People v. Caguana , 2020 IL App (1st) 180006 ( 2020 )


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    2020 IL App (1st) 180006
    SIXTH DIVISION
    September 4, 2020
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    No. 1-18-0006
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS                                      )      Appeal from the
    )      Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                              )      Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                                       )      No. 11 CR 11239
    )
    TRAVIS CAGUANA,                                                          )      Honorable
    )      Arthur F. Hill, Jr.,
    Defendant-Appellant.                                             )      Judge Presiding.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Cunningham and Connors concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Travis Caguana was convicted by a jury of first degree murder and aggravated battery with
    a firearm. The trial court sentenced Travis, who was 17 years old at the time of his offenses, to an
    aggregate term of 66 years in prison. During the course of Travis’s trial, two members of the jury
    learned outside of court that his father, Euripides Caguana, had tried to have two of the State’s key
    witnesses killed so that they would be unable to testify in Travis’s case. Travis now seeks a new
    trial, on the basis that this information gave rise to a presumption of prejudice that the State failed
    to establish was harmless. In the alternative, Travis asks to be resentenced, arguing that the
    sentencing judge did not follow our supreme court’s guidance in People v. Holman, 
    2017 IL 120655
    , regarding what a court imposing a de facto life sentence on a juvenile must do to comply
    with the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012).
    No. 1-18-0006
    ¶2     For the reasons that follow, we agree that a new trial is warranted. Although we commend
    the trial judge for taking the allegations of jurors’ exposure to outside information seriously and
    conducting a thorough hearing into what the jurors learned and how they learned it, we believe the
    judge did not allow himself to fully appreciate the impact that such information was likely to have
    on a reasonable juror’s verdict. In light of our holding, we do not address Travis’s sentencing
    challenges.
    ¶3                                      I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4                  A. Voir Dire and the Court’s Initial Cautionary Instructions
    ¶5     A one-week jury trial was held in this case in March 2017. Pretrial motions and voir dire
    took all of the first day. Potential jurors were asked if they had heard about an unrelated shooting
    that occurred near the courthouse earlier that morning and several had. Sheila Jefferson, for
    example, had heard about it on a television news program in the jury room. David Rivers, who
    heard someone discussing the shooting at lunch, stated that he had “looked it up on [his] phone”
    and recited for the judge a number of details about the incident. Ms. Jefferson and Mr. Rivers both
    indicated, however, that the incident would not affect their ability to decide Travis’s case fairly,
    and both were selected as jurors.
    ¶6     It was not until the following morning, before opening arguments, that the jury was given
    the following cautionary instruction:
    “Members of the jury, the trial is about to commence and I now will instruct you as
    to the law regarding some of your duties during trial and deliberations. You should not do
    any independent investigation or research on any subject or person relating to the case.
    What you may have seen or heard outside the courtroom is not evidence. This includes any
    press, radio or television programs and it also includes any information available on the
    2
    No. 1-18-0006
    internet. Such programs, reports and information are not evidence, and your verdict must
    not be influenced in any way by such material.
    For example, you must not use the internet or any other sources to search for any
    information about the case or the law that applies to the case. During the trial, during the
    course of the trial do not communicate with, provide information personally or in writing
    or electronically to anyone about this case. Not even your own families or friends,
    courtroom personnel and also not even among yourselves until instructed otherwise.”
    The jurors were not asked if they had already received any outside information relating to the case,
    and no juror volunteered such information.
    ¶7                                       B. Travis’s Trial
    ¶8     This case involved a gang-related drive-by shooting. The sufficiency of the evidence to
    support the jury’s verdict is not at issue. The following overview of that evidence is provided as
    context for Travis’s claim that the outside information Ms. Jefferson and Mr. Rivers learned was
    prejudicial and may have influenced their findings of guilt.
    ¶9     In the late afternoon of June 8, 2011, two brothers—Larry and Courtney Holmes—were
    returning on foot to their home at 3459 West 79th Street in Chicago. The two were accompanied
    by their friends, Donte Smallwood and Donta Mosley, and the group was unarmed. Shots were
    fired from a nearby vehicle as the group crossed the street and approached the residence. The
    Holmes brothers ducked and took cover in a gangway, but Mr. Smallwood was killed and Mr.
