People v. Chambers ( 2021 )


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  •                                      
    2021 IL App (4th) 190151
                               FILED
    February 10, 2021
    NO. 4-19-0151                              Carla Bender
    4th District Appellate
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT                               Court, IL
    OF ILLINOIS
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                         )   Appeal from the
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                )   Circuit Court of
    v.                                                 )   McLean County
    WILLIE CHAMBERS,                                             )   No. 14CF791
    Defendant-Appellant.                               )
    )   Honorable
    )   Scott D. Drazewski,
    )   Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Holder White and Steigmann concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1             The defendant, Willie Chambers, is serving a sentence of 42 years’ imprisonment
    for first degree murder, an offense to which he pleaded guilty. See 720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(2) (West
    2014). After an unsuccessful direct appeal (People v. Chambers, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 160232-U
    ,
    appeal denied, No. 123591 (Ill. Sept. 26, 2018)), he petitioned for postconviction relief. The circuit
    court of McLean County summarily dismissed the pro se petition. See 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a)(2)
    (West 2018). Chambers appeals. In our de novo review (see People v. Tate, 
    2012 IL 112214
    , ¶ 10),
    we are unable to say that the pro se petition is “based on an indisputably meritless legal theory or
    a fanciful factual allegation” (People v. Hodges, 
    234 Ill. 2d 1
    , 16 (2009)). Therefore, we reverse
    the judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.
    ¶2                                      I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3                                  A. The Guilty Plea Hearing
    ¶4                                    1. The Plea Agreement
    ¶5             Chambers was charged, in the present case, with the first degree murder of Ronald
    Smith (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(1), (2) (West 2014)). Additionally, in other cases, he was charged with
    robbery, aggravated battery, and mob action, and he faced the prospect of having his probation
    revoked that he had received for residential burglary.
    ¶6             Chambers made a deal with the State. He would plead guilty to count II of the
    information, a strong-probability theory of first degree murder (id. § 9-1(a)(2)): specifically that,
    on June 2, 2014, “without lawful justification, [he] struck Ronald Smith on and about the body,
    knowing such act created a strong probability of great bodily harm to Ronald Smith, thereby
    causing the death of Ronald Smith.” Also, Chambers would testify truthfully against his
    codefendants, Tory Washington and Anthony Davis-Dixon. In return, the State would dismiss the
    remaining charges against Chambers and would dismiss the petitions to revoke his probation. For
    count II, Chambers would be subject to the normal sentencing range of “not less than 20 years and
    not more than 60 years,” the standard penalty for first degree murder. 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-20(a)(1)
    (West 2014). The State would not seek a greater, extended term sentence on the theory that “the
    offense was accompanied by exceptionally brutal or heinous behavior indicative of wanton
    cruelty.” Id. § 5-5-3.2(b)(2).
    ¶7                                     2. The Factual Basis
    ¶8             On August 7, 2015, in the guilty plea hearing, the circuit court asked the prosecutor
    if he had a factual basis for the proposed guilty plea. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 402(c) (eff. July 1, 2012)
    (providing that “[t]he court shall not enter final judgment on a plea of guilty without first
    determining that there is a factual basis for the plea”). The prosecutor proposed beginning the
    -2-
    factual basis by having Chambers testify pursuant to his promise of cooperation. Accordingly,
    Chambers took the stand and described to the court what happened on June 2, 2014.
    ¶9             By Chambers’s account, he and some friends of his were in a park in Bloomington,
    Illinois. They were skateboarding, drinking hard liquor, swallowing Xanax pills (an anti-anxiety
    medication), and playing a game called “point them out, knock them out.”
    ¶ 10           The first target of the game was Kyle Fairchild. Chambers punched Fairchild once,
    either in the face or on the back of the head. Chambers’s three companions—Washington,
    Davis-Dixon, and someone named “JT”—likewise punched Fairchild. After receiving this beating,
    Fairchild left the park. Chambers and his friends returned to a jungle gym and drank more alcohol
    and took more pills.
