People v. Ealy , 2024 IL App (1st) 221748 ( 2024 )


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    2024 IL App (1st) 221748
    SIXTH DIVISION
    May 10, 2024
    No. 1-22-1748
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF                       )       Appeal from the Circuit Court
    ILLINOIS,                                        )       of Cook County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )
    )
    v.                                        )       No. 14 CR 6853
    )
    COURTNEY EALY,                                   )       The Honorable
    )       Vincent Gaughan,
    Defendant-Appellant.                      )       Judge, presiding.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE ODEN JOHNSON delivered the judgment of the court,
    with opinion.
    Justices Hyman and Tailor concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1               Defendant, 19-year-old Courtney Ealy, and his codefendant, 17-year-old Clint Massey,
    were both convicted after a joint jury trial of first degree murder. The convictions stemmed
    from the shooting death of taxi driver Javan Boyd, in the early morning hours of February 22,
    2014, in front of the Wentworth Gardens housing project. The State’s evidence at trial
    established that the taxi driver was sitting in his car, waiting for a customer, when two men
    whom he did not know approached him, shot him, and fled. The shooting was recorded by
    nearby security cameras, and the two men were identified by eyewitnesses as defendant and
    No. 1-22-1748
    codefendant Massey. On this appeal, defendant concedes that he approached the victim’s car
    at the time of the shooting.
    ¶2             The jury found both defendants guilty of first degree murder but found that codefendant
    Massey was armed with a firearm while defendant was not. After trial, defendant was
    sentenced to 38 years with the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC), while Massey
    received a sentence of 39 years. On direct appeal, defendant argued (1) that the evidence
    against him was insufficient, (2) that the State made improper comments at trial, (3) that he
    was denied his right to a speedy trial, and (4) that his 38-year sentence was excessive. Both
    defendant’s conviction and Massey’s conviction were affirmed by this court on direct appeal.
    People v. Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    ; People v. Massey, 
    2023 IL App (1st) 220123
    .
    ¶3             After his 2019 appeal, defendant retained private counsel, and on September 14, 2020,
    defendant’s counsel filed a postconviction petition on defendant’s behalf. The petition was
    accompanied by affidavits and advanced to the second stage. On November 1, 2022, the trial
    court granted the State’s motion to dismiss the petition, and this dismissal is the subject of the
    present appeal. The Office of the State Appellate Defender initially represented defendant in
    this appeal, but on April 26, 2023, this court granted defendant’s motion for permission to
    proceed pro se. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    ¶4                                           BACKGROUND
    ¶5             We described the evidence at trial in detail in our prior opinions, and we incorporate
    those opinions here by reference. Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    ; Massey, 
    2023 IL App (1st) 220123
    .
    ¶6                                          I. Evidence at Trial
    ¶7             In our prior opinion regarding defendant, we described the evidence at trial as follows:
    2
    No. 1-22-1748
    “On the night of February 21, 2014, defendants attended a party at 39th Street and
    Wentworth Avenue in the Wentworth Gardens housing project. [Defendant] wore a
    Burberry shirt and white pants, and Massey wore a tiger-striped jogging suit. Also
    attending the party were Kaprice Johns, Jasmine Brown, Germontay Carpenter,
    T’Keyah Herbert, and Jerome Anderson.
    Defendants left the party with Herbert in Herbet’s van. After they left, Johns, who
    remained at the party, got into an argument with a group of women known as ‘Pretty
    in Pink’ because Johns disliked the song that was being played. As they argued,
    someone fired a gun into the air multiple times. Johns did not see who fired the shots,
    but she guessed that the shooter wanted to stop the argument because it was too loud.
    The gunshots did not hit anyone.
    After the altercation, Johns left the party with Brown, Carpenter, and Anderson.
    They left in Johns’s car, with Anderson driving. Carpenter made a phone call to either
    [defendant] or Massey, who were still with Herbert in her van, and told them about the
    altercation at the party. Carpenter put the call on speakerphone, and Brown could hear
    [defendant’s] voice, which she recognized, on the other end.
    Anderson drove to Wendy’s, where they met up with a red car and Herbert’s van.
    [Defendant] and Massey exited the van and got into the red car, along with a man
    named D-Rose. (A fourth man, unidentified at trial, was the driver.) The three vehicles
    drove back toward Wentworth Gardens in a convoy: first the red car, then Herbert’s
    van, then Johns’s car. According to Johns, they intended to ‘see who shot at [them]’
    and ‘deal with the matter.’
    3
    No. 1-22-1748
    Meanwhile, [the taxi driver’s customer] was visiting her mother in Wentworth
    Gardens. Around 3 a.m. on the morning of February 22, she called for a taxi to go to a
    friend’s house. [A driver] was dispatched to the call.
    As the three-vehicle convoy approached 38th Street and Princeton Avenue, they
    passed [the taxi driver] sitting in his parked car, waiting to pick up [his customer]. The
    three vehicles all made a U-turn and came to a stop. [Defendant], Massey, and D-Rose
    disembarked from the red car and approached [the taxi driver’s] car from the passenger
    side.
    Both Johns and Herbert witnessed the shooting. According to Johns, [defendant]
    and Massey were standing next to each other, with D-Rose behind them. [Defendant]
    and Massey spoke to [the driver], and then Johns saw ‘a light flash from the gun’ and
    [the driver] ‘jumping’ as if he was getting shot. At trial, Johns said she did not see the
    actual gun, but in a prior statement to detectives, Johns identified [defendant] as the
    shooter. After the shooting, D-Rose ran back to Johns’s car and got inside, saying
    ‘sh**’ and ‘he’s dead.’ [Defendant] and Massey ran back to one of the other vehicles,
    and all three vehicles drove away. As they left, Johns could see [the taxi driver]
    ‘slumped over’ in his car.
