People v. Luciano , 2023 IL App (2d) 220112 ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    No. 2-22-0112
    Opinion filed June 9, 2023
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Kane County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,             )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 07-CF-1753
    )
    MICHAEL A. LUCIANO,                    ) Honorable
    ) Donald Tegeler Jr.,
    Defendant-Appellee.              ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Hutchinson and Schostok concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     On Halloween 1990, Albert Gonzalez, leader of the Insane Deuces street gang in Aurora,
    was murdered by members of the Latin Kings street gang in Aurora. Police quickly developed
    information pointing to defendant, Michael A. Luciano, and other members of the Latin Kings.
    The State was presented with a choice: develop further information and charge defendant with
    murder or charge defendant as quickly as possible with what it could from the evidence on hand.
    The State chose the latter course and charged defendant in two cases: in 1990, in case No. 90-CF-
    1887, defendant was charged with six counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a felon (Ill.
    Rev. Stat. 1991 ch. 38, ¶ 24-1.1(a) (now 720 ILCS 5/24-1.1(a) (West 2020))), and in 1991, in case
    No. 91-CF-787, defendant was charged with four counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    felon and one count of solicitation to commit aggravated discharge of a firearm (Ill. Rev. Stat.
    1991, ch. 38, ¶ 8-1(a) (now 720 ILCS 5/8-1(a) (West 2020))).)
    ¶2     In this case, the third appeal before this court, 1 the State’s choice to prosecute defendant as
    quickly as possible is at issue. The State appeals the order of the circuit court of Kane County
    granting relief to defendant following a third-stage postconviction hearing. We affirm as modified
    the trial court’s judgment, and we reverse and vacate defendant’s conviction.
    ¶3                                       I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4     We summarize the facts necessary for an understanding of the issues raised in this appeal.
    ¶5                         A. Investigation of the Offense in 1990 and 1991
    ¶6     On October 31, 1990, Michael Langston, a detective with the Aurora Police Department,
    arrived at the Gonzalez residence, where Gonzalez was shot, about an hour after the shooting had
    occurred. He determined that the shots were fired from a grassy area about 60 yards from the
    residence. Langston’s search of the area recovered six .22-caliber shell casings, one live .22-caliber
    round, two shotgun shell casings, one .30-caliber shell casing, and one .30-30-caliber shell casing.
    A further search of the area by an evidence technician recovered three .30-30 Winchester shell
    casings and parts of expended shotgun shells.
    1
    The first case before us was defendant’s direct appeal from his conviction of first degree
    murder (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 38, ¶ 9-1(a)). People v. Luciano, No. 2-09-0066 (Oct. 26, 2010)
    (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23) (Luciano I). The second case involved
    defendant’s appeal of the summary dismissal of his postconviction petition. People v. Luciano,
    
    2013 IL App (2d) 110792
     (Luciano II).
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶7     On November 4, 1990, the police executed a search warrant at a residence associated with
    defendant, located on East Galena Boulevard in Aurora. Police recovered firearms and
    ammunition, as well as documents and photographs related to the Latin Kings.
    ¶8     On November 7, 1990, a confidential source, later revealed as Hector Rodriguez, informed
    Robert Reichardt, an officer with the Aurora Police Department, about details of a Latin Kings
    meeting that occurred near Halloween 1990. Reichardt was told that defendant distributed firearms
    to Latin King members Robert “Droopy” Rangel, Jose “Bam Bam” or “Joe” Delatorre, and Jose
    “Speedy” Rivera. Rodriguez also informed Reichardt that, on November 3, 1990, after the
    Gonzalez murder, the weapons were returned to defendant and on November 4, 1990, the weapons
    were again moved. From Rodriguez’s information, the State obtained search warrants and
    conducted searches of the residences that Rodriguez had linked to defendant and the Gonzalez
    murder.
    ¶9     On November 7, 1990, Reichardt executed a search warrant at an apartment associated
    with defendant on Best Place in Aurora (Best Place apartment), which was the residence of his
    father’s girlfriend. Inside the bedroom, Reichardt found a Marlin .30-30 lever-action rifle, a Ted
    Williams 12-gauge shotgun with the barrel sawed off, a loaded Commando Mark .45-caliber
    assault rifle, a .30-caliber carbine, and another 12-gauge sawed-off shotgun. In addition to the
    firearms, police found 700 rounds of assorted ammunition of various calibers and gauges.
    ¶ 10   Juan Acevedo spoke with a police officer during that week. Acevedo revealed that, after
    the Gonzalez murder, Rangel, Michael “Loco” Rodriguez, and Delatorre drove to Acevedo’s
    residence. The three used an outside water spigot to wash their faces and hands. At the time of this
    statement to police, Acevedo concealed the fact that the men also hid guns at his residence; it was
    not until the trial of defendant on the 2007 murder charges that Acevedo testified that the men hid
    firearms.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 11   Testing on the weapons recovered from the Best Place apartment matched a spent .30-30
    shell casing from the grassy area near the Gonzalez residence to the Marlin .30-30 rifle. Two of
    the spent shotgun shells recovered from the grassy area were matched to the Ted Williams 12-
    gauge shotgun. In addition, by April 1991, a fingerprint on the Commando Mark .45-caliber assault
    rifle was determined to belong to defendant.
    ¶ 12   In December 1990, Hector Rodriguez provided a recorded statement to the police.
    Rodriguez described a Latin Kings meeting that occurred before the Gonzalez murder. Rodriguez
    stated that, at that meeting, defendant instructed the members present to shoot opposing gang
    members, particularly members of the Insane Deuces, with whom the Latin Kings were at war,
    and defendant distributed firearms to the members to carry out the shootings. Defendant gave
    Rodriguez the .45-caliber assault rifle, gave Rangel the Ted Williams shotgun, and gave Delatorre
    the .30-30 Marlin rifle. Defendant also gave them instructions to shoot Gonzalez, the leader of the
    Insane Deuces. Rodriguez related that, on Halloween, he encountered defendant at a bar and
    defendant informed him that Gonzalez had already been shot. Rodriguez stated that, after
    Halloween, he observed Rangel and Delatorre return their weapons to defendant and, thereafter,
    he helped defendant move the firearms to another location to conceal them.
    ¶ 13   Late in 1990, the State began to prosecute cases arising from the Gonzalez murder. In
    December 1990, defendant was indicted in Kane County circuit court case No. 90-CF-1887 with
    six counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a felon (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, ¶ 24-1.1(a)
    (now 720 ILCS 5/24-1.1(a) (West 2020))).
    ¶ 14   In March 1991, the State presented Hector Rodriguez’s account to the grand jury. The State
    also presented Acevedo’s statement corroborating Rodriguez’s claim that the Gonzalez shooting
    was ordered at a Latin Kings meeting. In addition, the State presented Acevedo’s account of the
    immediate aftermath of the shooting, in which Rangel, Michael Rodriguez, and Delatorre came to
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    his house and used an outside spigot to wash their faces. The State presented information that,
    early in March 1991, Rangel bragged that he had shot Gonzalez. Rangel was eventually charged
    with the Gonzalez murder.
    ¶ 15   On May 28, 1991, defendant was indicted in Kane County circuit court case No. 91-CF-
    797. Defendant was charged with one count of solicitation to commit aggravated discharge of a
    firearm (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, ¶ 8-1(a) (now 720 ILCS 5/8-1(a) (West 2020))), by directing
    Hector Rodriguez to shoot at Gonzalez, and four counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a
    felon (specifically two shotguns, a Marlin .30-30-caliber rifle, and a Commando Mark .45-caliber
    rifle). We note that the count of solicitation to commit aggravated discharge of a firearm bears a
    handwritten modification of the date to October 28, 1990, with the original date being scratched
    out. There is no explanation or initials showing that the handwritten modification was properly
    agreed to and entered by the trial court.
    ¶ 16   In October 1991, Rangel was tried by a jury. He was acquitted after Acevedo offered
    perjured testimony establishing an alibi for Rangel.
