
    Schenk and Coffee were similarly indicted. The State nol-prossed the counts of armed robbery,
    unlawful possession of a stolen vehicle, and concealment of a homicidal death, and the case
    proceeded to trial against defendant on the four counts of first-degree murder.
    ¶7                              A. Pertinent Pretrial Proceedings
    ¶8     On August 23, 2013, defendant and his counsel, Robert Ritacca, appeared before the circuit
    court and requested a plea conference pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 402 (eff. July 1,
    2012). The State agreed to participate in the Rule 402 conference, but it noted that it needed to
    conduct further investigation before it could settle the case. The court explained to defendant what
    a Rule 402 conference entailed, and defendant confirmed that he wanted the conference to proceed.
    The court then held a Rule 402 conference with the prosecutor and defense counsel, off the record.
    ¶9     On August 28, 2013, the circuit court advised defendant at length concerning what was
    discussed at the Rule 402 conference, including its understanding of the underlying facts of the
    case. Pertinently, the court told defendant that Ritacca asserted that defendant, Schenk, and Coffee
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    got into Nutter’s vehicle, that defendant “saw Schenk pull out a gun and point [it] diagonally
    towards the driver and pull the trigger,” that Schenk asked defendant to help put the body in the
    trunk, and that, after leaving the body on the roadside, defendant covered it with leaves. The court
    also stated that Ritacca informed it that “no one in any of the evidence that he has to present would
    show that [defendant] had a gun” and that “[t]here’s no *** information that [defendant] or Mr.
    Coffee knew about the gun” prior to the shooting. The court also stated that it was advised that
    “there is a person in the jail who indicated that he had separate conversations with [defendant] and
    Schenk” and that “Schenk had bragged about doing the shooting.”
    ¶ 10   Defendant agreed that the court’s summary of the conference matched what Ritacca told
    him. The State informed the court that it had started negotiations with Ritacca but that further
    investigation was still needed. The prosecutor stated that any agreement would require a proffer
    from defendant and truthful testimony against Schenk and Coffee and that, in exchange, the State
    would drop the first-degree murder charges and offer “something along the lines of an armed
    robbery based on the dangerous weapon with a consecutive conceal[ment] of a homicidal death.”
    The prosecutor stated that Ritacca advised him “that he would not take anything in the teens and
    that the defendant’s father [did] not wish his son to do any time. Therefore, that ended our
    conversation.” Ritacca agreed with the State’s summary of their conversation and stated that he
    was “still in the same position, that [he had not] heard anything agreeable for this defendant.” He
    continued that he “wish[ed] to proffer [and] give the State [defendant’s] statement, and if that
    doesn’t sway the State in any way *** [he] wish[ed] to go to trial on this matter.” Nevertheless,
    Ritacca agreed to continue negotiating with the State.
    ¶ 11   On September 9, 2013, the prosecutor informed the court that there was a “breakdown in
    negotiations.” Ritacca indicated that he wished to continue negotiations and stated that he was
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    “antsy to try to resolve this matter.” Two days later, on September 11, 2013, the prosecutor
    informed the court that plea negotiations had resumed but that they were “still at opposite ends.”
    ¶ 12   On September 13, 2013, the court confirmed with defendant that Ritacca had informed him
    of the possibility of an additional conference, and defendant indicated that he wished for the
    attorneys and the court to engage in another conference. Accordingly, the parties conducted a
    second Rule 402 conference off the record.
    ¶ 13   The State tendered a written plea offer to Ritacca on September 15, 2013. The offer appears
    in the record and provides that, in exchange for defendant’s truthful testimony against Schenk and
    Coffee, the first-degree-murder and motor-vehicle charges would be dismissed and that defendant
    would plead guilty to “Armed Robbery—20 years imprisonment based on a ‘dangerous weapon’
    to be served at 50% followed by Concealment of a Homicidal Death—5 years imprisonment @
    50% to be served consecutively so that the actual time served after good-time credit is
    approximately 12 ½ years.” It also stated that, “if the defendant does not accept this offer by the
    pretrial date, or there are any pre-trial motions requiring evidentiary testimony, the offer will
    automatically terminate.” The offer also indicated that the State reserved the right to revoke the
    offer “should relevant information concerning this offense or defendant arise prior to the
    completion of the plea.”
    ¶ 14   On September 16, 2013, the prosecutor informed the court that he gave Ritacca the written
    offer the prior day. Ritacca confirmed that he informed defendant as to what transpired at the
    September 13, 2013, conference. He also acknowledged that he received the State’s offer and that
    he discussed it with defendant and defendant’s father, Daniel Vatamaniuc, but he stated, “I don’t
    understand it, judge, the way that it is written.” The court replied that it had not seen the offer and
    would not “get involved in that.” It advised Ritacca to discuss it with the State.
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    ¶ 15    The court proceeded to advise defendant what transpired during the second Rule 402
    conference, including additional facts of which it was apprised. Pertinently, it stated that it was
    informed that defendant, Schenk, and Coffee were at Hahn’s house prior to the shooting, that
    Schenk and Coffee passed a gun back and forth, as well as loaded and unloaded it, and that Schenk
    had discussed robbing a drug dealer before they left to meet Nutter. The court also informed
    defendant that “the State had talked about a plea on the armed robbery as well as a consecutive
    plea on the concealment of a homicid[al] death. *** The court discussed between 15 and 18 years
    and indicated that the defense and the State should continue talking.” Defendant acknowledged
    that Ritacca discussed these developments with him.
    ¶ 16    Ritacca then explained that his confusion stemmed from his belief that the sentences should
    run concurrently, but the trial court replied that it agreed with the State that, following a legislative
    amendment, the sentences should run consecutively. Ritacca also indicated that he was confused
    that the offer did not include a mandatory supervised release (MSR) term, to which the court
    explained that the MSR is based on the class of the offense, so that “if it is a plea on a Class X or
    Class 1, you know what the mandatory supervised release statute says.” Ritacca agreed in that
    regard, and the court told the parties to step away and “discuss that.” Ritacca answered that he did
    not “want to discuss it at [that] particular time” because he was “very, very upset” with how the
    State was proceeding. The court replied, “well, Mr. Ritacca, you might be upset, but you have a
    duty to discuss this offer with your client.” He replied that he “discussed—,” at which point the
    court interrupted him and said, “if you don’t understand it, you can’t discuss it with your client. If
    you [would] like a minute to discuss that so you can again talk to your client about that, that’s fine.
    We will pass the case.” The record does not indicate that the case was passed, and Ritacca moved
    on and discussed other matters.
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    ¶ 17   On September 27, 2013, at the next court date, the prosecutor informed the court that he
    and Ritacca “spoke at some length about what that offer actually meant and that’s as far as [they]
    got.” After the court handled other issues raised by the parties, the prosecutor stated that, on
    October 1, 2013, he was going to “tender a formal deadline date for the offer that’s already been
    tendered.” He continued, “I just wanted to put that on the record. October 1st.” Ritacca replied,
    “[t]here is no offer here. There is no offer here[,] *** Judge, you can’t give this guy an offer if it’s
    false.” The court told Ritacca to step out of the courtroom, and the proceedings ended.
    ¶ 18   At a status hearing on October 1, 2013, the prosecutor stated, “in all fairness to Mr.
    Ritacca’s client, judge, we will keep that written offer that we did tender open until October 21st.
    After that, the offer will be withdrawn.” Ritacca replied, “in terms of the written offer that they
    gave me, it’s not correct, Judge, in terms of my calculations, in terms of the charges, in terms of
    the numbers, [and] in terms of the dispositions in this matter.” The court directed Ritacca to discuss
    that with the State and return on October 21. He responded, “I’ve been discussing it until I’m blue
    in the face.” The court stated that if Ritacca wanted to have another Rule 402 conference, he could
    bring that up at the next court date.
    ¶ 19   On October 21, 2013, at the next court date, there was neither any mention of the plea offer
    nor any indication that either party wished to engage in another Rule 402 conference. Instead,
    Ritacca requested hearing dates on a motion he recently filed, which the court obliged. As the State
    points out in its brief, the motions were subsequently litigated, including a multi-day evidentiary
    hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress.
    ¶ 20   More than six months later, on May 8, 2014, Ritacca filed a motion to enforce the plea
    agreement. Therein, he asserted that the State “made a formal offer to the defendant which has
    been previously accepted and is still pending and has not been rejected” as well as that “defendant
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    has excepted [sic] the offer and the Court’s exception [sic] should be allowed and the court should
    mandate the State to further comply.” He also pointed out that defendant has a right to the effective
    assistance of counsel during plea negotiations.
    ¶ 21   The circuit court held a hearing on the motion on June 10, 2014. Ritacca stated that the
    State gave him a plea offer, that he “gave it to this defendant, *** this defendant had accepted it,
    *** [and] never rejected any type of plea negotiations in this matter.” He also asserted that the
    offer did not automatically terminate, that he did not bring forward any witnesses to testify
    “evidentiary-wise,” and that the State had not discovered any new evidence that would have caused
    it to withdraw the offer. In response, the State pointed out that there was a multi-day evidentiary
    hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress. It also relied on the transcript from the October 1, 2013,
    proceedings, wherein the prosecutor stated that the offer would be kept “open until October 21st.
    After that, the offer will be withdrawn,” and it stressed that nothing in the October 21, 2013,
    transcript indicated that the defense wished to accept the offer. The State further argued that, even
    if the offer had not lapsed, it would have withdrawn the offer on November 12, 2013—when it
    interviewed and obtained the written statement of a witness who stated that defendant confessed
    to him that he was the shooter. It argued that, even otherwise, the court would not have accepted
    the plea after receiving the witness’s written statement. The State further highlighted that it had
    not yet interviewed the witness when the parties engaged in the Rule 402 conferences.
    ¶ 22   The circuit court denied defendant’s motion to enforce the plea agreement, reasoning that
    the offer lapsed on October 21, 2013. It also rejected Ritacca’s assertion that it had not litigated
    any evidentiary matters, noting that Ritacca elicited testimony from two detectives, defendant, and
    Daniel in November 2013. The court then explained to defendant that there could be an issue with
    Ritacca continuing to represent him if defendant wished to allege that he was ineffective in
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    handling the plea negotiations. The following exchange occurred:
    “THE COURT: Now, this Court does not consider this a game. And, Mr. Ritacca,
    if there are issues with regard to your unprofessional conduct in this matter, it takes it a
    step further because then the Court is in a position where it may have to report this to the
    Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Committee [sic].