    Herbert saw [defendant] and Massey open [the taxi driver’s] passenger-side door
    and then saw Massey firing a gun into the car. She heard four or five gunshots, after
    which [defendant] and Massey returned to the red car and drove away.
    The shooting was captured on surveillance cameras belonging to the Chicago
    Housing Authority (CHA), which owns the Wentworth Gardens housing project. The
    video footage was played for the jury. In the videos, three vehicles drove past [the] taxi
    4
    No. 1-22-1748
    and then came driving back the other way. The convoy leader, a red car, stopped next
    to [the] taxi and two men got out, one wearing a striped track suit (Massey) and the
    other wearing a brown shirt and white pants ([defendant]). They approached [the
    parked] car from the front passenger side and appeared to be talking to him. [The] taxi
    started backing up, but hit a vehicle parked a couple of feet behind him. (At this point,
    D-Rose got out of the red car and ran back toward Johns’s car.) There was a bright
    flash of light near [defendant’s] hand; [the parked] car surged forward and hit another
    parked car in front. [Defendant] and Massey ran forward to look in the front passenger
    window. [Defendant] returned to the red car, Massey followed him a few moments
    later, and the three vehicles drove away.
    ***
    After leaving the scene of the shooting, Johns dropped Anderson off at his house
    and then drove to the Shell gas station at 55th Street. [Defendant] was waiting there.
    He entered Johns’s car, told her that he dropped his iPhone at the scene, and asked her
    to help him retrieve it. Brown said that it was stupid to go back, but Johns agreed to do
    it. On the way there, [defendant] spoke about the shooting. He said that he asked the
    victim if he was ‘from over here’ and specified the part of Wentworth Gardens where
    the party had been. The victim said he was. [Defendant] also said, ‘man down,’ which
    Johns understood to mean the victim was dead.
    By the time Johns returned to the scene of the crime, police had already cordoned
    off the area. Johns parked the car and approached on foot. She told officer Chris Martin
    that she had dropped her phone nearby and asked whether she could retrieve it. Martin
    refused, explaining that it was a crime scene.
    5
    No. 1-22-1748
    Johns returned to her car and drove closer to the crime scene. While in the car, she
    spoke with Sergeant Arthur Young. She gave him a fake name (‘Brianna Johns’) and
    also a fake story, telling him that she was driving in the area when she heard several
    gunshots and saw a man with braided hair and a dark sweater near the victim’s car; she
    got scared and dropped her phone near the victim’s car. Johns then gave Young the
    phone number. Although Johns did not have [defendant’s] number memorized,
    [defendant] told her the number as she was speaking to Young. ***
    Officers did, in fact, find an iPhone in the middle of the street near the victim’s
    vehicle. Pursuant to a search warrant, detectives conducted data extraction on the
    phone, which revealed its number was [the number given by Johns]. The phone was
    also swabbed for DNA; testing revealed a mixture of at least three DNA profiles that
    were not suitable for comparison.
    A latent fingerprint impression recovered from [the taxi’s] passenger side window
    was identified as belonging to [defendant]. Inside [the victim’s] car, the police
    recovered three 9-millimeter fired cartridge casings and two 9-millimeter fired bullets;
    additionally, the medical examiner recovered two more 9-millimeter bullets from [the
    victim’s] chest. Kellen Hunter, a firearms examiner for the Illinois State Police,
    determined that the bullets were all fired from a single gun, and the cartridge casings
    were all fired from a single gun. He was unable to determine whether the bullets and
    cartridges were fired from the same gun, since it is impossible to match a fired bullet
    to a fired cartridge casing. He also could not determine what kind of gun they were
    fired from, since both 9-millimeter revolvers and 9-millimeter semi-automatic weapons
    exist.” Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    , ¶¶ 3-17.”
    6
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶8               With respect to both defendants, the State sought a conviction for first degree murder
    and a 15-year sentence enhancement for being armed with a firearm. The jury was instructed
    on accountability, as follows:
    “A person is legally responsible for the conduct of another person, when, either
    before or during the commission of the offense and with the intent to promote or
    facilitate the commission of the offense, he knowingly solicits, aids, abets, agrees to
    aid, or attempts to aid the other person in the planning or commission of the offense.
    The word ‘conduct,’ includes any criminal act done in furtherance of the plan and
    intended act.”
    After finding both defendant and Massey guilty of first degree murder, the jury returned an
    acquittal for defendant regarding the firearm enhancement that stated: “We, The Jury, find the
    allegation was not proven that during the commission of the offense of First Degree Murder
    that the defendant [ ] was armed with a firearm.” (Emphasis added.) The jury found that the
    firearm allegation, however, “was proven” for codefendant Massey. The jury returned its
    murder verdicts on a general verdict form that stated simply: “We, The Jury, find the defendant
    [ ], Guilty of First Degree Murder.” As already noted, the convictions of both defendant and
    Massey were affirmed on appeal.
    ¶9                                         II. Postconviction Process
    ¶ 10             On September 14, 2020, defendant’s counsel submitted a postconviction petition that
    was accompanied by affidavits from Kaprice Johns, Germontay Carpenter, and defendant. At
    trial, Johns and T’Keyah Herbert were the two eyewitnesses who testified to witnessing the
    shooting. Herbert had testified that she saw defendant and Massey open the passenger-side
    door of the victim’s car and saw codefendant Massey firing a gun into the car.