    ¶ 11           Then they saw “the homeless guy,” Ronald Smith, as he was lying down under a
    tree near a fence. Davis-Dixon suggested, “ ‘Let’s go beat him up.’ ” This time it was just three of
    them who went over: Chambers, Washington, and Davis-Dixon. (It is unclear where JT was at this
    point.) Chambers was the one who hit Smith first. He punched Smith in the face, and Smith began
    yelling. Then Washington hit Smith. Throughout this beating, Smith was lying on the ground,
    hollering. Then Davis-Dixon jumped in the air and landed on Smith’s rib cage, and Smith became
    silent. The three of them left Smith where he lay, and they returned to the pavilion and resumed
    drinking. Eventually, Smith got off the ground and began walking away. Washington and
    Davis-Dixon returned to Smith and punched him “a couple of times more.” After delivering those
    parting punches, Washington and Davis-Dixon fled. Chambers fled too—but not before he picked
    up some Goldfish Crackers that Smith had dropped and apologized to him.
    -3-
    ¶ 12           Next, Chambers and three others—Davis-Dixon, JT, and someone named Isaiah—
    set out on foot toward Normal, Illinois. They entered Kroger, a supermarket in Normal, where
    Davis-Dixon stole some liquor. After getting kicked out of Kroger, they drank the stolen liquor.
    ¶ 13           Drinking and walking, they passed by a hospital, where they saw another man
    whom they decided to beat up. Davis-Dixon and Washington (who reappears at this point in
    Chambers’s narrative) pounded on this man until he was on the ground, bleeding. Then they ran.
    ¶ 14           Eventually, they slowed to a walk and saw another man. Chambers’s companions
    urged him, “ ‘It’s your turn.’ ” Chambers punched this man four or five times. Then Chambers and
    the others walked away.
    ¶ 15           Near the public library in Normal, they saw a man wearing headphones.
    Davis-Dixon and Washington beat him up. When the man fell to the ground, they took his
    headphones.
    ¶ 16           The group started walking again. The police came onto the scene and stopped them.
    The last victim, the man near the library, had called in the robbery. After finding the stolen blue
    headphones in Washington’s pocket, the police arrested him, Chambers, and the others.
    ¶ 17           The prosecutor supplemented the foregoing factual basis by informing the circuit
    court that on June 2, 2014, the homeless man, Smith, went to BroMenn Hospital to obtain treatment
    for his injuries. Smith remained in the hospital until July 3, 2014, when he died. An autopsy
    revealed that Smith had died from an infection secondary to the internal injuries that Chambers,
    Washington, and Davis-Dixon had inflicted upon him. The shoes that Chambers was wearing at
    the time of his arrest were spattered with Smith’s blood, as DNA testing confirmed.
    ¶ 18                               B. The Sentencing Hearing
    ¶ 19                         1. The Presentence Investigation Report
    -4-
    ¶ 20                                  a. Previous Adjudications
    ¶ 21           The presentence investigation report listed juvenile adjudications for theft, retail
    theft, resisting arrest, and domestic battery.
    ¶ 22                                     b. Prior Conviction
    ¶ 23           Chambers had a prior conviction of residential burglary. The date of that offense
    was August 6, 2013. Chambers was born on April 29, 1996, so he was 17 when he committed the
    residential burglary, for which he received probation. For that matter, he already was on juvenile
    probation when he committed the residential burglary.
    ¶ 24                                      c. Family History
    ¶ 25           Chambers’s father was shot and killed when Chambers was one year old. When
    Chambers was two years old, he was removed from his mother’s custody because of her substance
    abuse and was placed in foster care, where he remained for 2½ years. His foster parents physically
    abused him and locked him in closets. The month of his fifth birthday, Chambers was returned to
    his mother’s custody. A few years later, his mother married his stepfather. When Chambers was
    eight, his mother and his stepfather were convicted of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance.
    The mother received probation. The stepfather was sentenced to imprisonment. Upon being
    released from prison, the stepfather returned to the home and battered the mother.
    ¶ 26                                   d. Personal Difficulties
    ¶ 27           From early childhood, Chambers suffered from learning disabilities and mental-
    health problems. He was psychiatrically hospitalized at least seven times. On at least two
    occasions, he tried to hang himself. Psychiatric hospitalization and other intensive residential
    treatment greatly improved his behavior. Upon returning, however, to his mother’s dysfunctional
    home, he soon began misbehaving again.
    -5-
    ¶ 28                               2. Evidence in Aggravation
    ¶ 29           For evidence in aggravation, the prosecutor presented written statements by
    Smith’s son and brother, both of whom called for the severest punishment authorized by law. The
    prosecutor likewise recommended the maximum sentence of 60 years’ imprisonment.