    MR. RITACCA: That’s fine, Judge.
    THE COURT: And I’m not suggesting at this point that that’s where I am, but that’s
    where this is headed. And so, if that is what you’re suggesting, I now believe that
    [defendant] has the right to have another attorney. And so I will pass this, and he can ***
    discuss it with you, Mr. Ritacca, if that’s what he wishes to do and continue with this.
    That’s up to you and your client at this point.”
    After a brief recess, defendant informed the court that he wanted Ritacca to continue to represent
    him. As such, the court determined that Ritacca had not provided ineffective assistance of counsel,
    reasoning that defendant had not suffered any prejudice.
    ¶ 23    On June 17, 2014, the circuit court granted the State’s motion to disqualify Ritacca as
    defense counsel due to a conflict of interest that stemmed from his representation of a State’s
    witness in defendant’s case in an unrelated criminal matter. The conflict arose between Ritacca
    and defendant after all the foregoing described plea negotiations occurred. Ritacca filed a motion
    for leave to file an interlocutory appeal, which this court denied in a minute order on August 14,
    2014. Defendant thereafter retained new counsel, attorney Patrick Quilty, who represented him
    through the trial.
    ¶ 24                                       B. The Trial
    ¶ 25    A four-day bench trial was held in April 2017. Samantha Dela Cruz testified that, on the
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    evening of June 3, 2013, she walked her dog along Frontage Road in Skokie and observed what
    “could possibly be a mannequin” laying in some overgrown shrubs. She walked home and returned
    to the area with her mother, Rebecca Dela Cruz. Rebecca testified that her daughter directed her
    to a weeded area, where she observed a leg that “looked like it was bent unnaturally.” She also
    saw a torso and “a little bit of the face” through the brush. She called 911.
    ¶ 26   Francisco Martinez Sr. testified that he owned a .40 caliber semiautomatic handgun that he
    kept in a case on the top shelf of a closet in his Highland Park home. He had two or three magazines
    for the handgun and a case of hollow-point bullets. He stored the magazines in the carrying case
    and the box of hollow-point ammunition next to the case. He and his wife were out of town from
    May 27 to May 31, 2013, leaving their son, Francisco Martinez Jr., at home. On June 6, 2013,
    several Highland Park police officers came to Martinez Sr.’s home and inquired about his firearm.
    He invited the officers inside and went to the closet to show them where he kept it, only to discover
    that his firearm and all the ammunition were missing.
    ¶ 27   Martinez Jr. testified that, during the week of May 27, 2013, while his parents were out of
    town, some of his friends came to “just chill” at a week-long gathering he had at his house. They
    spent their time “drinking, smoking cannabis, listening to music, free styling to instrumentals, and
    watching T.V.” Among the people who visited his house at various times during the week were
    defendant, Nutter, Schenk, Coffee, and Daniel Valentine. While at the gathering, Nutter mentioned
    his ability to procure marijuana. On May 30, 2013, Coffee was alone in the house for
    approximately five hours while Martinez Jr. was at work.
    ¶ 28   Martinez Jr. testified that he missed a call from Schenk’s phone number on June 3, 2013.
    He returned the call later that evening, but defendant answered the phone and stated that they were
    in Chicago and could not make it back to the Highland Park area. Two days later, on June 5,
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    Martinez Jr. picked up defendant from school after one of his finals. Defendant directed them to a
    house where they picked up some marijuana, and they returned to Martinez Jr.’s house to smoke
    it. Afterward, Martinez Jr. dropped defendant back off at school. When Highland Park police
    officers questioned him at his house on June 6, he “had no clue” that his father’s firearm was used
    to kill Nutter.
    ¶ 29    Lucas Carlson testified that on May 31 or June 1, 2013, Coffee came to his residence with
    a group of “somewhere between four and seven” people whom he did not know. He could not
    recall if defendant was with them, but he acknowledged that when he reported the incident he told
    the police that defendant was present. Coffee brandished a firearm and asked Carlson if they could
    come inside. Carlson let the group in because he feared for his life. Coffee had a backpack with
    him, and he showed Carlson several firearm magazines and some ammunition. The group sat in
    his living room “chit chatting” for a few minutes. Carlson was “on drugs at the time” and “was
    nervous.” He cut into their conversation and asked them if they would leave if he let them empty
    an entire magazine into his wall. Coffee then fired the gun several times into the wall near where
    the wall met the ceiling. The group laughed for about a minute, then left. Police later recovered
    three bullets from Carlson’s wall, and forensics determined that they were fired from the same
    firearm that was used to kill Nutter.
    ¶ 30    Luis Ramos and Oscar Hernandez testified that late on the evening of June 2, 2013, they
    drove to a house in Highwood to pick up Oscar’s friend. As they waited in the car for the friend to
    come outside, Coffee, Schenk, and defendant, with whom they were familiar, approached the
    vehicle. Coffee stated that they “were running” because they had “heat,” and he lifted his shirt up
    and revealed to Ramos a firearm in his waistband. Defendant stood about one foot away from
    Coffee when he revealed the gun. Defendant said nothing and kept to himself. Hernandez, who
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    was in the driver’s seat, “couldn’t really see anything,” but he looked at Coffee when he told
    Ramos that he had a gun, and he saw Coffee “pretty much [do] the motion of look, you know, like
    we have this [gun].” Schenk then began to look agitated, and he pulled Coffee aside, where they
    exchanged words. Ramos could not hear what either individual said. Coffee asked Ramos and
    Hernandez if they wanted to hang out, but they declined.
    ¶ 31   Hahn testified that, in 2013, she lived in a home on Oakridge Avenue in Highwood. She
    met Schenk, Coffee, and defendant in 2013, and they came to her house almost every day after
    school, including on June 3, 2013. That day, at approximately 11 a.m., Schenk and Coffee arrived
    at her house, and Coffee had a gun. They had brought a gun to her house before that day,
    “probably” more than one time. They went into her living room and “were taking the gun and
    passing it around and emptying the bullets and taking the [clip] out.” While Schenk and Coffee
    were handling the gun, Hahn “was trying to pay attention [to the] T.V.”
    ¶ 32   Hahn testified that defendant arrived at her house at approximately 2 p.m. Defendant sat
    on the couch next to her for a while. He eventually took the gun from Schenk, emptied the bullets
    into the hooded sweatshirt he was wearing, and then put the bullets back into the gun. She told
    them to “get that thing out of my place,” but they did not leave right away. Defendant had the gun
    when the group eventually left.
    ¶ 33   Hahn further testified that Schenk, Coffee, and defendant returned to her house later that
    evening. Either Coffee or Schenk stated that defendant had cut his ear and asked her for bleach.
    She went outside to see defendant, but she did not observe a cut. She gave them a bottle of bleach
    and “saw them taking the [trunk] carpeting in and out of a car.” She later found carpeting and
    blood inside the garbage cans that she kept along the exterior of her house.
    ¶ 34   Hahn testified that, the following day, Schenk and Coffee returned to her house in a silver
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    car. She thought defendant was also there, but she was “not 100 percent sure.” She asked them to
    get the vehicle out of her driveway because that side of the driveway was not hers. She saw Schenk
    take a baseball bat and strike the car window three times. She watched from her window, but not
    for “too long,” because she did not want to see what was going on and “probably” knew
    “something was bad.”
    ¶ 35   Frances Pieri, Hahn’s next-door neighbor, testified that on the afternoon of June 3 or June
    4, 2013, she saw a car in Hahn’s driveway that she had not seen before. Through the window of
    her laundry room, she observed a white male wiping down the interior of the vehicle while wearing
    gloves. The white male she observed was not defendant. She also saw another white male, a black
    male, and Hahn in the driveway “watching this man in the car.” Pieri tended to some household
    duties and later observed “this same young man that was in the car wiping it down” use a baseball
    bat, “hitting it against the windows trying to get into the car.” The car window did not break, and
    the individual went into Hahn’s home. Later, at approximately 4 p.m., she observed a white male
    and a black male get into the car and drive away. The white male was not the same individual she
    observed cleaning the interior of the vehicle.
    ¶ 36   Nutter’s parents, Michael and Angie Nutter, both testified. On June 3, 2013, at
    approximately 4:30 p.m., Nutter left home in his Dodge Stratus. He told Angie that he was going
    to hang out with friends. After the Nutters came home from shopping that evening, Angie placed
    the keys to their Ford Focus on the kitchen counter. She tried to call Nutter on his cell phone at
    approximately 8 p.m., but he did not answer. She called him several more times before she went
    to bed, but she was unable to reach him. At approximately 4:15 a.m. the next morning, Michael
    left their house and walked to the train station to go to work in Chicago, which was his normal
    routine. Between 5 and 6 a.m., Angie heard “a very audible sound,” “like a ‘click’ or something
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    falling,” but she did not go downstairs to investigate it. At approximately 6:30 a.m., Mrs. Nutter
    went downstairs and saw that the Dodge Stratus was not in the garage, nor was the Ford Focus.
    She also noticed that the keys for the Ford Focus and three prescription medication bottles for their
    dog were missing from the kitchen counter. Angie then called the police to report that her son was
    missing. Police arrived at her home soon after and informed her that they had found her son’s
    body.
    ¶ 37    Sergeant Solveig Gehrken of the Wilmette Police Department testified that on the evening
    of June 4, 2013, he responded to Hahn’s residence after police located the Nutters’ Ford Focus
    parked in her driveway. He observed bloody footwear impressions on the driveway, as well as
    blood stains on the sidewalk that led from the driveway to the side of the house, where several
    garbage cans were situated. A pressboard from the trunk of a vehicle was leaning against one of
    the cans, and he observed a blood stain on one corner of it. He also found a carpet liner inside one
    of the garbage cans, and he recognized it as something that looked like it came from the trunk of
    a vehicle. He also found inside one of the garbage cans a second pressboard, a hospital disinfectant
    bottle, a plastic bag filled with carpet remnants, and a prescription bottle for Michael, from an
    animal hospital for a dog. All these items had blood stains on them. He also examined the Ford
    Focus in the driveway, which was locked and had keys in the ignition. He noted damage to the
    driver’s-side front window as well as damage to the rear bumper. He also recovered from inside
    Hahn’s residence a license plate registered to the Nutters’ Ford Focus.