    Mosley was injured. Inside the vehicle from which the shots were fired were 19-year-old Ricardo
    Rios, 18-year-old Michael Sierra, and 17-year-old Travis Caguana. Officers investigating the
    shooting soon focused their efforts on the pair of houses where Travis and Mr. Sierra lived as next-
    door neighbors. The night of the shooting, Mr. Sierra was observed walking out of his house with
    3
    No. 1-18-0006
    a gun that he gave to his girlfriend and that was later identified as the murder weapon. Both Mr.
    Sierra and Travis, who was seen removing a different weapon from his parent’s house, were
    arrested and charged with unlawful gun possession. Two days later, Mr. Rios named Travis as the
    shooter in the earlier drive-by shooting. Four days after that, Mr. Sierra also named Travis as the
    shooter.
    ¶ 10   According to the testimony of Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra, they, along with Travis, were
    members of the Latins Out of Control (LOC) gang. On the day of the shooting, they were driving
    around in Mr. Rios’s mother’s vehicle, a green Kia Sportage, and had a verbal confrontation with
    a group of three or four individuals who were members of a rival gang known as Money Over
    Bitches (MOB). No guns were displayed, and the group drove on. Later the same day, Mr. Rios
    was again driving—with Mr. Sierra in the rear passenger seat and Travis in the front passenger
    seat—when they came upon a group of individuals crossing the street who they suspected might
    also be MOB members. Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra testified that they suddenly heard a gunshot and
    ducked. They looked up to see Travis holding a gun and watched as he fired a second shot out of
    the vehicle’s window at the group crossing the street. Neither Mr. Rios nor Mr. Sierra had seen
    Travis with a gun before the shooting. Following the shooting, the three had an argument, and Mr.
    Rios dropped Travis and Mr. Sierra off before returning to his own home. Mr. Sierra testified that
    he reluctantly took the murder weapon from Travis and agreed to hide it beneath a window air
    conditioner in back of his house.
    ¶ 11   Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra were never charged in connection with shooting. Mr. Rios stated
    that he was not promised anything in exchange for his testimony but acknowledged that he had
    been questioned by the police, detained overnight, and threatened with murder charges if he did
    not cooperate in their investigation. Mr. Sierra explained that he had agreed to testify at Travis’s
    4
    No. 1-18-0006
    trial in exchange for probation on a charge of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon. Mr. Sierra
    noted, however, that he had a pending charge for driving under the influence that, as a violation of
    his probation, could mean that the State was no longer bound by that plea agreement. Mr. Sierra
    further testified that five months before the trial commenced, he had requested and received the
    State’s assistance to relocate within the City of Chicago, with the State paying his moving
    expenses, first month’s rent, and security deposit.
    ¶ 12   Beyond the testimony of these two individuals, the State’s case largely consisted of officer
    testimony regarding the surveillance of the suspects’ homes and forensic evidence linking the
    weapon Mr. Sierra gave to his girlfriend to the shooting. No fingerprints were found on the murder
    weapon. The Kia Sportage Mr. Rios was driving on the night of the shooting tested positive for
    gunshot residue on the driver-side door and inconclusive with respect to the passenger-side door.
    The State’s expert testified that if—as Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra maintained—Travis had fired the
    gun with his hand outside the front passenger-side window, gunshot residue may or may not have
    settled on the passenger-side door. The expert testified that it was also possible for residue to have
    blown back and settled on the driver-side door without ever settling on the passenger-side door.
    ¶ 13   The jury found Travis guilty of the first degree murder of Donte Smallwood, the aggravated
    battery with a firearm of Donta Mosley, and aggravated discharge of a firearm in the directions of
    Larry and Courtney Holmes.