    7
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 11               Like Herbert, Johns had also testified to witnessing defendant and Massey approach
    the victim’s car. Johns testified that defendants spoke to the victim and that she then saw “a
    light flash from the gun” and saw the victim “jumping” as if he was being shot. Although at
    trial Johns testified that she did not see the actual gun, Johns had stated in a prior statement to
    detectives that defendant was the shooter. 1
    ¶ 12               In the affidavit submitted with this petition, Johns averred that defendant and
    codefendant Massey “talked to a man sitting in a parked car” and that she “then heard several
    shots fired and saw light flashing because it was dark.” However, she averred: “I did not see a
    gun or who shot the man.” Johns averred that a week or two after the shooting, she was taken
    into custody and “threatened” by police “with an attempted murder charge.” Since she “felt
    threatened” and “afraid,” she told the police that defendant was the shooter. However, she
    averred that she did not know if defendant shot the victim, that she did not see defendant shoot
    the victim, and that she did not see a gun before or after the shooting.
    ¶ 13               Carpenter did not testify at trial. In the affidavit that he submitted with defendant’s
    petition, Carpenter averred that he was sitting in Johns’s car, that he observed a man sitting in
    another car, and that “[m]ost people sitting in their vehicle” in that neighborhood “at that time
    of night” were selling “weed.” Carpenter averred that defendant “wanted to get some weed”
    and that Carpenter assumed that defendant was trying to buy weed from the man in the other
    car. Carpenter then heard several shots fired but did not see a gun or who shot the man.
    Carpenter averred that he had never known defendant to have or use a gun. Defendant also
    submitted his own affidavit in which he averred that, moments after asking the man whether
    1
    However, the jury specifically found that the State had failed to prove that defendant was armed
    with a firearm.
    8
    No. 1-22-1748
    he had marijuana, defendant “remember[ed] seeing flashes.” Portions of defendant’s affidavit
    were illegible, a fact which the State later noted in its response, and so defendant supplemented
    it with a second affidavit which is described below.
    ¶ 14               In addition to the Johns and Carpenter affidavits, the petition alleged (1) that the trial
    court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a severance and (2) that defendant’s 38-year
    sentence, imposed for an offense committed when he was 19-years old, was excessive and
    disproportionate.
    ¶ 15               On October 6, 2020, defendant’s postconviction counsel submitted a supplemental
    petition for postconviction relief with additional affidavits, including a second affidavit from
    defendant. In this second affidavit, defendant averred that “it was known that marijuana is sold
    in the projects” and that, after noticing a parked vehicle, defendant “decided to see if marijuana
    can be purchased from this individual” in the parked vehicle. Defendant averred: “The next
    thing [sic] shots were fired, and I went into a shock.” Defendant “remembered my friend
    running past saying something like this was not the plan.” Defendant stated unequivocally: “I
    did not have a firearm or shoot anyone the day of Feb. 21, 2014.”
    ¶ 16               Ahbir Sardin 2 averred that he was in the same car as defendant immediately prior to
    the shooting and that: “I knew that [defendant] was not armed because his clothes were so tight
    that I would have noticed.” Sardin averred that, after they arrived at the housing project,
    defendant “stated that he wanted to purchase some marijuana and that he would see if the man
    in the car who was sitting had some.” However, “[a]fter 30 seconds or so [defendant] ran back
    2
    In the court’s description of evidence reprinted above at paragraph 7, Sardin is the person
    referred to as “D-Rose.” Supra ¶ 7.
    9
    No. 1-22-1748
    to the car with a shocked and surprised look on his face! [Defendant] was empty handed when
    he got back to the car, and I did not see him shoot anyone February 21, 2014.”
    ¶ 17             On December 7, 2020, the State moved to dismiss defendant’s petition. The State
    argued, first, that defendant’s trial counsel was not ineffective with respect to the severance
    issue, where trial counsel had moved to sever defendant’s case from that of his codefendant
    and had raised this issue again in a posttrial motion. The State argued that the trial court’s
    decision to deny counsel’s motion could not be attributed to counsel and, thus, counsel was not
    ineffective with respect to this issue.The State argued, further that although defendant claimed
    that codefendant’s counsel continually argued that defendant was the shooter, “no such
    statement was made in the pages [defendant] cites, or anywhere else during closing argument.”
    Next, the State argued that defendant failed to explain how the affidavits he submitted were
    material to an ineffectiveness claim and that defendant had failed to provide facts to indicate
    why his sentence was excessive or disproportionate, particularly where he was not a juvenile.
    ¶ 18             Lastly, the State argued that the submitted affidavits failed to support an actual
    innocence claim because the affidavits did not constitute evidence, which was new, material,
    or conclusive. The State argued that Johns’s affidavit was essentially a restatement of the
    testimony that she had already given at trial and that Carpenter and Sardin were witnesses who
    were known at the time of trial.
    ¶ 19             On December 28, 2021, defendant’s postconviction counsel filed a response to the
    State’s motion. However, on January 5, 2022, the same counsel filed a motion to withdraw,
    stating that “[c]ommunciation has irretrievably broken down between the parties” and that
    defendant requested that counsel seek to withdraw. On January 18, 2022, defendant submitted
    a handwritten pro se response, and the response stated that it was submitted by counsel. On
    10
    No. 1-22-1748
    February 14, 2022, defendant filed a “motion for counsel to withdraw and proceed pro se.”
    Ten days later, on February 24, 2022, the trial court permitted defendant’s counsel to withdraw
    and directed an assistant public defender to appear on the next court date. Also on February
    24, 2022, defendant filed a “supplemental petition for post-conviction relief,” which alleged
    (1) coercion of the statement by Johns that identified defendant as the shooter; (2) prosecutorial
    misconduct relating to the coerced statement, including a failure to disclose both the coercion
    and a pattern of misconduct by the detective involved; (3) ineffective assistance by trial and
    appellate counsel relating to the identification; and (4) actual innocence. On March 28, 2022,
    a new counsel entered an appearance on behalf of defendant. On May 16, 2022, the new
    counsel moved to amend the supplemental petition filed in February 2022, with a list of cases
    to support defendant’s claim of pervasive misconduct by Detective John Halloran.