    ¶ 38    Nicholas Pacileo testified that he was 13 years old at the time of the offense. On June 3,
    2013, he visited his friend, Reno Vanderpal, at his house. Schenk was renting a room from Reno’s
    mother, Diane Vanderpal. Pacileo observed Coffee, Schenk, and defendant pull up to Vanderpal’s
    house in a “dark color” car. He went outside with Vanderpal and observed Schenk go inside the
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    house “to grab stuff,” including “towels and gloves and stuff like that, gardening supplies,
    basically.” He also saw defendant retrieve a shovel from the side of the house and put it into the
    back seat of the vehicle. Pacileo walked up to the side of the vehicle the group arrived in. The
    vehicle’s trunk was open, and he observed blood, towels, and feet. He and Vanderpal then went
    into the garage and “acted like nothing happened because [he] was 13 and never really experienced
    stuff like that.”
    ¶ 39    Valentine testified that he and defendant had been friends since they were 11 or 12 years
    old, and he thought of defendant like a brother. Together, they used to “chill, walk around, rap,
    smoke, skate, little bit of everything.” Valentine considered himself a “rap artist,” and defendant
    also liked to rap. Valentine met Coffee through defendant less than a year before the events of June
    2013. Valentine was also familiar with Schenk.
    ¶ 40    Valentine testified that, on the morning of June 4, 2013, defendant and Coffee “just showed
    up” at his house while he was playing basketball in his driveway. Neither defendant nor Coffee
    joined him playing basketball, which Valentine thought was very unusual. After about 30 minutes,
    they went into the garage, where they smoked marijuana and “started rapping, putting on an
    instrumental.” Defendant rapped “some lyric about a gun.” Valentine testified that he could not
    “exactly remember what he said, but [he] just, like, didn’t believe what he said, so [he] called him
    out on it.” Defendant and Coffee then “started talking about what they—what happened that night
    that they killed Colin.” Valentine testified that he could not “really remember exactly what
    [defendant] said,” but he stated that he remembered what he included in the handwritten statement
    he had subsequently prepared. He noted that his “statement says that [defendant] pulled the
    trigger,” but he testified that “that doesn’t sound like [defendant], doesn’t sound like something he
    would say.” Valentine further testified that he thought defendant said, “we did it,” and then Coffee
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    loudly said “bang!” Valentine asked them “questions like who did this happen to, where did it
    happen, why, and all that.” Defendant told him what kind of gun was used, and Valentine
    “believe[d] he said .44.” Defendant also stated that he sat behind Nutter when he was shot. Coffee
    stated that he was in the front passenger seat and Schenk was seated behind him. Valentine testified
    that defendant then told him that he and Schenk put Nutter’s body in the trunk, dumped it on the
    side of the road, and covered it with leaves and sticks. Valentine then “called them all idiots and
    told them that they had to leave [his] house.”
    ¶ 41     Valentine further testified that investigators went to his house and asked him if he had any
    information about the homicide. He “declined to speak with them” because he “just didn’t want
    to.” Valentine testified that he was subpoenaed by the Lake County State’s Attorney’s office in
    November 2013, and he prepared a handwritten statement concerning the statements that
    defendant and Coffee made to him on June 4, 2013. Valentine’s handwritten statement, dated
    November 12, 2013, appears in the record. It states, pertinently: “[Defendant] said he had put the
    gun to Colin’s head and pulled the trigger. *** I asked [defendant] what happened[,] and he said
    his head didn’t splatter.” During his testimony, Valentine noted that he had not slept in three days
    when he prepared the statement, and he begged the police to allow him to provide the statement
    later.
    ¶ 42     Detective Sergeant Joe Kopecky of the Wheeling Police Department testified that he found
    the Nutters’ Ford Focus backed into Hahn’s driveway on June 4, 2013. He parked nearby to watch
    the vehicle and observed Hahn come out of the house to meet Schenk, who was wearing gloves
    and carrying a baseball bat. After Schenk and Hahn spoke for a few minutes, Schenk pushed the
    Ford Focus back several feet, toward the garage, and struck the driver’s-side window several times
    with the baseball bat. The window did not break. Schenk then went into Hahn’s house and came
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    out alone several minutes later, without the gloves and the baseball bat. Schenk proceeded to walk
    down the street whilst talking on his cell phone, at which point he was arrested by other detectives
    in the area.
    ¶ 43    On June 29, 2015, Schenk entered into an open plea agreement wherein he agreed to testify
    truthfully against defendant in exchange for a plea to murder, with a sentencing range of 20 to 60
    years. Schenk testified that he was 20 years old at the time of the offense and had been friends
    with defendant since the summer of 2011. They hung out together nearly every day, “playing video
    games, smoking weed, drinking [alcohol], [and] sometimes stealing stuff.” He met Coffee through
    defendant in 2012. He spent time with Coffee on many occasions, although he was better friends
    with defendant than he was with Coffee. He did not really know Nutter, but he had previously
    purchased marijuana from him through an intermediary.
    ¶ 44    Schenk testified that on the morning of June 2, 2013, he received a loaded .40 caliber
    firearm from Coffee. He was contemplating purchasing it from Coffee and “thinking about ending
    [his] life with it.” Schenk brought the gun with him to work at an Ace Hardware on June 3, 2013,
    and kept it concealed in his waistband. He received a phone call from Coffee during his shift, after
    which he left work early. He met Coffee at a specified location and gave him the gun back.
    ¶ 45    Schenk and Coffee walked to Hahn’s house and arrived at around noon. They sat in her
    living room and “just kind of hung out, [and] watched T.V.” Defendant arrived at Hahn’s house
    approximately 90 minutes later. Defendant picked up the gun from a table and began to play with
    it, “jacking the bullets out of the magazine, wiping them, [and] putting them back in.” He did that
    “off and on” over the course of about three hours. Schenk also took hold of the gun a few times.
    He “[j]ust looked at it, jacked [a bullet] around in and out of the chamber, [and] put it back in.”
    Coffee similarly took the gun and did the same thing.
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    ¶ 46      Schenk testified that Coffee initiated a conversation about who they could rob to obtain
    drugs and money, and Nutter’s name came up. Coffee called Nutter and arranged a meeting. Coffee
    then picked up the gun, and they left Hahn’s house on foot to meet Nutter. As they walked, Coffee
    stated that he wanted to go to the west side of Chicago and that they needed a car. Schenk replied
    that Nutter was not going to drive them there, and Coffee stated that they were “going to have to
    kill him.” Coffee stated that Schenk had already “proved” himself and, as he passed the gun to
    defendant, stated that it was “Phil’s turn.” Defendant and Coffee then began “bandying Four
    Corner Hustler [(gang)] slogans back and forth” and “fist bumped.”
    ¶ 47      Schenk testified that they arrived at the meeting location before Nutter. Schenk distributed
    to Coffee and defendant black cotton gloves that he had stolen from work, and they put the gloves
    on. Nutter pulled up in his Dodge Stratus approximately 5 to 10 minutes later, and the trio got into
    the vehicle. Coffee entered the front passenger seat, defendant sat behind Nutter in the backseat,
    and Schenk sat in the rear passenger’s-side seat. Music was playing in Nutter’s car, and Coffee
    said, “this is my shit,” and turned the volume up. Coffee then screamed “do it!” Nutter turned his
    head to look at Coffee, and defendant shot Nutter in the back of his head. Coffee opened the trunk,
    into which Schenk and defendant put Nutter’s body. Coffee then got into the driver’s seat and
    drove them back to Hahn’s house, where Coffee and Schenk cleaned the inside of the vehicle with
    bleach.
    ¶ 48      Schenk testified that, while Nutter’s body was still in the trunk of the Dodge Stratus parked
    in Hahn’s driveway, he, defendant, and Coffee smoked marijuana inside Hahn’s house for about
    two hours. Defendant was also “playing with the gun a little bit, but not as much as before.” The
    group eventually departed Hahn’s house in the Dodge Stratus. Coffee drove the vehicle, and they
    picked up shovels from Vanderpal’s residence, where Schenk was renting a bedroom. They
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    proceeded to drive toward the west side of Chicago, but they “began to get nervous about driving
    around with a body in the trunk.” They pulled off the road and threw into a dumpster a bag that
    contained their gloves, the spent shell casings from the firearm, and other items. They then drove
    around in search of a spot to leave the body. Coffee identified a secluded area, and defendant and
    Schenk removed the body from the trunk, laid it in some brush, and covered it with leaves. They
    did not use the shovel to bury the body, because they feared being seen.
    ¶ 49   Schenk testified that they next continued driving, only to return to the scene where they
    left Nutter’s body, to take his wallet. It took them “a while” to find where they had dumped the
    body, because they “did not know the area” and “were unsure where it was, exactly.” Coffee took
    $200 in cash from the wallet, and Schenk threw Nutter’s various cards and other items from the
    wallet out the car window as they drove on the expressway. When they arrived in Chicago, they
    drove around for several hours. While there, Coffee used some of the money he took from Nutter’s
    wallet to purchase cocaine for defendant and Schenk, which they snorted. They returned to Hahn’s
    house, left the Dodge Stratus in her driveway, and parted ways.
    ¶ 50   Schenk further testified that, at 5 a.m. the next morning, he and Coffee burglarized the
    Nutters’ house. They drove there in the Dodge Stratus and used Nutter’s house key to enter the
    home. Coffee took a “big Tupperware thing full of marijuana” from a drawer in Nutter’s bedroom,
    and Schenk put on a hooded sweatshirt that he took from the bedroom because he was “jittery and
    cold” since he “had been taking a lot of pills and snorting a lot of cocaine.” They proceeded into
    the kitchen, and Schenk took pill bottles from the kitchen counter. Coffee handed him the keys to
    the Dodge Stratus and took some keys from the kitchen counter. Schenk and Coffee then left the
    house and returned to Hahn’s house; Schenk drove the Dodge Stratus while Coffee drove a Ford
    Focus that he took from the Nutters’ garage.
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    ¶ 51   Schenk testified that, later that day, he, Coffee, and defendant drove back to Chicago. He
    drove the Dodge Stratus while defendant and Coffee drove the Ford Focus “pretty fast,” “weaving
    in and out of traffic.” While they were driving in Chicago, the Ford Focus stopped suddenly, and
    Schenk rear ended it with the Dodge Stratus, which “took that car out of commission.” They left
    the Dodge Stratus parked on the street, and Schenk entered the Ford Focus. The three individuals
    then “drove around the west side for a little bit” and then returned to Hahn’s house. They parked
    the Ford Focus in Hahn’s driveway. Schenk testified that he later realized that the keys to the Ford
    Focus were left in the ignition and locked inside the vehicle. He retrieved a baseball bat from inside
    Hahn’s house and struck the vehicle’s window with it several times. He was unable to break the
    window, so he left. As he walked “to Walgreens to get some cigarettes and some food,” he was
    arrested in connection with Nutter’s murder.