    ¶ 14                    C. Exposure of Two Jurors to Outside Information
    ¶ 15   In a motion for a new trial filed on March 31, 2017, Travis argued that his rights to due
    process and to confront witnesses against him were violated when two jurors improperly learned
    that Travis’s father Euripides had tried to have two of the witnesses in this case killed. Attached
    to the motion was the affidavit of juror Ellen Mulvey, who contacted defense counsel on the
    5
    No. 1-18-0006
    Monday following the jury’s verdict to report a conversation she had overheard in the jury room.
    Ms. Mulvey averred that “[a]fter the verdict forms were signed, but before [they] were published
    in Court, a female juror, Sheila, said she had ‘looked up this case’ and had learned that the
    Defendant’s father had tried to hire people to kill witnesses in the case.” According to Ms. Mulvey,
    upon hearing this, the jury foreman had remarked “ ‘I saw that too.’ ” Ms. Mulvey stated, “I was
    concerned because the judge had told us not to try to investigate the case on our own.”
    ¶ 16    The motion was briefed, and the trial judge held an evidentiary hearing to receive testimony
    from the jurors Ms. Mulvey had identified. Jury foreman David Rivers testified that he had looked
    up an article about the case on the Internet. Although he could not remember the name of the
    newspaper, when shown a Chicago Tribune article titled “Dad guilty in plot to kill witnesses,” he
    said, “It looks like the same information I read.”
    ¶ 17    That article, which was entered into evidence, stated that a federal jury had convicted
    Euripides Caguana on four counts of using interstate commerce to facilitate the murders “of two
    witnesses slated to testify at his son’s murder trial.” The article further reported that Euripides’s
    son Travis “was about to go on trial in the June 2011 gang-related murder of Dante Smallwood,”
    when Euripides called an individual who turned out to be a police informant and “asked for a
    meeting to discuss having the witnesses in his son’s case killed before they could testify.”
    According to the article, Euripides offered to buy the informant a gun, agreed to pay up to $7,000
    for the murders, and met with the informant several times to point out the witnesses and even
    specify the order in which they should be killed.
    ¶ 18    Mr. Rivers stated that he did not mention or share any information from the article he read
    with any of his fellow jurors during trial or deliberations but that, after the verdict was read in open
    court and the jurors returned to the jury room, he did discuss it with another juror who brought up
    6
    No. 1-18-0006
    the subject.
    ¶ 19      Ms. Jefferson testified that on the day the jury was chosen, she had spoken to a friend of
    hers about the case. Ms. Jefferson said the friend “asked me what was I doing that day or something
    and I told her I had just got picked for jury duty on a trial and I said the name.” Ms. Jefferson said
    she could not recall exactly what her friend said in response but that “it was, like, a contract—a
    murder to hire thing” or “something like that.” Ms. Jefferson denied doing any independent
    research into the matter. She also claimed that she had not immediately associated the story her
    friend told her with Travis’s case but that when “someone got up on the stand and you all said he
    was in witness protection,” it occurred to her that the two things “had something to do with each
    other.”
    ¶ 20      Neither Mr. Rivers nor Ms. Jefferson mentioned to the deputy at any time during trial or
    deliberations that they had learned outside information relating to the case. They both agreed that
    the murder-for-hire plot was not raised in the jury room until after the verdicts were signed and
    read out in open court.
    ¶ 21      In lieu of her live testimony, Ms. Mulvey’s affidavit was admitted as evidence.
    ¶ 22      During argument on the motion, both sides addressed what they believed a juror could have
    inferred from the outside information about Euripides’s conduct and resulting conviction. Defense
    counsel worried that a juror may have inferred that Travis knew of the plot and had asked his father
    to kill the witnesses or concluded that Travis’s own father believed he was guilty. The State
    countered that it was also possible for the jurors to have inferred that Euripides believed his son
    was innocent and did not want him to be convicted of a crime he did not commit. The prosecutor
    closed by stating:
    “The sins of the father cannot be considered the sins of the son. In no way can we show the
    7
    No. 1-18-0006
    nexus or connection between the two of them; no phone calls, no accommodation. Nothing
    in that article indicates the son was part of this plot, this grand scheme of the father.”