    ¶ 20              On November 1, 2022, a second-stage hearing was held before the same judge who had
    presided over defendant’s jury trial. Defendant and his new counsel were both present. At the
    hearing, defendant’s new counsel indicated that he adopted defendant’s pro se response to the
    State’s motion, as well as the response filed by prior counsel. Counsel began by arguing (1) that
    appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the severance issue and (2) that the law
    regarding young adult sentencing was in flux and evolving. However, the point that counsel
    stated that he “really want[ed] to stress” was “the presence of Detective John Halloran who is
    a member of the infamous crew headed by Detective Burge” and who, defendant claims,
    coerced Johns’s pretrial statement in which she identified defendant as the shooter. Counsel
    argued that a third-stage evidentiary hearing was required due to Halloran’s involvement, plus
    defendant’s evidence of actual innocence in the form of Johns’s, Carpenter’s and Sardin’s
    affidavits.
    11
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 21              When the trial court asked counsel about the connection between Carpenter and
    Halloran, counsel conceded that defendant did not contend that Halloran coerced Carpenter. In
    response, the State argued that there had been no allegation by Johns or any of the witnesses
    that Halloran coerced them and that Johns’s affidavit was perfectly consistent with her trial
    testimony.
    ¶ 22              The trial court found (1) that no ineffectiveness existed regarding the severance issue,
    since appellate counsel does not have to raise every possible claim and trial counsel did raise
    the issue, and (2) that the law regarding juvenile sentencing did not apply to defendant. The
    court did not advance the actual innocence claim, noting that Johns’s allegations were
    considered during her testimony at trial, that Carpenter did not allege coercion, and that
    defendant had had an opportunity to testify at trial if he had so chosen.
    ¶ 23              On November 9, 2022, defendant filed a pro se notice of appeal. On November 18,
    2022, the trial court appointed the Office of the State Appellate Defender to represent
    defendant on appeal. The record on appeal was filed on February 7, 2023, and this court
    subsequently granted a couple of motions by the assistant appellate defender for extensions of
    time to file a brief.
    ¶ 24              On April 26, 2023, this court granted defendant’s motion to proceed pro se on appeal
    and also granted defendant’s motion to file instanter his pro se appellate brief. The brief raised
    four issues for review: (1) that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise a claim that
    defendant’s trial should have been severed from his codefendant’s trial; (2) that the State relied
    on coerced statements at trial; (3) that the State failed to disclose, and his trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to discover, a pattern and practice of misconduct by Halloran; and (4) that
    12
    No. 1-22-1748
    defendant had made a substantial showing of both actual innocence and ineffective assistance
    of counsel.
    ¶ 25             On May 26, 2023, this court entered an order permitting defendant to file a
    supplemental brief. In this second appellate brief, defendant raised three issues, namely:
    (1) severance, (2) coercion of a witness’s statement, and (3) actual innocence.
    ¶ 26             On June 27, 2023, this court permitted defendant to file a third brief, which
    supplemented the first and second briefs that he had already filed. This third brief stated that it
    concerned: “Denial of Severance.”
    ¶ 27             On September 18, 2023, the State filed its response. On October 5, 2023, defendant
    filed a reply brief. On October 25, 2023, defendant filed a motion seeking to file a supplemental
    reply brief, and on March 11, 2024, he filed a motion to issue a decision; both motions were
    taken with the case.
    ¶ 28                                              ANALYSIS
    ¶ 29                             I. Stages of the Post-Conviction Hearing Act
    ¶ 30             Defendant seeks relief under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/art.
    122 (West 2020)). The Act provides a statutory remedy for criminal defendants who claim
    their constitutional rights were violated at trial. People v. Edwards, 
    2012 IL 111711
    , ¶ 21. It is
    not a substitute for appeal but, rather, a collateral proceeding that attacks a final judgment.
    ¶ 31             The Act provides for three stages of review by the trial court. People v. Domagala,
    
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 32. At the first stage, the trial court may summarily dismiss a petition only
    if it is frivolous and patently without merit. 725 ILCS 5/122-2.1(a)(2) (West 2020); Domagala,
    
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 32.
    13
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 32             At the second stage, counsel is appointed if a defendant is indigent and unrepresented
    by counsel. 725 ILCS 5/122-4 (West 2020); Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 33. After counsel
    determines whether to amend the petition, the State may file either a motion to dismiss or an
    answer to the petition. 725 ILCS 5/122-5 (West 2020); Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 33. At
    the second stage, the trial court must determine “whether the petition and any accompanying
    documentation make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation.” People v. Edwards,
    
    197 Ill. 2d 239
    , 246 (2001).
    ¶ 33             In the case at bar, defendant’s petition was dismissed at the second stage. The issue at
    this stage is whether the petition made a substantial showing such that an evidentiary hearing
    is warranted. People v. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 37. The court must accept as true both the
    petition’s allegations and its supporting evidence “unless they are positively rebutted by the
    record of the original trial proceedings.” Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 48. At the second stage,
    the allegations in the petition are “liberally construed in favor of the petitioner.” Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31. “All well-pleaded factual allegations must be taken as true ***.” Sanders,
    
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 37. “[T]here are no factual issues” at the second stage. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31. “Credibility determinations may be made only at a third-stage evidentiary
    hearing.” Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 42.