    ¶ 17   In December 1991, defendant and the State entered into a plea agreement. Defendant
    pleaded guilty to the six counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a felon in case No. 90-CF-
    1887 and the four counts of unlawful possession of weapons by a felon in case No. 91-CF-797. In
    exchange for the guilty plea, the State agreed to nol-pros the solicitation count in case No. 91-CF-
    797. Defendant and the State did not reach any agreement regarding his sentence. At the sentencing
    hearing, the State presented Reichardt’s testimony about defendant’s role in the Gonzalez murder.
    Specifically, the State elicited that Reichardt had received information from Hector Rodriguez that
    defendant convened a meeting of the Latin Kings for the purpose of planning Gonzalez’s shooting
    on Halloween, passed out weapons, and assigned shooting targets to the members present. In
    particular, Reichardt related that defendant gave Delatorre the Marlin .30-30 rifle and gave Rangel
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    the Ted Williams 12-gauge sawed-off shotgun and instructed them to shoot at the Gonzalez
    residence. Forensic evidence subsequently determined that those weapons, the Marlin .30-30 rifle
    and the Ted Williams shotgun, had been used in the Gonzalez murder. Reichardt also reviewed his
    investigation and the recovery of the weapons from the Best Place apartment. The State presented
    other witnesses who testified about defendant’s involvement in the Latin Kings gang and its
    structure at that time.
    ¶ 18    The State argued that defendant should receive consecutive sentences because the offenses
    encompassed separate dates, they involved two sets of guns, and the guns were found in two
    distinct locations. The trial court rejected the State’s position, stating, “What I have before me is
    possession of weapons by a felon, and I specifically find that that possession is not two separate
    acts, but an ongoing series of events and that consecutive sentencing is not available.” 2 Defendant
    was sentenced to concurrent 5-year terms of imprisonment on each of the 10 counts to which he
    pleaded guilty.
    2
    In Luciano I, we rejected defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and
    affirmed his conviction following the trial on the 2007 murder charges (which we discuss below).
    We analyzed the evidence at trial and discussed how defendant’s possession of the weapons and
    the physical evidence corroborated Hector Rodriguez’s testimony specifically. We concluded that
    Rodriguez’s testimony (the contours of which, we note, can be discerned in his statements to police
    made near in time to the shooting) gave “rise to the reasonable inference that defendant had
    oversight of gang weapons and, therefore, possessed the weapons before the shooting, as well as
    handed out the weapons” to the gang members to use in shooting Gonzalez. Luciano I, No. 2-09-
    0066, slip op. at 43.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 19   We also note that, on February 4, 1992, the State filed its State’s Attorney’s statement, or
    pen letter. The State represented that, “upon search warrant, numerous weapons were found
    including murder weapon used in assassination of [Gonzalez].” The State further provided, as
    “factual information about defendant,” that “defendant is a notorious leader of Latin King street
    gang in Aurora. His father, Angel Luciano, is reputed leader of Latin Kings. Defendant is
    dangerous and was previously charged with ordering [the] assasination [sic] of [a] gang member
    in Aurora. The case [(i.e., the solicitation of aggravated discharge count)] was dismissed for lack
    of proof.”
    ¶ 
    20 B. 2007
     Murder Charges and Trial
    ¶ 21   In 2007, defendant and his father, Angel Luciano, were charged with Gonzalez’s murder.
    Both defendant and Angel Luciano were tried in a simultaneous bench trial. Defendant’s trial
    counsel did not file a motion to dismiss the new charge pursuant to any theory that may have been
    available.
    ¶ 22   At the trial, Hector Rodriguez testified that defendant instructed him to shoot Gonzalez and
    gave him the Commando Mark .45-caliber assault rifle. A few days before October 31, 1990,
    Rodriguez went to a bar in downtown Aurora where defendant, Angel Luciano, and other Latin
    Kings members were present. Rodriguez testified that Angel Luciano instructed him to do a “drive-
    by” at Gonzalez’s residence. Rodriguez testified that, on October 31, 1990, he attended a Latin
    Kings meeting with defendant, Rangel, and others. Defendant reiterated the instruction to
    Rodriguez to do a “drive-by” on Gonzalez. Rodriguez testified that, while armed with the
    Commando rifle, he drove to the Gonzalez house, where he observed police and emergency
    vehicles around the house. Rodriguez drove on, still with the rifle. Later, defendant told Rodriguez
    to “move” the rifle, so Rodriguez met defendant at a house and placed the rifle on a bed. Rodriguez
    observed other weapons that defendant had passed out at the earlier meeting and had collected
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    from the members. Rodriguez observed defendant wiping down the weapons and recognized the
    shotgun defendant had given to Rangel at the meeting.
    ¶ 23   At trial, Acevedo testified that, on October 31, 1990, he was at his residence in Aurora.
    Jose “Fang” Hernandez stopped by his residence and then left and did not return again that evening.
    Later in the evening, a car with four people, including Rangel, Delatorre, and Michael Rodriguez
    stopped at Acevedo’s residence. The car’s occupants washed their faces at an outside spigot, and
    the men, all of whom had guns, hid the guns in Acevedo’s residence. Acevedo testified at trial that,
    in 1990, he lied to the police when he told the investigator that only three men had stopped by and
    that the men were not armed. Acevedo testified that, because he was on probation, he did not want
    the police to know that he had firearms in his residence. In the trial on the 2007 murder charges,
    Acevedo admitted that, during the 1991 Rangel trial, he lied when he testified that he had not seen
    Rangel on Halloween in 1990. Acevedo admitted that he had been convicted of perjury for his
    testimony in the Rangel trial and that he had served a five-year sentence for the offense.
    ¶ 24   Due to federal investigations, three witnesses came forward and testified at defendant’s
    trial on the 2007 murder charges in exchange for significant sentencing considerations. Michael
    Rodriguez, Jose Oliva, and Hernandez each testified about their roles in the Gonzalez murder.
    Each testified he had attended a meeting around October 31, 1990, at which defendant distributed
    weapons and issued instructions to shoot Gonzalez and other members of the Insane Deuces. At
    that meeting, Angel Luciano stated that Halloween was a good opportunity to wear black (a gang
    color) and do shootings. They described that the weapons were spread across a table and defendant
    handed weapons to the members: Rangel received a shotgun, Delatorre received the Marlin .30-
    30 rifle, and Hector Rodriguez received the Commando .45-caliber rifle. Michael Rodriguez
    testified that defendant told him, Rangel, and Delatorre that they were to hit Gonzalez and that
    defendant had also instructed Hector Rodriguez to shoot Gonzalez. Michael Rodriguez further
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    testified that defendant explained that he was concerned that Hector Rodriguez would not follow
    through with the shooting.
    ¶ 25   Michael Rodriguez, Rangel, and Delatorre went to a park near the Gonzalez residence and
    fired their weapons at the house. Michael Rodriguez used a .22-caliber rifle he had been given at
    the Latin Kings meeting. He dropped the rifle on the grass as he, Rangel, and Delatorre ran back
    to Delatorre’s car after they shot at Gonzalez’s house. They went to Acevedo’s house, dropped off
    the weapons, and washed their hands. Hernandez also testified that the shooters included Rangel
    and Delatorre and they arrived with their weapons at Acevedo’s house.
    ¶ 26   In its closing argument, the State remarked that, “we also know [defendant pleaded] guilty
    to possessing those exact weapons [(the Marlin .30-30 rifle, the Ted Williams shotgun, and the
    Commando .45-caliber rifle)].” The State believed that defendant’s 1991 guilty plea to possession
    of the weapons showed
    “his control over those weapons, whether it be constructive possession or actually in his
    hands, like he left those fingerprints on [the Commando .45-caliber rifle]. He had control
    over those weapons on November 4th, just like he had control over those weapons on
    Halloween evening when he passed them out to various members of the Latin Kings to go
    out and do this mission.”
    ¶ 27   In its rebuttal closing argument, the State continued its theme: “what this case is really
    about is control of the weapons, control of the people, and control over the [Latin] Kings.” The
    State argued, “What we have then is we have [defendant] involved in the distribution of those
    weapons, and that is the key element of his participation in [Gonzalez’s murder].” The State
    concluded that defendant “aided,” “abetted,” and “solicited” the principals in Gonzalez’s murder.
