People v. White ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (1st) 182112-U
    THIRD DIVISION
    March 31, 2021
    No. 1-18-2112
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,            )     Appeal from the
    )     Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )     Cook County.
    )
    v.                                              )     No. 03 CR 12481 02
    )
    MARCEL WHITE,                                   )     Honorable
    )     William H. Hooks,
    Defendant-Appellant.                      )     Judge Presiding.
    _____________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE McBRIDE delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Ellis and Burke concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1     Held: Affirming the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for leave to file a successive
    postconviction petition where the affidavits supporting the petition failed to set
    forth a colorable claim of actual innocence.
    ¶2     Defendant, Marcel White, was convicted of the May 8, 2002, home invasion and first-
    degree murder of Brian Campbell, and was sentenced to consecutive terms of imprisonment of 50
    years for first degree murder plus a 15-year firearm enhancement, and 10 years for home invasion.
    In this appeal, defendant challenges the denial of his motion for leave to file a successive
    postconviction petition. Defendant specifically claims that he made a colorable claim of actual
    No. 1-18-2112
    innocence based on the affidavits of two witnesses who would testify that they saw defendant
    outside of the apartment building where Campbell was shot at the time of the shooting.
    ¶3     The facts elicited at trial were set out in the direct appeal. Because those facts are relevant
    to this appeal, we repeat them below.
    “Defendant, James Mitchell and Christopher Peoples were charged with the
    May 2002 death of Campbell. Defendant was a member of the Gangster Disciples
    street gang. At trial, the State asserted that Peoples fired the weapon that killed
    Campbell, and, therefore, defendant was tried on an accountability theory, as
    Mitchell had been.
    The State’s theory of prosecution was that Campbell was killed because he
    and his wife, Ninner Powers, angered defendant, Mitchell and Peoples by selling
    drugs for a members of a rival gang. Powers testified that on May 8, 2002, she and
    Campbell lived in a two-flat building at 826 West 50th Street in Chicago. At about
    8:30 p.m., Powers concluded a conversation with a friend at her front door and was
    shutting and locking the door. Defendant, Mitchell and a third man, who was later
    identified as Peoples, pushed the door open and entered the vestibule at the foot of
    the stairs that led to the couple’s second-floor apartment.
    Powers said she had known defendant, or ‘Duke,’ and Mitchell, or ‘Pooh
    Butt,’ for about 20 years. Powers did not know Peoples. Powers testified that
    Mitchell accused her of receiving money and a large quantity of drugs to sell for
    the rival gang, and Mitchell demanded the drugs and money from her. Powers
    replied to Mitchell that she did not make that arrangement with the rival gang
    because she was not at home the previous night; she had been in jail after an arrest
    for criminal trespass to a vehicle. Powers said she told the men that she did not have
    any drugs or money.
    During this confrontation, Powers and the men were walking upstairs to the
    apartment, and defendant said he was going to go upstairs and find the drugs
    himself. Defendant went to the top of the stairs, kicked the door open and entered
    the apartment. According to Powers, before defendant kicked the door in, defendant
    told Mitchell that he should ‘go ahead and have [Powers] popped.’ Mitchell then
    told Peoples to ‘pop’ her. Peoples pulled a gun from his coat and pointed it in
    Powers’ direction. Campbell came to the door at the top of the stairs, and Peoples
    fired three or four shots at him, striking him in the chest and in each leg. Powers
    testified that after Peoples shot Campbell, Peoples put the gun to her head and
    pulled the trigger, but the gun was empty. Powers saw her husband’s .38-caliber
    revolver on the floor nearby and took the weapon out of its case, at which point the
    three men ran downstairs.
    Police arrived at the apartment to investigate the shooting. Powers provided
    police with the nicknames and addresses of defendant and Mitchell, and she
    described Peoples to police. Powers later identified police photographs of all three
    men.