    ¶ 52   Defendant did not testify, but a video recording of his June 6, 2013, custodial interrogation
    by police was entered into evidence. In the interview, defendant initially denied any involvement
    in the homicide. He told the police that, on the day in question, he was at the beach with his ex-
    girlfriend until approximately 4 p.m., after which he went to Valentine’s house, where he played
    basketball and smoked marijuana with friends until sometime between 10 p.m. and midnight.
    ¶ 53   Defendant’s explanation regarding his whereabouts on June 3, 2013, changed once police
    told him that Schenk and Coffee were also being questioned and that “everybody’s talking.”
    Defendant then told investigators the following. He, Schenk, and Coffee were at Hahn’s house
    after school on June 3, 2013, and they left to buy marijuana from Nutter. Once Nutter pulled up to
    the meeting spot, they got into his car. He sat behind Nutter, who was in the driver’s seat, Schenk
    sat next to defendant in the rear passenger-side seat, and Coffee sat in the front passenger seat.
    Schenk told Nutter that he did not have any money on him and he needed to get money to pay for
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    the marijuana. Defendant did not see the gun before they got into the car, and it surprised him
    when Schenk shot Nutter. He was “in shock” after the gun went off. It was daylight at the time,
    and he “was just being quick” when he helped Schenk put the body in the trunk, out of fear of
    being seen.
    ¶ 54   After he helped Schenk put the body in the trunk, defendant said “[d]rop me off, man. I
    don’t want to be part of this shit.” When they returned to Hahn’s house, he was “freaking out
    [and] smoked a cigarette” on the living room couch while Schenk and Coffee cleaned the inside
    of the car. He saw Schenk get a garbage bag from under the kitchen sink and bring it outside, into
    which Schenk put dirty towels. Coffee told him that Schenk had pointed a gun at him “at some
    point” and threatened him, but defendant could not remember when.
    ¶ 55   Defendant stated that Schenk then decided that they needed to get rid of the body. He could
    not remember who picked the spot to leave the body or why the spot was chosen. Defendant stated
    that he “had to get the head part” because Schenk had already “grabbed the feet,” and defendant
    “got [Nutter’s] fucking blood all over [his] hands.” He and Schenk lifted the body out of the trunk
    and covered it with leaves.
    ¶ 56   Defendant stated that they drove around for about an hour before they returned to take
    Nutter’s wallet—Schenk retrieved it and stated that he wanted to look at his driver’s license to find
    out where Nutter lived. Defendant also remembered that Schenk took a house key from Nutter’s
    key ring. As they drove on the expressway to Chicago, Schenk threw Nutter’s various cards out
    the window. They “went to the city for a bit, and after that [they] did come back and [Schenk and
    Coffee] did drop [defendant] off at home.”
    ¶ 57   Defendant stated that he went to Hahn’s house the next day, and it was then that he first
    saw the Nutters’ Ford Focus. He said he “didn’t want to go” to Nutter’s house, because he “had a
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    bad feeling about that” and “didn’t want to be a part of it.” He stated that Schenk “wanted to get
    more and [was] getting greedy.” Schenk told him that he stole the Ford Focus from the Nutter
    house, and defendant went home because he “want[ed] it to stop.”
    ¶ 58   At trial, the parties entered several stipulations, including that Michael Ferrill testified
    before the grand jury that he had a conversation with Schenk on June 7, 2013, while they were in
    the Lake County jail. Schenk told him that “he had shot the Asian kid *** and he was going to
    blame the other white kid in the case.” Schenk also told him that he was an “army brat,” had
    received weapons training, and used an FNH .40 caliber firearm in the shooting. A partial copy of
    the transcript of the testimony was attached to the stipulation. It was further stipulated that
    information concerning the make and caliber of the firearm was not publicly available at that point.
    ¶ 59   Following closing arguments, the circuit court found defendant guilty on all four counts of
    first-degree murder. However, the court concluded that it could not find beyond a reasonable doubt
    that defendant “was the actual shooter,” pointing to (1) defendant’s statement to investigators that
    Schenk was the shooter; (2) Schenk’s testimony that “he entered a plea and for that plea the
    enhancement of 45 years to life was withdrawn, that he pled to 20 to 60 years even though at 100
    percent and he had to testify truthfully;” (3) Schenk’s statement to Ferrill that he shot Nutter and
    was going to blame the “other white kid;” (4) Ferrill’s knowledge of details about the murder
    weapon that were not then publicly available; and (5) the fact that the murder weapon was found
    at Schenk’s residence. Notwithstanding, it found that defendant, or one whose conduct he was
    legally responsible for, was armed with a firearm at the time of the offense. The court commented
    that “the penalties for said offense [are] an additional 15 years of imprisonment” and that, “based
    on all the evidence that has been presented, the Court finds that the defendant was armed with a
    firearm.”
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    ¶ 60                                  C. Posttrial Proceedings
    ¶ 61   Following his conviction, defendant retained new counsel, attorney Renea Amen, for
    posttrial proceedings. On December 29, 2017, defendant filed a motion to vacate the judgment or,
    in the alternative, for a new trial. He argued, inter alia, that Ritacca was ineffective for failing to
    advise him of the details regarding the State’s 25-year guilty plea offer prior to its expiration. 1
    Specifically, he asserted that Ritacca failed to advise him concerning the conditional nature of the
    State’s plea offer—namely that it would be withdrawn if not accepted by the pretrial date or if he
    litigated any evidentiary motions. Defendant asserted that the State withdrew the offer after “the
    conditions were violated.” Moreover, he asserted that Ritacca did not understand the offer, as
    demonstrated when he told the court on September 16, 2013, “I don’t understand it, Judge, the way
    that it is written.” Pointing to defendant’s affidavit, the motion further alleged that, “[i]f the
    [d]efendant was properly explained the offer and all the conditions in a meaningful manner and
    with enough time, [he] would have accepted the offer.” In defendant’s affidavit attached to the
    motion, he averred, pertinently, that (1) he was “not told of the offer of 25 years to be served at
    50% (good time credit) until either the day before or the day the offer was withdrawn;” and (2) he
    was “never told by [Ritacca] that the filing or running of [m]otions could cause the State to
    withdraw any potential offers or not make any offers based on the filings and running of
    [m]otions.”
    ¶ 62   The court held a hearing on the motion on March 1, 2018. Defendant testified that Ritacca
    told him “briefly” about the State’s offer of 25 years but that Ritacca stated, “we’re not taking
    1
    Defendant also alleged that his trial counsel, Quilty, was ineffective. Defendant does not
    raise this argument on appeal.
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    that” and “things would get better.” Ritacca brushed aside any questions defendant asked about
    the offer, and he moved on to the next topic. Defendant also testified that Ritacca did not inform
    him that the sentence could be served at 50% with good-time credit and did not mention that the
    State would rescind the offer if not accepted by the pretrial date or if any evidentiary motions were
    filed. Defendant stated he would have accepted the State’s offer had Ritacca advised him in full
    about its details and the conditions attached to it. Defendant learned the details about the offer “one
    day in court when [he] believe[d] that [Ritacca was] filing a motion.” He saw the offer while he
    was seated at counsel’s table.
    ¶ 63   Ritacca also testified at the hearing. He stated that, following the Rule 402 conference on
    September 13, 2013, he received an offer from the State and shared it with defendant and Daniel.
    At the time, he explained to defendant that “[t]he offer was that the murder was going to be
    dismissed, that [defendant] was going to plead guilty to an armed robbery and *** concealment of
    a [homicidal death]. *** In total, the bottom line of that was about [a] 12 year[ ] sentence.” He
    testified that he did not tell defendant about a deadline after which the offer would expire, because
    it was an “open offer” and “there was no deadline.” Ritacca further testified that he did not tell
    defendant that the offer would be revoked if any evidentiary hearings were litigated. In explaining
    his apparent confusion regarding the offer in court on September 16, 2013, he testified that his
    comment was taken out of context, and he stated that he did not understand why the written offer
    differed from the court’s recommendations following the Rule 402 conference as well as that he
    was confused about the absence of a specific MSR term in the offer. When asked whether he
    recalled the October 1, 2013, status date—when the State extended the deadline for the offer to
    October 21, 2013—Ritacca responded, “could have, yes.”
    ¶ 64   The circuit court denied the motion following oral argument. In addressing the ineffective-
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    assistance-of-counsel claim, the court concluded that defendant was unable to establish prejudice,
    noting that, although Ritacca indicated in some instances that he wanted to plead, “there was never
    any indication by this defendant that he wanted to plea[d],” and “every indication was that Mr.
    Ritacca went over all the ramifications of the plea with this defendant.” It also stressed that neither
    defendant nor Daniel wanted him to do any jail time. In addressing Ritacca’s apparent confusion,
    the court noted that, although “there were comments made by Mr. Ritacca that he didn’t
    understand, *** he cleared that up in the remainder of the transcript as well as here in court.” It
    concluded by stating that
    “just because now after that plea was rejected and [defendant] has now been found guilty
    of murder, [it] doesn’t give him the right to go back now and say that Mr. Ritacca did
    anything unprofessional. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Mr. Ritacca was
    compromised or that his advice or information provided to this defendant was
    unprofessional.”
    ¶ 65                                       D. Sentencing
    ¶ 66   On March 2, 2018, the court held a sentencing hearing. Highland Park police officer Darren
    Graff testified that on morning of August 1, 2012, he received a dispatch regarding suspicious
    individuals who had pillowcases and were walking in between houses. Defendant, Schenk, and a
    third individual were apprehended. Defendant was found carrying a backpack, inside of which was
    a large knife, an iPod, and two GPS units that he had stolen from parked vehicles. Defendant
    confessed that it was his idea for the group to burglarize vehicles.
    ¶ 67   Highwood police officer Ed Biondi testified that at approximately 2:23 a.m. on June 3,
    2013 (some 13 to 14 hours before Nutter was murdered), he observed defendant, Schenk, and
    Coffee walking down the street. Coffee was wearing plastic gloves. Biondi asked Coffee why he
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    was wearing the gloves, and Coffee replied that it was cold outside. Biondi then asked the group
    where they were going, and Coffee answered that he was going to his house. Defendant and Schenk
    then separated and ran away. Biondi notified dispatch that two individuals were fleeing, but neither
    defendant nor Schenk were located by police that night. In the days that followed, Biondi
    fingerprinted and photographed defendant, Schenk, and Coffee in connection with Nutter’s
    murder.