    ¶ 30                                3. Evidence in Mitigation
    ¶ 31           For evidence in mitigation, defense counsel presented some 55 pages of records
    pertaining to Chambers’s diagnosed clinical disorders and his social and cognitive deficits. Among
    those records was a 2007 psychoeducational evaluation, which concluded that Chambers had “a
    general level of intellectual ability” within the low average range: specifically, a general ability
    index “somewhere within the range of 75 and 87,” which put him in “the 11th percentile.” (In the
    guilty plea hearing, Chambers had told the circuit court that he was unable to read or write.)
    Acknowledging the seriousness of the offense but highlighting the hardships and disadvantages to
    which Chambers had been subjected his entire life, defense counsel recommended a sentence of
    30 years’ imprisonment.
    ¶ 32                              4. The Statement in Allocution
    ¶ 33           Chambers made the following statement in allocution:
    “I’m sorry for what happened to the man that died. I did not mean to kill him. I
    keep—I keep thinking about that night. I be telling myself ‘You are not that kind
    of person,’ but much of the time I be helping a lot of people. I be drinking—I have
    been drinking that night. But I’m not going to put drinking for what I did. I cannot
    live with myself doing what I did. I please hope that your family can forgive me for
    what I did. So please can you forgive me so I can move on with my life[?] A man
    is dead because of me. And I know that—I know there’s something, anything I can
    -6-
    do, so even much—even makes it right. But I hope someday that gets the chance to
    go back in the world and at least try to make up for what I did.”
    ¶ 34               5. The Circuit Court’s Rationale for 42 Years’ Imprisonment
    ¶ 35           After the concluding arguments by counsel and the statement in allocution, the
    circuit court enumerated what it had taken into account in deciding on a sentence, including “the
    presentence investigation report,” the defense exhibits, and “the factors in aggravation and
    mitigation.”
    ¶ 36           One of the mitigating factors in the circuit court’s analysis was that Chambers’s
    “criminal conduct [had been] induced or facilitated by some others besides himself.” See 730 ILCS
    5/5-5-3.1(a)(5) (West 2014). Also, it seemed to the court, there was “at *** least some evidence”
    that the murder was “a result of circumstances that [were] unlikely to re-occur.” See id. § 5-5-
    3.1(a)(8). For a further factor in mitigation, the court found Chambers to be intellectually disabled.
    See id. § 5-5-3.1(a)(13).
    ¶ 37           On the other hand, the circuit court considered, in aggravation, that Chambers
    “ha[d] a history of prior delinquency or criminal activity.” See id. § 5-5-3.2(a)(3). Also, “a
    sentence [was] necessary to deter others from committing the same crime.” See id. § 5-5-3.2(a)(7).
    It was yet another aggravating factor that Chambers “was on a term of probation during the
    commission of this offense.” See id. § 5-5-3.2(a)(12).
    ¶ 38           After reciting those factors in mitigation and aggravation, the circuit court noted
    the following principles that should guide the determination of a sentence:
    “The [c]ourt, in imposing a sentence, must also balance a defendant’s
    rehabilitative potential with the seriousness of the offense, and each sentencing
    decision must be based on the particular circumstances of the case. And the [c]ourt
    -7-
    must consider factors such as the defendant’s credibility, demeanor, general moral
    character, mentality, social environment, habits, and age.”
    ¶ 39           Apropos moral character, the circuit court was shocked by the unfeeling blood sport
    in which Chambers and his codefendants had avidly engaged over and over again. The court
    remarked:
    “It didn’t just result in the tragic death of Mr. Smith. It also resulted in other law-
    abiding citizens being hurt. And so the defendant, along with his [codefendants],
    were like a pack of wolves preying on innocent victims.
    *** [A]s far as what transpired, yes, I’m offended. I’m shocked, in essence,
    by the game. And that’s what it was, a game of ‘Point them out, knock them out.’
    That’s cruel. It’s a callous disregard for the rights and safety of law-abiding citizens
    within this community. And all I can think of was it was similar to the events or
    occurrences that are depicted in the movie A Clockwork Orange.”
    ¶ 40           The circuit court decided that, on balance, a fitting sentence would be imprisonment
    for 42 years (and restitution to the surviving victims). The court imposed this prison term with the
    explicit awareness that 100% of it would have to be served. See id. § 3-6-3(a)(2)(i).
    ¶ 41                            C. The Postconviction Proceeding
    ¶ 42           On January 22, 2019, Chambers filed a pro se petition for postconviction relief, in
    which he raised two claims.