    2
    No. 1-18-2112
    Antonio Rogers also testified for the State. Rogers admitted to a recent
    misdemeanor conviction for retail theft and also to a pending misdemeanor case.
    Rogers, who knew Powers, stated that on the night of the shooting, he and his
    cousin went to the home of ‘Big Ken,’ who lived across the street from Powers, to
    buy drugs with counterfeit money. On his way to Big Ken’s, Rogers encountered
    defendant and Mitchell. Rogers knew both men and identified defendant in court.
    Rogers said defendant asked him if he was ‘straight,’ meaning did Rogers want to
    buy drugs. Even though Rogers intended to buy drugs, he told defendant he did not
    because he did not ‘want [any] trouble’ for giving defendant fake money because
    Rogers knew defendant was a Gangster Disciple.
    As Rogers stood on the porch of Big Ken’s house and waited for a response
    to his knock, Rogers saw defendant, Mitchell and a third person standing on
    Powers’ porch across the street. Defendant, Mitchell and the third man went inside
    Powers’ building, after which Rogers heard a gunshot. Defendant and Mitchell
    emerged from the building, and defendant said to Mitchell, ‘Chris just shot dude’
    [sic]. Peoples then came out of the building, and defendant and Mitchell ran away
    from Peoples, who walked away from the building. Powers then came out,
    screaming that her husband had been shot. As Rogers walked away from the scene,
    he saw defendant and Mitchell return and speak to Powers and saw defendant leave
    in a car driven by his girlfriend.
    Chicago Police Officer Brian Pratscher testified that he interviewed Powers
    at her apartment immediately after the shootings. In contrast to Powers’ trial
    testimony that the men pushed the door open while she was closing it, Pratscher
    testified that Powers told him that the men knocked on the door and she went down
    the stairs to answer it. Cocaine was found in Powers’ apartment.
    Chicago Police Detective John Halloran testified that when he entered
    Powers’ apartment to investigate the shooting, he observed Campbell’s body on the
    floor with gunshot wounds to the chest, left thigh and right shin. The officer
    observed a total of three .25-caliber spent shell casings in the upstairs doorway of
    the apartment and the dining room, in addition to a .38-caliber revolver in the dining
    room. The revolver had not been fired.
    Halloran and Chicago Police Detective Timothy Nolan interviewed
    defendant both with and without his attorney present. In the latter interview,
    defendant admitted going to Powers’ house with Mitchell and Peoples to confront
    Powers but he denied entering the residence.” People v. White, No. 1-06-01 (2008)
    (unpublished order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23).
    ¶4     The trial court additionally described the trial evidence regarding the two interviews of
    defendant as follows:
    “Halloran testified that his partner called defendant’s counsel but the
    attorney did not call back. At about 9 p.m., Halloran and another detective spoke to
    defendant.
    After advising defendant of his Miranda rights, which defendant indicated
    he understood, defendant said his nickname was Duke, that he was a Gangster
    3
    No. 1-18-2112
    Disciple and a friend of Mitchell and that he knew Powers. When asked about the
    events of May 8, defendant said he and Mitchell were walking on Powers’ block
    and passed her building. They saw Peoples (who defendant referred to as Chris)
    standing on Powers’ porch. Defendant described Peoples as a heroin addict from
    the neighborhood. Defendant and Mitchell joined Peoples on the porch to ‘help
    [him] get drugs at that location,’ and one of the men knocked on Powers’ door.
    Powers answered and allowed Peoples inside. Defendant and Mitchell remained on
    the porch. Shots were fired inside the building while he and Mitchell were outside,
    and when Peoples came out, the three men fled together.
    At that point, Halloran told defendant that Powers had ‘implicated him as
    taking a far more active role in the home invasion and murder’ of Campbell. The
    detective told defendant that a witness saw the three men enter the building
    together. Defendant denied going inside. At that point, the police received a call
    from defendant’s attorney.