    ¶ 23   Before ruling on the motion, the trial judge made clear that he was troubled by the facts
    that had come to light and took the matter very seriously:
    “Obviously this is an issue that is of great importance to all the parties here, not just
    to the Court but to defense counsel, the defendant, the state, and the witnesses, as well as
    the victim’s family.
    I don’t think there is any judge alive who would be happy upon hearing that one or
    some of the jurors that were selected to hear a case got outside information not authorized
    by the Court. That is one of the most bone-chilling feelings that a judge can have. It is a
    serious issue. It is a crucial issue and it demands strict scrutiny when it comes to figuring
    out what to do about it.”
    ¶ 24   The judge then described the inquiry that he believed was required:
    “Our case law gives us some guidance as it relates to how to proceed. *** Certainly the
    method or process of the jury’s deliberative process is off limits but if there’s outside
    information, that should be looked at. ***
    ***
    It is clear that, even in the best case scenario for the defense, the allegations about
    juror misconduct relate to the defendant’s father on its face and not against this defendant.
    Neither by the statements that are attributed to the jurors, either by Ms. Mulvey’s affidavit
    or the actual testimony of Mr. Jefferson—Ms. Jefferson and Mr. Rivers, is there an
    indication that the outside information was directly [related] to defendant or defendant’s
    actions or the defendant’s mind-set. Clearly the implication relates to the defendant’s father
    8
    No. 1-18-0006
    and his actions and/or his conviction.
    Any outside information, from a juror’s standpoint, not all outside information is
    equal.
    In McGee [v.] City of Chicago, [
    2012 IL App (1st) 111084
    ], during the course of
    the trial a clear issue that was going to be important for the jurors to decide were issues
    about memory loss or memory lapses. In that case a juror researched memory lapses and
    shared that with other jurors. That is something that constitutes outside information that
    had a direct impact on the issues that were going to be before that jury. That’s not what we
    have here. We are prohibited, and I think rightly so by case law, from getting into the mind-
    set of the jurors in terms of their deliberative process.”
    ¶ 25   The judge expressed regret over what had happened and his intention, in future trials, to
    perhaps give the general cautionary instructions immediately after jury selection. Ultimately,
    though, he denied the motion. In the judge’s view, the information, which did not concern anything
    that Travis himself said or did, would not help the jury decide whether Travis was the shooter in
    this case. And because there was no evidence that Travis knew of or participated in his father’s
    plot to kill witnesses against him, the mere existence of that plot did not reveal a consciousness of
    guilt on Travis’s part.
    ¶ 26   Following a hearing, Travis was sentenced to an aggregate term of 66 years in prison.
    ¶ 27                                    II. JURISDICTION
    ¶ 28   Travis was sentenced on December 5, 2017, and timely filed his notice of appeal the same
    day. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article VI, section 6, of the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const.
    1970, art. VI, § 6), and Illinois Supreme Court Rule 603 (eff. Feb. 6, 2013) and Rule 606 (eff. July
    1, 2017), governing appeals from final judgments of conviction in criminal cases.
    9
    No. 1-18-0006
    ¶ 29                                      III. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 30   Travis argues that he is entitled to a new trial because two of the jurors in his case were
    exposed to prejudicial outside information. As he concedes: “A jury verdict will be set aside as a
    result of outside influences or communications only if the defendant was prejudiced as a result of
    the improper communication or outside influence.” People v. Hobley, 
    182 Ill. 2d 404
    , 458 (1998).
    ¶ 31   As a general rule, the determination of prejudice “rests in the sound judicial discretion of
    the court after it has considered all the facts and circumstances.” Thornton v. Garcini, 
    364 Ill. App. 3d 612
    , 617 (2006). However, an exception to this general rule of deference applies, “where a trial
    court’s exercise of discretion has been frustrated by an erroneous rule of law.” (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) People v. Caffey, 
    205 Ill. 2d 52
    , 89 (2001). Where that is the case, our review is
    de novo. 
    Id.
     The abuse of discretion standard includes review to determine that the discretion was
    not “guided by erroneous legal conclusions.” Koon v. United States, 
    518 U.S. 81
    , 100 (1996).
