People v. Grano ( 1996 )


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  •                              No. 2--96--0249          

        

    ______________________________________________________________________________

                                        

                                     IN THE

      

                           APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

      

                                 SECOND DISTRICT

    ______________________________________________________________________________

      

    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE         )  Appeal from the Circuit Court

    OF ILLINOIS,                    )  of Du Page County.

                                   )

        Plaintiff-Appellee,             )

                                   )

    v.                              )  No. 94--CF--644

                                   )    

    ANTHONY GRANO,                  )  Honorable

                                   )  Thomas E. Callum,

        Defendant-Appellant.            )  Judge, Presiding.

    _______________________________________________________________________________

      

        JUSTICE THOMAS delivered the opinion of the court:

      

        Following a jury trial in the circuit court of Du Page County, the

    defendant, Anthony Grano, was convicted of criminal sexual assault (720 ILCS

    5/12--13(a)(4) (West 1994)).  The defendant was sentenced to four years in

    prison.  We reverse and remand for a new trial.   

                                      FACTS

        The facts relevant to our decision are as follows.  At the January 1996

    trial, 17-year-old K.M. testified that she first met the defendant when she

    joined his karate school, the Grano Karate School, at the age of six.  The 40-

    year-old defendant was the owner of and head instructor at the karate school.

    The defendant was K.M.'s "sensai," her teacher.  K.M. became an instructor at the

    karate school in 1993.  Late in 1993 and early in 1994, she was at the karate

    school three to five times per week.  On Tuesdays and Fridays, she was at the

    school by 4 or 5 p.m.  On Wednesdays, she was there by 7:30 p.m.  

        K.M. further testified that the defendant initiated a physical relationship

    with her during the summer of 1993.  The first instance occurred when the

    defendant drove K.M. home from the karate school.  While parked in K.M.'s

    driveway, the defendant leaned over and French-kissed K.M.  From that time

    forward, the kissing incidents became more passionate, occurring in the

    defendant's car, in his office at the karate school, and at K.M.'s house when her

    parents were away.  On one occasion, the defendant kissed K.M. while they were

    in his office at the karate school.  Because K.M.'s cousin, Jeff Gardner, was at

    the school at that time, the defendant locked the door to the office.  On another

    occasion, the defendant kissed K.M. at her house while K.M.'s friend, Tina

    O'Nash, was in the next room.  When O'Nash stepped outside to have a cigarette,

    the defendant locked the front door.  He and K.M. then engaged in kissing and

    fondling one another.  The defendant fondled K.M.'s breasts both outside and

    underneath her shirt.  On yet another occasion, the defendant and K.M. were in

    the defendant's office at the karate school.  K.M. was sitting on the desk while

    the defendant was standing between her legs.  The defendant had unbuttoned a few

    buttons on her shirt, and they were kissing.  The door suddenly opened, and

    Anthony Passo, another student at the school, walked in.  The defendant jumped

    back from K.M. and pretended there was something in her eye.          

        In addition to these incidents, K.M. testified that she and the defendant

    engaged in dry sex and that she had given him a hand job to the point of

    ejaculation while in his office.  When she and the defendant would go out for

    dinner with others from the karate school, they would sit next to one another and

    the defendant would place his jacket over his lap and their hands.  They would

    rest their hands on each others' knees and the defendant would move her hand

    toward his groin area.  

        K.M. testified that in August 1993, the defendant drove K.M. and two other

    students, 23-year-old D.J. and 15-year-old Tara Romanow, to a karate tournament

    in Tennessee.  During the ride, the defendant engaged K.M. in a graphic sexual

    conversation.

        According to K.M., in February 1994, she and the defendant were kissing in

    his office at the karate school.  He was sitting on his desk and she was standing

    between his legs.  The defendant then stuck his hand down her pants and

    penetrated her vagina with his finger.  K.M. was 15 years old at the time.  K.M.

    testified that they never engaged in oral sex.  She also testified that they

    never engaged in sexual intercourse, although the defendant had made arrangements

    to do so at a local hotel.  She stated that he called her at home to discuss the

    arrangements one time when her friend, Kim McCullough, was there.  She asked

    McCullough to pick up another extension and listen to their conversation.  In

    February 1994, they both went to the hotel along with a group of karate students,

    but did not engage in sexual intercourse.  That month, K.M. stopped attending the

    karate school.  