    ¶ 34             If a defendant makes a “substantial showing” at the second stage, then the petition
    advances to a third-stage evidentiary hearing. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 34. A third-stage
    evidentiary hearing is what defendant here seeks. At a third-stage evidentiary hearing, the trial
    court would act as fact finder, determining witness credibility and the weight to be given
    particular testimony and evidence and resolving any evidentiary conflicts. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 34.
    14
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 35             When no evidentiary hearing is held, as in the case at bar, a reviewing court’s standard
    of review is de novo. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31 (a second stage dismissal is reviewed
    de novo). De novo consideration means that we perform the same analysis that a trial judge
    would perform. People v. Carrasquillo, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 180534
    , ¶ 107.
    ¶ 36                                          II. Severance Issue
    ¶ 37                   Defendant claims that his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the
    severance issue. Defendant also claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective regarding this
    issue; however, as the trial court noted, trial counsel did raise it, both in a motion to sever and
    in a posttrial motion for a new trial. As the trial court observed, trial counsel cannot be blamed
    for the court’s decision not to sever. For the following reasons, we find that appellate counsel
    was also not ineffective on this ground and that the trial court’s denial of defendant’s severance
    motion is not grounds for a new trial.
    ¶ 38                    A. Ineffective Assistance Claim Regarding Appellate Counsel
    ¶ 39             To establish that appellate counsel was ineffective, a defendant must satisfy the well-
    established standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 685-87 (1984). People
    v. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 33. Under the Strickland standard, a defendant must show both
    that appellate counsel’s performance was deficient and that, but for counsel’s errors, there is a
    reasonable probability that the appeal would have been successful. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    ,
    ¶ 33. An appellate counsel is not required to raise every possible issue on appeal. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 33. Instead, we expect appellate counsel to exercise his or her professional
    judgment and expertise to select, from among the various arguable claims of error, the ones
    that may succeed. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶¶ 33-34; People v. Haynes, 
    192 Ill. 2d 437
    , 476
    15
    No. 1-22-1748
    (2000) (“Appellate counsel is not obligated to brief every conceivable issue on appeal, and it
    is not incompetence *** unless counsel’s appraisal of the merits is patently wrong.”).
    ¶ 40             In the case at bar, we cannot find either deficient performance or a reasonable
    probability of success where, as we explain below, we cannot find a reasonable probability that
    this claim would have succeeded on appeal. Haynes, 
    192 Ill. 2d at 476
     (“unless the underlying
    issues are meritorious, defendant has suffered no prejudice from counsel’s failure to raise them
    on appeal”).
    ¶ 41                                            B. Severance
    ¶ 42             In the case at bar, prior to trial, trial counsel stated orally to the trial court that she
    intended to make a written motion for severance but that she had not yet filed it. The following
    exchange then occurred:
    “THE COURT: What’s the basis of your motion for severance.
    [TRIAL COUNSEL]: We’re just moving to make a motion for severance. That’s
    our sole basis.
    [ASSISTANT STATE’S ATTORNEY (ASA)]: Your Honor, neither of the
    defendants in this case gave statements. All the other witnesses and evidence go to both
    defendants.
    THE COURT: So, there’s not antagonistic defenses?
    [ASA]: Correct.
    THE COURT: Your motion for severance will be denied.”
    When trial counsel for codefendant Massey arrived in court, the court informed him that a
    motion for severance had been made on behalf of defendant. About a half page later in the
    transcript, the court asked Massy’s counsel whether there were “any conflicts.” The State
    16
    No. 1-22-1748
    quotes this exchange in its appellate brief, as though this exchange refers to defendant’s
    severance motion. However, the court follows up counsel’s answer that there were no
    “conflicts” by asking: “Anybody going on vacation or anything else like this in July or August
    [?]” Thus, the question about “conflicts” appears to be a reference to the attorney’s calendar
    rather than to defendant’s severance motion. However, whether Massey counsel’s answer
    refers to his calendar or to severance is not relevant to our analysis since we do not rely on a
    codefendant counsel’s assessment of whether a severance was warranted in determining
    whether one was or was not required.
    ¶ 43             “The long-established rule in this jurisdiction is that defendants jointly indicted are to
    be jointly tried unless fairness to one of the defendants requires a separate trial to avoid
    prejudice.” People v. Gabriel, 
    398 Ill. App. 3d 332
    , 346 (2010); People v. Henderson, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 142259
    , ¶ 202 (defendants are generally tried together “when charged with an
    offense arising out of a common occurrence”); 725 ILCS 5/114-8(a) (West 2020) (if a
    defendant “is prejudiced” by joinder, a court “may order separate trials”). “The trial court has
    broad discretion in deciding whether or not to sever codefendants for trial, and as a reviewing
    court, we will affirm, unless that decision constitutes an abuse of discretion.” Henderson, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 142259
    , ¶ 201. “An abuse of discretion occurs where the trial court’s decision is
    arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable or where no reasonable person would agree with the
    position adopted by the trial court.” Henderson, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 142259
    , ¶ 201
    ¶ 44             Our supreme court has recognized two types of prejudice where severance is generally
    required. Gabriel, 
    398 Ill. App. 3d at 346
    . First, severance is generally required when the
    statement of a codefendant implicates the defendant. Gabriel, 
    398 Ill. App. 3d at
    346 (citing
    People v. Bean, 
    109 Ill. 2d 80
    , 93 (1985)). This is because admission of the codefendant’s
    17
    No. 1-22-1748
    statement would impair the defendant’s constitutional right to confront and cross-examine the
    witnesses against him. Gabriel, 
    398 Ill. App. 3d at 346
    . In the case at bar, neither defendant
    nor Massey gave a statement, so this concern is not present on these facts.