    ¶ 32   While the trial judge fully appreciated that he could not inquire into the thought process of
    the two jurors before him, his analysis demonstrates that he may have further believed he could
    not properly consider, in even an abstract way, what the likely effect of the information on a
    reasonable juror’s thought process may have been. We believe this prevented the court from fully
    considering the potential prejudicial effect of the information. When a trial court has unnecessarily
    constrained its own analysis—even where it has done so in an understandable spirit of caution and
    with the goal of hewing to a well-established rule—our deference must give way.
    ¶ 33   The inquiry into whether a defendant suffered prejudice as a result of outside information
    reaching a juror is a uniquely delicate one. To protect the “frankness and freedom of discussion
    and conference” on which jury deliberations depend, it has long been the rule that jurors may not
    be questioned regarding the “motive, method or process by which the jury reached its verdict.”
    10
    No. 1-18-0006
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People. v. Williams, 
    209 Ill. 2d 227
    , 239 (2004). As a result,
    “the inquiry focuses on the relationship between the extraneous information and the issues at trial
    in a rather abstract sense.” (Emphasis added.) People v. Collins, 
    351 Ill. App. 3d 175
    , 180 (2004).
    Because the trial court cannot inquire into a juror’s thought process, it must decide—based only
    on the content of the extraneous information and its relation to the issues in the case—whether the
    juror’s exposure to the information resulted in “such a probability” of prejudicing the complaining
    party that the proceedings should be deemed “inherently lacking in due process.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Hobley, 
    182 Ill. 2d at 458
    .
    ¶ 34    If a party makes a showing that potentially prejudicial outside evidence did reach the jury,
    the burden then shifts to the other party—here, the State—to establish that the exposure was
    harmless. 
    Id.
     “[A] verdict may stand only if it is obvious that no prejudice resulted from the
    communication.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 462
    .
    ¶ 35    It is clear to us that the jurors’ exposure to this murder-for-hire plot resulted in such a
    probability of prejudice that Travis was denied due process. This was highly charged information.
    The perpetrator of the murder-for-hire plot was not a random acquaintance or a fellow gang
    member but defendant’s own father. From the arresting officer’s testimony, the jury understood
    that at the time of the shooting and his subsequent arrest, Travis was a 17-year-old boy living in
    his father’s home. And according to news coverage that Mr. Rivers, at least, was exposed to,
    Euripides was not merely under investigation for potential wrongdoing. He had not made some
    sort of vague threats against the witnesses in question. He had been tried and convicted of multiple
    counts of solicitation to commit murder. The facts were sensational enough that, based only on
    their shared name, a friend of Ms. Jefferson’s recalled them and immediately connected them to
    Travis’s trial.
    11
    No. 1-18-0006
    ¶ 36   There are a number of ways in which, based on the content of this information and its
    relation to the issues in this case, we may conclude that the jurors’ exposure to it prejudiced Travis.
    If the jurors thought that Travis’s own father believed his teenage son was guilty, that alone would
    have been highly prejudicial. See People v. Davis, 
    130 Ill. App. 3d 41
    , 53 (1984) (holding that
    certain hearsay testimony was inadmissible where “the only conceivable purpose” for eliciting it
    was “to raise the highly prejudicial inference that the defendant’s own mother believed him to be
    guilty of the crimes charged”). Moreover, the jurors certainly could have believed, even without
    any evidence, that Travis had asked his father to solicit someone to kill the witnesses or knew and
    approved of the plot. The credibility of the State’s two identification witnesses, Mr. Rios and Mr.
    Sierra, was also pivotal to the State’s case. If the jurors had any doubt as to whether these two men
    were telling the truth, knowledge that someone had been willing to kill them to keep them quiet
    and the witnesses were still willing to testify could very well have bolstered their credibility. As
    our supreme court held in People v. Holmes, 
    69 Ill. 2d 507
    , 519 (1978), although not every instance
    of extraneous information reaching a juror will require reversal, where that information “was in
    the nature of evidence crucial to the question of the defendant’s identification with which he had
    neither been confronted at trial nor had the opportunity to refute,” the exposure was prejudicial,
    and reversal is required.