        K.M. testified that she eventually told her aunt what had been going on

    between her and the defendant.  K.M. agreed to allow an investigator from the Du

    Page County Children's Center to tape phone conversations between her and the

    defendant on March 11 and March 14, 1994.  The tapes were introduced at trial and

    admitted into evidence.

        Anthony Passo testified that he was a student at the Grano Karate School.

    On one occasion, he opened the closed door to the defendant's office and walked

    in.  He observed that K.M. was sitting on the desk and the defendant was standing

    close to her between her legs.  K.M.'s shirt was partially unbuttoned and her

    makeup was smeared.  Passo also testified that he saw the defendant place his

    hand on K.M.'s leg while seated at a table when the class went out for dinner.

        Kim McCullough testified that she was a student at the Grano Karate School.

    On February 10, 1994, she was at K.M.'s house; at K.M.'s request, she listened

    in on a phone conversation between K.M. and the defendant about sex.  She stated

    that she had seen the defendant place his hand on K.M.'s lap frequently while

    seated at a table when the class went out to dinner.  McCullough also testified

    that she saw K.M. go into the defendant's office alone quite a few times.  They

    would shut the door.  Once, she saw K.M. leave the office with her shirt

    unbuttoned and untucked.  K.M. immediately went to reapply her makeup in the

    bathroom.

        Tina O'Nash, a friend of K.M.'s, testified that she was at K.M.'s house in

    January 1994.  The defendant stopped over.  O'Nash heard K.M. and the defendant

    kissing and moving around on the plastic covered couches in the family room.  She

    observed that K.M. and the defendant were alone five or six times in the

    defendant's office sometimes with the door locked.  She also observed the

    defendant rub K.M.'s leg while seated at a table when they all went out to eat

    at a local restaurant.  

        At trial, Tara Romanow testified that the defendant drove her to a karate

    tournament in the summer of 1993, along with K.M. and D.J.  She stated that the

    defendant engaged them in a graphic conversation about sex and asked them not to

    tell anyone about their conversation, especially his kids.  When the class went

    out to eat at a local restaurant, she saw the defendant and K.M. holding hands

    many times underneath the table.  K.M. was often alone with the defendant in his

    office and the door would be closed.  Sometimes when K.M. exited the office, her

    shirt would be messy and she would go straight to the bathroom to reapply her

    lipstick.  According to Romanow, during a conversation between her and K.M. in

    February 1994, K.M. acknowledged having had oral sex with the defendant.

        Jeff Gardner, K.M.'s cousin, testified that he was a student at the Grano

    Karate School.  He often saw K.M. go into the defendant's office alone and close

    the door.  Once, when he tried to open the door, he found it to be locked.  When

    he went out to eat after class, many times he saw the defendant and K.M. holding

    hands under the table and noted their hands to be moving around beneath the

    defendant's jacket.  The defendant often dropped Gardner and K.M. off at K.M.'s

    home after class.  Once, the defendant came into K.M.'s home, and Gardner saw him

    kiss K.M. as she walked him out the door.

        Jeff DiGangi, a friend of the defendant, testified that from August 1993

    through February 1994, he attended classes at the Grano Karate School.  Classes

    were held at the school four days each week.  DiGangi arrived between 4 and 4:30

    p.m. and the first classes started about 5:30 p.m.  He testified that K.M. would

    show up at 5:30 p.m. when she had to instruct class or later to attend her 8:30

    p.m. class.  The door to the defendant's office was always open.  He never saw

    K.M. and the defendant alone in the office and never saw them hold hands when the

    group went out to dinner after class.  On April 14, 1994, he confronted K.M.

    about rumors he had been hearing regarding K.M. and the defendant.  K.M. denied

    having had oral sex with the defendant but confirmed that the defendant had

    "fingered" her.  DiGangi also testified that K.M. had a reputation among students

    at the school for not telling the truth.