    ¶ 28   From the foregoing argument, the State’s theory was clearly that defendant’s possession of
    the weapons began no later than the meeting at which he passed out the weapons to the members
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    and continued through the Gonzalez shooting and until, on November 4, 1990, the weapons were
    finally seized. This possession was key to defendant’s participation, and his actions indicated that
    he “solicited” the principals to perform the Gonzalez murder.
    ¶ 29    The trial court found defendant guilty of each count charged. The court also found that the
    State had not proved Angel Luciano guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The court determined that,
    under accountability principles, defendant was culpable upon the State showing his “involvement,
    in some fashion, in sharing the criminal purpose underlying the offense.” The court specifically
    noted that defendant’s guilty plea to possessing the Marlin .30-30-caliber rifle and the Ted
    Williams 12-gauge sawed-off shotgun corroborated trial testimony that defendant controlled the
    weapons and distributed them at the meeting in which Gonzalez’s murder was planned.
    ¶ 30    Before Gonzalez’s murder and before the trial on the 2007 murder charges occurred,
    defendant had been convicted of a June 1989 murder. Thus, under the applicable law and despite
    defendant’s age of 17 years at the time of the Gonzalez murder, the trial court imposed a sentence
    of natural life.
    ¶ 31                        C. Appeals and Postconviction Proceedings
    ¶ 32    In his direct appeal in Luciano I, defendant challenged only the sufficiency of the evidence.
    Defendant questioned how, when the trial court heard exactly the same evidence during the
    simultaneous bench trials of his father and himself, that evidence was somehow insufficient to
    prove his father guilty beyond a reasonable doubt yet sufficient to prove defendant guilty beyond
    a reasonable doubt. This court affirmed, reasoning that the trial court segregated the evidence
    applicable to each defendant and carefully evaluated the applicable evidence with respect to each
    defendant when rendering its determination. Luciano I, No. 2-09-0066, slip op. at 39-40.
    ¶ 33    On May 31, 2011, defendant filed his petition for postconviction relief. Among the claims
    defendant raised were allegations of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for not filing a motion
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    to dismiss based on compulsory joinder, contending that the 2007 murder charges were based on
    the same acts as the 1990 and 1991 weapons possession and solicitation charges to which
    defendant pleaded guilty. On July 25, 2011, the trial court summarily dismissed defendant’s
    postconviction petition.
    ¶ 34   Defendant appealed the summary dismissal of his postconviction petition. Luciano II, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 110792
    . Defendant argued that his mandatory life sentence violated the prohibition
    on imposing mandatory life sentences on minors. He also argued that he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel because counsel failed to recognize, and move to dismiss, the 2007 murder
    charges as being founded on the same act as the 1990 and 1991 weapons and solicitation charges,
    which led to a violation of compulsory-joinder and speedy-trial provisions. Id. ¶ 41. We agreed
    with defendant on both points. We remanded the matter for resentencing, instructing the trial court
    to consider all permissible sentences. Id. ¶ 62. Regarding the ineffective assistance claim, we
    advanced the matter to the second stage, noting that defendant’s arguments hinged on the factual
    determination of “what the State knew and when they knew it” for purposes of determining
    whether the 2007 murder charges were subject to compulsory joinder to the 1990 and 1991
    possession and solicitation charges. Id. ¶ 86.
    ¶ 35   Once the cause was remanded, the trial court proceeded to the resentencing. Defendant
    received a 50-year term of imprisonment, from which he appealed. People v. Luciano, No. 2-17-
    0236 (Luciano III). Because the postconviction proceedings were still pending as part of the
    remand from Luciano II, we held Luciano III in abeyance, reasoning that there was a reasonable
    probability that the result of the postconviction proceedings would obviate the need to decide the
    issues raised in Luciano III. We ordered defendant to provide us with periodic reports on the status
    of the postconviction proceedings.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 36   On April 17, 2019, defendant, through counsel, filed an amended postconviction petition.
    The amended petition included claims of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel.
    Defendant alleged that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to file a motion to
    dismiss the 2007 murder charges because they were based on the same act as the 1990 and 1991
    weapons possession and solicitation charges and were therefore subject to compulsory joinder.
    Defendant alleged that appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to raise the
    compulsory-joinder issue on direct appeal. On September 4, 2019, the State filed its motion to
    dismiss defendant’s amended petition for postconviction relief.
    ¶ 37   On January 20, 2021, following delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the trial court
    heard the State’s motion to dismiss. In that hearing, the State did not advance an affirmative
    defense, but instead argued that the 1990 and 1991 charges were not based on the same act as the
    2007 murder charges. Specifically, the State argued that the solicitation charge was based on
    defendant’s alleged instruction to Hector Rodriguez, which occurred on a different date than the
    gang meetings that were emphasized at the trial on the 2007 murder charges. The State also argued
    that, in 1990 and 1991, it only “suspected,” rather than had “knowledge,” that defendant was
    involved in the Gonzalez murder, and the 2007 murder charges therefore were not subject to
    compulsory joinder. For his part, defendant argued that his actions constituted a part of a
    continuing solicitation and ongoing conspiracy to kill Gonzalez, which was known to the State.
    ¶ 38   On April 5, 2021, the trial court denied the State’s motion to dismiss. The court focused on
    the compulsory-joinder issue between the 1990 and 1991 weapons and solicitation charges and the
    2007 murder charges. The matter advanced to the third-stage hearing, with the court describing
    the issues as, “What did the State know when they first charged [defendant], who knew it, and
    what were the circumstances that they didn’t charge the murder.”
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    ¶ 39   On February 17, 2022, the trial court held the third-stage hearing on defendant’s amended
    postconviction petition. Neither party presented in-person testimony; instead the parties relied on
    purely documentary evidence. After defendant presented his case-in-chief, the State moved for a
    directed finding, arguing that defendant’s evidence did not demonstrate that the State “knew” (for
    purposes of compulsory joinder) the identity of the actual shooter. According to the State, under
    our Luciano II decision, joinder was required only if the State had sufficient “admissible
    substantive evidence” to “secure a conviction,” rather than simply adequate evidence with which
    to charge defendant. The trial court denied the State’s motion for a directed finding.
    ¶ 40   The State continued to focus on the identity of the actual shooter or shooters. The State
    maintained that it needed “admissible substantive evidence which identifies the shooter” before
    the 2007 murder charges were subject to compulsory joinder. The State acknowledged that it could
    have charged defendant in 1991 with the solicitation of the actual shooter or shooters and that it
    might have been able to secure a conviction for murder, based on circumstantial evidence without
    proving the identity of the shooter or shooters. However, the State maintained that it was not
    required to join the murder charges prematurely, based on only the possibility of prevailing.
    ¶ 41   On March 25, 2022, the trial court rendered its determination. The court first evaluated the
    evidence presented in the third-stage hearing, noting that the search warrants presented were
    uniformly seeking weapons at locations associated with Angel Luciano, defendant, Acevedo,
    Hernandez, Oliva, Delatorre, and others. The search warrants sought evidence related to the
    Gonzalez murder, with the court expressly noting, “Never do I have a search warrant for the
    possession of weapons.” The court also recounted the various police reports, witness interviews,
    and cooperating witness statements, particularly, Hector Rodriguez’s description of the meeting at
    which defendant passed out the weapons and ordered certain members to shoot Gonzalez.
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    ¶ 42   The trial court also discussed the 1990 and 1991 indictments for the possession and
    solicitation offenses and defendant’s guilty plea. Specifically, the court referenced comments made
    by the sentencing judge “about potential accountability [i.e., possible future ramifications and
    charges],” noting that “other comments were also made by defense counsel and the State; not
    getting to the heart of the nature, but acknowledging that the guns were used in the murder.”
    ¶ 43   The trial court then discussed its judgment:
    “this Court has to determine, as I said under Strickland, whether or not a constitutional
    violation occurred.
    Normally on a third stage post-conviction petition the relief sought is a new trial.
    That’s not the case here.
