People v. Olvera , 2023 IL App (1st) 210875 ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (1st) 210875
    FIRST DISTRICT
    SECOND DIVISION
    August 8, 2023
    No. 1-21-0875
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                  )              Appeal from the
    )              Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                            )              Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                    )              No. 18 CR 16041
    )
    HINIGO OLVERA,                                        )              Honorable
    )              Joseph M. Cataldo,
    Defendant-Appellant.                           )              Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Howse and Cobbs concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Defendant Hinigo Olvera was convicted after a bench trial of aggravated driving under
    the influence of alcohol (DUI) and obstructing justice. We affirm both convictions, over his
    various challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence.
    ¶2                                        BACKGROUND
    ¶3     Aries Cobian’s car broke down in Streamwood. Amherst Powell, Destini Hall, and Hall’s
    child were in the car with her. Cobian and Powell pushed the stalled car for a time while Powell
    steered. Officer Kisija pulled up behind them, to keep the traffic at bay, and directed them into a
    parking lot. But the safe harbor proved fatefully temporary. They declined any further assistance,
    figuring that they could push the car to their final destination nearby. Officer Kisija moved on,
    and back out they went, into the eastbound traffic on Lake Street (also known as Route 20), just
    past the intersection with Park Avenue.
    ¶4     Lake Street is a busy thoroughfare. Two lanes of traffic flow in each direction. The road
    bends somewhat to the right, with a guardrail and heavy vegetation next to the right lane (going
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    eastbound), where Cobian and Powell pushed the car. At 7:30 p.m. in October, it was dark out,
    and the streetlights, if any, were sparse. By all accounts, traffic was “heavy.” And there was
    significant road construction, as Lake Street was being repaved at the time. The speed limit in
    this zone was 45 miles per hour.
    ¶5     Cobian pushed from the rear driver’s side, Powell from the rear passenger’s side. The
    car’s taillights and hazard lights were on. By Powell’s estimation, roughly 15 cars passed them
    during the two minutes or so that they pushed the car.
    ¶6     Among those passing by was Mary Otto, who noticed a dark pickup truck tailgating her
    in the left lane. She was not speeding, so neither was the truck, she figured, but it was following
    her closely enough to make her feel unsafe. Otto saw a “disabled” car in the right lane, just
    beyond the intersection with Park Avenue, but she did not notice anyone pushing it. She slowed
    down a little and moved as far to the left as she could in her lane, to leave space between her and
    the evident hazard.
    ¶7     Around the time that Otto was passing the disabled car, the pickup truck moved even
    closer behind her, revved its engine, and swerved sharply into the right lane. Otto heard brakes
    screeching and then a collision, though she did not see it. She did not know if anyone was hurt
    and continued on her way. She reported the incident to the police a few days later, after she heard
    on the news that someone had died in the crash.
    ¶8     Just before the crash, Powell also heard “screeching noises” and moved off to the side of
    Cobian’s car. A pickup truck slammed into the back, and the car and Cobian both briefly “flew
    up” in the air. The collision forced Cobian’s car quite a ways forward; Officer Slocum, the first
    to respond, estimated it was about 20 yards ahead of the pickup truck. Police photos confirmed
    that the brunt of the impact was to the left rear of the car, where Cobian was pushing. Suffice it
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    to say that her injuries were gruesome and fatal. Powell’s arm was gashed, but he was otherwise
    fine, as were the passengers (Hall and her child) inside the car, at least as far as we have been
    told.
    ¶9      Defendant emerged from the driver’s seat of the pickup truck. Hall ran out of the car,
    screaming that defendant killed Cobian. In plain view of Cobian’s mangled and unresponsive
    body, defendant reportedly shrugged his shoulders.
    ¶ 10    When Officer Slocum arrived, he found defendant standing near the pickup truck. It had
    significant front-end damage. The windshield was cracked, and inside, what appeared to be hair
    was stuck in one of the cracks. (It was never tested.) Defendant did not have any visible signs of
    injury to his head or anywhere else. He was standing straight and did not show any obvious signs
    of impairment from Officer’s Slocum’s vantage point, though the officer was not looking for
    any. But defendant was, oddly, wearing a head lamp—and looking “unusually unfazed” for
    someone who had just been in a serious crash. Given the circumstances, Officer Slocum believed
    that standardized field sobriety tests (SFSTs) were in order.
    ¶ 11    Before administering the tests, Officer Ciaciura spoke to defendant and found that he had
    glassy, bloodshot eyes and alcohol on his breath. Defendant seemed unsteady as he walked away
    from his truck, though he was able to stand relatively straight and his speech was not mumbled
    or blurred. Defendant claimed that he did not have anything to drink since the previous day and
    agreed to take the SFSTs. Officer Ciaciura administered the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN)
    test, the walk-and-turn test, and the one-leg-stand test. Defendant not only failed all three tests;
    he repeatedly failed to follow the officer’s directions. We will elaborate later.
    ¶ 12    Officer Ciaciura asked defendant again if he had been drinking. This time, defendant said
    that he had one beer with lunch, around noon. The officer was taken aback when defendant asked
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    him what “the girl was doing on the ground.” Defendant refused to take a Breathalyzer test and
    was arrested for DUI.
    ¶ 13   Officer Ciaciura, and the State following his lead, both attribute to defendant a comment,
    allegedly made to the officer, to the effect that he was doing his job correctly. The sobriety tests
    and arrest were recorded, and we can find no such comment on the video. Rather, what we hear
    is defendant saying, “Do you think you’re doing it the right way, what you’re doing?” Defendant
    said this while Officer Ciaciura was handcuffing him.