        Several other students at the Grano Karate School testified for the

    defendant.  Denise Fessenden testified that she attended classes on Tuesdays and

    Thursdays.  She arrived between 8 and 8:30 p.m.  K.M. always arrived late to

    class.  Although the door to the defendant's office was closed at times, people

    would still enter the office without knocking.  Fessenden also testified as to

    K.M.'s reputation for lack of truthfulness.  Eric Jaegar testified that in early

    1994 he was always the first to arrive at the karate school and that K.M. never

    arrived before 6:30 p.m.  The defendant usually did not arrive until 7:30 p.m.

    Robert Mercier testified that his son had been attending the Grano Karate School

    for four years.  He usually arrived at 6 p.m.  The door to the defendant's office

    was always open.

        Kathleen Wilson, K.M.'s aunt, testified that she had a conversation with

    K.M. early in 1994 regarding allegations that K.M. had made against the

    defendant.  According to Wilson, K.M. told her that she had been involved in a

    relationship with the defendant and that he was pressuring her to do things.

    When Wilson asked if that included oral sex, K.M. responded with a shrug, which

    Wilson took to mean yes.

        Sean Contreras, the defendant's nephew by marriage and business partner,

    confronted K.M. with the rumors he had heard about her and the defendant.  K.M.

    was very upset, sobbing, and hesitant.  She told him that the defendant "went

    down my pants and touched my breasts" but vacillated in her response as to

    whether she had engaged in oral sex with the defendant.  Contreras observed K.M.

    to be alone with the defendant in his office with the door closed for 15 to 20

    minutes on two occasions.

        Robert Holguin, an investigator with the Du Page County Children's Center,

    testified that he interviewed K.M. and several other people.  According to

    Holguin, K.M. told him that she and the defendant had begun a physical

    relationship in the six or seven months prior to February 1994.  That

    relationship began with kissing, then progressed to fondling of her breasts and

    vaginal area.  Eventually, the defendant inserted his fingers into her vagina.

    The physical contacts would occur two to four times per week, at the karate

    school, in his car, and once at K.M.'s home while her parents were away.  

        The jury returned a verdict of guilty on the criminal sexual assault

    charges.  The defendant was later sentenced to four years' imprisonment.  He

    filed a timely appeal.

      

                                    ANALYSIS

        On appeal, the defendant raises seven issues for our review.  He contends

    that (1) he was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial as a result of

    prosecutorial misconduct; (2) the trial court improperly barred evidence under

    the rape shield statute; (3) the criminal sexual assault conviction must be

    reversed because the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt;

    (4) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress tape recordings of

    conversations between him and K.M.; (5) the trial court erred in denying his

    motion to dismiss the indictment because the criminal sexual assault statute is

    unconstitutionally vague; (6) the trial court abused its discretion in ruling he

    was barred from presenting impeachment evidence on hearsay grounds; and (7) the

    statutory sentencing scheme under which he was sentenced is unconstitutional.

        The defendant initially contends that he was denied his constitutional

    right to a fair trial as a result of prosecutorial misconduct.  These alleged

    instances of prosecutorial misconduct include: (1) inflammatory and prejudicial

    remarks during closing argument; (2) improper questioning and elicitation of

    answers from witnesses; and (3) improper reference to the uncontroverted nature

    of the evidence.

        We first examine the alleged inflammatory and prejudicial remarks of the

    prosecutor during closing argument.  

        A defendant is entitled to a fair trial free from prejudicial comments by

    the prosecution.  People v. Cisewski, 144 Ill. App. 3d 597, 602 (1986).

    Nevertheless, a prosecutor is generally permitted great latitude in closing

    argument, and the determination of whether this scope is exceeded depends upon

    the facts and circumstances of an individual case.  Cisewski, 144 Ill. App. 3d

    at 602.  In determining whether a prosecutor's closing comments or arguments

    constitute prejudicial error, reference must be made to the content of the

    language used, its relation to the evidence, and the effect of the argument on

    the rights of the accused to a fair and impartial trial.  People v. Bivens, 163

    Ill. App. 3d 472, 482 (1987).  Improper remarks made during closing argument

    constitute reversible error where they result in substantial prejudice to the

    defendant or serve no purpose except to inflame the jury.  People v. Terry, 99

    Ill. 2d 508, 517 (1984).  However, arguments and statements based upon the facts

    in evidence, or upon reasonable inferences therefrom, are within the scope of

    proper argument.  Terry, 99 Ill. 2d at 517.  A new trial will not be granted

    unless the prosecutorial remarks are so prejudicial as to materially contribute

    to a defendant's conviction.  People v. Collins, 127 Ill. App. 3d 236, 241

    (1984).