    ¶ 68   Kimberly Crittendon testified that she was a corrections officer with the Lake County
    Sheriff’s Department. She testified that, up to the sentencing hearing, defendant had 68 violations
    in the jail, including 5 violations for fighting with other inmates. In January 2015, defendant fought
    with an inmate and did not stop until they were sprayed with pepper spray. In February 2016,
    defendant fought with an inmate, and all the inmates in the area scattered. In July 2016, defendant
    fought with an inmate because the other inmate refused to cover up his “King Killer” tattoo;
    Crittendon testified that she believed that defendant was a member of the Latin Kings. The other
    inmate had facial injuries and was “covered in blood.” In September 2016, defendant was observed
    running to his cell from another cell and then washing blood from his hand. The inmate from
    whose cell defendant had run had a black eye, a bruised face, and a bloody hand. In October 2017,
    defendant was again observed fighting. Defendant had a black eye and tried to disguise the
    discoloration with toothpaste. In all these instances, defendant denied fighting. Some of
    defendant’s other violations were minor offenses, such as laughing or talking too loudly.
    ¶ 69   Angie Nutter, Michael Nutter, and Nutter’s sister provided testimony and statements
    regarding the devastating impact his death had on their lives.
    ¶ 70   Defendant presented evidence in mitigation. Laurie Cashman testified that she was a
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    mitigation specialist retained by defendant’s family to prepare a mitigation report. 2 She conducted
    an “exhaustive number of interviews” with individuals familiar with defendant, and she provided
    detailed evidence regarding defendant’s background and characteristics. She testified that
    defendant’s relationship with his parents, Daniel and Rebeca Vatamaniuc, “involved a deep love”
    but also a sense of “longing” because of his limited contact with them. Starting at an early age,
    defendant was often home alone because Daniel worked long hours and Rebeca had moved out of
    state. Defendant believed that the family would move out of state to rejoin Rebeca, but that plan
    never materialized, and he was devastated. Defendant was also bullied at school starting when he
    was six years old, because of his weight and his accent. Defendant’s older brother also bullied him
    “pretty severely.” Defendant described instances where his brother held his head underwater until
    he thought he would drown, stuck his finger into an electrical outlet, and set fire to his hair.
    Cashman also detailed that two of defendant’s friends had died. One was killed by a stray bullet,
    and the other friend, whom defendant thought of as an older brother, died by suicide after defendant
    missed several of his phone calls late one night. Defendant never received counseling or therapy,
    even though the school psychologist recommended that he be evaluated by a professional.
    Cashman believed that defendant was a “follower,” stating that defendant “sought the feeling of
    family wherever he could and that whatever friends would accept him, he went with,” including
    Schenk and Coffee. Cashman opined that defendant would not reoffend, because he was no longer
    self-medicating with alcohol and marijuana and was focused on a positive future for himself
    wherein he wished to enter a field helping others. She also noted defendant’s participation in
    alcoholics anonymous, frequent meetings with the chaplain, receipt of his GED, and study of two
    2
    The report is not included in the record on appeal.
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    foreign languages, “to better himself and to use his time wisely.” She also relayed that defendant’s
    former cellmate submitted to a chaplain an article for publication that detailed how defendant
    helped him with his own struggles and anger and noted that defendant checked out for his cellmate
    books that defendant thought would help him.
    ¶ 71   Daniel and Rebeca both testified that they believed defendant could be rehabilitated.
    Rebeca testified that she moved out of state when defendant was 11 years old. She brought
    defendant’s older brother to live with her because he was having trouble with some of his friends,
    but she “left [defendant] behind” because Daniel was very attached to him. Shortly before the
    events of June 2013, defendant asked if he could live with her because he was having “some
    problems and [wanted] to get out of Highland Park.” She testified that she “didn’t know how deep
    he was in the problem” and told him “no.”
    ¶ 72   Defendant made a statement in allocution. He began by speaking about the impact the
    offense had on himself, and he apologized to his family for “all the stress, tears, and sleepless
    nights that this caused” them. He next addressed Nutter’s family and stated that he wished “to
    cause [them] no more grief” and for them to “know how truly and genuinely sorry [he was] for all
    that [they] have endured.” He apologized for not having “the courage to do anything, something,
    that might have saved him.” He asked for their forgiveness for that failure and for “being in any
    type of correlation, connection, relation, whatever—for even simply being there” when Nutter was
    killed. He ended by stating that he learned from others that Nutter was “a great person” and that it
    was “more than despicable” and “more than a shame” that “the light that [he] had in this world
    [was] unfortunately and tragically snuffed out.”
    ¶ 73   During the sentencing hearing, a copy of the presentence investigation report (PSI) was
    admitted into evidence. In the portion of the PSI detailing the instant offense, defendant stated,
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    pertinently, as follows:
    “When we got to where my codefendant said we were meeting up [with] the guy,
    Colin Nutter pulled up. We got into his car. When he got in, my codefendant told him to
    pull off. Colin then pulled into a driveway and, as I was looking out the window, a loud
    gunshot went off. I turned to see Colin slump forward, and ‘co-d’ with the gun in his hand.
    I looked back at Colin and was stuck. After a while, I realized co-d was yelling something
    at me. He wanted me to help put Colin’s body in the trunk. Looking at the gun in his hand
    and back at Colin, I feared I’d be shot, too. Everything happened so fast, and he didn’t even
    ask for anything, didn’t give Colin a chance, or nothing. He just shot him. I don’t know
    what my state of mind was that day. I know I just wish I told the police or something. I
    didn’t run because co-d knew where I, and my family lived.”
    The PSI noted that, when discussing his attitude regarding Nutter’s death, defendant stated:
    “I wish I could have saved Colin or knew what co-d was plotting to prevent it
    somehow. I know I’m not a perfect person, and makes [sic] mistakes. Even still[,] I had no
    knowledge of what was to take place. I had no part in it other than what I did in fear of
    mine and my family’s lives. For that alone I am responsible for. But for Colin’s life? I will
    never claim responsibility for that, or for any cruel intentions that led to it.”
    The “conclusion/recommendations” portion of the PSI noted that defendant “is adamant he did not
    know what was going to occur the night *** Nutter died. He expressed what he did the night ***
    Nutter died was out of fear for himself and his family.” It noted that, “[b]ased on the offense, the
    defendant is subject to a mandatory prison sentence” and stated that, “[w]hile in custody[,]
    [defendant] may wish to seek substance abuse / mental health / or any educational or vocational
    programing available.”
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    ¶ 74   The circuit court merged the first-degree murder convictions and sentenced defendant to
    54 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections to be served at 100%, followed by an MSR term
    of 3 years. Defendant filed a motion to reconsider the sentence, which the court denied on May
    17, 2018. Defendant timely appealed.
    ¶ 75                                     II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 76   Defendant raises two issues on appeal. He argues that (1) he received ineffective assistance
    of counsel during plea negotiations because Ritacca failed to properly convey the details of the
    State’s 25-year plea offer, including that the State would withdraw it if not accepted by a certain
    date, and (2) his 54-year sentence is a de facto life sentence and violates the eighth amendment
    prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment and the proportionate penalties clause. We
    address each issue in turn.
    ¶ 77                           A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    ¶ 78   On appeal, defendant largely reiterates the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim that was
    rejected by the circuit court. Namely, he contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel
    stemming from Ritacca’s failure to properly convey to him the details of the State’s written plea
    offer—including that the State would withdraw the offer if not accepted by October 21, 2013, and
    that the sentence could be served at 50% with good-time credit. Defendant asserts that, had he
    known those details, “there is a reasonable probability that *** he would have accepted the offer.”
    Defendant prays that we vacate his conviction and, relying on Lafler v. Cooper, 
    566 U.S. 156
    (2012), asserts that the appropriate remedy is to “remand for the specific performance of the
    original plea agreement.”
    ¶ 79   The State responds that Ritacca properly conveyed the offer, that defendant failed to accept
    it, and that defendant would not have accepted it prior to its expiration or withdrawal. The State
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    stresses that defendant expressed interest in the offer only after (1) it had lapsed six months prior,
    (2) he had received unfavorable rulings on several motions, and (3) he was aware that further
    investigation led to Valentine’s written statement that indicated that defendant was the shooter.
    The State maintains that defendant offered no independent support for his claim that he would
    have accepted the offer such that he did not establish prejudice for his claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel to succeed.
    ¶ 80   A criminal defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel is provided by the sixth and
    fourteenth amendments to United States Constitution. People v. Angarola, 
    387 Ill. App. 3d 732
    ,
    735 (2009) (citing U.S. Const., amends. VI, XIV). The sixth amendment right to effective
    assistance of counsel applies to plea negotiations. People v. Curry, 
    178 Ill. 2d 509
    , 528 (1997)
    (“[a] criminal defendant has the constitutional right to be reasonably informed with respect to the
    direct consequences of accepting or rejecting a plea offer.” (Emphasis omitted.)) “This right to
    effective assistance of counsel extends to the decision to reject a plea offer, even if the defendant
    subsequently receives a fair trial.” People v. Hale, 
    2013 IL 113140
    , ¶ 16 (citing Curry, 
    178 Ill. 2d at 518
    ).
    ¶ 81   Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel during plea bargaining are evaluated under the
    familiar standards set forth by the United States Supreme Court in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984), and adopted in Illinois by People v. Albanese, 
    104 Ill. 2d 504
    , 526-27 (1984). To
    prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must satisfy two prongs, namely
    that (1) counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) the
    deficient performance resulted in prejudice. People v. Manning, 
    241 Ill. 2d 319
    , 326 (2011).
    However, we may dispose of a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel by addressing the
    prejudice prong without first addressing counsel’s performance. Albanese, 
    104 Ill. 2d at 527
    . To
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    establish prejudice where a plea offer has lapsed or was rejected because of counsel’s deficient
    performance, a defendant must demonstrate a reasonable probability that, absent his attorney’s
    deficient advice, he would have accepted the plea offer. Hale, 
    2013 IL 113140
    , ¶ 18. Such
    demonstration must include more than a defendant’s own subjective, self-serving assertions. 
    Id.
    Instead, there must be “ ‘independent, objective confirmation that defendant’s rejection of the
    proffered plea was based upon counsel’s erroneous advice,’ and not on other considerations.” 
