People v. Thornton ( 2022 )


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  •             NOTICE
    
    2022 IL App (4th) 210200-U
    FILED
    This Order was filed under                                                         April 12, 2022
    Supreme Court Rule 23 and is                                                       Carla Bender
    NO. 4-21-0200
    not precedent except in the                                                    4th District Appellate
    limited circumstances allowed                                                        Court, IL
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT
    under Rule 23(e)(1).
    OF ILLINOIS
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                        )   Appeal from the
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                               )   Circuit Court of
    v.                                                )   Jersey County
    RODGER THORNTON,                                            )   No. 88CF21
    Defendant-Appellant.                              )
    )   Honorable
    )   Joshua A. Meyer,
    )   Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Harris and Steigmann concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1      Held: (1) Because any future challenge to the length of the prison sentence was waived
    by the negotiated guilty plea, the second amended petition for postconviction relief
    fails to make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation in the length of the
    prison sentence.
    (2) Postconviction counsel filed a certificate stating that he had made amendments
    to the pro se petition that were necessary for adequate presentation of defendant’s
    claims, and the certificate is, in that respect, unrebutted by the record.
    ¶2               Defendant, Rodger Thornton, is serving a sentence of natural-life imprisonment for
    the first degree murder of William J. Lewis. See Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 38, ¶ 9-1(a)(2). Defendant
    petitioned the circuit court of Jersey County for postconviction relief. After appointing
    postconviction counsel, the court granted a motion by the State to dismiss defendant’s second
    amended petition, agreeing with the State that the second amended petition failed to make a
    substantial showing of a constitutional violation. Defendant appeals.
    ¶3             His first contention is that, contrary to the circuit court’s finding, his second
    amended petition made a substantial showing of a constitutional violation. He contends that when
    the eighth amendment (U.S. Const., amend. VIII) and the proportionate penalties clause (Ill. Const.
    1970, art. I, § 11) are applied to the facts of his case, his life-without-parole prison sentence
    violates those constitutional provisions. In our de novo review, we conclude that the waiver
    inherent in defendant’s negotiated guilty plea bars this contention.
    ¶4             Second, alternatively, defendant complains that his appointed postconviction
    counsel failed to make amendments to the pro se petition that were “necessary for an adequate
    presentation of [defendant’s] contentions.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017). But
    postconviction counsel filed a certificate stating that he had made the necessary amendments—
    and the petition was amended, twice. In our de novo review, we find the certificate by
    postconviction counsel to be unrebutted by the record.
    ¶5             Therefore, we affirm the judgment.
    ¶6                                     I. BACKGROUND
    ¶7             On June 30, 1988, defendant entered a negotiated guilty plea to count VI of the
    information, a count alleging that on February 4, 1988, he murdered Lewis. See Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987
    ch. 38, ¶ 9-1(a)(2). Lewis was an 88-year-old man whom defendant bludgeoned to death
    supposedly because Lewis had reneged on his agreement to pay defendant $20 for shoveling snow.
    The State purportedly had evidence, in the form of a statement by defendant’s girlfriend (whose
    name appears to be unspecified in the record), that defendant had repeatedly expressed to her an
    intention to kill Lewis to avenge Lewis’s having implicated him, as a juvenile, in a residential
    burglary.
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    ¶8             In any event, defendant deemed it advisable to make a deal with the State. By the
    terms of the plea agreement, the remaining five counts of the information were to be dismissed,
    and he would receive a sentence of natural life imprisonment.
    ¶9             On June 30, 1988, in the guilty plea hearing, the circuit court admonished
    defendant that the possible penalties for the charged offenses were death; natural-life
    imprisonment; imprisonment for not less than 20 years; or, if the term of imprisonment were an
    extended term, imprisonment for not less than 60 years. Part of the dialogue between the court
    and defendant was as follows:
    “THE COURT: Now, under the law, the penalties for murder as charged
    in these Informations are these: If you pled guilty or were found guilty of the
    charge of murder as set out in the six counts of the Information, one of the
    penalties could be the death penalty.
    Do you understand that, Mr. Thornton?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I’m perfectly well aware of that.
    THE COURT: And another possible penalty is to be in prison for your
    natural life.
    Do you understand that?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I understand.”