        In the case at bar, the defendant takes issue with comments made during the

    rebuttal closing argument by the prosecutor characterizing the defendant as

    someone who liked to have sexual contact with 15-year-old girls.  Certain of

    defense counsel's objections to the comments were sustained while others were

    overruled.  The defendant argues that the remarks unfairly prejudiced the

    defendant and served only to inflame the jury.  

        We have carefully reviewed the record and each objectionable remark.  We

    note that the trial court admonished the jury that closing arguments were not

    evidence.  With respect to the remarks to which objections were sustained, any

    potential prejudice or alleged impropriety was cured when defense counsel's

    objections were promptly sustained and the court properly instructed the jury.

    People v. Robinson, 199 Ill. App. 3d 24, 36 (1989).  With respect to the remarks

    to which objections were overruled, we find them to have been reasonable

    inferences based upon the facts in evidence and therefore to have been within the

    scope of proper argument.  Even if we had found the remarks to have been

    improper, we would not find them to be so prejudicial as to have materially

    contributed to the defendant's conviction.  See People v. Walker, 259 Ill. App.

    3d 98, 104 (1993).

        The defendant also takes issue with a comment made during the rebuttal

    closing argument by the prosecutor characterizing the defendant as someone who

    had similar inappropriate behavior with another young female, D.J.  Defense

    counsel offered no objection to the comment.  Since no objection was raised at

    trial, any error is waived.  People v. Lyles, 106 Ill. 2d 373, 392 (1985).

        We next examine the alleged improper questioning and elicitation of answers

    from witnesses by the prosecutor.

        The defendant complains of portions of the prosecution's direct examination

    of K.M. and cross-examination of defense witness, Contreras.  Specifically, the

    defendant takes issues with the prosecution's questions concerning the

    defendant's past sexual behavior with another female student at the karate

    school, D.J.  The defendant argues that the introduction of evidence suggesting

    that the defendant had a prior unlawful relationship with D.J. was highly

    prejudicial, insinuating to the jury that the defendant had a propensity to

    commit such acts, thus requiring reversal.   

        Again, we have reviewed the objectionable questions and answers elicited

    by the prosecution.  With respect to the questioning of the victim, we find any

    error to be waived since defense counsel made no objection thereto at trial.

    Lyles, 106 Ill. 2d at 392.  As to the questioning of Contreras, we note that

    defense counsel's singular objection during the questioning was sustained.

    Moreover, we do not find the objectionable question to have materially

    contributed to the defendant's conviction.  See Walker, 259 Ill. App. 3d at 104.

        We also examine the alleged improper reference by the prosecutor to the

    uncontroverted nature of the evidence.

        During closing argument, the prosecutor referred to the defendant's having

    put his finger into K.M.'s vagina.  He then stated that there "is absolutely

    uncontroverted evidence by [K.M.] that this act happened."  Defense counsel's

    objection to the remark was overruled.  The defendant now argues that this remark

    constituted reversible error because it was intended to direct the jury's

    attention to the defendant's failure to testify and to rebut K.M.'s testimony.

    The State argues that the issue has been waived and is without merit in any

    event.

        As a general rule, the failure to raise an issue in a written motion for

    a new trial results in a waiver of that issue on appeal.  People v. Enoch, 122

    Ill. 2d 176, 186 (1988).  Having reviewed the defendant's amended motion for a

    new trial, we agree with the State that the defendant has failed to raise this

    issue below.  The motion for a new trial does not specify the particular defect

    now raised on appeal.  Accordingly, we deem this issue waived.  Had we not deemed

    this issue waived, we would, nevertheless, resolve the issue in favor of the

    State.

        A defendant has a constitutional right not to testify, and the prosecution

    is forbidden from referring either directly or indirectly to the defendant's

    failure to testify.  People v. Brown, 253 Ill. App. 3d 165, 175-76 (1993).