    As the Appellate court said when they decided to tell me to peel the onion from the
    inside out, I think is the words that they used, the question becomes, what did the State
    know and when did they know it and was there enough to charge him? Not was there
    enough to actually convict him, but was there enough to charge when they charged him
    with that [sic]?
    I’m at a unique posture in this case because I have not yet had filed a mandatory
    joinder motion because it’s not been allowed. We’re at a post-conviction petition.
    However, it is going to be the finding of this Court with everything I have in front
    of me, we have argued whether or not [defendant] could have been charged by
    accountability, that’s the only way he could have been charged in [this] case. The defense
    has pretty much conceded the guilt of [defendant]. They haven’t said that directly but they
    pretty much conceded that for purposes of this motion.
    The State has pretty much conceded that if mandatory joinder applies, this case is
    over and the murder conviction would be vacated on speedy trial grounds.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    What I am finding today is as follows, because of the procedural history of this case
    and I somewhat disagree with the Appellate Court, I have not heard at this point any of the
    witnesses from the State as to what they knew and when they knew it.
    What I have heard is the documentary evidence leading up to this, to determine
    whether or not ineffective assistance occurred by not filing the motion for joinder.
    What I see here is as follows: I do not see that there is any trial strategy that this
    court can come up with. And I will tell you for the record so that it’s clear, this Court did
    criminal defense work for 25 years before it took the bench and sat in felony court until
    recently getting the assignment to be presiding judge of family court, sat in felony court
    for about six and a half years.
    On my experience, even if [defendant] did not tell his attorney about the gun case,
    I cannot fathom a trial strategy that you would not go back and look into the history, to see
    what happened on a 1990 murder when this is charged in 2007 and figure out what’s going
    on. It’s incumbent upon defense attorneys to research. That was obviously not done in this
    case.
    There is no trial strategy for never filing a motion for compulsory joinder if you
    think it is there as we all know. [Worst] thing that happens is if you don’t file it, the answer
    is always no.
    I can’t think of a trial strategy that said, don’t file a joinder that could have killed
    the case off immediately.
    So I do find under the first prong of Strickland that ineffective assistance occurred.
    As to the second prong of Strickland whether or not, and I know I’m paraphrasing,
    there’s a reasonable possibility that had the motion been filed, it would have been
    successful. I have to find that there’s a reasonable possibility.
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    This court can make a reasonable argument as to accountability in this case and that
    at the time the gun cases were charged, there’s a real possibility the State had enough
    information based upon, if nothing else, Mr. Rodriguez’s comments that [defendant] who’s
    sitting in front of me, was accountable. If nothing else, he handled the guns, he ordered
    people to go shoot Deuce house[s]. He said Psycho was going to get hit. And he took the
    guns back and wiped them clean. And if I’m not mistaken, one of his fingerprints ended
    up on one of the guns. By accountability, I believe that there may have been enough.
    However, so the relief I’m granting is as follows, because I find that the second
    prong of Strickland was met too. But I don’t have a motion for joinder in the file. And I
    am not prepared today to find specifically that joinder must apply. This Court has never
    heard from any of the witnesses at the time.
    And I know the witnesses, Mr. Johnson, who was the state’s attorney is still alive,
    the prosecuting attorney Mr. Crimmins is still alive and they’re both practicing law. I just
    bring that up because in the future we may hear from them.
    So I am granting the third stage.
    I am not vacating the conviction. And the reason I’m not vacating the conviction in
    this case is, quite frankly, I don’t think it’s appropriate based on the arguments I have.
    There’s a tacit admission that this is a joinder and that, therefore, I find that the trial
    was appropriate. I find the facts of the trial were appropriate. And I find that the finding of
    the jury was an appropriate finding, based upon the facts of this case.
    This is a procedural question that should a motion [have] been filed, and I find that
    it should have been. So I’m not going to vacate the conviction in this case.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    But what I am going to do is grant the third stage and grant the Defense leave, if
    they so desire, they may not, but if they so desire grant them to [sic] leave to file a
    mandatory joinder or compulsory joinder motion and have that heard.”
    ¶ 44      On March 25, 2022, the trial court entered a handwritten order that stated: “Reassignment
    following the court’s granting of 3rd stage evidentiary hearing & continuance to allow defense [to]
    file motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder.” On March 28, 2022, the court entered two
    written status orders stating, relevantly, “On 3/25/2022, [the trial court] found trial counsel was
    ineffective under both prongs of Strickland but did not vacate the conviction. [The trial court]
    continued the case for defense counsel to file a motion to dismiss the indictment and for a hearing
    on that motion.” The trial court also tolled the 30-day period for defendant to file the motion for
    compulsory joinder until April 11, 2022. On April 5, 2022, the State timely filed its notice of
    appeal.
    ¶ 45                                        II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 46      On appeal, the State argues that the trial court improperly granted postconviction relief to
    defendant. First, the State contends that the trial court did not actually decide the amended
    postconviction petition in defendant’s favor. Second, the State contends that, in any event, the
    2007 murder charges were not subject to compulsory joinder because (1) they were not based on
    the same act as the 1990 and 1991 possession and solicitation charges and (2) the State did not
    have a reasonable chance of securing a murder conviction based on what it knew when the 1990
    and 1991 charges were filed.
    ¶ 47                   A. Postconviction Proceedings and Standard of Review
    ¶ 48      The Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2020)) describes
    how postconviction proceedings are to be conducted. A postconviction proceeding allows an
    individual convicted of a criminal offense to challenge his or her conviction on the grounds of a
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    constitutional violation. People v. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 32. It provides for up to three
    stages of review. 
    Id.
     In the first stage, the defendant is required only to set forth the gist of a
    constitutional deprivation, and the trial court may summarily dismiss the petition if it is frivolous
    or patently without merit. 
    Id.
     If the petition is not summarily dismissed, it is advanced to the second
    stage, in which counsel may be appointed to assist the defendant, and the petition and its
    accompanying documentation must make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation. Id.
    ¶ 33. If the petition survives the second stage, it advances to the third and final stage, where the
    defendant is entitled to an evidentiary hearing. Id. ¶ 34.
    ¶ 49    At the third-stage hearing, the trial court serves as the fact finder, and it determines the
    credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given to evidence and it resolves any evidentiary
    conflicts. Id. Ultimately, the court must determine whether the evidence introduced in the third-
    stage hearing demonstrates that the defendant is, in fact, entitled to relief. Id. A defendant is entitled
    to relief if he or she proves, by a preponderance of the evidence, that a constitutional right has been
    violated. People v. Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 92.
    ¶ 50    As noted above, defendant’s postconviction petition was advanced to the third stage and
    the parties submitted documentary evidence. The trial court evaluated the documentary evidence,
    heard the parties’ arguments, and rendered its decision. The parties dispute the standard of review.
    Defendant argues that the typical post-evidentiary-hearing standard of deference, the manifest-
    error standard, applies. People v. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 23. Defendant contends that fairness
    requires a deferential review because the court considered new evidence, albeit documentary, and
    made factual determinations based on its review. See People v. Brown, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 091009
    ,
    ¶ 53 (manifest-error standard applied where the trial court considered new documentary evidence
    entered by stipulation at the third-stage hearing; additionally, the trial court presided over the
    defendant’s trial).
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 51   The State argues that our review is more appropriately de novo where the trial court
    considered only documentary evidence and the issues presented are purely questions of law. See
    English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 23. However, even in these circumstances, deferential review is
    required if the trial court has some special expertise or familiarity with the defendant’s trial or
    sentencing and that familiarity has some bearing upon the disposition of the postconviction
    petition. 
    Id.
     The State argues that this exception does not apply in this case: the parties presented
    only documentary evidence at the third-stage hearing, the evidence concerned the legal issue of
    whether defendant’s trial and appellate counsel were ineffective, and the trial court neither had
    special expertise nor presided over the trial or sentencing of defendant.
    ¶ 52   We agree with the State that our review of the trial court’s third-stage determination is
    de novo. We note that defendant relies upon Brown but ignores the detail that the trial court in that
    case also presided over the Brown defendant’s trial. Brown, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 091009
    , ¶ 53. Thus,
    the Brown court applied the deferential manifest-error standard in significant part because the trial
    court had presided over the underlying trial. Here, while the trial court did consider and evaluate
    new documentary evidence, it did not have the necessary special expertise or involvement in the
    underlying trial or sentencing to qualify for the exception carved out in English. In any event, the
    standard of review does not affect the outcome in this case—the result remains the same whether
    we employ deferential or plenary review.