    ***
    Halloran interviewed defendant again the next day with defendant’s
    attorney present.
    Defendant said he was a Gangster Disciple and sold drugs near Powers’
    house. Contrary to his previous statement, defendant said he, Mitchell and Peoples
    went to Powers’ house together to confront Powers about selling drugs in the
    neighborhood. Halloran again told defendant that Powers and other witnesses had
    contradicted his statement. Defendant denied going inside Powers’ building or
    participating in the shooting.
    With his attorney present, defendant told police that he, Mitchell and
    Peoples went to Powers’ house together to confront her about selling drugs in the
    area, in contrast to his earlier statement that he and Mitchell simply accompanied
    Peoples on his drug buy.” 
    Id.
    ¶5     Halloran further testified that after interviewing defendant, Halloran:
    “showed Powers a photo array in which she identified Peoples as the man
    who fired the weapon.
    The defense presented the stipulated evidence of Detective Nolan that he
    interviewed Rogers and that Rogers ‘saw the guy was fiddling with something with
    his right hand in his right jacket pocket’ and that ‘it looked like the guy was trying
    to keep a gun from falling out of the coat pocket.’ The jury was instructed on three
    theories of murder - intentional, knowing and felony murder - and on the offense
    of home invasion. The jury was provided with general verdict forms. At the close
    of evidence, the jury convicted defendant of first degree murder and home invasion.
    The jury also determined that a person for whom defendant was legally responsible
    was armed with a firearm.” 
    Id.
    ¶6     Thereafter, defendant was sentenced to consecutive terms of imprisonment of 50 years for
    first degree murder plus a 15-year firearm enhancement, and 10 years for home invasion.
    4
    No. 1-18-2112
    ¶7     On direct appeal, this court affirmed defendant’s convictions and sentence over several
    challenges. In particular, defendant claimed that (1) the denial of his counsel’s challenges to three
    potential jurors for cause denied him a fair trial; (2) the prosecution introduced improper evidence
    of his criminal record and made various improper remarks during closing argument; (3) his trial
    counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress his statement made without his attorney
    present and also for not requesting separate jury verdicts for the alternate counts of murder in the
    indictment; (4) his 65-year sentence for murder was excessive; (5) the 15-year statutory sentence
    enhancement could not be applied in his case because he did not hold the weapon; and (6) he was
    entitled to a new trial because the jury was instructed on three theories of murder, including felony
    murder, and due to the use of general verdict forms, the jury could have convicted him on the
    theory of felony murder, of which home invasion is a lesser included offense. 
    Id.
    ¶8     On April 7, 2010, defendant filed a pro se post-conviction petition, claiming ineffective
    assistance of trial and appellate counsel, and that the State used perjured testimony. On July 2,
    2010, the trial court summarily dismissed the petition, finding it to be frivolous and patently
    without merit. Appointed appellate counsel filed a Finley motion to withdraw, which this court
    granted. People v. White, 
    2011 IL App (1st) 102471-U
    .
    ¶9     On March 30, 2018, defendant filed a pro se motion for leave to file a successive post-
    conviction petition, as well as the successive petition. The petition alleged: (1) actual innocence
    based on newly discovered evidence; and (2) that the State committed a Brady violation by failing
    to disclose that Antonio Rogers initially gave police a statement inconsistent with his trial
    testimony.
    ¶ 10   In support of defendant’s motion, defendant presented the affidavits of two individuals,
    Ranceallen Hankerson and Antonio Rogers.
    5
    No. 1-18-2112
    ¶ 11    In Hankerson’s affidavit, he attested that he had known defendant his whole life as they
    grew up in the same neighborhood, but they did not “hang out” with each other. Hankerson’s uncle,
    Big-Ken, would sell drugs across the street from Powers’s apartment building where defendant
    would also sell drugs. On May 8, 2002, from his front room window, Hankerson saw defendant
    and Mitchell standing across the street. Antonio Rogers knocked on Hankerson’s door, but
    Hankerson did not answer because he knew Rogers was looking for drugs. Rogers came back a
    few minutes later and at that time, Hankerson saw two people come out of Powers’s apartment.