    Id.
    (quoting Curry, 
    178 Ill. 2d at 532
    ). Additionally, a defendant must demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that the plea would have been entered without the prosecution withdrawing it or the
    trial court refusing to accept it. Id. ¶¶ 19-20. “The disparity between the sentence a defendant faced
    and a significantly shorter plea offer can be considered supportive of a defendant’s claim of
    prejudice.” Id. ¶ 18. The question of whether an individual’s constitutional rights have been
    violated is reviewed de novo. Id. ¶ 15.
    ¶ 82   Here, we conclude that defendant has failed to establish prejudice under Strickland because
    he failed to identify anything in the record that predates the expiration of the offer on October 21,
    2013, and corroborates his naked assertion that he would have timely accepted the State’s offer
    but for his counsel’s deficient performance. As noted, a defendant’s own subjective and self-
    serving assertion that he or she would have accepted the plea offer without his or her attorney’s
    deficient advice is insufficient to establish prejudice, absent “ ‘independent, objective confirmation
    that [his or her] rejection of the proffered plea was based upon counsel’s erroneous advice.’ ” See
    id. ¶ 18 (quoting Curry, 
    178 Ill. 2d at 532
    ). Indeed, defendant seems to concede in his reply brief
    the absence of any evidence to substantiate his assertion. In directly responding to the State’s
    argument, rather than identifying anything to independently and objectively confirm that he would
    have timely accepted the plea offer, defendant states only that “a reasonable person would have
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    accepted [it] if conveyed properly, where it amounted to a sentence of only approximately 12 and
    a half years.”
    ¶ 83   However, we note that Ritacca testified that he shared the offer with defendant and Daniel
    following the Rule 402 conference that was held on September 13, 2013, and he explained the
    offer in detail to them both—pertinently, that “the murder [charges were] going to be dismissed,
    that [defendant] was going to plead guilty to an armed robbery and *** concealment of a
    [homicidal death],” and that, “[i]n total, the bottom line of that was about [a] 12 year[ ] sentence.”
    In denying defendant’s motion for a new trial, the circuit court necessarily deemed this testimony
    credible, as it commented that there was “every indication *** that Mr. Ritacca went over all the
    ramifications of the plea” with defendant. Defendant’s testimony also establishes that Ritacca
    communicated the offer to him, albeit “briefly,” and that he saw the written offer while he was
    seated at counsel’s table “one day in court when [he] believe[d] that [Ritacca was] filing a motion.”
    Moreover, the record confirms that Ritacca communicated the offer to defendant when he met with
    him in jail following the Rule 402 conference on September 13, 2013—which was more than a
    month before the offer ultimately expired. Notably, on September 16, 2013, Ritacca informed the
    court that he discussed the offer with defendant, and defendant acknowledged on the record that
    Ritacca discussed it with him. The record also confirms that defendant was present in court on
    September 27 and October 1, 2013—when the prosecutor announced both that a “formal deadline
    for the offer that’s already been tendered” would be provided on October 1, 2013, as well as that
    the State would “keep that written offer that we did tender open until October 21st. After that, the
    offer will be withdrawn.” Finally, we observe that defendant did not aver in the affidavit attached
    to the motion to vacate the judgment or, in the alternative, for a new trial, that he would have
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    accepted the offer on or before October 21, 2013, had Ritacca counseled him that the State would
    withdraw it on that date.
    ¶ 84   To support his assertion that he would have accepted the plea offer, defendant points only
    to his motion to enforce the plea agreement, reasoning that, if he “did not want to plead guilty,
    then Ritacca would not have filed a motion to enforce the plea agreement.” We note that this
    motion, which was not filed until May 8, 2014, is the first indication in the record that defendant
    wished to accept the State’s offer. However, the motion, having been filed more than six months
    after the offer expired, does no more to corroborate defendant’s assertion that he would have timely
    accepted the offer absent Ritacca’s deficient performance than does the instant appeal. Defendant
    makes no argument that the motion establishes independent, objective confirmation that the plea
    lapsed due to Ritacca’s erroneous advice. We also note that the parties made more than 15 interim
    court appearances between the expiration of the offer on October 21, 2013, and the filing of
    defendant’s motion to enforce the plea agreement on May 8, 2014. By that time, however,
    defendant was aware that further investigation had yielded Valentine’s written statement that
    defendant told him that “he had put the gun to Colin’s head and pulled the trigger,” which,
    according to the express terms of the plea offer, very likely would have caused the offer to be
    withdrawn.
    ¶ 85   If anything, the record affirmatively rebuts defendant’s assertion that he would have
    accepted the State’s offer prior to its expiration. On August 28, 2013, the State informed the court
    that it was “considering something along the lines of an armed robbery based on the dangerous
    weapon with consecutive concealing of a homicidal death.” Upon hearing this, Ritacca confirmed
    the prosecutor’s statement that defendant “would not take anything in the teens” and that Daniel
    did not want him to do any jail time. Ritacca also added that he had “not heard anything agreeable
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    for this defendant.” Although these assertions predate the written offer, we note that the offer the
    State was “considering” largely mirrors the written offer that it eventually extended to defendant.
    Nevertheless, what the State was “considering” was “not agreeable for this defendant.” These
    statements demonstrate a probability that defendant would have not accepted the offer even if he
    were aware that it would be withdrawn by a date certain. Further, despite having received the offer,
    defendant filed a motion to dismiss the armed-robbery charges and the concealment-of-a-
    homicidal-death charge on October 1, 2013, which demonstrated a lack of interest in pleading to
    those charges. We also note that, although defendant stresses Ritacca’s statements on the record
    that he wished to resolve the case without a trial, the various pretrial reports of proceedings are
    also replete with statements that he was ready to proceed with trial.
    ¶ 86   Put simply, in the absence of “independent, objective” confirmation demonstrating a
    reasonable probability that defendant would have accepted the State’s offer prior to its expiration
    on October 21, 2013, defendant has failed to make a showing of prejudice under Strickland, and
    we need not examine the additional factors necessary to demonstrate prejudice. See id. ¶ 30. The
    circuit court properly rejected the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim that defendant included
    in his motion to vacate the judgment or, in the alternative, for a new trial. We therefore affirm his
    conviction and deny his request to remand for specific performance of the plea offer.
    ¶ 87                                 B. The Eighth Amendment
    ¶ 88   Defendant next argues that his 54-year sentence is a de facto life sentence, which violates
    the eighth amendment to the United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. VIII) and the
    proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11). He relies
    on Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012), and its progeny, as interpreted by our supreme court
    in People v. Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , and People v. Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , to argue that the
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    circuit court did not consider his youth and its attendant characteristics in imposing his sentence
    or evaluate whether he was irretrievably depraved, permanently incorrigible, or irreparably corrupt
    beyond the possibility of rehabilitation. As a related matter, defendant also asserts that the record
    suggests that the circuit court did not realize that the 15-year firearm enhancement was not
    mandatory but instead was within its discretion under section 5-4.5-105(b) and (c) of the Unified
    Code of Corrections (Unified Code) (730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-105(b), (c) (West 2018)). Defendant
    requests that we vacate his sentence and remand for a new sentencing hearing.
    ¶ 89   In response, the State concedes that defendant’s 54-year sentence is a de facto life sentence
    under Buffer, but it disagrees with defendant’s assertion that the sentence violates the eighth
    amendment or the proportionate penalties clause. In the State’s view, the record demonstrates that
    the circuit court properly considered all of the relevant sentencing factors, including defendant’s
    youth and its attendant circumstances, as well as his “rehabilitat[ive] potential or lack thereof.” It
    argues that a new sentencing hearing is unnecessary because “defendant is one of the rare juveniles
    whose irreparable corruption warrants *** a [de facto life] sentence.” Regarding the enhancement,
    it stresses that defendant’s 54-year sentence is within the 20- to 60-year range for first-degree
    murder without the firearm enhancement.
    ¶ 90   We address only defendant’s first claimed sentencing error, which we find dispositive.
    ¶ 91   At this juncture, an overview of the principles applicable to offenders who are juveniles at
    the time of their offense is appropriate. The eighth amendment to the United States Constitution
    prohibits, inter alia, “cruel and unusual punishments” (U.S. Const., amend. VIII) and applies to
    the states via the fourteenth amendment. Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    , 560 (2005).
    Proportionality is inherent in that prohibition, and a criminal sentence should be “ ‘graduated and
    proportioned to both the offender and the offense.’ ” Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 33 (quoting
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    People v. Davis, 
    2014 IL 115595
    , ¶ 18). Reviewing courts look to “ ‘ “the evolving standards of
    decency that mark the progress of a maturing society,” ’ ” rather than to the standards of bygone
    times, in evaluating whether a sentence is so excessive that it is cruel and unusual under the eighth
    amendment. See Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 469
    ; Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 15.
    ¶ 92   Our supreme court has recognized that “there is a genuine risk of disproportionate
    punishment” where, as is the case here, the defendant is a juvenile and the offense is serious. See
    Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 33. “[T]he United States Supreme Court addressed that risk and
    unmistakably instructed that youth matters in sentencing.” 
    Id.
     This principle emerged from United
    States Supreme Court cases such as Roper, 
    543 U.S. 551
     (eighth amendment prohibits capital
    sentences for juveniles, including those who commit murder), Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    (2010) (eighth amendment prohibits mandatory life sentences for juveniles who commit
    nonhomicide offenses), and Miller, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (eighth amendment prohibits mandatory life
    sentences for juveniles, including those who commit murder).
    ¶ 93   The Court has cautioned that the “imposition of a State’s most severe penalties on juvenile
    offenders cannot proceed as though they were not children.” Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 474
    . As the Court
    has noted, “children are constitutionally different from adults for purposes of sentencing.” 
    Id. at 471
    . The Miller Court outlined several such differences. Specifically, children (1) lack maturity
    and have an underdeveloped sense of responsibility, which leads to “recklessness, impulsivity, and
    heedless risk-taking”; (2) are more vulnerable to negative influences and outside pressures from
    their families and peers as well as have limited control over their environments and lack the ability
    to extricate themselves from crime-producing settings; and (3) have characters that are not as
    “ ‘well formed’ ” and traits that are “ ‘less fixed’ ” as compared to adults, such that their actions
    are not as likely to be evidence of irretrievable depravity. The Court noted that “the distinctive
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    attributes of youth diminish the penological justifications for imposing the harshest sentences on
    juvenile offenders, even when they commit terrible crimes.” Id. at 472. Put simply, juveniles “ ‘are
    less deserving of the most severe punishments’ ” because they have diminished culpability and
    greater prospects for reform. Id. at 471 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 68). The Court also pointed
    to studies demonstrating the fundamental differences between the minds of juveniles and adults,
    and it noted that “transient rashness, proclivity for risk, and inability to assess consequences”
    reduced the moral culpability of juveniles and “enhanced the prospect that, as the years go by and
    neurological development occurs,” their deficiencies would be reformed. Id. at 471-72.