    ¶ 53                                   B. Compulsory Joinder
    ¶ 54   In Luciano II, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 110792
    , ¶ 66, we termed the issues presented in
    defendant’s ineffective assistance claim “something of an analytical onion,” due to the layering of
    the various components of his claims. Defendant’s postconviction petition alleged claims of
    ineffective assistance against trial and appellate counsel. The ineffective assistance claims, in turn,
    were based on trial counsel’s failure to file a motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder (720
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ILCS 5/3-3 (West 2006)) and appellate counsel’s failure to raise on direct appeal an ineffective
    assistance claim against trial counsel for that failure. In turn, by not seeking compulsory joinder,
    defendant’s right to a speedy trial was compromised because the 1990 and 1991 weapons
    possession and solicitation charges constituted the same acts used to prove the 2007 murder
    charges and thus, when the 2007 murder charges were instituted, the speedy-trial period, both
    statutory and constitutional, had long since lapsed. Therefore, the heart of defendant’s claim in this
    appeal, on which any relief succeeds or fails, is the compulsory-joinder issue. We therefore address
    this issue first, because, if it fails, then none of the other layers of defendant’s claim can succeed;
    but if it succeeds, then we can move on to the next layer of our “analytical onion.”
    ¶ 55   The compulsory-joinder statute provides: “If the several offenses are known to the proper
    prosecuting officer at the time of commencing the prosecution and are within the jurisdiction of a
    single court, they must be prosecuted in a single prosecution *** if they are based on the same
    act.” 720 ILCS 5/3-3(b) (West 2006). There are two key concepts relevant to our consideration
    here: “knowledge” or “known to the proper prosecuting officer” and “based on the same act.”
    Knowledge for compulsory-joinder purposes means “the conscious awareness of evidence that is
    sufficient to give the State a reasonable chance to secure a conviction.” Luciano II, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 110792
    , ¶ 78; see also People v. McBride, 
    2022 IL App (4th) 220301
    , ¶ 41. 3 We conclude
    that the State had “knowledge” under the compulsory-joinder statute.
    ¶ 56   When defendant was charged in 1990 and 1991, especially in 1991 for solicitation of
    aggravated discharge, the State had evidence, provided by Hector Rodriguez, that defendant had
    instructed Rodriguez and others to shoot Gonzalez, distributed weapons for that purpose, been
    3
    In December 2022, after briefing concluded, defendant filed a motion to cite this case as
    additional authority and the State did not object. We hereby grant defendant’s motion.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    aware of the shooting immediately after it occurred, collected the weapons after the shooting,
    attempted to secrete the weapons, and possessed the actual weapons used in the shooting. Analysis
    of the weapons found in defendant’s possession showed that the .30-30 Marlin rifle and the Ted
    Williams shotgun were used in the shooting and the Commando Mark .45-caliber rifle had
    defendant’s fingerprint on it. Rodriguez also informed the police that defendant gave him the
    Commando Mark .45-caliber rifle and instructed him to shoot Gonzalez. In addition, Acevedo told
    police at that time that several men, who were identified in Rodriguez’s statements to police as
    possible shooters, came to his house and used the outside spigot to wash their faces.
    ¶ 57    As the case developed, the police focused on Rangel as one of the shooters, and Rangel
    was charged with Gonzalez’s murder. Rangel’s murder charge was founded in significant part on
    Hector Rodriguez’s statements but was torpedoed by Acevedo’s perjury. Notwithstanding the
    State’s failure to convict Rangel, the State used the Rodriguez information at defendant’s
    sentencing on the 1990 and 1991 possession charges as evidence in aggravation to support a longer
    sentence. This evidence shows that the State had the requisite knowledge to charge defendant with
    murder, certainly by the time it secured the 1991 indictment for weapons possession and
    solicitation.
    ¶ 58    We next turn to the “based on the same act” concept. Our supreme court observed that the
    compulsory-joinder statute was enacted to prevent the State from embarking on a piecemeal and
    harassing prosecution of multiple offenses. People v. Hunter, 
    2013 IL 114100
    , ¶ 18. For purposes
    of compulsory joinder, “based on the same act” is not given “a hypertechnical interpretation to
    create multiple acts based on discrete moments in time”; instead, where the defendant is engaged
    in a single and uninterrupted act, joinder will be required. 
    Id.
     Our supreme court cautioned against
    adopting an elements-based test when determining whether joinder is required versus other
    situations, such as when determining whether multiple convictions are supported by separate acts.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    Id. ¶ 22. Indeed, our supreme court expressly overruled cases in which courts had erroneously used
    a one-act-one-crime definition of “act” in the context of compulsory joinder. Id. (overruling People
    v. Davis, 
    381 Ill. App. 3d 614
     (2008), and People v. Davis, 
    328 Ill. App. 3d 411
     (2002)).
    ¶ 59   With this understanding of “based on the same act” in mind, it is clear that the 1991 charges
    in case No. 91-CF-797 are based on the same act as the 2007 murder charges. The statement from
    Hector Rodriguez indicated that defendant held a cache of weapons that he distributed to various
    gang members attending a meeting before Halloween 1990. At that meeting, defendant instructed
    the members to shoot members of the Insane Deuces generally and Gonzalez specifically.
    Defendant also distributed the weapons to the members for that purpose. At the trial on the 2007
    murder charges, more witnesses came forward to corroborate Rodriguez’s description of the
    meeting at which defendant distributed the weapons and gave the members their assignments. This
    act—conducting the meeting, distributing the weapons, and giving the instructions—forms the
    foundation of both the solicitation of aggravated discharge offense and the 2007 murder charges.
    Because both the 1990 and 1991 charges and the 2007 charges were “based on the same act” for
    purposes of the compulsory-joinder statute, the State, which, as we have determined above, had
    “knowledge” of the facts, was required to prosecute the murder charges together with the
    possession and solicitation charges.
    ¶ 60   Having determined that joinder was required, we can now move to the next layer. The
    interplay between compulsory joinder and speedy-trial rights is governed by the Williams rule:
    “Where new and additional charges arise from the same facts as did the original
    charges and the State had knowledge of these facts at the commencement of the
    prosecution, the time within which trial is to begin on the new and additional charges is
    subject to the same statutory limitation that is applied to the original charges. Continuances
    obtained in connection with the trial of the original charges cannot be attributed to
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    defendants with respect to the new and additional charges because these new and additional
    charges were not before the court when those continuances were obtained.” People v.
    Williams, 
    94 Ill. App. 3d 241
    , 248-49 (1981).
    Here, because the 2007 murder charges were subject to compulsory joinder with the 1990 and
    1991 weapons possession and solicitation charges, the speedy-trial term began to run at that time.
    Approximately 16 years elapsed between when the State had “knowledge” of the murder charges
    and when it instituted the murder charges, and defendant’s murder prosecution was subject to
    dismissal on speedy-trial grounds.
    ¶ 61   Next, in 2007, had defendant filed a motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder, it
    would have been granted. Because the speedy-trial term had long since lapsed, the prosecution on
    the 2007 murder charges would have been dismissed. It is on this failure to file a motion to dismiss
    that defendant bases his postconviction claims of ineffective assistance. To prevail on a claim of
    ineffective assistance, a defendant must show both that his or her counsel’s performance fell below
    an objective standard of reasonableness and that there is a reasonable probability that the result of
    the proceeding would have been different but for counsel’s deficient performance. People v. Jones,
    
    2023 IL 127810
    , ¶ 51. Counsel’s strategic decisions are generally immune from ineffective
    assistance claims. 
    Id.