    He then saw Powers let an unknown male inside the apartment and saw defendant immediately
    start walking west towards Peoria Street, followed by Rogers and Mitchell. After that, Hankerson
    saw the unknown male come out of the apartment building with a small, silver gun in his hand and
    head east toward Halsted Street. When Big-Ken came home, Hankerson told him what he saw,
    and Hankerson learned a week later that defendant had been arrested for Campbell’s death. Big-
    Ken, who had previously been beaten up by defendant for dealing drugs, told Hankerson not to get
    involved or come forward because of what defendant had done to him in the past. Hankerson
    further averred that Big-Ken had since passed away and that knowing that defendant had been
    locked up for a crime he did not commit has been “weighing heavily” on Hankerson’s heart and
    mind “over the years.” Hankerson approached defendant’s mother and provided the affidavit, and
    further stated that he was willing to testify.
    ¶ 12    Antonio Rogers’s affidavit states that, in his interview with Detective Halloran and another
    detective, he told them that on the day that Campbell was shot and killed, he had been talking to
    defendant because defendant was trying to sell him drugs. Rogers was on Big Ken’s porch when
    he saw a woman coming out of Powers’s apartment and, a minute or so later, he saw a black male
    who he did not know enter Powers’s apartment building. At the time, Rogers was outside with
    6
    No. 1-18-2112
    White and Mitchell. At no time did Rogers see anyone other than this black male enter Powers’s
    apartment. Rogers also averred that he began walking home as soon as he heard gunshots. As
    Rogers was walking away, defendant was walking west towards Peoria Street. Rogers stated that
    he told Halloran this information at his initial interview but had to change his story because
    Halloran said that Rogers was lying and that he would be charged with perjury. Rogers stated that
    he was addicted to drugs and did not want to go to jail, so he provided the story given to him by
    Halloran and made the false statement in which he placed defendant and Mitchell inside the
    apartment at the time of the murder. Rogers averred that he also testified falsely because he was
    afraid that Halloran would send him to jail if he “did not tell the false story [Halloran] gave”
    Rogers. Rogers further stated that after he testified, Rogers left Illinois for ten years and provided
    the affidavit to defendant’s mother when he moved back.
    ¶ 13   On August 2, 2018, the trial court denied defendant leave to file his successive petition,
    finding that he failed to set forth a colorable claim of actual innocence and failed to demonstrate
    cause and prejudice to assert a Brady claim. Regarding defendant’s actual innocence claim, the
    court concluded that his claim was “deficient on every element.” The court noted that the “import”
    of both affidavits was that defendant “never went inside the building where Campbell was shot.”
    This evidence, however, was not newly discovered since defendant already told the police that he
    did not go into the building and that codefendant Mitchell, who Rogers said was with defendant at
    the time, could have testified to the same thing. The trial court also found that defendant failed to
    show that he could not have discovered the evidence sooner through due diligence, since defendant
    offered no evidence that he attempted to contact Rogers before he provided the affidavit. The trial
    court then determined that the proposed evidence that defendant never entered the building was
    cumulative because the jury already heard testimony that defendant denied going into the building.
    7
    No. 1-18-2112
    The trial court further concluded that the affidavits were not of such a conclusive character that
    they would likely change the result on retrial. Since defendant was convicted on an accountability
    theory and he voluntarily attached himself to a common design with Mitchell and Peoples to rob
    Powers, it did not matter if Peoples was the only person to enter the apartment.
    ¶ 14    Finally, regarding the alleged Brady violation, the trial court concluded that Rogers’s
    affidavit was not material because defendant could not show that he was prejudiced by the State’s
    failure to disclose Rogers’s initial statement that defendant did not go inside the building. Having
    failed to show prejudice, defendant could not show cause and prejudice to raise such a claim, and
    accordingly, defendant’s Brady claim also failed.