    ¶ 10           The circuit court informed defendant of the rights he would “waive” (or “give
    up,” as the court explained what “waive” meant) by pleading guilty, including the rights to a
    presentence investigation and to the preparation of a report on the presentence investigation:
    “THE COURT: When you have a trial, if you were found guilty at the
    trial, under the law, before you were sentenced, there would be a presentence
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    investigation made as to your situation, and this is usually made by the Probation
    Department or the Sheriff’s Department, and a presentence investigation means
    that someone under the direction of the Court goes into your home community
    and talks with people who know you, talks with your family, talks with people
    who have employed you in the past, talks with teachers that you might have had
    in school. In other words, the person or persons who write the presentence
    investigation report goes out and finds out about your life and sets it out in a
    report which the Court then must consider before sentencing you. So, the Court
    would know about your medical history and your past family life and about your
    work life and about past criminal record, if any.
    There would be a recommendation to the Court by the probation officer.
    In other words, this presentence investigation report is ma[d]e to the Court so the
    Court knows more about you than the Court knows about you now.
    Now, by pleading guilty, there will be no presentence investigation report
    because there will be no presentence investigation. Do you understand that, Mr.
    Thornton?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I understand it.”
    ¶ 11           The circuit court made sure that defendant understood the terms of the plea
    agreement. Instead of having one of the attorneys recite the terms of the plea agreement, the
    court requested defendant do so. The court wanted to ascertain his personal understanding of
    what the terms of the proposed plea agreement were:
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    “THE COURT: Now, I need for you to tell me what you understand is the
    plea agreement. What’s going to happen to you by pleading guilty? What is the
    plea agreement as you understand it?
    THE DEFENDANT: The way I understand it is, the way I gather it is I’m
    charged with six counts of murder. Five counts would be dropped.
    THE COURT: The first five.
    THE DEFENDANT: The first five would be dropped, dismissed, if I was
    to cop out to the last charge, to the last charge, and I would receive a term of life
    in prison.
    THE COURT: All right. And when you say ‘life in prison,’ after talking
    with [defense counsel], you understand that’s the same as natural life?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir. I’m well aware of that.”
    ¶ 12           At the conclusion of its admonitions to defendant, the circuit court found his
    proposed guilty plea to count VI to be knowing and voluntary. The court accepted the guilty
    plea, entered judgment on it, dismissed the remaining five counts of the information, and
    sentenced defendant to the agreed-upon term of natural life imprisonment.
    ¶ 13           In 2017, defendant filed, pro se, a petition for postconviction relief. In his
    petition, he claimed that recent neuroscience research and evolving societal standards regarding
    the treatment of youthful offenders made his natural life prison term, for a murder he committed
    at age 19, excessively severe under both 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). His petition cited such decisions as Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    (2005), Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012), People v. House, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 110580
    ,
    -5-
    vacated, No. 122134 (Ill. Nov. 28, 2018) (supervisory order), and People v. Harris, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 141744
    , rev’d, 
    2018 IL 121932
    . The circuit court summarily dismissed the pro se petition
    as frivolous or patently without merit. See 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a) (West 2016).
    ¶ 14          In September 2019, we reversed the summary dismissal and remanded the case
    for further proceedings. See People v. Thornton, 
    2019 IL App (4th) 170560-U
    .
    ¶ 15          On remand, the circuit court appointed postconviction counsel, who, on January
    11, 2021, filed an amended petition for postconviction relief. The amended petition claimed as
    follows:
    “14. That the Defendant’s Constitutional rights were violated under the
    U.S. Constitution as well as the Illinois Constitution, and further were violated
    pursuant to the [eighth amendment] and the [proportionate penalties clause] in
    that:
    (a) The Defendant would not have accepted his negotiated plea if
    he had fully understood the implications of the eighth amendment as it
    relates to his emerging adult cognitive abilities.
    (b) The Defendant would not have accepted his negotiated plea had
    he or his counsel had the benefit of the Miller and Harris decisions, and
    their implications of the eighth amendment. [Citation.]
    (c) The Defendant would not have accepted his negotiated plea had
    he known of the scientific studies regarding the developing brain as it
    relates to a young adult’s capability.
    (i) That given the Defendant[’]s trauma he experienced as a
    child (as further outlined in the attached exhibit B), as well as his
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    age, the Defendant’s brain was not developed to a sufficient extent
    to understand the implications of his negotiated plea.