    ¶ 43           The first claim, which we already had rejected on direct appeal (Chambers, 
    2018 IL App (4th) 160232-U
    ), was an asserted violation of People v. Krankel, 
    102 Ill. 2d 181
    , 189
    (1984) (requiring the circuit court, in posttrial proceedings, to conduct a preliminary investigation
    of factual matters underlying the defendant’s pro se claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, to
    -8-
    determine whether new counsel should be appointed to litigate the claim). In this appeal from the
    summary dismissal of his postconviction petition, Chambers does not pursue the Krankel claim.
    ¶ 44           The second claim in the pro se petition invoked Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
    (2012). It is this claim that Chambers pursues in the present appeal. He pleaded in his petition that
    the 42-year prison term was a de facto life sentence triggering the protections and special
    considerations that Miller required for “juvenile offenders,” as Chambers referred to himself—
    although, in a footnote in his petition, he admitted that he was “just over a month past his 18th
    birthday at the time of the commission of the offense.”
    ¶ 45           On February 7, 2019, for essentially four reasons, the circuit court summarily
    dismissed the postconviction petition. First, the court disagreed that 42 years’ imprisonment was
    a de facto life sentence. Chambers had misread a longevity table, the court explained. Second,
    according to the United States Supreme Court’s holding in Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 479
    , “the Eighth
    Amendment forb[ade] a sentencing scheme that mandate[d] life in prison without possibility of
    parole for juvenile offenders.” (Emphasis added.) No such sentencing scheme was involved in the
    present case. Instead of being mandatory, the sentence of 42 years’ imprisonment was
    discretionary. The sentence was one that the court had chosen on the basis of all the evidence
    presented in the sentencing hearing, including the presentence investigation report and the defense
    exhibits. Third, contrary to his self-characterization, Chambers was not a juvenile when he
    committed the offense. Rather, he was 18 years old, the age that the law had denominated as the
    beginning of adulthood. Fourth, the court explicitly considered Chambers’s age (and a host of
    other factors) when determining the sentence.
    ¶ 46                                      II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 47                               A. The Flagship Case, Miller
    -9-
    ¶ 48            In Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 465
    , the two 14-year-old defendants were convicted of
    murder and were sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Statutory law
    gave the sentencing authorities no choice but to impose those punishments. “State law mandated
    that each juvenile die in prison even if a judge or jury would have thought that his youth and its
    attendant characteristics, along with the nature of his crime, made a lesser sentence (for example,
    life with the possibility of parole) more appropriate.” (Emphasis in original.) 
    Id.
    ¶ 49            Because “[t]he concept of proportionality [was] central to the [e]ighth
    [a]mendment” (internal quotation marks omitted) (id. at 469), a sentencing statute that
    “mandate[d] life in prison without possibility of parole for juvenile offenders” violated the eighth
    amendment (id. at 479). The statutory sentencing schemes at issue in Miller made youth and its
    transient features (id. at 476)—the incomplete neurological development with the resultant
    recklessness, impulsivity, impressionability, and malleability of youth (id. at 471-72)—completely
    “irrelevant to imposition of that harshest prison sentence” (id. at 479). The categorical approach
    of these sentencing statutes “pose[d] too great a risk of disproportionate punishment.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 50            This was not to say that it was constitutionally forbidden, no matter what the facts,
    to sentence a juvenile offender to life imprisonment for murder. 
    Id. at 480
    ; see also People v.
    Lusby, 
    2020 IL 124046
    , ¶ 1 (upholding, against a Miller challenge, a 130-year prison term imposed
    upon a defendant for a first degree murder and other offenses that he committed when he was 16).
    It was just that, before imposing such a severe sentence on a juvenile offender, the “sentencer [had
    to] have the ability to consider the mitigating qualities of youth.” (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 476
    . The sentencer had to consider—and, thus, had to be statutorily
    allowed to consider—“the nature of their crimes” as well as the juvenile’s “age and age-related
    characteristics.” 
    Id. at 489
    .