    ¶ 15    Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal from the court’s denial of his motion for leave to
    file a successive postconviction petition.
    ¶ 16    In this court, defendant contends that he presented a colorable claim of actual innocence
    based on the affidavits of Hankerson and Rogers, who averred that he “never entered Powers’s
    house where the shooting of Brian Campbell occurred.”
    ¶ 17    As an initial matter, we note that defendant has raised no argument in this court regarding
    the second issue raised in his successive petition—that the State committed a Brady violation by
    allegedly failing to disclose Rogers’s initial statement. Accordingly, defendant has abandoned
    that issue and forfeited it for review. Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7) (eff. Jan. 1, 2016); People v. Guest,
    
    166 Ill. 2d 381
    , 414 (1995).
    ¶ 18    The Postconviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2014)) provides a
    statutory mechanism for a criminal defendant to assert that “in the proceedings which resulted in
    his or her conviction there was a substantial denial of his or her rights under the Constitution of
    the United States or of the State of Illinois or both.” 
    Id.
     § 122-1(a)(1). The Act contemplates the
    8
    No. 1-18-2112
    filing of only a single petition. People v. Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 42; 725 ILCS 5/122-3 (West
    2014) (“Any claim of substantial denial of constitutional rights not raised in the original or an
    amended petition is waived.”). Prior to filing a successive postconviction petition, a petitioner must
    obtain leave of the circuit court. Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 43. The bar against a successive
    filing will be relaxed, and leave of court to file should be allowed, in two situations. First, a
    defendant may raise a constitutional claim by satisfying the cause-and-prejudice test. Robinson,
    
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 42; see also 725 ILCS 5/122-1(f) (West 2016). Second, even without showing
    cause and prejudice, a defendant may assert a claim of actual innocence pursuant to People v.
    Washington, 
    171 Ill. 2d 475
     (1996). Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 42 (citing People v. Edwards,
    
    2012 IL 111711
    , ¶ 23). Our review of the circuit court’s denial of a motion seeking leave to file a
    successive postconviction petition is de novo. Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 39.
    ¶ 19   In this appeal, defendant raises only the second type of claim—actual innocence. To
    establish a claim of actual innocence, the supporting evidence must be newly discovered, material
    and not cumulative, and of such conclusive character that it would probably change the result on
    retrial. Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 47 (citing Edwards, 
    2012 IL 111711
    , ¶ 32). A motion for
    leave to file a successive petition raising a claim of actual innocence should be denied only where
    it is clear from a review of the petition and supporting documentation that, as a matter of law, the
    petition cannot set forth a colorable claim of actual innocence. 
    Id.
     ¶ 44 (citing People v. Sanders,
    
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 24). We therefore consider defendant’s motion and the accompanying
    affidavits, “to ascertain whether he has raised the probability that it is more likely than not that no
    reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of the new evidence.” Id. ¶ 44. Ultimately, the
    question is whether the evidence supporting the postconviction petition places the trial evidence
    in a different light and undermines the court’s confidence in the judgment of guilt. Id. ¶ 48.
    9
    No. 1-18-2112
    ¶ 20     Initially, we seriously question whether the affidavits of Hankerson and Rogers may be
    considered newly discovered. Within the context of an actual innocence claim, “newly discovered
    evidence” means evidence that was discovered after trial and that the petitioner could not have
    discovered earlier through the exercise of due diligence. Id. ¶ 47 (citing Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    ,
    ¶ 96).
    ¶ 21     Defendant contends that Hankerson’s affidavit should be considered newly discovered
    because, in defendant’s words, Hankerson indicated that he was “unwilling to come forward earlier
    because of familial pressure.” Defendant similarly asserts that Rogers’s affidavit is newly
    discovered and could not have been obtained earlier because Rogers lived outside of Illinois for
    ten years.