    (d) That due to said trauma and young age, the Defendant did not
    possess the cognitive abilities to understand the implications of his
    negotiated plea or to knowingly and voluntarily waive his right to a
    sentencing hearing.
    (e) That the sentence of natural life in prison, as applied to the
    Defendant who was nineteen (19) years old at the time, violated the
    proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution, and violates his
    constitutional rights.
    (f) That the trial court failed to consider the mitigating qualities of
    youth, as described in Miller before accepting his negotiated sentence.
    [Citation.]”
    ¶ 16           On January 25, 2021, because the amended petition inadvertently omitted the
    exhibits to which it referred, postconviction counsel moved for permission to file a second
    amended petition—which was in all respects identical to the amended petition except that it
    included the exhibits.
    ¶ 17           Also, on January 25, 2021, the State moved to dismiss the amended petition. (The
    parties appear to agree that this motion should be construed as a motion to dismiss the second
    amended petition.) The State gave essentially three reasons for its motion. First, the
    eighth-amendment analysis in Miller was inapplicable to offenders 18 years of age or older.
    Second, unlike the defendant in House, defendant in the present case was convicted as the sole
    perpetrator of Lewis’s murder, not on a theory of accountability. Third, the amended petition
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    “fail[ed] to provide any reason an as-applied challenge should apply to defendant besides a flat
    assertion that he would not have pled guilty ‘had he known of the scientific studies regarding the
    developing brain as it relates to a young adult’s culpability.’ ”
    ¶ 18           On April 1, 2021, the circuit court granted the State’s motion for dismissal. The
    reason, the dismissal order explained, was that the second amended petition “reference[d]
    general science” without “connect[ing] the general science mentioned to [defendant’s] specific
    case.” The order continued:
    “There are insufficient allegations of his own immaturity, cognitive
    developmental impairments, intellectual abilities, a specific diagnosis or
    symptom. *** He simply has not [pled] specific and individual allegations
    particular to him that rendered him functionally younger than [19]. *** The
    closest he gets to specific allegations in support of an as-applied claim are the
    general statements that his childhood ‘trauma,’ as well as his age, resulted in [his]
    brain not being developed enough to understand his negotiated plea or knowingly
    and voluntarily waive his right to a sentencing hearing or understand the
    implications of the plea. ***
    [Defendant’s] allegations, even if taken as true, do not rise to the level of a
    substantial violation of constitutional rights. [He] was 19 years old at the
    applicable time. He clearly does not have a direct or ‘facial’ constitutional claim,
    and Miller is not presumptively applicable to his claim. [His] claim under the
    eighth amendment fails to allege a substantial constitutional violation. The
    general allegation that he had ‘trauma’ from an abusive father, coupled with his
    age, fail to allege or show his individual characteristics caused his brain to be
    -8-
    more similar to that of a juvenile than an adult. [His] second amended petition
    fails to allege or show Miller should be applied to his specific case. His as-applied
    claim under the Illinois constitution is insufficient. The State’s motion to dismiss
    is granted.”
    ¶ 19           This appeal followed.
    ¶ 20                                      II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 21                    A. Whether the Second Amended Petition Made
    a Substantial Showing of a Constitutional Violation
    ¶ 22           Defendant argues that his “postconviction petition made a substantial showing that
    his life-without-parole prison sentence[,] as applied to his case[,] violates the eighth amendment
    of the United States Constitution and proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution.”
    In our de novo review (see People v. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31), we affirm the dismissal of
    the second amended petition for postconviction relief because, in the second amended petition,
    defendant “[is] seeking to hold the State to its part of the [plea] bargain while unilaterally
    modifying the sentence[ ] to which [he] had earlier agreed” (People v. Evans, 
    174 Ill. 2d 320
    , 327
    (1996)).
    ¶ 23           The second amended petition requested the circuit court to “vacate the Judgment in
    this matter and set this matter for a new sentencing hearing.” Allowing defendant to unilaterally
    renege on the plea agreement would “fl[y] in the face of contract law principles” and would be
    “inconsistent with constitutional concerns of fundamental fairness.” 
    Id.