    - 10 -
    ¶ 51            B. Interpretations and Applications of Miller by Our Own Supreme Court
    ¶ 52                               1. Discretionary Life Sentences
    ¶ 53            Miller, our own supreme court has concluded, applies not only to mandatory life
    sentences imposed on juvenile offenders but also to discretionary life sentences imposed on
    juvenile offenders. People v. Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 40. “Life sentences, whether mandatory
    or discretionary, for juvenile defendants are disproportionate and violate the eighth amendment,
    unless the trial court considers youth and its attendant characteristics.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 54                                 2. De Facto Life Sentences
    ¶ 55            In People v. Reyes, 
    2016 IL 119271
    , ¶ 9, the supreme court held that “[a] mandatory
    term-of-years sentence that [could not] be served in one lifetime ha[d] the same practical effect on
    a juvenile defendant’s life as would an actual mandatory sentence of life without parole,”
    triggering Miller’s protections. The defendant in Reyes, who was 16 years old at the time of his
    offenses (id. ¶ 1), was sentenced to “a mandatory minimum aggregate sentence of 97 years’
    imprisonment” (id. ¶ 2).
    ¶ 56            Despite the designation of a number of years of imprisonment, the defendant in
    Reyes was sentenced, essentially, to die in prison. That was clear. It was highly unlikely that he
    would live 97 more years. But what if the prison term, instead of being 97 years, had been 50 years
    or 40 years or 30 years? How are we to know “when a prison sentence for a term of years imposed
    on a juvenile defendant is the functional equivalent of life without parole”? See People v. Buffer,
    
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 29. “[W]hen [is] a juvenile defendant’s prison term *** long enough to be
    considered a de facto life sentence without parole”? See 
    id.
     Our supreme court “cho[se] to draw
    the line at 40 years.” Id. ¶ 40.
    - 11 -
    ¶ 57           Here is why. In section 5-4.5-105(c) of the Unified Code of Corrections (730 ILCS
    5/5-4.5-105(c) (West 2018)), “the General Assembly *** determined that the specified first degree
    murders that would justify natural life imprisonment for adult offenders would warrant a
    mandatory minimum sentence of 40 years for juvenile offenders.” Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 39.
    Evidently, then, in the belief of the legislature, “this 40-year floor for juvenile offenders who
    commit[ted] egregious crimes complie[d] with the requirements of Miller.” 
    Id.
     Deferring to that
    belief, the supreme court “conclude[d] that a prison sentence of 40 years or less imposed on a
    juvenile offender [did] not constitute a de facto life sentence in violation of the eighth
    amendment.” Id. ¶ 41. But a prison sentence “greater than 40 years,” imposed on a juvenile
    defendant, should be considered “a de facto life sentence.” Id. ¶ 42.
    ¶ 58                         3. The Retroactive Applicability of Miller
    ¶ 59           Miller applies retroactively to cases on collateral review. People v. Davis, 
    2014 IL 115595
    , ¶¶ 39, 42; see also Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. ___, ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 718
    , 736
    (2016) (holding likewise). In other words, a defendant may petition for postconviction relief on
    the basis of Miller even though Miller did not exist yet when the defendant was sentenced.
    ¶ 60           4. What, Specifically, a Sentencing Court Must Consider Under Miller
    ¶ 61           Some courts had “read Miller narrowly, holding that trial courts [had to] consider
    generally mitigating circumstances related to a juvenile defendant’s youth”—in other words, just
    youthfulness in general. Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , ¶ 42. Other courts had “read Miller more
    broadly, holding that trial courts [had to] consider specifically the characteristics mentioned by the
    Supreme Court.” Id. ¶ 43. Since “age [was] not just a chronological fact but a multifaceted set of
    attributes that carr[ied] constitutional significance,” Holman adopted the broad approach. Id. ¶ 44.
    - 12 -
    ¶ 62           The Illinois General Assembly has adopted the broad approach too. Section 5-4.5-
    105(a) of the Unified Code of Corrections, effective January 1, 2016, provides as follows:
    “(a) On or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
    Assembly, when a person commits an offense and the person is under 18 years of
    age at the time of the commission of the offense, the court, at the sentencing hearing
    conducted under Section 5-4-1 [(730 ILCS 5/5-4-1 (West 2018))], shall consider
    the following additional factors in mitigation in determining the appropriate
    sentence:
    (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;
    (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;
    - 13 -
    (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).
    Most of those factors come from Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 477-78
    .
    ¶ 63           It is arguable that, if Miller indirectly applied to a young adult offender’s
    proportionate penalties claim (see People v. Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 45), the Miller factors
    would be applicable too. See People v. Ruiz, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 163145
    , ¶ 52.