    ¶ 14   In any event, the officer took defendant to Saint Joseph Hospital in Elgin, where he again
    refused to submit to testing. From there, he was taken to the Streamwood police station, and then
    to Saint Alexius Medical Center, once a search warrant for a DUI kit had been issued. His blood
    and urine samples were collected at 1:14 a.m., almost five hours after the crash. Defendant’s
    blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at that time was 0.101—above the legal limit of 0.08.
    ¶ 15   The next day, Streamwood officers reviewed the video from Officer Slocum’s dash-cam,
    which is included in the record on appeal. Shortly after the crash, and before he took the SFSTs,
    defendant took some items from the cabin of the truck and put them in the bed of his pickup
    truck. One of them is almost certainly a cooler (as the State described it at trial, without objection
    from the defense). After meandering around and taking another look inside the cabin, defendant
    went back to the spot where he put the cooler and started to rummage. He picked up a bottle, cast
    a few glances around—toward the various emergency personnel on the scene and the squad car
    parked behind his truck—and threw the bottle into the bushes on the side of the road. Twenty or
    so seconds later, he threw another item. It also looked like a bottle, though it is not as clear on
    the video.
    ¶ 16   Officer Ciaciura went back to Lake Street and searched the bushes. He found an Absolut
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    Vodka bottle, unbroken, with some liquid still inside. The parties stipulated that defendant’s
    fingerprints were found on the bottle. The second bottle, or other item, was never found.
    ¶ 17   The defense case largely comprised two expert witnesses. First, the defense introduced a
    written report from a pharmacologist, Dr. James O’Donnell. In short, Dr. O’Donnell opined that
    defendant’s BAC at the time of the crash could not be extrapolated from the sample taken from
    him nearly five hours later. His opinion was based principally on the general and well-known
    uncertainties of what is known as “retrograde extrapolation,” but also in part on the failure of the
    Illinois State Police to document that its laboratory instruments had been properly validated.
    ¶ 18   Dr. O’Donnell also interviewed defendant and reported the following account of events:
    defendant claimed that he drank “some beer” when he came home from work around 4 p.m.
    Later, after leaving his son’s house, he found a bottle of vodka in his truck bed and had “a shot”
    about 10 minutes before the crash.
    ¶ 19   Second, the defense called Michael Cowsert, a police officer who moonlights as an
    expert witness in automobile accident reconstruction. Cowsert’s testimony was the basis for the
    defense argument that the sole proximate cause of the crash (and hence Cobian’s death) was not
    defendant’s impaired driving, but rather the decision to push Cobian’s car in circumstances that
    made the collision unavoidable, even by a non-impaired driver.
    ¶ 20   This defense argument lingers on appeal, in the form of a sufficiency challenge, so we
    will leave the details of Cowsert’s analysis until we reach the issue. For now, we will just say
    that the trial court was skeptical of his assumptions and methods, rejected his conclusions, and
    found that he generally lacked credibility on the witness stand. To the court’s mind, his analysis
    defied common sense and experience, not least because all the other drivers in the “heavy” traffic
    on Lake Street managed to avoid the crash that Cowsert deemed unavoidable.
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    ¶ 21   The trial court acquitted defendant on various charges. Based on the issues noted in Dr.
    O’Donnell’s report, the trial court found that the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
    that defendant’s BAC at the time of the crash was 0.08 or more. 625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(1) (West
    2020). The trial court also found that the State did not offer sufficient proof of its allegation that
    Cobian was pregnant, and thus acquitted defendant on two counts charging him with proximately
    causing the death of her unborn child.
    ¶ 22   The trial court found defendant guilty on the one remaining aggravated DUI charge,
    which alleged that he proximately caused Cobian’s death while driving impaired. The trial court
    also found that he obstructed justice by removing evidence from his truck and discarding it into
    the bushes on the side of the road. Defendant was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of nine
    years for aggravated DUI and three years for obstructing justice.
    ¶ 23                                         ANALYSIS
    ¶ 24                                               I
    ¶ 25   To convict defendant of (aggravated) DUI, as charged, the State had to prove that he was
    driving or in actual physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. 
    Id.
    § 11-501(a)(2). A driver is under the influence when “ ‘his mental or physical faculties are so
    impaired as to reduce his ability to think and act with ordinary care.’ ” People v. Gordon, 
    378 Ill. App. 3d 626
    , 631 (2007). Defendant argues that the evidence of impairment was insufficient. We
    disagree.
    ¶ 26   A conviction will not be reversed on sufficiency grounds unless the evidence was so
    “unreasonable, improbable, or unsatisfactory” that no rational trier of fact, viewing it in the light
    most favorable to the State, could accept it as proof beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Ross,
    
    229 Ill. 2d 255
    , 272 (2008); see Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (1979). The trier of fact’s
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    findings regarding the credibility of witnesses and the inferences to be drawn from the evidence
    are not conclusive, but they are entitled to significant deference. Ross, 
    229 Ill. 2d at 272
    .
    ¶ 27   Defendant failed all three field sobriety tests. In the process, he repeatedly failed to
    follow Officer Ciaciura’s instructions. See People v. Tatera, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 160207
    , ¶ 28 (fact
    that defendant “was unable to comprehend and follow [officer’s] instructions” for sobriety tests
    supported finding of impairment).