    ¶ 62   Here, the trial court could find no strategic reason for not filing a motion to dismiss. We,
    too, discern no strategic purpose in failing to file a motion to dismiss. As we determined above, a
    motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder would have been successful. Defendant’s murder
    charges, therefore, would have been dismissed. Trial counsel’s representation, therefore, was
    objectively deficient. Defendant was also prejudiced because, had the motion been filed, the 2007
    murder charges would have been dismissed on compulsory-joinder/speedy-trial grounds. Thus, we
    agree with the trial court that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 63    Likewise, the same rubric applies to appellate counsel. We can discern no strategic reason
    not to include the issue of trial counsel’s failure to file a motion to dismiss. Therefore, appellate
    counsel’s failure to raise this issue in the direct appeal was objectively deficient. Further, defendant
    was also prejudiced on direct appeal in at least two ways. First, the issue of ineffective assistance
    of trial counsel for failing to file a motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder would have
    been successful. This alone establishes prejudice because the outcome of defendant’s direct appeal
    would have been different. Second, by failing to raise the issue on direct appeal, appellate counsel
    has potentially forfeited its consideration in future proceedings. Indeed, it is only through an
    ineffective assistance claim against appellate counsel that we are able to consider the compulsory-
    joinder issue, because it could, and should, have been raised on direct appeal. Thus, appellate
    counsel, too, provided ineffective assistance.
    ¶ 64    Finally, we consider the relief ordered by the trial court. The court unequivocally granted
    defendant relief following the third-stage evidentiary hearing. In its oral remarks, the court stated
    that it would “grant the third stage and grant the Defense leave, if they so desire, they may not, but
    if they so desire grant them to [sic] leave to file a mandatory joinder or compulsory joinder motion
    and have that heard.” The court appears to have believed that it needed to entertain the actual
    motion to dismiss despite necessarily deciding that, had counsel filed the motion to dismiss,
    defendant was reasonably likely to prevail. In other words, although the court determined that
    compulsory joinder applied and that the motion to dismiss the murder charges would have
    succeeded based on the 16-year speedy-trial violation, it granted leave to present a motion that it
    had already determined would be successful.
    ¶ 65    We believe that the trial court erred in choosing this relief. Effectively, the court’s relief
    was a do-over on the third-stage evidentiary hearing because the completed third-stage evidentiary
    hearing covered precisely the issue of whether a motion to dismiss based on compulsory-
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    joinder/speedy-trial grounds would have succeeded. While neither the parties’ nor our own
    research has revealed the relief to be granted in a procedurally similar case, the relief granted in
    direct appeals for this situation is uniform and compelling. For example, in People v. Williams,
    
    204 Ill. 2d 191
    , 207-08 (2003), our supreme court reversed the defendant’s murder conviction
    where counsel failed to move to dismiss on compulsory-joinder/speedy-trial grounds. See also
    People v. Isbell, 
    2020 IL App (3d) 180279
    , ¶¶ 13, 29 (“when a defendant raises an ineffectiveness
    claim on [failing to file a motion to dismiss], we must only consider whether a motion to dismiss
    charges on speedy trial grounds, had it been filed by counsel, would have been meritorious.
    [Citation.] The remedy for ineffective assistance in this regard is the same as the remedy for any
    speedy trial violation found on appeal: outright reversal of the conviction or convictions in
    question”; conviction subject to compulsory joinder reversed). Thus, the proper remedy here was
    to reverse and vacate defendant’s conviction of the 2007 murder charges. Accordingly, we modify
    the court’s judgment and reverse and vacate defendant’s conviction in this case.
    ¶ 66                                C. The State’s Contentions
    ¶ 67   The State argues that the trial court actually determined that defendant had not
    demonstrated that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance and that the court erred in not
    denying defendant postconviction relief. The State also challenges the court’s findings that the
    2007 murder charges were based on the same act as the 1990 and 1991 charges and that it had a
    reasonable chance to secure a conviction based on its knowledge in 1990 and 1991. We consider
    the contentions in turn.
    ¶ 68                       1. Erroneous Grant of Postconviction Relief
    ¶ 69   The State initially argues that the trial court’s chosen relief actually means that defendant
    failed to prove prejudice. As we have discussed above, the trial court unequivocally granted
    defendant postconviction relief based on a determination that trial counsel provided ineffective
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    assistance. The trial court determined both that trial counsel provided objectively deficient
    representation by failing to file a motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder and the
    concomitant speedy-trial violation and that this failure prejudiced defendant because the motion
    to dismiss would likely have succeeded. The trial court, however, did not order the proper relief;
    rather, it effectively ordered a repeat of the third-stage evidentiary hearing, despite having
    necessarily determined that a motion to dismiss had a reasonable probability of succeeding. Thus,
    the State conflates the relief granted with the success of the petition.
    ¶ 70    Notwithstanding the type of relief, the trial court inescapably granted defendant’s
    postconviction petition. The court determined that defendant prevailed on his claim of ineffective
    assistance, and it very clearly ordered relief in favor of defendant. We reject the State’s claim that
    relief is not relief.
    ¶ 71    The State concedes that, if the 2007 murder charges were subject to compulsory joinder,
    then “defendant’s murder prosecution would have been barred by speedy trial principles where the
    [State] brought the murder charges after the 160-day speedy-trial period had expired.” The State
    nevertheless reasons that, because the relief granted by the trial court was not the vacation of
    defendant’s murder conviction, “the court necessarily found that defendant had not proven that his
    compulsory joinder argument would have succeeded.” We disagree.
    ¶ 72    On March 25, 2022, the trial court entered an order stating: “Reassignment following the
    court’s granting of 3rd stage evidentiary hearing & continuance to allow defense [to] file motion
    to dismiss based on compulsory joinder.” On March 28, 2022, the court entered two orders. Both
    orders stated: “On 3/25/2022, [the trial court] found trial counsel was ineffective under both prongs
    of Strickland but did not vacate [defendant’s] conviction.” Both orders referenced that defendant
    was granted leave to file a motion to dismiss based on compulsory joinder. Thus, for purposes of
    the postconviction proceedings, the court clearly determined that trial counsel had provided
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ineffective assistance since both prongs of Strickland had been satisfied. The court then granted
    the relief, albeit incorrect, of granting defendant leave to file the very motion to dismiss that was
    the subject of the postconviction proceedings. The court’s written orders directly refute the State’s
    contention.
    ¶ 73   Similarly, the trial court’s oral remarks directly refute the State’s contention. To the
    exclusion of everything else that the trial court said from the bench, the State focuses on a single
    sentence in the March 25, 2022, transcript: “And the reason I’m not vacating the conviction in this
    case is, quite frankly, I don’t think it’s appropriate based on the argument I have.” The State ignores
    that the trial court stated that it “[found under the first prong of Strickland] that ineffective
    assistance occurred.” The State ignores that the trial court stated: “there’s a real possibility the
    State had enough information based upon, if nothing else, Mr. Rodriguez’s comments that
    [defendant], who’s sitting in front of me, was accountable [for Gonzalez’s murder].” The State
    ignores that the trial court stated, “I am granting the third stage,” and proceeded to order the relief
    of “leave to file a mandatory joinder or compulsory joinder motion and have that heard.” Thus, the
    oral statements and the written orders all reflect the trial court’s judgment of granting defendant’s
    postconviction petition following the third-stage hearing.
    ¶ 74   Finally, we note that the State agrees with our assessment of the correct relief to be ordered
    in this case. As mentioned, the State concedes that, “if compulsory joinder applied, defendant’s
    murder prosecution would have been barred by speedy trial principles where the [State] brought
    the murder charges after the 160-day speedy-trial period had expired.” We have determined that
    compulsory joinder did indeed apply to the 2007 murder charges, and we accept the State’s
    concession. Further, we reject the State’s contention that the trial court did not grant defendant’s
    postconviction petition, because the record directly and completely refutes the State’s argument.