    ¶ 22     In this case, there is no evidence that defendant had ever previously attempted to contact
    Hankerson or Rogers, and due diligence assumes at least some effort by defendant to discover
    evidence. Edwards, 
    2012 IL 111711
    , ¶ 37. Although the affidavits generally recount the reasons
    why Hankerson and Rogers did not come forward sooner, the record is devoid of any evidence of
    efforts on defendant’s part to obtain those affidavits prior to 2018, approximately 13 years after
    defendant’s trial. Hankerson does not state in his affidavit that he was unavailable at any time prior
    to when he signed his affidavit in February 2018, and makes no other assertion that would allow
    this court to conclude that he would not have offered his affidavit earlier. Although Hankerson’s
    affidavit suggests that he waited for Big-Ken to die before coming forward, he does not specify
    when that occurred.
    ¶ 23     In Rogers’s affidavit, he asserts that he left Illinois and moved back ten years later.
    However, there is no indication when he left the state or when he returned, that he was actually
    unavailable while he was living out of the state, or that he would not have offered his affidavit
    10
    No. 1-18-2112
    earlier had defendant attempted to find him. See People v. Wingate, 
    2015 IL App (5th) 130189
    , ¶¶
    27-28.
    ¶ 24     Nonetheless, even if we could find the affidavits to be newly discovered, defendant’s
    proposed actual innocence claim otherwise fails.
    ¶ 25     Reduced to their essence, the affidavits supporting defendant’s claim of actual innocence
    provide that defendant did not personally enter the apartment building where the victim was shot.
    In his affidavit, Rogers essentially repeats much of his trial testimony, recanting only that he saw
    defendant and Mitchell go inside Powers’s apartment. Instead, Rogers now claims that he never
    saw defendant or Mitchell enter Powers’s building, that one unknown black male entered, and that
    defendant was outside when Rogers heard the gun shots. Hankerson similarly attested, in relevant
    part, that he saw defendant and Mitchell standing across the street when an unknown male entered
    Powers’s building, and that the unknown male later exited the building holding a gun.
    ¶ 26     In this appeal, defendant contends that the affidavits of Hankerson and Rogers are material
    because they “exonerate” him of the home invasion and murder since they establish that defendant
    did not enter the apartment building. This claim ignores the context of defendant’s trial, as well as
    the fact that defendant was tried on an accountability theory, for the actions of Peoples, who was
    alleged to have been the actual shooter.
    ¶ 27     Importantly, defendant’s claim that he was outside Powers’s apartment at the time
    Campbell was shot was before the jury at defendant’s trial. As set forth above, the evidence
    presented at trial included two statements given by defendant in which he claimed to have been
    outside Powers’s apartment building at the time Campbell was shot. Specifically, Detective
    Halloran testified that during defendant’s first interview, defendant admitted that on the evening
    of May 8, 2002, he and Mitchell encountered Peoples, who was looking to purchase drugs.
    11
    No. 1-18-2112
    Defendant and Mitchell brought Peoples to Powers’s home, because defendant knew she sold
    drugs. Defendant further stated that they knocked on the door, and that only Peoples went inside
    while defendant and Mitchell remained outside on the front porch. While Peoples was inside the
    hallway, defendant heard several shots being fired. Defendant, Mitchell, and Peoples then fled the
    scene. When Detective Halloran “confronted [defendant] with the fact that [Powers] implicated
    [defendant] as taking a far more active role in the home invasion and murder of [Campbell],” and
    that another witness said that defendant was inside the building at the time of the gunshots,
    defendant “denied that he went into the hallway.”
    ¶ 28   During defendant’s second interview, in the presence of his attorney, defendant admitted
    that “he sells drugs in that area” and that “that block is his block and that no one else sells drugs
    on that block.” Defendant acknowledged that he, Mitchell, and Peoples went to Powers’s house
    “to question her about the fact that they had learned that she was selling drugs in that area.”