    ¶ 37   From his remarks on the record, the trial judge in this case seems to have stopped short of
    considering these avenues for prejudice because he believed, in his words, that he was “prohibited,
    and I think rightly so by case law, from getting into the mind-set of the jurors in terms of their
    deliberative process.” But there is a distinction between probing the actual thought process of
    jurors and considering the likely thought process of a hypothetical juror faced with potentially
    prejudicial information. The former is forbidden. The latter is imperative if the court is to
    12
    No. 1-18-0006
    determine, as it must in these situations, whether a juror’s exposure to certain information resulted
    in “such a probability” of prejudice that the proceedings should be deemed “inherently lacking in
    due process.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Hobley, 
    182 Ill. 2d at 458
    . As noted above,
    although we generally accord great deference to a trial court’s conclusions regarding prejudice in
    such matters (Thornton, 364 Ill. App. 3d at 617), the determination by the trial court in this case
    appears to have been the result of a misapprehension of the appropriate inquiry.
    ¶ 38   In urging us to affirm, the State makes much of the fact that, contrary to Ms. Mulvey’s
    affidavit, both Mr. Rivers and Ms. Jefferson testified that Euripides’s murder-for-hire plot was
    never mentioned in the jury room until after the jury’s verdicts were published and their service
    as jurors had ended. But a new trial is required even if only one juror was exposed to prejudicial
    outside information that may have affected that juror’s verdict. Collins, 351 Ill. App. 3d at 181
    (attaching “no significance” to the fact that a juror who conducted his own investigation into an
    issue in the case did not share that information with other jurors because he “was a juror, and his
    personal verdict was necessary to convict [the] defendant”). Mr. Rivers and Ms. Jefferson learned
    about the murder-for-hire plot on the evening following jury selection, before the first witness took
    the stand. If the deliberations of either of them was tainted, the verdict against Travis cannot stand.
    75B Am. Jur. 2d Trial § 1338 (Aug. 2020 Update) (“A conviction cannot stand if even a single
    juror has been improperly influenced.”); 23A C.J.S. Criminal Procedure and Rights of Accused
    § 2020, at 925 (2016) (“even one juror’s prejudice due to exposure to extraneous information is
    sufficient to warrant a new trial in a criminal proceeding”).
    ¶ 39   The State insists that because news coverage did not specifically name the targeted
    witnesses, there was no way for Mr. Rivers or Ms. Jefferson to have known, out of the 20 or so
    witnesses that the State called at trial, that it was Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra whose lives had been
    13
    No. 1-18-0006
    threatened. Mr. Rios and Mr. Sierra were the State’s key witnesses and the only ones who
    identified Travis as the shooter. Any reasonable person would believe it likely that a murder-for-
    hire plot would involve those witnesses. The State’s position is also rebutted by the connection
    that Ms. Jefferson testified she made during the trial between Euripides’s plot and Mr. Sierra’s
    relocation testimony, from which she apparently—and reasonably—inferred that Mr. Sierra was
    in a witness protection program.
    ¶ 40   At oral argument in this court, the State pointed out that neither juror could recall many
    details about the murder-for-hire plot and that Mr. Rivers in fact testified that the article he found
    online was “very vague,” a “short article,” with “[n]ot a lot of information.” But the jurors testified
    a number of months after the trial in this case had concluded. It is unsurprising that they may not
    have remembered all the details of the information they were exposed to. When shown a copy of
    a news article—and one that was entered into evidence with no objection by the State—that
    contained a number of details regarding the plot, Mr. Rivers clearly stated, “It looks like the same
    information I read.” The prosecutor himself described the article as one “that Mr. Rivers indicated
    may be the same one or very similar to the same one that he read.” The article reported that
    Euripides had been convicted on four counts of using interstate commerce to facilitate the murders
    “of two witnesses slated to testify at his son’s murder trial.” It included details of both Travis’s
    trial and his father’s conviction. In short, we are unconvinced by the State’s assertion that the two
    jurors were exposed only to a vague reference to Euripides’s plot that likely made no lasting
    impression on them.