    ¶ 75       2. Same Act Supporting 1990 and 1991 Charges and 2007 Murder Charges
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 76    The State disputes that the two sets of charges, the 1990 and 1991 possession and
    solicitation charges and the 2007 murder charges, were based on the same act. As an initial matter,
    we note that, in defendant’s guilty plea to the 1990 and 1991 possession charges, the State argued
    that consecutive sentencing was available, not because each count to which defendant was
    pleading guilty constituted a separate act, but because defendant was dangerous and consecutive
    sentences would protect the public from defendant. See Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, ¶ 1005-8-4(b)
    (now 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(c)(1) (West 2020)). At the sentencing, the trial court specifically rejected
    that the acts of possession constituted different acts and, instead, determined that the possession
    constituted “an ongoing series of events and that consecutive sentencing [was] not available.” In
    the trial on the 2007murder charges, the State argued that defendant possessed the weapons before,
    during, and after the Gonzalez shooting. The trial court determined that defendant’s possession of
    the weapons used in the shooting supported his conviction of Gonzalez’s murder. Luciano I, No.
    2-09-0066, slip op. at 29-30. The State also used defendant’s guilty plea as evidence of his
    possession of the weapons used in the murder (id. at 37), and, we note, this evidence was deemed
    effectively a single, continuing, act that would not support consecutive sentencing for separate acts
    of possession. In this appeal, however, the State now argues that defendant’s murder conviction
    was founded on separate acts of possession and separate acts of encouragement to the members to
    shoot and kill Gonzalez. This argument constitutes a significant and first-time change in position,
    from asserting a single act to multiple acts.
    ¶ 77    The doctrine of judicial estoppel operates to protect the integrity of the judicial process
    from parties deliberately changing their positions based on the exigencies of the moment. People
    v. Palmer, 
    2021 IL 125621
    , ¶ 74. Generally, judicial estoppel will apply when a party “has
    (1) taken two positions (2) that are factually inconsistent (3) in separate judicial or quasi-judicial
    administrative proceedings, (4) intending for the trier of fact to accept the truth of the facts alleged
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    and (5) having succeeded in the first proceeding and received some benefit from it.” 
    Id.
     The fact
    that all the factors are established does not always require the application of judicial estoppel—the
    court may exercise its discretion in making the determination and it may also consider whether the
    party intended to deceive or mislead, whether the party’s change in position was due to
    inadvertence or mistake, and the impact of the party’s original position in the first proceeding.
    Seymour v. Collins, 
    2015 IL 118432
    , ¶ 47.
    ¶ 78   We believe that judicial estoppel could be invoked under the circumstances of this case.
    The State’s consistent theory from 1990 through the trial on the 2007 murder charges was that
    defendant’s possession of the weapons used in the murder was a continuing act, which served as
    the foundation of the murder charges. It is only in this appeal (and the third-stage postconviction
    proceedings below) that the State has changed its position from asserting an ongoing act of
    possession to contending discrete acts of possession that render the murder charges not subject to
    compulsory joinder. The latter position is factually inconsistent with the former position, taken in
    the 1991 guilty plea and the murder trial (which also used defendant’s guilty plea to establish his
    ongoing possession of the weapons and his ability to distribute the weapons he possessed).
    Moreover, the State obtained a murder conviction based on its earlier theory, and it now jettisons
    that theory. Thus, the record manifestly and clearly establishes each of the elements necessary to
    apply the doctrine of judicial estoppel. Palmer, 
    2021 IL 125621
    , ¶ 74.
    ¶ 79   Nevertheless, although the doctrine could, and perhaps should, apply to prohibit the State’s
    argument that defendant’s 1990 and 1991 possession and solicitation charges and 2007 murder
    charges were based on different acts, we do not decide this case on that basis. Neither party appears
    to have raised the issue below, and the trial court made neither findings concerning the elements
    nor a determination whether the doctrine should be applied. While it is well established that we
    may sustain the trial court’s judgment on any basis supported in the record (People v. Aljohani,
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    2022 IL 127037
    , ¶ 28), we believe it would not be appropriate to decide this case on an unbriefed,
    albeit manifestly apparent, rationale. We therefore turn to the State’s specific contentions.
    ¶ 80    The State argues that the 1991 solicitation charge was not based on the same act as the
    2007 murder charges, because the solicitation charge focused on Hector Rodriguez. The State does
    not explain how the 1991 solicitation charge differs from the 2007 murder charges, but we infer
    that the State is suggesting that the murder charges were based on the instructions to the other
    individuals. However, at the same time and in the same meeting, defendant instructed members,
    including Hector Rodriguez, Michael Rodriguez, Delatorre, and Rangel, to carry out the Gonzalez
    shooting. Under Hunter, the simultaneous instructing of these individuals is the same act for
    purposes of compulsory joinder. Hunter, 
    2013 IL 114100
    , ¶ 27.
    ¶ 81   The State relies on People v. Gooden, 
    189 Ill. 2d 209
    , 219 (2000), to support its contention
    that the act of soliciting Hector Rodriguez to commit aggravated discharge of a firearm is not the
    same act for compulsory-joinder purposes as instructing others, including Delatorre and Rangel,
    to shoot Insane Deuces generally and to shoot Gonzalez specifically. In Gooden, our supreme court
    held that an aggravated criminal sexual assault committed after the defendant had committed a
    home invasion by breaking into his ex-wife’s residence and injuring her by hitting her with a
    shotgun were separate acts and not subject to compulsory joinder even though they occurred during
    the same incident. 
    Id. at 220
    . Gooden is distinguishable, however, because the evidence in this
    case showed a single act, where Hector Rodriguez and the other gang members, including those
    who shot Gonzalez, were all instructed at the same meeting. See Hunter, 
    2013 IL 114100
    , ¶ 27
    (simultaneously possessing cannabis and firearms discovered during the same search deemed a
    single physical act for purposes of compulsory joinder). Because the solicitation and the murder
    charges were based on defendant’s instructing the gang members to carry out the shooting of
    Gonzalez, they were based on the same act (id.), and we reject the State’s contention.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 82                                3. The State’s Knowledge
    ¶ 83   The State denies that it had sufficient “knowledge” for purposes of compulsory joinder.
    The State argues that the trial court employed an incorrect standard by focusing on whether the
    State “knew” enough to charge defendant with murder instead of whether the State could “secure
    a conviction for murder.” The State contends that it did not possess “substantively admissible
    evidence identifying the [actual] shooter” or connecting the actual shooter to defendant at the time
    it instituted the 1990 and 1991 charges, so it “could not prove that defendant was accountable for
    the acts of the shooter.”
    ¶ 84   This argument subtly misstates “knowledge” for purposes of compulsory joinder. In
    Luciano II, which is also the law of this case, we stated that “ ‘knowledge’ or ‘known to the proper
    prosecuting officer’ means the conscious awareness of evidence that is sufficient to give the State
    a reasonable chance to secure a conviction.” Luciano II, 
    2013 IL App (2d) 110972
    , ¶ 78; accord,
    McBride, 
    2022 IL App (4th) 220301
    , ¶ 41; People v. Sykes, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 150023
    , ¶ 42. The
    State converts the prosecutor’s “conscious awareness of evidence” into actual possession of
    admissible evidence, and it converts the prosecutor’s confidence in the evidence from “sufficient
    to give the State a reasonable chance to secure a conviction” to proof beyond a reasonable doubt
    that defendant was accountable for the shooter’s acts. This conception would impermissibly raise
    the standard to a degree where no prosecution would ever be subject to compulsory joinder and it
    would implement the very harm—piecemeal prosecutions—the compulsory-joinder statute was
    enacted to prevent. See Hunter, 
    2013 IL 114100
    , ¶ 18 (compulsory-joinder statute was enacted to
    prevent prosecutorial abuse through the piecemeal prosecution of multiple offenses). We reject the
    State’s conception of “knowledge” pertaining to compulsory joinder.