    ¶ 94   Our supreme court recently observed that
    “[t]he mandatory penalty schemes in Miller prevented ‘the sentencer from taking account
    of these central considerations. By removing youth from the balance—by subjecting a
    juvenile to the same life-without-parole sentence applicable to an adult—[those] laws
    prohibit[ed] a sentencing authority from assessing whether the law’s harshest term of
    imprisonment proportionally punishes a juvenile offender.’ ” Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 18
    (quoting Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 474
    ).
    In a passage quoted verbatim by our supreme court in several instances, the Miller Court noted the
    fatal defects in a sentencing scheme that mandates life without parole for juvenile offenders:
    “ ‘To recap: Mandatory life without parole for a juvenile precludes consideration of his
    chronological age and its hallmark features—among them, immaturity, impetuosity, and
    failure to appreciate risks and consequences. It prevents taking into account the family and
    home environment that surrounds him—and from which he cannot usually extricate
    himself—no matter how brutal or dysfunctional. It neglects the circumstances of the
    homicide offense, including the extent of his participation in the conduct and the way
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    familial and peer pressures may have affected him. Indeed, it ignores that he might have
    been charged and convicted of a lesser offense if not for incompetencies associated with
    youth—for example, his inability to deal with police officers or prosecutors (including on
    a plea agreement) or his incapacity to assist his own attorneys. [Citations.] And finally, this
    mandatory punishment disregards the possibility of rehabilitation even when the
    circumstances most suggest it.’ ” People v. Lusby, 
    2020 IL 124046
    , ¶ 70 (Neville, J.,
    dissenting) (quoting Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 477-78
    ).
    See Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 19 (same); Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 37 (same).
    ¶ 95    The Miller Court stopped short of outright prohibiting a sentence of life without parole for
    juveniles who commit murder but instead mandated that the trial court first examine “an offender’s
    age and the wealth of characteristics and circumstances attendant to it” before imposing such a
    sentence. Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 476
    . The Miller Court stressed that its decision “mandates only that
    a sentencer follow a certain process—considering an offender’s youth and attendant
    characteristics”—before it may impose such a sentence. 
    Id. at 483
    . The Court also made clear its
    view that “appropriate occasions for sentencing juveniles to this harshest possible penalty will be
    uncommon” due to the great difficulty “of distinguishing at this early age between ‘the juvenile
    offender whose crime reflects unfortunate yet transient immaturity, and the rare juvenile offender
    whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.’ ” 
    Id. at 479-80
     (quoting Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 573
    , and
    Graham, 560 U.S. at 68). The Court continued that, “[a]lthough we do not foreclose a sentencer’s
    ability to make that judgment in homicide cases, we require it to take into account how children
    are different, and how those differences counsel against irrevocably sentencing them to a lifetime
    in prison.” Id. at 480.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    ¶ 96    In Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 718
     (2016), the Court held that
    Miller applied retroactively, and it clarified that Miller established both a substantive and a
    procedural requirement. The Montgomery Court elaborated that, although Miller did not bar life
    without parole for all juveniles, it nevertheless “did bar life without parole *** for all but the rarest
    of juvenile offenders, those whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility.” 
    Id.
     at ___, 136 S. Ct.
    at 734. In other words, “the sentence of life without parole is disproportionate for the vast majority
    of juvenile offenders.” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 736. Further delving into Miller, the Montgomery
    Court explained that Miller
    “recognized that a sentencer might encounter the rare juvenile offender who exhibits such
    irretrievable depravity that rehabilitation is impossible and life without parole is justified.
    But in light of ‘children’s diminished culpability and heightened capacity for change,’
    Miller made clear that ‘appropriate occasions for sentencing juveniles to this harshest
    possible penalty will be uncommon.’ ” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 733-34 (quoting Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 479
    ).
    ¶ 97    Our supreme court tied these various constitutional principles neatly together in Holman,
    wherein it specified which characteristics attend youth and explained the relationship between
    these characteristics and the concept of incorrigibility. The Holman court, in explaining how to
    apply Miller to juvenile sentences, clarified as follows:
    “Under Miller and Montgomery, a juvenile defendant may be sentenced to life
    imprisonment without parole, but only if the trial court determines that the defendant’s
    conduct showed irretrievable depravity, permanent incorrigibility, or irreparable corruption
    beyond the possibility of rehabilitation. The court may make that decision only after
    considering the defendant’s youth and its attendant characteristics. Those characteristics
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    include, but are not limited to, the following factors: (1) the juvenile defendant’s
    chronological age at the time of the offense and any evidence of his particular immaturity,
    impetuosity, and failure to appreciate risks and consequences; (2) the juvenile defendant’s
    family and home environment; (3) the juvenile defendant’s degree of participation in the
    homicide and any evidence of familial or peer pressures that may have affected him; (4) the
    juvenile defendant’s incompetence, including his inability to deal with police officers or
    prosecutors and his incapacity to assist his own attorneys; and (5) the juvenile defendant’s
    prospects for rehabilitation.” Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 46.
    ¶ 98   Moreover, Holman stated that consideration of “the Miller factors” is consistent with
    section 5-4.5-105 of the Unified Code, which provides a framework for sentencing defendants who
    were under 18 years of age at the time of their offense. Id. ¶ 45. The statute requires sentencing
    courts to consider several “additional factors in mitigation in determining the appropriate
    sentence” for any defendants who were younger than 18 at the time of their offense. 730 ILCS 5/5-
    4.5-105(a) (West 2018). These statutory factors are “taken from the Supreme Court’s list.”
    Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 45. They include the following:
    “(1) the person’s age, impetuosity, and level of maturity at the time of the offense,
    including the ability to consider risks and consequences of behavior, and the presence of
    cognitive or developmental disability, or both, if any;
    (2) whether the person was subjected to outside pressure, including peer pressure,
    familial pressure, or negative influences;
    (3) the person’s family, home environment, educational and social background,
    including any history of parental neglect, physical abuse, or other childhood trauma;
    (4) the person’s potential for rehabilitation or evidence of rehabilitation, or both;
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    (5) the circumstances of the offense;
    (6) the person’s degree of participation and specific role in the offense, including
    the level of planning by the defendant before the offense;
    (7) whether the person was able to meaningfully participate in his or her defense;
    (8) the person’s prior juvenile or criminal history; and
    (9) any other information the court finds relevant and reliable, including an
    expression of remorse, if appropriate. However, if the person, on advice of counsel[,]
    chooses not to make a statement, the court shall not consider a lack of an expression of
    remorse as an aggravating factor.” 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-105(a) (West 2018).
    We also note that subsections (b) and (c) provide that, in the court’s discretion, it may decline to
    impose any otherwise applicable sentencing enhancement based upon the possession of a firearm
    that proximately causes to another person great bodily harm, permanent disability, permanent
    disfigurement, or death. 
    Id.
     § 5-4.5-105(b), (c); Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 36.
    ¶ 99   In Buffer, our supreme court observed that Miller, as interpreted and clarified in
    Montgomery, “ ‘drew a line between children whose crimes reflect transient immaturity and those
    rare children whose crimes reflect irreparable corruption.’ ” Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 24. It went
    on to declare that, “[e]ven if a court considers a child’s age prior to sentencing the child to life in
    prison without parole, that sentence still violates the eighth amendment for a juvenile whose crime
    reflects unfortunate yet transient immaturity.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     Similarly, it
    reiterated Miller’s statement “that sentencing a child to life without parole is excessive for all but
    the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.” (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id.
     Buffer recognized that Miller “rendered life without parole an unconstitutional
    penalty for that category of juvenile offenders whose crimes reflect the transient immaturity of
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    youth.” 
    Id.
     “Miller’s procedural component requires a sentencer to consider a juvenile offender’s
    youth and attendant characteristics before determining that life without parole is a proportionate
    sentence.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     “Such a hearing ‘is necessary to separate those
    juveniles who may be sentenced to life without parole from those who may not.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ____, 136 S. Ct. at 735).
    ¶ 100 Noting that “Miller contains language that is significantly broader than its core holding”
    (Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 38), our supreme court has extended Miller to apply to various other
    sentencing scenarios, including (1) mandatory term-of-years sentences that are the functional
    equivalent of life without the possibility of parole—also known as a de facto life sentence (People
    v. Reyes, 
    2016 IL 119271
    , ¶¶ 9-10 (per curiam))—and (2) discretionary sentences of life without
    the possibility of parole for juveniles (Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 40). Applicable here, in Buffer,
    our supreme court held that a de facto life sentence for a juvenile offender is one that exceeds 40
    years, reasoning that a prison sentence of 40 years or less for a juvenile offender still provides
    “some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and
    rehabilitation.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶¶ 40-41 (quoting
    Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 479
    ).
    ¶ 101 We now turn to the merits. Upon careful review of the transcript of the sentencing hearing,
    we agree with defendant that his de facto life sentence does not comport with Miller and its
    progeny, because the circuit court failed to evaluate whether he is irretrievably depraved,
    permanently incorrigible, or irreparably corrupt beyond the possibility of rehabilitation. As noted,
    Miller requires sentencing courts to “ ‘separate those juveniles who may be sentenced to life
    without parole from those who may not.’ ” Id. ¶ 24. Sentencing courts are instructed to accomplish
    this task by deciding on which side of the “line” the juveniles fall and categorize them as either
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    children whose crimes reflect “unfortunate yet transient immaturity” or “those rare children whose
    crimes reflect irreparable corruption.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
    “Only after consideration of youth and its attendant circumstances, as in the Miller factors
    or those in section 5-4.5-105, and a finding of ‘irretrievable depravity, permanent
    incorrigibility, or irreparable corruption beyond the possibility of rehabilitation’
    [citation][,] will the eighth amendment’s bar against cruel and unusual punishment yield to
    a de facto life sentence without possibility of parole for a juvenile.” (Emphasis in original.)