    ¶ 64             5. What a Juvenile Offender Must Show to Prevail Under Miller
    ¶ 65           Our supreme court requires the following showing from a defendant seeking relief
    under the Miller line of cases:
    “[T]o prevail on a claim based on Miller and its progeny, a defendant sentenced for
    an offense committed while a juvenile must show that (1) the defendant was subject
    to a life sentence, mandatory or discretionary, natural or de facto, and (2) the
    sentencing court failed to consider youth and its attendant characteristics in
    imposing the sentence.” Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 27.
    Thus, noncompliance with Miller is never presumed. It must be shown. See 
    id.
    ¶ 66           6. Miller and a Proportionate Penalties Claim by a Young Adult Offender
    - 14 -
    ¶ 67            In Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 1, the defendant was convicted of first degree murder
    and other violent offenses and was “sentenced to a mandatory minimum aggregate term of 76
    years’ imprisonment.” When he committed the offenses, the defendant was 18 years and 3 months
    old (id.)—just past his eighteenth birthday, like Chambers. On direct appeal, the young-adult
    offender in Harris challenged his mandatory minimum aggregate sentence of 76 years’
    imprisonment, contending that this punishment violated 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). Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 17. The appellate court
    rejected the eighth-amendment claim but held that the aggregate prison term offended the
    “rehabilitation clause” of article I, section 11, which required that penalties “be determined with
    ‘ “the objective of restoring the offender to useful citizenship.” ’ ” Id. ¶ 18 (quoting People v.
    Harris, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 141744
    , ¶ 40, quoting Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11). While recognizing
    the seriousness of the defendant’s crimes, the appellate court deemed it to be “ ‘shock[ing] [to] the
    moral sense of the community to send this young adult to prison for the remainder of his life, with
    no chance to rehabilitate himself into a useful member of society.’ ” Id. (quoting Harris, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 141744
    , ¶ 69).
    ¶ 68            After granting the State’s petition for leave to appeal as a matter of right (id. ¶ 20
    (citing Ill. S. Ct. R. 317 (eff. July 1, 2006))), the supreme court agreed with the appellate court that
    the defendant, being 18 years old at the time of his offenses, had no viable eighth-amendment
    claim under Miller (id. ¶ 61). For purposes of the eighth amendment, the supreme court declined
    to “extend[ ] Miller to offenders 18 years of age or older.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 69            The supreme court left the door open, however, to a claim under the proportionate
    penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution, a clause providing that “[a]ll penalties shall be
    - 15 -
    determined both according to the seriousness of the offense and with the objective of restoring the
    offender to useful citizenship” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11). See Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 48.
    The appellate court had gone ahead and granted the defendant relief under the proportionate
    penalties clause, remanding the case for resentencing. Id. ¶ 18. But the appellate court’s decision
    on the proportionate penalties claim was, the supreme court concluded, premature because in the
    proceedings below no evidence had been adduced on that claim. Id. ¶ 46.
    ¶ 70           This conclusion by the supreme court—that review of the proportionate penalties
    claim was premature—presupposed that, theoretically, the claim had potential: that there was a
    legally cognizable claim that, perhaps, could be developed with evidence. The defendant’s claim
    under the proportionate penalties clause was that (1) the juvenile brain development discussion in
    Miller applied to him as a young adult (id. ¶ 42) and, (2) given his asserted neurological immaturity
    at the time he committed the offenses, the 76-year prison sentence was shocking to the moral sense
    of the community (id. ¶ 36). The majority of the supreme court characterized this claim as an as-
    applied constitutional challenge to the sentencing statutes mandating the aggregate prison term of
    76 years. Id. ¶ 37. The claim was that, given the defendant’s “specific facts and circumstances,”
    namely, his own alleged developmental immaturity at the time he committed the offenses, the
    sentencing statutes—which removed any discretion to impose a shorter aggregate prison
    sentence—were unconstitutional as applied to him (but the defendant did not go so far as to claim
    that the sentencing statutes were “unconstitutional under any possible set of facts,” as in a facial
    challenge). Id. ¶ 38.
    ¶ 71           The trouble was that this as-applied claim rested on no evidence, at least none
    specific to the defendant and his crime. Because the defendant never raised his as-applied claim in
    the circuit court, no evidentiary hearing had been held on the claim. Id. ¶ 40. Consequently, there
    - 16 -
    were no “specific facts and circumstances” to review. Id. ¶ 38. If the defendant had been a juvenile
    when he committed his offenses, no further evidence would have been necessary: it would have
    been as simple as applying Miller. See id. ¶ 44. Because the defendant in Harris was 18, however,
    when he committed his offenses, he was an adult, and “Miller [did] not apply directly to his
    circumstances.” Id. ¶ 45. Therefore, “[t]he record [had to] be developed sufficiently to address
    [the] defendant’s claim that Miller applie[d] to his particular circumstances.” Id.