    ¶ 85   The State recognizes that, in 2007, defendant was charged with murder and that a
    conviction could be obtained only under accountability principles. A defendant is legally
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    accountable for the acts of another if, “before or during the commission of an offense, and with
    the intent to promote or facilitate such commission, he [or she] solicits, aids, abets, agrees or
    attempts to aid, such other person in the planning or commission of the offense.” 720 ILCS 5/5-
    2(c) (West 2006); see also Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, ¶ 5-2(c). In People v. Fernandez, 
    2014 IL 115527
    , ¶ 13, our supreme court explained that, to prove a defendant’s legal accountability, the
    State may present evidence that the defendant shared the criminal intent with the principal, or that
    there was a common criminal design between the defendant and the principal. The State argues
    that accountability cannot be proved, and it specifically contends, relying on People v. Johnson,
    
    2014 IL App (1st) 122359-B
    , ¶ 160, that “[o]ne cannot share an intent to facilitate or promote the
    commission of a crime without knowing who committed the crime.” The State’s contention,
    however, conflates the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial with “knowledge” for purposes
    of compulsory joinder. In Johnson, the issue involved whether the defendant was accountable for
    the actions of Sims. The court determined that the defendant shared with Sims neither a prior intent
    to shoot the victim nor a common design to shoot the victim—indeed, the State failed to offer
    evidence that the defendant was in any way involved in the commission of the crime. Id. ¶ 161.
    Thus, the State is placing itself in the shoes of the defendant in Johnson in considering whether
    shared criminal intent was demonstrated by the evidence presented at trial when the identity of the
    shooter was not known. Instead, the proper issue is whether the prosecutor was aware of evidence
    that provided a reasonable chance of demonstrating accountability.
    ¶ 86   Likewise, the State makes a similar argument regarding common criminal design. Relying
    on People v. Ivy, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 130045
    , ¶ 45, the State contends that it must prove that
    someone with whom defendant shared a common criminal design committed the act for which
    defendant is being held criminally responsible. Once again, however, the State conflates the
    sufficiency of the evidence presented to convict defendant at trial with “knowledge” for purposes
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    of compulsory joinder. In Ivy, the issue was whether the State needed to present evidence that an
    accomplice of the defendant performed the shooting, and the court determined that the State had
    not presented any evidence concerning who shot the victim. Id. ¶ 46. Once again, the State places
    itself in the Ivy defendant’s shoes and considers the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial
    instead of assessing the evidence it possessed and whether that offered a reasonable chance of
    demonstrating a common design.
    ¶ 87   The State, therefore, by relying on Johnson and Ivy, is impermissibly attempting to conflate
    evidence of which the prosecutor is aware that provides the State a “reasonable chance to secure a
    conviction” with evidence admitted at trial that proves a defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. Again, that is neither the law of this case nor what the law actually requires. E.g., McBride,
    
    2022 IL App (4th) 220301
    , ¶ 41. We reject the State’s argument.
    ¶ 88   To prove defendant guilty of murder, the State had to be able to prove that defendant was
    legally accountable for the shooters’ actions. Under either the shared intent or common design
    doctrines, the State was aware that defendant could be proved accountable. Hector Rodriguez had
    informed police that defendant ran a meeting at which he passed out weapons and told the gang
    members present—including at least two of the shooters identified by Rodriguez and subsequently
    identified through the cooperating Latin King witnesses in the prosecution of the 2007 murder
    charges—to shoot members of the Insane Deuces generally and to shoot Gonzalez specifically.
    The various search warrants executed by the police led to the recovery of two of the weapons used
    in the shooting. Defendant’s fingerprint was found on a weapon that Rodriguez expressly
    acknowledged that defendant gave to him. This evidence was adequate to apprise the prosecutor
    and to provide a reasonable chance of proving defendant accountable under either the shared intent
    or common design doctrines for Gonzalez’s murder by the actual shooters.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ¶ 89   The State provides a recitation of the evidence it contends was known to prosecutors in
    1990 and 1991. The State’s recitation, however, focuses on the sufficiency of the evidence and
    whether it provides proof beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was accountable for and guilty
    of Gonzalez’s murder, much like the cases it cited in support of its position. As we have discussed,
    this is the wrong lens through which to view “knowledge” for purposes of compulsory joinder. As
    such, we reject the State’s improper framework and discussion. We instead conclude, based on our
    analysis above, that the evidence known to the State at the time of the 1990 and 1991 weapons
    possession and solicitation charges provided a reasonable chance to secure a murder conviction
    against defendant.
    ¶ 90                                  4. Final Considerations
    ¶ 91   There are two more considerations that were raised at oral argument that bear discussion
    here. First, while this appeal deals with the ineffective assistance provided by trial counsel and
    appellate counsel, we note that the performance of guilty-plea counsel has not been challenged,
    and we presume he provided competent representation. E.g., People v. Petrie, 
    2021 IL App (2d) 190213
    , ¶ 66 (counsel’s actions are presumed to be the product of sound strategy). This
    competence would extend to the effect of the guilty plea on future actions. At oral argument, the
    State did not dispute that, on the date of defendant’s guilty plea, the 120-day speedy trial term had
    lapsed. The lapse of the term would have prohibited a subsequent prosecution for Gonzalez’s
    murder based on the acts charged in the nol-prossed solicitation of aggravated discharge count in
    the 1991 case. This understanding was further reflected in defendant’s statement in allocution, in
    which he expressed the hope of “get[ting] this time in [his] past to start on [his] life again.” The
    understanding that the acts on which the solicitation charge was based could not be used to support
    a future murder charge is also reflected in the fact that the State did not qualify the guilty plea in
    any way to preserve its right, should more and better information come to light, to later seek to
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    charge defendant with Gonzalez’s murder. For example, the State could have easily made such a
    reservation a part of the guilty-plea record, but it did not do so. Instead, it sought and received the
    maximum sentence for weapons possession, and it sought to make defendant’s sentences
    consecutive because of his danger to the public, which the trial court rejected. Thus, flowing from
    the presumption of competent representation and effective performance by both defendant’s plea
    counsel and the prosecutors in the 1990 and 1991 cases, it is apparent that, at the time of the 1991
    guilty plea, the State had concluded all charges stemming from the acts depicted in the nol-prossed
    solicitation charge.
    ¶ 92      Our final point is to highlight our disagreement with the State’s argument on appeal and at
    oral argument that “[t]here is nothing in compulsory joinder jurisprudence which imposes a duty
    upon the [State] to seek out evidence that may or may not ultimately be available.” At oral
    argument, the State persisted in this position even when we bluntly asked if its argument meant
    that doing nothing to improve its knowledge and evidence regarding the case was proper and
    acceptable. While not binding, we note that a prosecutor is expected to investigate and prosecute
    offenses where appropriate. See ABA Criminal Justice Standards: Prosecution Function § 3-4.1
    (4th   ed.    2017),   https://www.americanbar.org/groups/criminal_justice/standards/Prosecution
    FunctionFourthEdition/ (last visited May 12, 2023) [https://perma.cc/X4J4-9GCP]; ABA Criminal
    Justice         Standards:       Prosecutorial        Investigations       (3d       ed.        2014),
    https://www.americanbar.org/groups/criminal_justice/publications/criminal_justice_section_arch
    ive/crimjust_standards_pinvestigate/ (last visited May 12, 2023) [https://perma.cc/L4DY-CADU].
    We believe that the State had sufficient evidence to charge defendant with Gonzalez’s murder no
    later than when it focused on bringing Rangel to trial, and it had the obligation to do more than
    nothing to investigate defendant’s culpability for Gonzalez’s murder. Because the State chose to
    do nothing, by either contemporaneously investigating to bolster its case or reserving its right and
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    ability to later charge defendant in Gonzalez’s murder notwithstanding the acts alleged in the count
    for solicitation of aggravated discharge, we are compelled to answer the question of whether
    compulsory joinder applied to the 2007 murder charges and to determine the consequences flowing
    from our answer.
    ¶ 93                                   III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 94   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm as modified the judgment of the circuit court of Kane
    County. Defendant’s conviction is reversed and vacated.
    ¶ 95   Affirmed as modified.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    People v. Luciano, 
    2023 IL App (2d) 220112
    Decision Under Review:     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kane County, No. 07-CF-
    1753; the Hon. Donald Tegeler Jr., Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                  Jamie L. Mosser, State’s Attorney, of St. Charles (Janet C.
    for                        Mahoney, Assistant State’s Attorney, and Patrick Delfino,
    Appellant:                 Edward R. Psenicka, and Katrina M. Kuhn, of State’s Attorneys
    Appellate Prosecutor’s Office, of counsel), for the People.
    Attorneys                  James E. Chadd, Douglas R. Hoff, and Jonathan Yeasting, of
    for                        State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
    Appellee:
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