    People v. Murphy, 
    2019 IL App (4th) 170646
    , ¶ 47 (quoting Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    ,
    ¶ 46). 3
    ¶ 102 Here, at the conclusion of defendant’s sentencing hearing, the circuit court announced that
    it considered several factors, including the underlying facts of the case, the PSI, the aggravating
    and mitigating factors, Cashman’s mitigation report submitted on defendant’s behalf, the
    sentencing testimony, and the arguments of counsel. The court recognized that, because defendant
    was 17 years old at the time of the offense, it was required it to consider defendant’s “age, [his]
    particular maturity, whether or not [he was] able to appreciate the risks and consequences, [his]
    family and home environment, [his] degree of participation, [and his] ability and capacity to assist
    3
    We note that on March 9, 2020, the United States Supreme Court granted a writ of
    certiorari in Jones v. Mississippi, 589 U.S. ___, 
    140 S. Ct. 1293
     (2020), wherein the issue
    presented is whether the eighth amendment requires the sentencing authority to make an explicit
    finding that a juvenile is permanently incorrigible before imposing a sentence of life without
    parole. The Court heard oral argument on the matter on November 3, 2020. The Court’s decision
    has not been issued as of the filing of the instant case.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    [his] attorney.” The court related that it had “to consider all of this, looking at the core of the
    sentencing statute, which is rehabilitation.” The court stated that it “consider[ed] all this
    information” but cautioned that it might “only comment on a few things.”
    ¶ 103 In announcing the mitigating factors, the circuit court noted that, while in jail, defendant
    had earned a GED, was involved in Bible study, was writing poetry, had attended self-help
    meetings, and was learning new languages. It also referenced defendant’s deep feelings of
    abandonment and loneliness, his low self-esteem, his lack of a “real prior criminal record,” and his
    lack of intellectual or physical disabilities. It also stated that it considered his statement at
    sentencing concerning his remorse and his appeal for forgiveness from Nutter’s family.
    ¶ 104 In turning to the aggravating factors, the court stated that it could not “find that there was
    any provocation or that [the murder] was committed because [defendant] hung around with the
    wrong crowd or that it was because [defendant] was lonely and abandoned or *** depressed or
    bullied.” The court then recounted the evidence, stating:
    “On June 3rd of 2013, you, Michael Coffee, and Ben Schenk were together. You
    were at *** Hahn’s house. This gun was passed around between all three of you. It was
    taken apart, bullets were taken out, put back in, and the decision was made with all three
    of you that you wanted drugs and you wanted to rob a drug dealer. And so Colin Nutter
    was called *** [and] told to meet in a secluded area in Highland Park. He was lured there
    by the three of you under the guise of buying drugs. He parked his car. The three of you
    walked there and got in his car. Unbeknownst to him, the three of you having a gun. You
    knew the gun was in the car. You knew what they were going to do, all three of you.
    Because it was like nothing. You got in the back seat, Coffee was in the front seat, and
    Schenk was sitting next to you. And then Colin was shot in the back of the head. You acted
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    together. You agreed to the murder. You acted in furtherance of it. You aided [and] abetted,
    *** dragging his body out of his own car and stuffing it in his trunk. And then from there,
    *** you drive around with his body in the trunk of his own car. And then, like some piece
    of garbage, you throw his body on the side of the road. You cover him with leaves and
    branches, and you drive away, but you forget something. You want his wallet and whatever
    else he had, and so then you drive back, pick [the] pockets of this dead young man like
    nothing happened, and then drive to Chicago. You went home, you ate, you slept, you went
    to school the next day, like nothing happened. You met with friends, your girlfriend, like
    nothing happened. You smoked pot, like nothing happened.
    I do consider the impact that this has had on the Nutter family. They lost their only
    son over some pot. And no sentence will ever assuage their *** grief or bring him back.
    But this sentence must deter others from thinking ‘it is no big deal.’ That you can murder
    *** someone and act like nothing happened.”
    ¶ 105 Here, although the court provided a cursory mention of the Miller factors, it provided little
    explanation as to how it applied them to defendant’s particular circumstances. Instead, the court
    stated that it “consider[ed] all of this information,” even though it would “only comment on a few
    things.” In seemingly discounting defendant’s youth, the court declared only that it could not “find
    that there was any provocation or that [the murder] was committed because [defendant] hung
    around with the wrong crowd or that it was because [defendant] was lonely and abandoned or ***
    depressed or bullied.” It then recounted the evidence presented at trial and repeatedly emphasized
    defendant’s actions in the days following the offense, wherein he acted “like nothing happened”
    and continued his daily routine as a high school student.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    ¶ 106 Even if the circuit court’s statements reflected adequate consideration of the Miller factors,
    they lack any indication, either express or implied, that the court evaluated whether defendant was
    among “the rarest of juvenile offenders *** whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility.” See
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734. This omission is grievous because, even if a court
    considers a child’s age prior to sentencing him or her to life in prison without parole, the sentence
    nevertheless violates the eighth amendment for a juvenile whose crime reflects unfortunate yet
    transient immaturity. Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 24. As Holman made clear, “a juvenile defendant
    may be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, but only if the trial court determines that
    the defendant’s conduct showed irretrievable depravity, permanent incorrigibility, or irreparable
    corruption ***. The court may make that decision only after considering the defendant’s youth
    and its attendant characteristics.” (Emphases added.) Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 46.
    ¶ 107 There is also no indication that the circuit court specifically considered the
    recommendation included in the PSI that defendant “seek substance abuse/mental health/or any
    educational or vocational programing available.” These recommendations, at a minimum, suggest
    that defendant would derive some benefit from these services. Moreover, the court did not
    acknowledge Cashman’s ultimate opinion that defendant would not reoffend because he had
    ceased self-medicating with drugs and alcohol. Her ultimate opinion, if accepted by the court,
    would heavily weigh against the imposition of a life sentence—and very likely would be
    dispositive of the issue.
    ¶ 108 The State argues that “the record *** demonstrate[s] that the sentencing court considered
    *** [defendant’s] lack of rehabilitative potential,” pointing to the court’s statement that it also
    “look[ed] at the core of the sentencing statute, which is rehabilitation.” However, the State reads
    this lone statement far too broadly, and it cannot reasonably be said that it confirms that the court
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    believed that, in defendant, it had “encounter[ed] the rare juvenile offender who exhibits such
    irretrievable depravity that rehabilitation is impossible and life without parole is justified.” Nor
    can it be interpreted to confirm that the court believed that defendant’s sentencing was the
    “ ‘uncommon’ ” occasion where the harshest possible penalty for a juvenile was appropriate. See
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 733-34.
    ¶ 109 Put simply, the circuit court did not address defendant’s potential for future criminality or
    find that he could not be rehabilitated or indicate that the de facto life sentence was chosen because
    defendant was beyond the possibility of rehabilitation. Instead, in issuing the 54-year sentence, the
    court emphasized the need to “deter others from thinking ‘it is no big deal’ [to] murder ***
    someone, and act like nothing happened.” However, as the United States Supreme Court has
    observed, “penological justifications *** apply to [juveniles] with lesser force than to adults,” due
    to their diminished culpability. Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 571
    . Indeed, juveniles are less susceptible to
    deterrence because the same characteristics that render them less culpable than adults, such as lack
    of maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility, often lead to ill-considered actions and
    decisions. Graham, 560 U.S. at 72.
    ¶ 110 Because the record does not reflect a determination by the circuit court that defendant was
    among the “rarest of juvenile offenders *** whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility” (see
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734) such that he was beyond the possibility of
    rehabilitation, nor does it reasonably suggest that the court considered defendant’s potential for
    rehabilitation or lack thereof, we vacate his sentence and remand for a new sentencing hearing. On
    remand, the court is advised to make a more thorough record of how it weighs each of the relevant
    factors in evaluating defendant’s youth and its attendant circumstances as well as explicitly
    evaluate and determine whether defendant’s crime reflected “unfortunate yet transient immaturity”
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    or “irreparable corruption.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) See Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 24;
    see also Davis, 
    2014 IL 115595
    , ¶ 43 (noting appropriate remedy is to vacate sentence and remand
    for a new sentencing hearing).
    ¶ 111 We express no opinion as to what sentence defendant should receive on remand. We
    emphasize, however, that, under Holman, a juvenile may not be sentenced to life imprisonment
    without parole unless the circuit court (1) considers the defendant’s youth and its attendant
    circumstances and (2) determines that the defendant is among the rarest of children whose conduct
    demonstrates irretrievable depravity, permanent incorrigibility, or irreparable corruption beyond
    the possibility of rehabilitation. See Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 46.
    ¶ 112 Because of our resolution, we need not evaluate defendant’s alternative argument that his
    sentence violates the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution.
    ¶ 113 Likewise, we need not substantively address defendant’s argument that the circuit court
    was unaware that the 15-year firearm enhancement was discretionary under section 5-4.5-105(b)
    and (c) of the Unified Code. We will, however, comment on it briefly because this issue is likely
    to recur on remand. The record reflects that, in finding that there was insufficient evidence to
    conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was the shooter, but also finding that
    defendant, or one whose conduct he was responsible for, was armed with a firearm, the court stated
    that “the penalties for said offense [are] an additional 15 years of imprisonment.” At the sentencing
    hearing, defense counsel stated that the sentencing range was 35 to 75 years. This statement
    presumed that the 15-year enhancement was inevitable. On appeal, defendant asserts that the
    sentencing range should have been 20 to 75 years—the latter 15 years of that range being
    applicable if the court, in its discretion, chose to impose a firearm enhancement. The State
    concedes that the enhancement is discretionary and that the sentencing range is 20 to 60 years
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    without it. On remand, the court should be mindful that the imposition of a firearm enhancement
    under section 5-4.5-105 of the Unified Code is not mandatory but, rather, is within its discretion.
    730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-105(b), (c) (West 2018); Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 36.
    ¶ 114                                  III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 115 For the reasons stated, we affirm defendant’s conviction, vacate his sentence, and remand
    for resentencing.
    ¶ 116 Affirmed in part and vacated in part.
    ¶ 117 Cause remanded.
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    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    No. 2-18-0379
    Cite as:                 People v. Vatamaniuc, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 180379
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, No. 13-CF-1611;
    the Hon. Victoria A. Rosetti, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Thomas A. Lilien, and Jessica Wynne Arizo,
    for                      of State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Elgin, for appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Michael G. Nerheim, State’s Attorney, of Waukegan (Patrick
    for                      Delfino, Edward R. Psenicka, and Stephanie Hoit Lee, of State’s
    Appellee:                Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the
    People.
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