    ¶ 28   The HGN test revealed a nystagmus—an involuntary jerking motion of the eye as it
    deviates from center to track a stimulus—in both of defendant’s eyes. Perhaps more importantly,
    the test could not be completed at maximum deviation because defendant was unable to follow
    the directions.
    ¶ 29   Officer Ciaciura testified, and the video corroborates, that defendant kept moving his
    entire head instead of just his eyes and kept disengaging from the stimulus. Each time defendant
    failed to follow instructions, the officer paused the test, explained the instructions again, and had
    defendant repeat them back. Though defendant is a native Spanish speaker, he clearly understood
    the officer. He just could not complete the test as instructed. Ultimately, Officer Ciaciura had to
    settle for testing at a 45-degree deviation, which revealed a nystagmus in both eyes. That was
    one indication or “clue” of impairment.
    ¶ 30   Defendant said he had no medical issues that would prevent him from walking normally
    during the walk-and-turn test, which he also failed. He failed to walk heel to toe, used his arms to
    balance himself, stepped off the imaginary line, and failed to stand normally at the start of the
    test. What’s more, he started the test while the officer was still giving him the instructions, as if
    somewhat oblivious; he took the wrong number of steps, despite counting out loud; and when he
    reached the “turn” part of the test, he walked in the wrong direction. This, too, indicated
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    impairment.
    ¶ 31    During the one-leg-stand test, defendant failed to maintain his balance without using his
    arms, hopped on one foot, swayed, and put his foot down and his arms out several times. He also
    failed to count out loud as instructed. After three attempts, Officer Ciaciura ended the test. All in
    all, defendant showed “compromised coordination and balance,” which are “commonly accepted
    as indicators of an impaired ability to drive.” People v. Lenz, 
    2019 IL App (2d) 180124
    , ¶ 117.
    ¶ 32   Some five hours later, defendant’s BAC was 0.101 and thus above the legal limit (of
    0.08). We recognize that a driver’s precise BAC at the time of an accident cannot always be
    reliably extrapolated from a single measurement taken hours later. There is no need to put a fine
    point on the topic of “retrograde extrapolation” here, since the trial court found reasonable doubt
    about defendant’s BAC on this basis. But that finding aside, his elevated BAC five hours later,
    when viewed in the context of the evidence as a whole, still supports a finding of impairment.
    See People v. Epstein, 
    2022 IL 127824
    , ¶ 25 (delay between driving and BAC testing “go[es] to
    the weight of the [BAC] evidence and must be viewed in light of the surrounding
    circumstances”).
    ¶ 33   Defendant was in the presence (and for most of the time, the custody) of the police from
    the time that Officer Slocum arrived on the scene, within minutes of the crash, until his BAC was
    tested. So whatever alcohol caused his elevated BAC was consumed earlier. We would find it
    hard to believe that a perfectly sober defendant decided to get drunk at the scene of a serious
    traffic accident while waiting for the police to arrive. And he has never made any such claim.
    ¶ 34   So we can safely infer that he drank before the crash, which leaves only one way around
    the conclusion that he was drunk at the time of the crash: that he drank right before the crash, so
    that the alcohol had not yet absorbed into his bloodstream and impaired his faculties. And yet he
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    drank enough that his BAC was still over the legal limit five hours later.
    ¶ 35   It is unlikely, at best, that defendant thus threaded the needle with his drinking. And that
    hypothesis, improbable as it is on its own terms, is hard to square with the rest of the evidence.
    For one, it is not what he told the police in either description of his drinking that day (in one
    version, he had nothing to drink; in the other, one beer at noon). He failed all three field sobriety
    tests. And even before those tests, the officer noted not only alcohol on his breath but that he had
    glassy, bloodshot eyes, indicating the alcohol was already in his bloodstream and physically
    affecting him. See People v. Janik, 
    127 Ill. 2d 390
    , 402 (1989) (“watery eyes” and smell of
    alcohol are evidence of intoxication). No doubt that helps explain his inability to follow
    instructions during the sobriety tests, never mind pass them. See Tatera, 
    2018 IL App (2d) 160207
    , ¶ 28.
    ¶ 36   Defendant had an open bottle of vodka in his truck, which is obviously incriminating in
    its own right. See People v. Groebe, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 180503
    , ¶ 59. The trial court could
    reasonably infer, as it did, that throwing the bottle into the brush on the side of the road was also
    evidence of his consciousness of guilt. So too for his refusal to submit to BAC testing at the
    hospital. 
    Id.
     (His refusal to take a preliminary breath test at the scene is another matter, so we
    will put that aside and not treat it as evidence of guilt. See People v. Brooks, 
    334 Ill. App. 3d 722
    , 726-29 (2002).)
    ¶ 37   Then there were defendant’s shifting, false, exculpatory statements about his drinking. As
    noted, he told Officer Ciaciura that he had not had a drink since the previous day, then later
    revised that story (after failing the sobriety tests) to one 12-ounce beer with lunch, around noon.
    In his interview with Dr. O’Donnell, defendant claimed he drank “some beer” around 4 p.m. and
    had “a shot” of vodka about 10 minutes before the crash.
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    ¶ 38    None of these stories explain his over-the-limit BAC at 1 a.m., except, perhaps, the last
    one. If he drank a lot of beer at 4 p.m., it is all but certain that he was impaired when he crashed
    into Cobian’s car around 7:30 p.m. In any event, for all that we do not know about when or how
    much defendant drank, or what his precise BAC was at the time of the crash, we do know this:
    defendant was drinking in the hours leading up to the crash, he eventually admitted as much, and
    he lied, more than once, about the details, in an apparent effort to avoid incriminating himself.