    ¶ 72           Thus, it could not be taken for granted that the developmental immaturity rationale
    in Miller, applicable to juveniles, could be applied to this particular young adult in the particular
    circumstances of his offense. After the milestone of age 18, the applicability of Miller had to be
    shown by evidence. The supreme court did not specify what form the evidence should take. The
    supreme court merely decided that, in the record before it, more evidence was needed. In “the
    factual vacuum created by the absence of an evidentiary hearing and findings of fact by the trial
    court,” a reviewing court lacked the means to make an as-applied finding of unconstitutionality.
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 41. The record lacked “evidence about how the evolving
    science on juvenile maturity and brain development that helped form the basis for the Miller
    decision applie[d] to [the] defendant’s specific facts and circumstances. Accordingly, [the]
    defendant’s as-applied challenge [was] premature.” Id. ¶ 46.
    ¶ 73           The defendant still had the option, however, of bringing his as-applied claim in
    postconviction proceedings, which “often require[d] presentation of evidence not contained in the
    record.” Id. ¶ 48.
    ¶ 74                       C. What All This Means for the Present Case
    ¶ 75           It should be evident by now that not all of the circuit court’s rationale for the
    summary dismissal of Chambers’s pro se petition has stood up to subsequent developments in case
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    law. For one thing, the circuit court rejected Chambers’s assertion that 42 years’ imprisonment
    was a de facto life sentence. As we have discussed, however, Buffer held that a prison term longer
    than 40 years was a de facto life sentence for a juvenile offender convicted of first degree murder.
    Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 42. By logical corollary, then, a prison term longer than 40 years would
    be a de facto life sentence for an adult offender convicted of first degree murder, since an adult is
    temporally closer to death than a juvenile. Also, the circuit court held Miller to be inapplicable to
    discretionary sentences. Holman subsequently concluded otherwise. See Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    ,
    ¶ 40.
    ¶ 76           The circuit court was correct, though, that Miller was inapplicable to defendants
    who were 18 years of age or older at the time of their offense. See Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 61.
    More precisely, Miller was not directly applicable to them. Although young adult offenders had
    no eighth-amendment claim under Miller, Harris gave young adult offenders such as Chambers
    an indirect opening. The supreme court held in Harris that in a postconviction proceeding an 18-
    year-old offender could use the juvenile brain development rationale in Miller to claim that a 76-
    year prison sentence violated the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution (Harris,
    
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 48; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11)—which, the supreme court previously had
    held, afforded greater protection than the eighth amendment (People v. Clemons, 
    2012 IL 107821
    ,
    ¶ 40).
    ¶ 77           The State observes that this indirect application of Miller to an 18-year-old
    individual’s commission of a particular offense is far from automatic and self-evident. The pro se
    petition for postconviction relief, the State argues, must have documentation attached to it
    corroborating that “the evolving science on juvenile maturity and brain development that helped
    form the basis for the Miller decision applies to [the] defendant’s specific facts and circumstances.”
    - 18 -
    Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 46; see 725 ILCS 5/122-2 (West 2018) (providing that “[t]he petition
    shall have attached thereto affidavits, records, or other evidence supporting its allegations or shall
    state why the same are not attached”). Chambers attached no such documentation to his pro se
    petition, nor did his petition offer any explanation for the omission. See 725 ILCS 5/122-2 (West
    2018). A pro se petition may be summarily dismissed for the lack of such supporting
    documentation. People v. Delton, 
    227 Ill. 2d 247
    , 255 (2008).
    ¶ 78           Even if the lack of corroborating documentation were somehow excusable, the
    State continues, the record affirmatively rebuts Chambers’s claim. See Hodges, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 16
    (explaining that “[a]n example of an indisputably meritless legal theory is one which is completely
    contradicted by the record”). In the State’s view, it is evident from the record of the sentencing
    hearing that the circuit court considered Chambers’s youth and attendant circumstances, as Miller,
    if it were indirectly applicable, would have required. The court could consider the Miller factors
    only to the extent that the court was presented with evidence relevant to those factors. The
    transcript of the sentencing hearing affirmatively indicates that the court considered the evidence
    that had been presented. In the sentencing hearing, the court explicitly stated that it had considered
    Chambers’s age and his statement in allocution and that it had reviewed the presentence
    investigation report and the defense exhibits (which laid out the evidence relevant to Miller
    factors).