    ¶ 45              Second, severance is required when the defenses of codefendants are so antagonistic
    that a severance is necessary to ensure a fair trial. Gabriel, 
    398 Ill. App. 3d at
    346-47 (citing
    People v. Daugherty, 
    102 Ill. 2d 533
    , 542 (1984)). “Actual hostility between the two defenses
    is required.” Bean, 
    109 Ill. 2d at 93
    . Thus, for example, our supreme court in Bean found
    severance was required where a codefendant presented an alibi defense claiming that the
    defendant was the murderer (Bean, 
    109 Ill. 2d at 86
    ), such that the codefendant “could only
    convince the jury of his own innocence by convincing them to convict” the defendant. Bean,
    
    109 Ill. 2d at 95
    .
    ¶ 46              In the case at bar, the opening statements of all the parties show one unified defense
    strategy to argue that defendants were not there and that State witnesses were lying, and one
    unified prosecution strategy to argue that defendants were, in fact, there. In its opening
    statement, the State argued that the evidence would show that defendant and Massey
    “approached” the taxi driver’s car, “fired the fatal shot,” and “left the scene.” The State did not
    make separate arguments regarding the defendants. Massey’s counsel argued that Massey was
    simply “not there,” in that there was no physical evidence linking Massey to the offense and
    that Massey was not on the videotape. In defendant’s opening statement, counsel asked the
    jurors to ask themselves why the State’s witnesses were not charged. Counsel argued: “That’s
    something that you’re going to have to keep asking yourself about when you hear the evidence,
    when you hear the Prosecution try to tell you that [defendant] was there and that he committed
    18
    No. 1-22-1748
    this crime.” The opening statements do not show antagonistic defenses, but rather a general
    defense strategy to discredit the State’s case about defendants’ alleged presence at the scene.
    ¶ 47             Defendant’s postconviction petition, filed September 14, 2020, alleged: “The cross-
    examination by co-defendant counsel of witness[es] Johns and Brown continually pointed out
    that [defendant] was the only one talking about ‘taking care of business.’ ” However, this
    phrase came up during Massey’s cross-examination of Johns, not Brown, and the cross-
    examination of Johns does not suggest antagonistic defenses.
    ¶ 48             During codefendant Massey’s cross-examination of Johns, who was one of the State’s
    key eyewitnesses, Massey’s counsel emphasized that his client had nothing to do with the
    original fight, that Johns was mad, and that she was heading back toward the projects because
    she (Johns) was “going to take care of business.” With respect to defendant, Johns repeated
    during Massey’s cross-examination the portion of her direct where she stated that she drove
    defendant back to the crime scene to look for his phone and that she lied to police regarding
    the phone. During cross, she asserted that the officers never told her that she had the right to
    remain silent, that they told her that she “could be charged with it if [she] didn’t tell them”
    what happened, and that she was in custody for 72 hours. At the very end of Massy’s cross-
    examination, Johns repeated that she spoke to defendant about the shooting after it happened
    but not Massey and that she did not see Massey with a gun. Very little of this was antagonistic
    to defendant’s defense and what was antagonistic was largely a short repeat of her direct
    testimony.
    ¶ 49             Like Massey’s counsel, defendant’s counsel emphasized during her cross-examination
    of Johns that Johns lied to police when she spoke to them on the scene about the cell phone,
    that she was held for 72 hours, and that she knew she could be charged with being an accessory
    19
    No. 1-22-1748
    to murder. Johns further admitted that she knew she could face a minimum of 35 years in
    prison. During Massey’s short two-question recross, Massey’s counsel emphasized that Johns
    lied to the police at the crime scene and lied to them again at the police station. The major
    points made during the two cross-examinations and the short recross were remarkably similar
    and, thus, not proof of a need for severance.
    ¶ 50              Defendant’s petition, filed September 14, 2020, alleged that the closing argument of
    Massey’s counsel “continually emphasized that it was [defendant] who was the shooter.”
    ¶ 51              During the State’s closing, the State argued that “they” were shooting and that it did
    not matter if one was the shooter or the other, or if the gun was going back and forth, because
    “[t]hey were committing the shooting together.” During defendant’s closing, his counsel
    argued, among other things, that: “Not one single witness took that stand and said [defendant]
    shot.” However, he argued further: “I am not insinuating that Clint Massey shot a gun. I am
    insinuating that those women on the stand had reason to lie.” Massey’s counsel argued that
    “[n]ot one of you can look at that video” and identify Massey from it, that no physical evidence
    linked Massy to the shooting, and that he was simply not there. Massey’s counsel did not argue
    that defendant was the shooter.
    ¶ 52              After a careful review of the pretrial ruling, the opening statements, the evidence at
    trial, and the closing arguments, we cannot find that the trial court abused its discretion prior
    to trial by denying defendant’s motion for severance or that defendant suffered undue prejudice
    as a result.
    ¶ 53                                    III. Alleged Coercion of Johns
    ¶ 54              In his supplemental petition filed on February 24, 2022, defendant argued that
    convictions based on witness statements procured through police intimidation or coercion
    20
    No. 1-22-1748
    violate due process (People v. Jackson, 
    2021 IL 124818
    , ¶ 29) and that, additionally, a
    pervasive pattern of criminal conduct by police officers is sufficient to reconsider the
    voluntariness of a statement (People v. Tyler, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 123470
    , ¶ 189).
    ¶ 55              Defendant alleges that Johns’s identification of defendant as the shooter was coerced
    by Halloran, that his trial and appellate counsel were ineffective for failing to discover a pattern
    and practice of misconduct by Halloran, and that the prosecution engaged in misconduct by
    failing to disclose it.