    ¶ 39    A driver’s “indifferent” attitude toward an accident—not to mention a mangled body in
    the street—may also be considered circumstantial evidence of impairment. People v. Allgauer,
    
    114 Ill. App. 2d 405
    , 407 (1969). The same is true for a driver’s confusion or lack of awareness
    regarding the evident facts of the situation. See Janik, 
    127 Ill. 2d at 397
    . Here, defendant
    reportedly shrugged when he first stepped out of his truck and stood there with Hall screaming at
    him and Cobian’s body in plain view. Later, defendant asked Officer Ciaciura what “the girl was
    doing on the ground.” His casual obliviousness was further evidence that his perception and
    judgment were impaired.
    ¶ 40    The same might be said of his aggressive tailgating, as described by Otto. But that point
    is hardly necessary, and it adds only little to the already substantial body of evidence, both direct
    and circumstantial, that defendant was impaired.
    ¶ 41    Lastly, the opinion testimony of a police officer may be sufficient on its own to support a
    finding that a driver was impaired, if the officer has the “relevant skills, experience, or training to
    render such an opinion.” (Quotation marks omitted.) Lenz, 
    2019 IL App (2d) 180124
    , ¶ 117;
    Janik, 
    127 Ill. 2d at 402
    . Officer Ciaciura rendered that opinion here. He testified to his ample
    experience in this field and his training in the administration of field sobriety tests. The trial
    court found him credible and agreed with his conclusion. There was more than enough evidence
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    for a rational trier of fact to find that defendant was impaired, or under the influence of alcohol,
    when he crashed into Cobian’s car.
    ¶ 42   Defendant’s cursory arguments to the contrary are unconvincing. Yes, there were times
    when he managed to stand straight and walk “without support,” as he is keen to point out. But
    the fact that he was not completely falling over at every moment—or the fact that his speech was
    comprehensible—hardly shows that he was sober enough to exercise “ ‘ordinary care’ ” as a
    driver. See Gordon, 378 Ill. App. 3d at 631. Defendant holds himself to a dangerously low
    standard.
    ¶ 43   Defendant acknowledges that he “exhibited signs of impairment” during the sobriety
    tests, but he argues that those signs can all be explained away by the fact that he was 67 years old
    and purportedly suffered a head injury during the accident. As for his age, Officer Ciaciura did
    acknowledge that being 65 or older can sometimes adversely affect a person’s performance on
    the tests. As for his purported head injury, defendant points out that his windshield was cracked,
    and what appeared to be hair was stuck inside one of the cracks. That said, he denied that he was
    injured when the officer asked, and he showed no visible evidence of a head (or other) injury on
    the dash-cam video.
    ¶ 44   Whatever merit these points may have, they can only carry defendant so far. There was
    ample evidence of his impairment, aside from the fact that he failed the sobriety tests, and he
    cannot explain all of that evidence away. He not only failed the tests, he also persistently failed
    to follow instructions. He drove aggressively. He had blood-shot eyes and alcohol on his breath.
    He had an open bottle of vodka in his truck, and he threw it to the side of the road when he
    thought nobody was looking. His BAC was (still) over the legal limit later that night, after
    spending five hours in the company of the police. He lied at least twice about his drinking that
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    evening, though he eventually admitted that he was drinking before the crash. He was casual,
    almost jovial, in the aftermath of the accident, and oblivious to the gravity of the situation.
    ¶ 45   The evidence of impairment in this case, while in some instances circumstantial, came
    from all directions. And that fact, among others, readily distinguishes it from defendant’s cited
    authorities. Briefly, in People v. Clark, 
    123 Ill. App. 2d 41
    , 43-45 (1970), the defendant’s head
    went “through” the windshield; he was found “unconscious,” with a bloody head and face; and
    he was taken to the hospital. There, he was found to be “stumbling” and “swaying” and “thick-
    tongued” when he regained consciousness. In these circumstances, his defects in gait and speech
    could not reliably be attributed to the alcohol that was apparent on his breath, which meant that
    the smell of alcohol was the only evidence of impairment in the case. On its own, that is not
    enough. 
    Id.
    ¶ 46   In People v. Holtz, 
    19 Ill. App. 3d 781
     (1974), as in Clark, there was little more than the
    smell of alcohol to go on. The codefendant, Lunsford, was convicted of a DUI after Holtz, his
    passenger, grabbed the steering wheel and caused a crash. Id. at 787. According to the officer,
    Lunsford had alcohol on his breath and his movements were unsteady. Id. at 788. But Lunsford
    did not take, much less fail, any sobriety tests. And his unsteady movements could have been the
    result of his injuries: he required “emergency treatment” for a head injury and also “injured his
    knees.” Id.
    ¶ 47   So too for the defendant in People v. Winfield, 
    15 Ill. App. 3d 688
    , 689-90 (1973), who
    had alcohol on his breath and “sway[ed]” when he walked—perhaps because he was knocked
    “temporarily unconscious” and “dislocated [his] knee cap,” among other injuries to his finger,
    shoulder, and face. But here, defendant appeared uninjured and insisted that nothing prevented
    him from walking normally right before he failed the walk-and-turn test.