    However, the prosecution may refer to the uncontradicted nature of the evidence,

    even where the defendant is the only person who could have contradicted the

    evidence.  People v. Romero, 189 Ill. App. 3d 749, 757 (1989).  The test to

    determine whether or not a defendant's right not to testify has been violated by

    prosecutorial comments is whether the remarks were calculated to draw attention

    to the defendant's failure to testify.  Lyles, 106 Ill. 2d at 390.  

        Nothing here indicates that there was a calculated effort by the prosecutor

    to highlight the defendant's failure to testify.  No direct reference was made

    to the fact that he did not testify.  Furthermore, the reference to the

    uncontroverted nature of the testimonial evidence by K.M. was permissible and did

    not amount to an indirect reference to the failure of the defendant to testify.

        The second contention of the defendant on appeal is that the trial court

    improperly utilized the rape shield statute to bar testimonial evidence that K.M.

    made prior allegations of sexual activity with other men and that such activity

    never occurred.

        Prior to trial in the underlying action, defense counsel advised the court

    that he wished to impeach the victim with the testimony of certain witnesses,

    three witnesses who would testify that the victim told them that she had sex with

    three other adult men, and three witnesses (the other adult men) who would

    testify that they never had sex with the victim.  The State filed a motion in

    limine to prohibit this questioning.  Acknowledging the defendant's right to

    confrontation, the trial judge noted that in prosecutions for criminal sexual

    assault the victim's prior sexual activity or reputation is generally

    inadmissible under section 115--7 of Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963.  725

    ILCS 5/115--7(a) (West Supp. 1995).  Finding no applicable exception to this

    general rule, the trial judge granted the motion in limine.

        The rape shield statute provides that, in prosecutions for criminal sexual

    assault, the prior sexual activity or the reputation of the alleged victim is

    inadmissible except as evidence concerning the past sexual conduct of the alleged

    victim with the accused or when constitutionally required to be admitted.  725

    ILCS 5/115--7(a) (West Supp. 1995).  Here, the trial court interpreted "sexual

    activity or the reputation" of the alleged victim to include prior accusations

    by K.M. of sexual misconduct toward her by other men.

        In this case, defense counsel made no representation that the complainant

    had engaged in previous sexual activities.  Defense counsel sought only to

    introduce evidence of the prior allegedly false statements for impeachment

    purposes and advised the court of his intent.  The statute clearly was not

    designed to preclude the admission of all evidence relating to sex.  We believe

    that the legislature intended to exclude the actual sexual history of the

    complainant, not prior accusations of the complainant.  Language or conversation

    does not constitute sexual activity.  This is the same rationale utilized by the

    appellate court in State v. Baron, 58 N.C. App. 150, 292 S.E.2d 741 (1982), in

    determining the identical issue of whether evidence that a complainant had

    falsely accused others of improper sexual advances on previous occasions was

    admissible under a rape victim shield statute.  Since there was no contention

    that the complainant ever engaged in sexual activity, there was no need to invoke

    the statute to prevent the disclosure of K.M.'s prior statements accusing others

    of improper sexual behavior toward her.  Defense counsel should have been allowed

    to introduce the evidence in order to attack the credibility of the complainant.

        Relying on People v. Alexander, 116 Ill. App. 3d 855 (1983), the prosecutor

    argues that the rape shield statute was properly applied to bar the subject

    testimonial evidence.  In Alexander, the Appellate Court, First District, noted

    that, while the general rule is that a witness' credibility may not be impeached

    by specific acts of misconduct, other jurisdictions have made an exception where

    the complainant has made prior false allegations.  Alexander, 116 Ill. App. 3d

    at 860.  Other jurisdictions have required that either the complaining witness

    admitted the falsity of the prior charges or that the charges have been

    disproved.  Alexander, 116 Ill. App. 3d at 861.  We find the prosecutor's

    reliance on Alexander to be misplaced.  In Alexander, defense counsel wanted to

    cross-examine the complainant concerning two prior rape charges which she had

    made.  The complaining witness did not admit the falsity of the prior charges.

    Moreover, the prior accusations were not proved false.  One of the prior

    accusations terminated in a finding of no probable cause; the other culminated

    in two hung juries.  The hung juries indicate only that the State did not prove

    its case beyond a reasonable doubt.  Likewise, the finding of no probable cause

    is silent on the reason for said finding.  Conversely, the defendant in the

    instant case sought to specifically prove false allegations through testimony.