    Defendant continued to maintain, however, that only Peoples went into the hallway, and that
    defendant and Mitchell “stepped off the porch and walked three or four doors to the left of her
    home” to wait for Peoples. Defendant then stated that “a few moments later” he heard gunshots
    fired within Powers’s home, and that he and Mitchell, and later Peoples, fled from the area. Again,
    after Detective Halloran questioned defendant about Powers’s version of events, defendant
    persisted in denying “that he went into the hallway with the other subjects.”
    ¶ 29   Based on the conflicting evidence on this point, defense counsel argued in closing that
    “what [defendant] was trying to tell the police over and over and over and over again” was more
    “logical” and “reasonable.” Counsel acknowledged that there was “no doubt” that “Peoples did
    it,” but asserted that defendant “didn’t know. He didn’t help. He wasn’t conspiring.” Counsel
    further argued, “Remember, [the prosecution] ha[s] to have this plan. Otherwise, they can’t say
    12
    No. 1-18-2112
    that [defendant]’s responsible for Christopher Peoples. That’s why they have to put them all
    together. Because if they can’t say this plan is real, or if you can’t say this plan is real, then
    [defendant]’s not responsible. That’s why the State says this plan is real.*** I don’t know how this
    happened. Christopher Peoples knows how and why. [Defendant] doesn’t.”
    ¶ 30   The jury, however, apparently rejected defendant’s version of events—specifically that he
    was outside the apartment building and that he was not aware of, and should not be responsible
    for, Peoples’s conduct.
    ¶ 31   In these circumstances, the affidavits of Hankerson and Rogers do not provide anything
    new or create any new questions for the fact finder, and are cumulative of the evidence presented
    at trial. See Ortiz, 235 Ill. 2d at 333; Williams, 
    392 Ill. App. 3d 359
    , 369 (2009).
    ¶ 32   Moreover, taking the affidavits as true, as we must at this stage (see Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 45), the affidavits do not negate defendant’s criminal involvement in the home invasion
    and murder of Campbell. Defendant was never alleged to be the actual shooter, and instead was
    tried on a theory of accountability. As explained above, defendant attached himself to both
    Mitchell and Peoples, admitting that he went with Mitchell and Peoples to Powers’s building to
    confront her about selling drugs. Although defendant stated that only Peoples entered the
    apartment building, defendant admitted that he and Mitchell waited outside for Peoples, and that
    they all fled the area after Campbell was shot. In light of the additional evidence presented at trial
    showing that their purpose was to rob Powers of drugs and money, defendant would remain
    criminally responsible for the home invasion and murder even if Peoples was the only one to enter
    the apartment. See People v. Fernandez, 
    2014 IL 115527
    , ¶ 13 (“[When] two or more persons
    engage in a common criminal design or agreement, any acts in the furtherance of that common
    13
    No. 1-18-2112
    design committed by one party are considered to be the acts of all parties to the design or agreement
    and all are equally responsible for the consequences of the further acts.”)
    ¶ 33   The affidavits of Hankerson and Rogers confirm that defendant was at the scene with
    Mitchell and Peoples, and they provide no evidence showing that defendant did not engage in a
    common design with his codefendants such that he could not be found accountable for their
    actions. Accordingly, we cannot find the affidavits to be of such conclusive character that they
    would probably change the result on retrial. See Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 47.
    ¶ 34   In light of the above, we cannot conclude that defendant “has raised the probability that it
    is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of the new
    evidence,” or that the affidavits place “the trial evidence in a different light and undermine[ ] the
    court’s confidence in the judgment of guilt.” Id. ¶ 48. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s
    denial of defendant’s motion for leave to file a successive postconviction petition.
    ¶ 35   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.
    ¶ 36   Affirmed.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-18-2112

Filed Date: 3/31/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 7/30/2024