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    ¶ 48   The facts of People v. Wallace, 
    133 Ill. App. 2d 297
     (1971), hardly bear mention. The
    defendant “staggered” out of a restaurant, with alcohol on his breath, after crashing his car into a
    tree. Id. at 298-99. But there was undisputed evidence that he went to the restaurant to call his
    wife for a ride and “drank some beer” while he waited for her. He also lost a substantial amount
    of blood from his head wound, which also could have caused him to stagger. Id. There was no
    evidence, just “mere speculation,” that he drank anything before the crash. Id. at 299.
    ¶ 49   In sum, the evidence of impairment in this case was too substantial, and too varied, for
    defendant to explain it all away. It was sufficient to convict him of (aggravated) DUI.
    ¶ 50                                             II
    ¶ 51   Defendant also claims that the State failed to prove proximate cause. To convict
    defendant of aggravated DUI, the State had to prove that his underlying DUI offense—that is,
    his impaired driving—“was a proximate cause of [Cobian’s] death.” 625 ILCS 5/11-501(d)(1)(F)
    (West 2020). This element requires proof of causation in fact and legal causation. People v.
    Johnson, 
    392 Ill. App. 3d 127
    , 131 (2009). Causation in fact is not at issue; defendant’s claim is
    rather that his impaired driving was not a legal or proximate cause of Cobian’s death.
    ¶ 52   Legal or proximate causation is established “ ‘if an injury was foreseeable as the type of
    harm that a reasonable person would expect to see as a likely result of his or her conduct.’ ” 
    Id.
    (quoting Hooper v. County of Cook, 
    366 Ill. App. 3d 1
    , 7 (2006)).
    ¶ 53   It bears emphasis that the impaired driving must be “a proximate cause of the death.”
    (Emphasis added.) 625 ILCS 5/11-501(d)(1)(F) (West 2020). It need not be “ ‘the sole and
    immediate cause.’ ” Johnson, 392 Ill. App. 3d at 130 (quoting People v. Merritt, 
    343 Ill. App. 3d 442
    , 448 (2003)). In other words, if there were multiple proximate causes of Cobian’s death,
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    defendant will still be criminally liable for an aggravated DUI if his impaired driving was one of
    them. Comparative negligence is not a defense in a criminal case.
    ¶ 54   So defendant cannot escape criminal liability just by pointing out that pushing the car on
    a major road, in these conditions, created a foreseeable risk of collision. With all due respect to
    the deceased, it did, and thus it was one proximate cause of death. But our question is whether it
    was the only proximate cause, or whether defendant’s impaired driving also played a role for
    which he can fairly be held responsible.
    ¶ 55   To this end, defendant argues that he could not reasonably foresee that changing lanes, as
    described by Otto, would result in the crash that ensued. And that is because he could not see the
    disabled car before he changed lanes, he could not reasonably anticipate that Cobian and Powell
    would be where they were, and he could not avoid the crash, since even an unimpaired driver
    could not have reacted quickly enough once the car became visible.
    ¶ 56   First, defendant would have us conclude that he could not see the disabled car, owing to
    some combination of the slight bend in the road, the lighting conditions, and the obstruction (or
    so he says) of the car’s hazard lights by Cobian and Powell. Whatever defendant may argue on
    this score, the fact remains that Otto, for one, did see the disabled car. She could not have been
    any clearer about this, and the trial court found her credible as a witness. Specifically, Otto saw
    the car in the right lane as she approached the area of the crash in the left lane. This caused her to
    slow down and move as far to the left in her lane as she could get, to leave room between her and
    the hazard she perceived.
    ¶ 57   Defendant, for his part, was immediately behind Otto. In fact, he was close enough that
    his tailgating made her palpably uncomfortable. All of which is to say that defendant’s position,
    relative to the disabled car, was not much different from Otto’s own. And his vantage point was
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    a relatively high one, given that he was driving a pickup truck. Unless his view was nonetheless
    obstructed, it is reasonable to infer that defendant, like Otto, could see the disabled car with
    enough time to keep a safe distance. If there was any such obstruction, the record gives no hint as
    to what it may have been.
    ¶ 58    The fact that it was dark out did not prevent Otto from seeing the disabled car. (Otto had
    her headlights on, as did defendant.) Nor did the slight bend in the road. Otto did not specifically
    say whether she saw the car’s hazard lights, though she did repeatedly describe it as “disabled.”
    And Powell testified that the hazard lights were on.
    ¶ 59    Relying on the testimony of his expert, a topic to which we will return shortly, defendant
    argues that the hazard lights would not have been visible because Cobian and Powell would have
    been blocking them while pushing the car from behind. Not necessarily. Officer Kisija’s dash-
    cam video shows Cobian and Powell pushing the car into the parking lot. The hazard lights are
    sometimes visible, sometimes not. It depends on where Cobian and Powell stood, and that
    changed from moment to moment.
    ¶ 60    No amount of “expert” testimony can establish that the hazard lights were necessarily and
    completely blocked when the dash-cam video shows otherwise. Granted, this does not establish
    that the hazard lights were visible when defendant changed lanes. But his expert had no basis to
    insist that they were not. So this is no reason to infer that an alert driver, in defendant’s position,
    could not see Cobian’s car. And so far, we have found no other reason to draw that inference.
    ¶ 61    The rest of the evidence also points to the conclusion that this was not an unavoidable
    accident for a sober and alert driver. Powell estimated that “maybe 15 or so” drivers passed by in
    the short time that they pushed the car. Defendant jumps on the uncertainty of the estimate, but
    there is no reason why Powell would have been counting the passing cars, and the exact number
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    No. 1-21-0875
    is immaterial in any event. The point is that, by all accounts, there were numerous cars on this
    stretch of Lake Street; defendant himself emphasizes the “busy conditions” and “heavy traffic.”