     The State delivered on its
    part of the bargain by giving up the remaining counts of the information and by forgoing the
    opportunity to seek capital punishment should defendant be found guilty in a trial. Likewise,
    defendant must deliver on his part of the bargain by serving his agreed-upon sentence of natural
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    life imprisonment. Granting the relief requested in his second amended petition would make this
    bargain—and all other negotiated plea agreements—meaningless and would “encourage
    gamesmanship of a most offensive nature.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     By agreeing to
    a sentence of life imprisonment in return for the dismissal of the first five counts of the information
    and the elimination of the risk of the death penalty, defendant effectively agreed not to challenge
    that sentence as excessive. See People v. Linder, 
    186 Ill. 2d 67
    , 74 (1999) (holding that “[b]y
    agreeing to plead guilty in exchange for a recommended sentencing cap, a defendant is, in effect,
    agreeing not to challenge any sentence imposed below that cap on the grounds that it is excessive”).
    Defendant must be held to his side of the bargain.
    ¶ 24                  B. The Alternative Claim That Postconviction Counsel
    Failed to Make Necessary Amendments to the Pro Se Petition
    ¶ 25           Under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017), the record must
    “contain a showing” that postconviction counsel discharged certain duties, including the making
    of “any amendments to the petitions filed pro se that are necessary for adequate presentation of
    [the] petitioner’s contentions.” This showing “may be made by the certificate of [postconviction
    counsel].” 
    Id.
     Such a certificate raises “a presumption that postconviction counsel provided
    reasonable assistance during second-stage proceedings under the [Post-Conviction Hearing] Act
    [(725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2020))].” People v. Addison, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 180545
    , ¶ 26. To
    overcome this presumption raised by the Rule 651(c) certificate, defendant must show that “the
    record positively rebuts the presumption of reasonableness.” People v. Wallace, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 142758
    , ¶ 28. We decide de novo whether the record does so. See 
    id. ¶ 25
    .
    ¶ 26           The Rule 651(c) duty of making any necessary amendments to the pro se petition
    means to “shape[ ] the petitioner’s claims into proper legal form.” People v. Perkins, 229 Ill. 2d
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    34, 43-44 (2007). Defendant complains that, instead of shaping his pro se claim into proper legal
    form, postconviction counsel substituted a different claim for his pro se claim. The pro se claim,
    as defendant describes it in his brief, was that, “as applied to him[,] [his] life sentence for an offense
    that he committed at just 19 years old violated the eighth amendment.” Instead of presenting that
    claim “to the court in appropriate legal form” (People v. Johnson, 
    154 Ill. 2d 227
    , 245 (1993)) and
    instead of buttressing that claim with discussions of “the relevant science on juvenile brain
    development” and descriptions of the trauma and deprivations that defendant suffered in his
    childhood, postconviction counsel raised a challenge to the knowingness of the guilty plea.
    Postconviction counsel pleaded that defendant would not have entered into the negotiated plea
    agreement if he had known the new constitutional principles that Miller and Harris later
    expounded or if he had understood how childhood trauma and his incompletely developed young-
    adult brain prevented him from fully “understand[ing] the implications of his negotiated plea.”
    ¶ 27            In his brief, however, when defendant refers to the sufferings of his childhood—
    specifically, his “injurious home life” that “caused him to struggle in school, consistently fight
    with other children, and attempt to provide for himself while ‘living on the street’ ”—he cites, for
    evidence, the pages of his sworn pro se petition in which he describes those hardships. His pro se
    petition is exhibit B of the second amended petition. Also, in his brief, when defendant discusses
    his “continuous[ ]” efforts “to rehabilitate himself from the moment he arrived in prison,” he again
    cites pages of his pro se petition—which, in its entirety (including the academic certificates of
    completion from the prison), is referenced in and attached to the second amended petition. Thus,
    the evidence that defendant originally presented pro se is the evidence that his postconviction
    counsel presented with the second amended petition. As the State points out, although
    postconviction counsel has an obligation to attempt to contact witnesses specifically named in the
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    pro se petition and “to present a petitioner’s claims in appropriate legal form, he [or she] is under
    no obligation to actively search for sources outside the record that might support general claims
    raised in a post-conviction petition.” (Emphasis in original.) Johnson, 154 Ill. 2d at 247.
    ¶ 28           We understand defendant’s complaint that postconviction counsel presented a
    different claim instead of the claim that defendant had intended to present. It is clearly apparent
    from the record, defendant argues, that postconviction counsel failed to do what Rule 651(c)
    required: “adequate presentation of petitioner’s contentions.” (Emphasis added.) Ill. S. Ct. R.