    ¶ 79           The State has some reasonable points here. To support an as-applied challenge
    under the proportionate penalties clause, the young-adult offender must do more than cite “the
    ‘evolving science’ on juvenile maturity and brain development that formed the basis of the Miller
    decision.” People v. Thompson, 
    2015 IL 118151
    , ¶ 38. Some form of additional “factual
    development” is necessary on the questions of (1) “how that science applies to the circumstances
    - 19 -
    of [the] defendant’s case” and (2) “whether the rationale of Miller should be extended beyond
    minors under the age of 18.” 
    Id.
     Chambers contends, like the young-adult offender in Harris, that
    “the record here includes sufficient information about his personal history to allow the court to
    consider whether the evolving science on juvenile maturity and brain development relied upon in
    Miller applies to him.” Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 42. The supreme court rejected that contention.
    Additional evidence was needed to show how that science applied specifically to the defendant
    and to the particular circumstances of his offense. Id. ¶ 46. The purpose of the attached “affidavits,
    records, or other evidence” required by section 122-2 of the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (725
    ILCS 5/122-2 (West 2018)) is to show that such factual development is possible, that the claim is
    “capable of objective or independent corroboration.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Delton,
    
    227 Ill. 2d at 254
    .
    ¶ 80            In any event, apart from this question of corroboration, there is a well-established
    presumption that the sentencing court considered all of the mitigating factors, without the court’s
    having to recite them or to assign a value to each factor presented in the sentencing hearing. People
    v. Meeks, 
    81 Ill. 2d 524
    , 534 (1980); People v. Hill, 
    408 Ill. App. 3d 23
    , 30 (2011). As we already
    have noted from Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    , ¶ 27, a defendant seeking relief under the Miller line of
    cases “must show that *** the sentencing court failed to consider youth and its attendant
    characteristics”—a showing that, one might think, would entail more than observing that the court
    did not explicitly recite the Miller factors.
    ¶ 81            Thus, arguments can be made in favor of the summary dismissal. But arguments
    can be made against the summary dismissal too. Chambers cites decisions in which the appellate
    court allowed young-adult offenders to file successive postconviction petitions premised on Harris
    even though, apparently, the proposed successive petitions lacked any attached affidavits or other
    - 20 -
    evidence on “how the evolving science on juvenile maturity and brain development that helped
    form the basis for the Miller decision applie[d] to [the defendants’] specific facts and
    circumstances.” Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , ¶ 46; see People v. Franklin, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 171628
    ,
    ¶ 72; People v. Minniefield, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 170541
    , ¶¶ 21, 44-45. Also, Chambers cites a
    decision in which the appellate court decided as follows: “Although the trial court commented on
    defendant’s youth and upbringing *** and acknowledged that it [had] read defendant’s
    [presentence investigation report] ***[,] we do not find these observations to be the equivalent to
    a full consideration of those special characteristics contained within the [presentence investigation]
    report.” People v. Morris, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 141117
    , ¶ 32. So, in the extremely undemanding first
    stage of the postconviction proceeding, Chambers has a foothold in appellate court case law. All
    that we require of a pro se petition is that it be arguable (see Hodges, 
    234 Ill. 2d at 17
    ), and to call
    the pro se petition in this case not arguable, we would have to call some decisions by the appellate
    court, e.g., Franklin, Minniefield, and Morris, not arguable—which, of course, would be
    untenable.
    ¶ 82                                     III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 83            For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the circuit court’s judgment and remand this
    case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ¶ 84            Reversed and remanded.
    - 21 -
    No. 4-19-0151
    Cite as:                 People v. Chambers, 
    2021 IL App (4th) 190151
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of McLean County, No. 14-CF-
    791; the Hon. Scott D. Drazewski, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Catherine K. Hart, and Amy J. Kemp, of State
    for                      Appellate Defender’s Office, of Springfield, for appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Don Knapp, State’s Attorney, of Bloomington (Patrick Delfino,
    for                      David J. Robinson, and Rosario David Escalera Jr., of State’s
    Appellee:                Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the
    People.
    - 22 -