    And the more cars that safely passed Cobian’s, the harder it is to believe that this crash was truly
    unavoidable.
    ¶ 62   Defendant argues that all the traffic safely passing by says nothing about the ability of a
    driver in his precise location to avoid the crash. After all, he says, we do not know exactly when
    or where or at what speed the other drivers passed by; nor do we even know what lane of traffic
    they were in.
    ¶ 63   Perhaps we know a little more than defendant would care to admit. This, for example: the
    other cars that passed Cobian were, by that point, all in the left lane. We know this because any
    car that tried to “pass” her in the right lane would have rear-ended her, just as defendant did.
    ¶ 64   So at some point, as a matter of necessity, the “heavy traffic” condensed into the left lane.
    Granted, we cannot know exactly when or where that happened, but it is unrealistic to suppose
    that, in one lucky coincidence after another, car after car just happened to be in or shift into the
    left lane for reasons that had nothing to do with the hazard that was plainly visible to Otto in the
    right lane. Other drivers had to be alert to it, too, which means that the hazard was in general
    visible—and avoidable.
    ¶ 65   What’s more, this traffic pattern was itself a clue that something was amiss in the right
    lane. Why else would everyone be condensing into the left lane when the right lane was open?
    (There were construction-related closures on other stretches of Lake Street, but there is no
    dispute that the right lane was open here.)
    ¶ 66   The State says that Otto’s slowing down, and her effort to get as far over as possible in
    the left lane, were two more clues of this kind. We are not so sure about the second one. Drivers
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    No. 1-21-0875
    drift in their own lanes for all sorts of reasons, and often for no reason at all, other than perhaps
    their own momentary inattentiveness. But the general point still stands, even if this particular
    piece of evidence deserves little weight: for a driver with his wits about him, Cobian’s car was
    visible and avoidable; and the overall traffic pattern should have alerted a sober and prudent
    driver that a hazard lurked in the right lane.
    ¶ 67   But defendant did not see Cobian’s car, even if Otto (and others) did. He did not take his
    cues, as he should have, from the other drivers and the flow of traffic. And he did not slow down
    when Otto did. Instead, he hit the gas, swerved sharply into the right lane, and caused a fatal
    crash. That decision to change lanes, at that moment and in these circumstances, was the result of
    impaired judgment and perception. It was a proximate cause, admittedly alongside another, of
    Cobian’s death.
    ¶ 68   On the other side of the ledger, Cowsert testified for the defense as an expert in the field
    of automobile accident reconstruction. Cowsert rendered three opinions: (1) the collision was
    unavoidable by a non-impaired driver in these conditions, (2) the sole cause of the collision was
    pushing Cobian’s car in these same conditions, and (3) Cobian and Powell would have been
    blocking the rear lights of the car. We have already said enough about the third opinion. And the
    first two ultimately come to the same thing: Cobian and Powell created a hazard that even a non-
    impaired driver could not have avoided; thus, defendant cannot fairly be held responsible for the
    crash that ensued.
    ¶ 69   Using a modeling program called the Integrated Driver Response and Research (IDRR),
    and measurements collected by the police, Cowsert offered the following analysis. The IDRR
    assigns a perception-to-reaction time of 1.8 to 2.5 seconds for a non-impaired driver, depending
    on the conditions. (Here, he said, defendant’s reaction time would have been in the 85th
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    No. 1-21-0875
    percentile, though there was no elaboration on the meaningfulness of that number.) At the speed
    limit of 45 miles per hour, that equates to 119 to 165 feet before a non-impaired driver would
    begin to take evasive action. Based on this calculation, and the assumptions about roadway
    conditions plugged into the model, Cowsert concluded that a non-impaired driver would have
    needed 185 to 231 feet to perceive, react, and avoid the collision.
    ¶ 70   But the maximum illumination for the headlights on defendant’s pickup truck, according
    to Cowsert, was 126 feet. Thus, Cobian’s car would not have been visible to defendant until it
    was too late for a non-impaired driver, driving at the speed limit, to avoid the crash.
    ¶ 71   And for what it’s worth, based on the tire marks left by the two cars, Cowsert calculated
    that defendant was driving at a maximum speed of 47.5 miles per hour and possibly less before
    he began to brake (even at the maximum rate, Cowsert said, his conclusions would stand) and
    slowed to a speed of 30.5 miles per hour at the point of impact with Cobian’s car.
    ¶ 72   Cowsert’s model is riddled with assumptions—that Cobian and Powell were walking at a
    speed of two miles per hour while pushing the car, that defendant applied the maximum force to
    his brakes, and more—that leave one wondering. The trial court was also skeptical of the
    reaction-time figures baked into the IDRR. And the court found that Cowsert generally lacked
    credibility on the witness stand. But we will put these points aside. We think there are even more
    urgent problems with Cowsert’s analysis.
    ¶ 73   For one, he assumed that defendant’s headlights were the only source of illumination on
    the road. In the same vein, defense counsel elicited testimony from Cowsert that there were no
    “sources of artificial illumination” on this stretch of Lake Street. Not quite right. There were no
    streetlights. But there was “heavy traffic”—and all the headlights that came with it. Cowsert’s
    model proceeds as if the headlights on one car, or even many cars, do nothing to illuminate the
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    No. 1-21-0875
    roadway (or its hazards) for other drivers. From the perspective of the driver in Cowsert’s model,
    a roadway full of cars is as dark as an empty one. That assumption alone renders the model
    dubious at best.