    651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017). But the matter is not so simple. Presenting a petitioner’s claim in
    appropriate legal form might require significantly recasting the claim so as to head off a fatal
    finding of waiver. “Our supreme court has held that a failure of post-conviction counsel to ‘make
    a routine amendment to [a] post-conviction petition which would overcome the procedural bar of
    waiver’ constitutes unreasonable assistance in violation of Rule 651(c).” People v. Kluppelberg,
    
    327 Ill. App. 3d 939
    , 947 (2002) (quoting People v. Turner, 
    187 Ill. 2d 406
    , 412-13 (1999)). If
    postconviction counsel in this case had merely realleged, in a dressed-up form, defendant’s pro se
    claim that sentencing him to life imprisonment, without the possibility of parole, violated the
    eighth amendment and the proportionate penalties clause, the second amended petition would have
    been vulnerable to dismissal on the ground of waiver. We already have highlighted this problem
    in our discussion of Evans.
    ¶ 29           To reiterate, by agreeing to plead guilty in return for a specific sentence, a defendant
    effectively gives up any claim that the sentence is excessive. In Linder, 
    186 Ill. 2d at 74
    , the
    supreme court held that “[b]y agreeing to plead guilty in exchange for a recommended sentencing
    cap, a defendant is, in effect, agreeing not to challenge any sentence imposed below that cap on
    the grounds that it is excessive.” The same logic would apply to a defendant who had agreed to
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    plead guilty in return for a specific sentence: the defendant agrees not to challenge that specific
    sentence as excessive. As the appellate court said in People v. Braje, 
    130 Ill. App. 3d 1054
    , 1066
    (1985):
    “Where a defendant enters a negotiated plea of guilty, he voluntarily accepts the
    sentence, even if it is in excess of the statutory minimum and thereby recognizes
    and admits that such sentence is fair and justified in light of his history and character
    and the nature of the circumstances of the offense. [Citation.] Consequently,
    defendant cannot now complain that the sentence was excessive since he had agreed
    that it was an appropriate sentence under the circumstances.”
    ¶ 30           In the light of some recent appellate court case law, postconviction counsel might
    have perceived a possible path around this obstacle of waiver, and he might have felt obliged, by
    the duty of reasonable assistance, to take that path. See Turner, 
    187 Ill. 2d at 412-13
    ; Kluppelberg,
    327 Ill. App. 3d at 947. The possible work-around was this. If the guilty plea could be invalidated
    on the ground that it was not a knowing guilty plea—more specifically, on the ground that
    defendant, when he pleaded guilty, was uninformed of the as-of-yet nonexistent decisions in Miller
    and Harris—then the sentence imposed pursuant to the guilty plea would be invalidated as well.
    See Evans, 
    174 Ill. 2d at 332
     (holding that, “following the entry of judgment on a negotiated guilty
    plea, even if a defendant wants to challenge only his sentence, he must move to withdraw the guilty
    plea and vacate the judgment so that, in the event the motion is granted, the parties are returned to
    the status quo”). After all, in January 2021, when postconviction counsel filed the second amended
    petition, there was appellate court authority for the proposition that a defendant’s inability to
    foresee the as-of-yet undecided case of Harris, 
    2018 IL 121932
    , prevented his negotiated guilty
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    plea from “waiv[ing] his right to bring the as-applied proportionate penalties claim he now
    [sought] to assert.” People v. Daniels, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 171738
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶ 31           Later, on December 16, 2021, the Illinois Supreme Court issued People v. Jones,
    
    2021 IL 126432
    , which revealed that this supposed path around waiver was really a dead end. In
    Jones, the defendant entered a fully negotiated guilty plea to a charge that he had murdered an
    elderly couple, George and Rebecca Thorpe. Id. ¶¶ 3-4. The defendant was 16 years old when he
    committed these murders. Id. ¶ 2. In accordance with the plea agreement, he was sentenced to
    imprisonment for 50 years. Id. ¶ 4-5. Later, he moved for permission to file a successive petition
    for postconviction relief. Id. ¶ 7. In the proposed successive petition, he claimed that the statutory
    provision “automatically transferring certain juvenile cases to adult criminal court and the
    requirement in the Illinois truth-in-sentencing statute that he serve every day of his sentence were
    unconstitutional” under Miller, Roper, and Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
     (2010). Jones, 
    2021 IL 126432
    , ¶ 7. He noted that “his guilty plea and the subsequent judgment were entered in 2000,
    years before Miller was decided,” and thus he pleaded guilty without knowing, or being able to
    know, the crucial and germane principles of constitutional law that Miller later unveiled. 