    ¶ 41   The State also emphasizes that “neither juror testified that they were influenced in any
    manner by their knowledge.” The case law could not make clearer that this is an irrelevant—and
    indeed an improper—consideration. Our concern is and must be with the probable effect of
    14
    No. 1-18-0006
    information on the jurors and not with the actual effect on the “motive, method or process”
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (Williams, 
    209 Ill. 2d at 239
    ) by which they reached their
    verdicts. There is no testimony to this effect because asking the questions that would have elicited
    such testimony would have been improper.
    ¶ 42   At oral argument in this case, the State also argued that the rule forbidding inquiry into the
    jurors’ actual thought process is a mere rule of evidence and that there was no objection when Mr.
    Rivers volunteered that the outside information “wasn’t part of our deliberations.” However,
    assuming that we can consider this evidence, we must do so in context. It is apparent that Mr.
    Rivers only meant that the outside information was never shared or discussed with other jurors as
    part of their discussions regarding the case. His statement tells us nothing about what effect the
    information may have had on Mr. Rivers’s own deliberative process.
    ¶ 43   The State’s position, which the trial judge seems to have adopted, is that the outside
    information could only have had a prejudicial effect if it related to Travis himself—if the jurors
    were informed that Travis knew of or participated in his father’s murder-for-hire plot, which would
    constitute proof that Travis was conscious of his own guilt as the shooter in this case. But for the
    reasons discussed above, that is not the only way that a reasonable juror could have been prejudiced
    by learning of Euripides’s conviction.
    ¶ 44   We conclude that Travis met his burden of demonstrating that the outside information two
    jurors in this case were exposed to related to issues in this case, such that there was a “probability”
    of prejudice to Travis. The burden then shifted to the State to demonstrate that any consideration
    of this evidence was harmless.
    ¶ 45   The State’s argument for harmless error is that we must presume that jurors follow the
    instructions they are given (People v. Taylor, 
    166 Ill. 2d 414
    , 438 (1995)) and the jurors in this
    15
    No. 1-18-0006
    case were instructed, after they were sworn in and after two of them had learned of Euripides’s
    conviction, not to consider or be influenced by any outside information in arriving at their verdict.
    But this was a standard jury instruction. The State cites no case standing for the proposition that
    such an instruction, which is given routinely in jury trials, is sufficient to cure a juror’s exposure
    to prejudicial information.
    ¶ 46   This case stands in contrast to cases where a party has successfully rebutted the
    presumption of prejudice and shown the improper information obtained by a juror was harmless.
    For example, in Birch v. Township of Drummer, 
    139 Ill. App. 3d 397
    , 409 (1985), a juror’s
    unsanctioned visit to the scene of an accident, though improper, was found to have resulted in no
    prejudice where everyone agreed that the scene appeared much as it did in maps and photographs
    that had already been introduced into evidence. The State has made no similar showing here that
    these jurors learned nothing new when they heard or read about the murder-for-hire plot to kill the
    State’s key witnesses.
    ¶ 47   We agree with Travis that the information the two jurors learned regarding his father’s
    attempts to kill the State’s identification witnesses likely appeared to those jurors to be “an overt
    attempt to influence the outcome of the trial in [Travis’s] favor.” Based on the probable impact
    that information would have had on a reasonable juror, a presumption of prejudice arose that
    cannot be viewed as harmless. A new trial is warranted.
    ¶ 48   Given this result, we need not address Travis’s sentencing challenges.
    ¶ 49                                    IV. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 50   For the above reasons, we reverse Travis’s convictions and remand this case for a new trial.
    ¶ 51   Reversed and remanded.
    16
    No. 1-18-0006
    No. 1-18-0006
    Cite as:                 People v. Caguana, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 180006
    Decision Under Review:   Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 13-CR-11239;
    the Hon. Arthur F. Hill Jr., Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                James E. Chadd, Patricia Mysza, and Gavin J. Dow, of State
    for                      Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J.
    for                      Spellberg, Clare Wesolik Connolly, and Sara Grurovic, Assistant
    Appellee:                State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.
    17