    ¶ 74   And as far as we can tell, nothing in Cowsert’s analysis shows that defendant’s decision
    to change lanes when and where he did was not itself the result of impaired and, thus, defective
    judgment. Consider this scenario: Cobian’s car was visible to someone in defendant’s position
    when he changed lanes, just as it was visible to Otto, but he did not see it because his perception
    was impaired. For all that Cowsert’s analysis can tell us, Cobian’s car may have even been
    illuminated by defendant’s own headlights at that time, to say nothing of Otto’s, since the
    analysis does not even purport to establish that defendant had to be more than 126 feet behind
    Cobian’s car when he changed lanes. Defendant could have failed to notice Cobian’s car, sped
    up when he should have slowed down, and changed lanes with insufficient time—perhaps for
    anyone, according to Cowsert’s model—to avoid the collision.
    ¶ 75   For the reasons we have discussed, a trier of fact could reasonably find that defendant’s
    lane change was an act of negligent driving that resulted from his impairment. And to repeat,
    Cowsert’s analysis does not undercut that inference or the credibility of the witnesses on whose
    testimony it was based. Putting aside its questionable assumptions, the analysis fails, even on its
    own terms, to establish that defendant’s impaired driving was not a proximate cause of the crash
    and thus Cobian’s death.
    ¶ 76   Defendant’s principal authorities on the topic of proximate cause bear little resemblance
    to the facts here. In People v. Mumaugh, 
    2018 IL App (3d) 140961
    , ¶¶ 7, 32, the defendant was
    neither impaired nor negligent in his driving; he unavoidably hit a pedestrian, despite his swift
    evasive action, when she suddenly “appeared out of nowhere” and “immediately in front of” his
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    No. 1-21-0875
    car, at night, dressed in black. These facts reveal nothing about defendant’s ability in this case to
    avoid crashing into Cobian.
    ¶ 77   The same is true of Reuter v. Korb, 
    248 Ill. App. 3d 142
     (1993). The civil defendant in
    Korb was driving on a “ ‘notoriously dark’ ” rural road (not a busy thoroughfare), when a drunk
    pedestrian in dark clothes, who had been trying to flag down cars, “suddenly” and “unexpectedly
    appeared out of nowhere,” “in the center of defendant’s lane,” about 10 feet in front of his car.
    Id. at 146, 150-52. At that distance, and at a (legal) speed of 45 miles per hour, there was no way
    for the defendant—who was driving “in a normal manner” and not negligently—to avoid hitting
    the pedestrian. Id. at 147, 152-53.
    ¶ 78   Here, nobody darted out into the road, directly in front of defendant’s car. True, Cobian
    should not have been where she was, as defendant says, but that is as far as the analogy to Korb
    and Mumaugh goes.
    ¶ 79   Lastly, in First Springfield Bank & Trust v. Galman, 
    188 Ill. 2d 252
    , 260-61 (1999), an
    illegally parked truck was not the proximate cause of the pedestrian’s death because it was not
    reasonably foreseeable that the parking violation would cause the pedestrian to ignore a marked
    crosswalk, jaywalk in front of the truck, and get hit by a car whose driver could not see her there.
    This principle of “intervening” causation has no useful application here. See 
    id. at 257
    .
    ¶ 80   In sum, the evidence was sufficient to prove both impairment and proximate causation.
    Defendant’s conviction for aggravated DUI is affirmed.
    ¶ 81                                             III
    ¶ 82   Lastly, defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of obstructing
    justice. “A person obstructs justice when, with intent to prevent the apprehension or obstruct the
    prosecution or defense of any person, he or she knowingly *** [d]estroys, alters, conceals or
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    No. 1-21-0875
    disguises physical evidence ***.” 720 ILCS 5/31-4(a)(1) (West 2020).
    ¶ 83    Under our supreme court’s precedents, the conduct required by the statute—destroying,
    altering, concealing, or disguising evidence—must also have a certain result: it must “actually
    interfere[ ] with the administration of justice.” To put the point differently, it must “materially
    impede[ ]” the investigation or prosecution of the underlying offense. People v. Comage, 
    241 Ill. 2d 139
    , 150 (2011); see also People v. Casler, 
    2020 IL 125117
    , ¶ 31.
    ¶ 84    The indictment here alleged that defendant obstructed justice when he “removed and
    discarded bottles from his vehicle” during the initial investigation of the accident. The conduct
    and intent elements of the offense were proven by the dash-cam video, the vodka bottle with
    defendant’s fingerprints on it, and the plainly obvious inference about why defendant took the
    bottle out of his truck and threw it into the bushes on the side of the road. Defendant does not
    dispute any of this. His only claim is that his conduct did not materially impede the investigation
    or the prosecution of his DUI offense.
    ¶ 85    The key precedent on this issue is Comage, 
    241 Ill. 2d 139
    . With the police in hot pursuit,
    the defendant in Comage took a crack pipe and push rod out of his pocket and threw them over a
    fence. 
    Id. at 142
    . He stopped in his tracks and was immediately apprehended, 10 to 15 feet from
    that point, when an officer threatened to tase him. 
    Id.
     It took all of 20 seconds for an officer to
    walk around the fence and retrieve the items. 