    ¶ 56              However, the Johns affidavit that defendant submitted with his petition does not name
    Halloran. The affidavit does allege, as Johns testified to at trial, that Johns felt coerced because
    police told her that she could be charged in connection with the murder. Defendant does not
    present allegations of coercion by any other witness. As for Johns’s affidavit, it is essentially
    a restatement of her trial testimony, which was subjected to thorough cross-examination and
    argued by all sides in closing.
    ¶ 57              In this appeal, defendant concedes his presence at the scene of the shooting. That fact
    is averred in his own affidavit, as well in the affidavits of the other witnesses that he submits,
    namely, Johns, Carpenter, and Sardin. The coercion allegation is thus directed at Johns’s
    pretrial identification of defendant as the shooter, which she recanted both at trial and in her
    newly submitted affidavit. However, the jury specifically found, by special verdict, that
    defendant was not “armed with a firearm.” We fail to see how defendant’s due process rights
    were violated at trial, where Johns’s allegation of coercion was disclosed, cross-examined, and
    argued at trial; where, although Halloran has been the subject of cases alleging a pattern of
    misconduct, Johns’s affidavit does not allege any acts by him; and where the jury did not find
    21
    No. 1-22-1748
    that defendant was “armed with a firearm” despite Johns’s allegedly coerced statement to the
    contrary. For these reasons, we do not find defendant’s due process claim persuasive.
    ¶ 58                                           IV. Actual Innocence
    ¶ 59               Defendant alleges that he is actually innocent. The evidence supporting an actual-
    innocence claim must be (1) new, (2) material and noncumulative, and (3) of such a conclusive
    character that it would probably change the result on retrial. People v. Allen, 
    2015 IL 113135
    ,
    ¶ 22; People v. Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 96. “New means the evidence was discovered
    after trial and could not have been discovered earlier through the exercise of due diligence.”
    Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 96. “Material means the evidence is relevant and probative of the
    petitioner’s innocence.” Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 96. To be material, the evidence “need
    not, standing alone, exonerate the defendant; rather, it must tend to ‘significantly advance’ his
    claim of actual innocence.” People v. Stoecker, 
    2014 IL 115756
    , ¶ 33. “Noncumulative means
    the evidence adds to what the jury heard.” Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 96. Conclusive means
    that the additional evidence, “when considered along with the trial evidence, would probably
    lead to a different result.” Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 96. “Probability, not certainty, is the
    key ***.” Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 97. A piece of new evidence is conclusive if it “would
    probably change the result on retrial, either by itself or in conjunction with” other new evidence
    also presented by the petitioner. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 53; see Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    ,
    ¶¶ 104-08 (considering together the statements of all the new witnesses presented by
    defendant). 3
    3
    Our supreme court has “specifically rejected the total vindication or exoneration standard” set
    forth in People v. Savory, 
    309 Ill. App. 3d 408
    , 415-16 (1999). People v. Robinson, 
    2020 IL 123849
    , ¶ 55
    (citing People v. Savory, 
    197 Ill. 2d 203
    , 213 (2001) (specifically rejecting the “complete vindication”
    standard set forth in the lower court’s opinion)).
    22
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 60             To support an actual innocence claim, the evidence must satisfy all three requirements:
    (1) newly discovered, (2) material, and (3) of such a conclusive character as to probably
    change the result on retrial. People v. Ortiz, 
    235 Ill. 2d 319
    , 333 (2009). Once a reviewing
    court determines that a witness’s testimony is “not new because it could have been discovered
    earlier through the exercise of due diligence,” the reviewing court’s analysis of that evidence
    may stop there. Coleman, 
    2013 IL 113307
    , ¶ 100 (the supreme court’s analysis of the testimony
    of Nickerson and Roberson ended with its conclusion that their testimony was not newly
    discovered). In the case at bar, the witnesses, from whom defendant submits affidavits, were
    all known at the time of trial, and no explanation is offered as to why their statements could
    not have been discovered and obtained earlier through the exercise of due diligence.
    ¶ 61             We could affirm the dismissal of defendant’s actual innocence claim on that ground
    alone. However, we also find, for the reasons explained below, that the statements are not of
    such a conclusive nature as to probably change the result at a retrial.
    ¶ 62             In these statements, defendant is putting forward an alternate theory to the one he
    presented at trial. In this version, defendant and the witnesses who he now puts forth readily
    admit that he was at the scene of the shooting, that he approached the victim’s car in the
    seconds prior to the shooting, and that he ran from the victim’s car after the shooting. However,
    in this version, he claims that he approached to inquire about purchasing marijuana and that he
    was shocked when shots were fired.
    ¶ 63             As we already noted, defendant does not offer a reason why he could not have presented
    this version at his original trial. Defendant had the opportunity to testify in his own defense
    and present this version at trial, and all these witnesses were known.
    23
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 64             In addition, the marijuana-buying theory is not so conclusive and persuasive as to
    probably change the result at trial, where it places him at the scene of the shooting, where it
    has him approaching the victim’s car in the seconds prior to the shooting, where his fingerprint
    was found on the passenger side of the victim’s vehicle, where he and apparently the shooter
    were both by the victim’s car at the exact same time, which was also the exact same moment
    that the shooting occurred, and where he ran after shots were fired and the victim was killed.
    ¶ 65             None of the affidavits name the shooter—not even defendant’s affidavit. Only
    defendant’s affidavit swears he was not the shooter. The other affidavits do not state who the
    shooter was. Instead, they say that defendant was in the vicinity of the shooting and that they
    did not see who shot—thereby leaving open the possibility that defendant did the shooting.