    Id.
     Even
    so, the circuit court denied the defendant permission to file the successive petition, and the
    appellate court affirmed. Id. ¶ 1.
    ¶ 32           The supreme court in Jones affirmed the appellate court’s judgment. Id. One of the
    reasons why the supreme court did so was that voluntarily entering a guilty plea waived all
    nonjurisdiction errors—including constitutional errors that could not have been apparent until
    later. Id. ¶ 20. A guilty plea was “a bet on the future,” by which the defendant “gain[ed] a present
    benefit in return for the risk that he [might] have to [forgo] future favorable legal developments.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 21. To avoid the mandatory sentence of life imprisonment
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    that he would have received if he had been convicted of other charges, the defendant in Jones made
    a deal with the State and pleaded guilty in return for 50 years’ imprisonment. See id. ¶ 25. He
    thereby waived any constitutional challenge to the agreed-upon sentence of 50 years’
    imprisonment. See id. ¶ 20. This waiver remained effective despite any later changes in the law
    regarding the sentencing of juveniles. “[A]bsent misrepresentation or other impermissible conduct
    by state agents [citation], a voluntary plea of guilty intelligently made in the light of the then
    applicable law does not become vulnerable because later judicial decisions indicate that the plea
    rested on a faulty premise.” (Emphasis and internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. ¶ 23.
    ¶ 33           Likewise, in the present case, seemingly for the benefit of avoiding the risk of
    capital punishment should he be found guilty in a trial, defendant pleaded guilty to count VI in
    return for natural life imprisonment and the dismissal of the remaining five counts of the
    information. Defendant received the benefit of his bargain, and the State should receive the benefit
    of its bargain. Contracts are a bet on the future. Jones teaches that, contrary to Daniels, the
    knowingness of defendant’s guilty plea to the murder of Lewis did not depend on defendant’s
    being able to foresee future developments in the law. See id. By his voluntary and knowing guilty
    plea, defendant once and for all waived all challenges to his sentence, including constitutional
    challenges based on case law published long after his criminal case was concluded.
    ¶ 34           In his reply brief, defendant argues that the waiver analysis in Jones is incorrect
    and unsupported by the cases the supreme court cites in that decision. We have no authority,
    however, to overrule a decision by the supreme court. People v. Ward, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190243
    ,
    ¶ 42. Our duty, instead, is to follow Jones by affirming, on the ground of waiver, the dismissal of
    defendant’s second amended petition for postconviction relief. See Jones, 
    2021 IL 126432
    , ¶ 20.
    Granted, the circuit court did not rely on a theory of waiver. It is well established, though, that, in
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    our de novo review of the dismissal of a postconviction petition, “[w]e may affirm the dismissal
    based on any reason supported by the record because we review the judgment, not the trial court’s
    reasoning.” People v. Gonzalez, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 141660
    , ¶ 25. Regardless of whether the circuit
    court or the State raised it, waiver is a reason supported by the record.
    ¶ 35           In sum, it was reasonable of postconviction counsel to amend the pro se petition in
    such a way as to try to get around the obstacle of waiver. We decide de novo that the presumption
    of reasonable assistance raised by the Rule 651(c) certificate is unrebutted by the record. See
    Addison, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 180545
    , ¶ 26; Wallace, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 142758
    , ¶ 28.
    ¶ 36                  C. The State’s Motion to Strike Evidence Presented in
    Defendant’s Brief That Was Never Presented in the Circuit Court
    ¶ 37           The State moves that we strike evidentiary material that defendant submits in his
    brief but that was not presented below. For the reasons explained in People v. Aquisto, 
    2022 IL App (4th) 200081
    , ¶ 92, we deny the State’s motion. Instead of striking the evidentiary material,
    we merely will disregard it because it is outside the record. See Hurlbert v. Brewer, 
    386 Ill. App. 3d 1096
    , 1101 (2008) (remarking that “a reviewing court will not consider any facts dehors the
    record and any claims based on such facts” and that, instead of striking the offending brief, the
    reviewing court will simply “disregard any fact or claim not supported by the record”).
    ¶ 38                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 39           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
    ¶ 40           Affirmed.
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