    Id. at 142, 150
    . Neither this 20-second detour, nor
    the fact that the incriminating items were so “briefly out of the officers’ sight,” had anything
    more than a de minimis effect on the officers’ investigation and thus did not materially impede it.
    
    Id. at 150
    .
    ¶ 86    Comage thus recognized that, without some materiality requirement, even the most trivial
    delay or inconsequential hurdle encountered by law enforcement could result in a conviction for
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    No. 1-21-0875
    obstruction. It is not enough to knock the police off course for a few seconds; the intent to derail
    the criminal process, in either its investigative or prosecutorial stages, must succeed in some non-
    trivial way. Law enforcement must be made to take some meaningful step that it would not have
    been required to take, if not for the defendant’s efforts to conceal or otherwise meddle with the
    evidence.
    ¶ 87   But the materiality requirement should not be overstated. It does not mean that a
    defendant is off the hook for obstruction merely because the obstruction was ultimately
    unsuccessful. A defendant is not automatically exonerated of an obstruction charge simply
    because the police found the evidence he tried to conceal; because the police still had grounds to
    arrest him, and did arrest him, before they found it; or because the State successfully prosecuted
    him for the underlying offense, with or without the evidence in question. The flaw in defendant’s
    argument is in thinking that obstructive conduct must achieve its ultimate aim of putting
    incriminating evidence out of law enforcement’s reach and, thus, successfully avoiding
    conviction, prosecution, or even arrest in the first instance. To the contrary, any obstacle thrown
    in law enforcement’s way, including one that was overcome, may be enough, as long as it was
    not something negligible, insubstantial, or trivial—like having to walk around a fence to pick up
    a piece of evidence that was tossed aside in plain view of the police. See 
    id. at 150
    .
    ¶ 88   Defendant’s other principal citation, Casler, 
    2020 IL 125117
    , does not purport to tell us
    what qualifies as a material impediment. It simply held that the materiality requirement applies
    equally to an obstruction charge based on providing false information to the police. Id. ¶ 31.
    Because the trial court thought that the State did not have to prove materiality, the jury was not
    instructed, and no evidence was received, on this issue. Thus, double jeopardy did not bar a
    retrial. Id. ¶¶ 64-67. Casler does not assist defendant.
    - 22 -
    No. 1-21-0875
    ¶ 89   Here, Officer Slocum’s dash-cam captured defendant moving various items, including a
    cooler, from the cabin to the bed of his pickup truck shortly after the crash. He then rummaged
    through those belongings, picked up a bottle, and threw it into the bushes after casting a few
    glances around at the emergency personnel. Seconds later, he took another item from the same
    spot and threw it into the bushes. It looked like another bottle, but we can table that question.
    ¶ 90   Apparently, nobody saw him do this at the time, but the officers reviewed the dash-cam
    footage the next day, went back to the scene of the accident, and found an Absolut Vodka bottle
    in the bushes. The second item—and defendant’s assertions aside, the video shows that there was
    a second item—was not found. The Illinois State Police crime lab found defendant’s fingerprints
    on the object that was recovered, the vodka bottle.
    ¶ 91   In ruling on the motion for new trial, the trial court noted that, unlike in Comage, there
    was a delay in recovering the bottle until the next day. What’s more, the police had to return to
    the scene, search the brush, and photograph and fingerprint the bottle. In the trial court’s eyes,
    these facts distinguished the case from Comage and proved that defendant materially impeded
    the investigation.
    ¶ 92   We agree that defendant’s obstructive conduct is meaningfully different from Comage
    and satisfies the relatively low threshold for materiality established in that case. Other than
    perhaps the photographing of the bottle, which presumably would have taken place regardless of
    how the police discovered it, we agree that this case presented more than a de minimis example
    of impeding law enforcement’s investigation: the delay in recovering evidence was not fleeting,
    as in Comage (the next day as opposed to 20 seconds), the police had to search for the bottle
    (versus just bending down to pick something up), and they had to return to a scene they had
    already left (as opposed to walking around an adjacent fence).
    - 23 -
    No. 1-21-0875
    ¶ 93   And the most decisive difference, in our view, is that defendant’s obstructive conduct
    also required the police to undertake an otherwise unnecessary forensic analysis—taking
    fingerprints off the bottle—to link him to the incriminating evidence that he moved and tried to
    conceal, which likely would have been unnecessary had they recovered the bottle in his vehicle.
    ¶ 94   Without the forensic fingerprinting analysis, the State could not have proven that the
    bottle that defendant tossed from his vehicle was that very vodka bottle. And the point is not just
    how long it took to test the bottle for fingerprints, but that defendant’s obstructive conduct
    required law enforcement to obtain new evidence and prove a new fact—that his fingerprints
    were on the bottle, proving that it was the same bottle once inside the cabin of his pickup and
    later discarded—so the State could introduce that incriminating evidence at trial. If that is not a
    material impediment to an investigation and prosecution, then we are at a loss to say what is.
    Defendant’s conviction for obstructing justice is thus affirmed.
    ¶ 95                                      CONCLUSION
    ¶ 96   The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    ¶ 97   Affirmed.
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    No. 1-21-0875
    People v. Olvera, 
    2023 IL App (1st) 210875
    Decision Under Review:     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 18-CR-
    16041; the Hon. Joseph M. Cataldo, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                  William Beattie, of Law Offices of William Beattie, Ltd., of
    for                        Mount Prospect, for appellant.
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                  Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Enrique
    for                        Abraham, Daniel Piwowarczyk, and Justin Erb, Assistant
    Appellee:                  State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People.
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