    ¶ 66             However, even if Sardin’s affidavit, which avers that defendant was not armed,
    exonerates defendant from being the shooter, the jury already acquitted defendant of the being-
    armed allegation. Instead of tending to exonerate, these affidavits establish that defendant had
    at least the opportunity, either before or during the commission of the offense, to promote or
    facilitate the commission of the offense, by soliciting, aiding, abetting, agreeing to aid, or
    attempting to aid the shooter—as the accountability instruction requires. While averring that
    defendant was just innocently out there, coincidentally approaching at the exact wrong
    moment, to buy marijuana, they do not offer an alternate explanation of why this heinous act
    occurred or who did it. However, they do establish defendant’s timely approach, his immediate
    proximity, and his instant flight. As a result, these affidavits are not so conclusive as to
    probably produce a different result at retrial.
    24
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 67               Is it possible that defendant jumped out at the exact wrong moment to buy marijuana?
    These are teenagers; anything is possible. 4 However, “is it possible” is not the standard on this
    appeal. The question is whether the evidence is so conclusive as to create a reasonable
    probability of a different result, and these affidavits do not meet this standard, even if they
    qualified as newly discovered. For these reasons, we cannot find that defendant’s actual-
    innocence claim warranted a third-stage evidentiary hearing.
    ¶ 68               In the interest of completeness, we note that defendant also put forth what he called
    “skip trace” evidence that the taxi driver did not live in the Wentworth Gardens housing
    project. However, the State never argued that he lived there. By contrast, in its opening, the
    State argued that he happened to be there because “[h]e had to go where the job took him.” To
    the extent that the driver’s residence is a relevant fact, it is one that defendant already raised,
    and we already considered on direct appeal. We stated:
    “[Defendant] argues that even if he shared a common criminal design to retaliate
    for the incident at the Wentworth Gardens party, he could not have planned to kill [the
    taxi driver], who was not connected to that incident. Indeed, at oral argument, counsel
    emphasized how apparently irrational it was that [defendant] and Massey would exact
    revenge for the earlier altercation between two groups of women by shooting a man
    who, as far as they were aware, had not even attended the party. But [the taxi driver]
    was only shot after he agreed (in response to [defendant’s] query) that he was from
    ‘over here,’ while parked outside a Wentworth Gardens residence. The jury could have
    4
    However, defendant’s new marijuana-buying theory is contradicted by Johns’s trial testimony,
    where she testified that defendant told her what he asked the taxi driver. What defendant said he asked the
    driver was not “did the driver have marijuana?” but rather “was he [the driver] from over here.” While
    Johns’s affidavit does not repeat this portion of her trial testimony, her affidavit does not retract it either.
    Unlike Sardin’s and Carpenter’s affidavits, Johns’s affidavit says nothing about an intent to buy
    marijuana.
    25
    No. 1-22-1748
    concluded that based on [the taxi driver’s] response, [defendant] and Massey believed
    [the taxi driver] was one of the guests at the party and decided to ‘deal with the matter’
    by shooting him.” Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    , ¶ 33.
    Hence, evidence of the taxi driver’s residence is not newly discovered, in that no reason is put
    forth why it could not have been discovered earlier through due diligence, and it is not a fact
    that would probably affect the outcome of a retrial, for the reasons that we already explained
    on defendant’s direct appeal.
    ¶ 69                                             V. Sentence
    ¶ 70             Lastly, defendant argues that his sentence was excessive and disproportionate.
    However, in his petitions, defendant failed to allege specific facts to indicate why, although
    not a juvenile, his sentence was nonetheless excessive or disproportionate. This court observed
    that defendant argued on direct appeal “that his 38-year sentence for first degree murder was
    excessive in light of his youth (he was 19 at the time of the shooting) and ‘the fact that he did
    not shoot the victim.’ ” Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    , ¶ 53. Rejecting this claim, we stated
    that we had reviewed the record and found no abuse of discretion by the sentencing judge and
    that the sentence was squarely within the middle of the possible 20-to-60-year sentencing
    range. Ealy, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 161575
    , ¶ 55. Further, under the line of sentencing cases that
    do apply to juveniles, defendant’s 38-year sentence would not qualify as a life sentence even
    if he had been a juvenile at the time of the offense. E.g., People v. Buffer, 
    2019 IL 122327
    ,
    ¶ 41 (“a prison sentence of 40 years or less imposed on a juvenile offender does not constitute
    a de facto life sentence in violation of the eighth amendment”). Where this claim was
    previously raised and considered, and where it lacks supporting factual detail, we cannot find
    it persuasive.
    26
    No. 1-22-1748
    ¶ 71                                           CONCLUSION
    ¶ 72             For the foregoing reasons, we do not find defendant’s claims persuasive and affirm the
    dismissal of his attorney-assisted and pro se postconviction petitions at the second stage. In
    addition, we have taken two motions with the case: a motion to issue decision, which is now
    rendered moot by the issuance of our decision, and a motion to file a supplemental reply brief.
    In this appeal, the pro se defendant was already permitted to file a total of four briefs, which
    is already double the number normally permitted appellants. Thus, this motion is denied.
    ¶ 73             Affirmed.
    27
    No. 1-22-1748
    People v. Ealy, 
    2024 IL App (1st) 221748
    Decision Under Review:       Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 14-CR-6853;
    the Hon. Vincent Gaughan, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                    Courtney Ealy, of Sumner, appellant pro se.
    for
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                    Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Enrique
    for                          Abraham, Su Wang, and Daniel Piwowarczyk, Assistant State’s
    Appellee:                    Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-22-1748

Citation Numbers: 2024 IL App (1st) 221748

Filed Date: 5/10/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/10/2024