        We grant the defendant a new trial based on the trial court's erroneous

    application of the rape shield statute to the facts of this case.  However, we

    elect to address the defendant's remaining assignments of error since they are

    likely to arise at a retrial.

        The third contention of the defendant on appeal is that the criminal sexual

    assault conviction must be reversed because the State failed to prove him guilty

    beyond a reasonable doubt.

        The defendant was convicted of criminal sexual assault under section 12--

    13(a)(4) of the Criminal Code of 1961, which provides:

             "The accused commits criminal sexual assault if he or she:

                                      * * *

             (4) commits an act of sexual penetration with a victim who was at

        least 13 years of age but under 18 years of age when the act was committed

        and the accused was 17 years of age or over and held a position of trust,

        authority or supervision in relation to the victim."  720 ILCS 5/12--

        13(a)(4) (West 1994).

        A conviction must be based upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt.  People

    v. Foules, 258 Ill. App. 3d 645, 653 (1993).  The reviewing court's duty is not

    to ask itself whether it believes the evidence establishes guilt, but whether the

    evidence viewed in a light most favorable to the prosecution would allow any

    rational trier of fact to find the essential elements of the crime proved beyond

    a reasonable doubt.  Foules, 258 Ill. App. 3d at 653.  A reviewing court may not

    substitute its judgment for that of the trier of fact on questions involving the

    weight of the evidence or the credibility of the witnesses.  People v. Winfield,

    113 Ill. App. 3d 818, 826 (1983).  Reversal of a conviction is required only

    where the defendant can show that the evidence is so unsatisfactory or improbable

    as to create a reasonable doubt of the defendant's guilt.  People v. Murray, 194

    Ill. App. 3d 653, 656 (1990).

        In the case at hand, K.M. testified that when she was 15 years old, the 38-

    year-old defendant inserted his finger into her vagina.  The only eyewitnesses

    to the alleged act of penetration were K.M. and the defendant.  The defendant

    contends that K.M.'s testimony was inconsistent and contradicted, serving to

    totally undermine the credibility of her testimony such that it could not be

    relied upon to convict him of the charged offense.  

        The defendant notes that the statement which K.M. gave to the investigator

    was inconsistent with her trial testimony concerning whether the defendant placed

    one or more fingers in her vagina.  The defendant also notes that what K.M. told

    Romanow and Contreras was inconsistent with her trial testimony concerning

    whether she and the defendant had engaged in oral sex.  While we cannot negate

    the existence of such inconsistencies, we find that the discrepancies were not

    substantial and did not detract from the reasonableness of K.M.'s testimony as

    a whole.

        The defendant additionally argues that K.M.'s testimony was contradicted

    with respect to whether she and the defendant ever were alone in his office with

    the door closed and whether she and the defendant sat next to one another and

    touched underneath the table when the class went out to dinner.  On the other

    hand, the State points to the testimony of numerous witnesses who corroborated

    K.M.'s accounts of graphic sexual conversations with the defendant, touching in

    public dining establishments, kissing while at K.M.'s home, and private meetings

    in the defendant's office.

        Here, the outcome of the case rested upon the credibility of one of the

    only eyewitnesses to the act of penetration in question, K.M.  It is well settled

    that a conviction may rest upon the testimony of a single witness, if positive

    and credible, even where contradicted by the accused.  Murray, 194 Ill. App. 3d

    at 656.  The jury, as trier of fact, was fully aware of the inconsistencies in

    and contradictions to K.M.'s testimony.  Nevertheless, it chose to believe her

    version of the events leading up to and including the act of penetration.  Under

    these circumstances, we find that a rational trier of fact could have found the

    defendant guilty of criminal sexual assault beyond a reasonable doubt.  

        A fourth contention of the defendant on appeal is that the trial court

    erred in denying his motion to suppress tape recordings of conversations between

    him and K.M. because the application for the telephonic eavesdropping order (1)

    was not supported by reasonable cause and (2) was unlawful.

        This court has previously stated that suppression is required only where

    there is a failure to satisfy any of the statutory requirements which directly

    and substantially implement the legislative intent to limit the use of

    eavesdropping procedures.  People v. Ellis, 122 Ill. App. 3d 900, 904 (1984).

        We first examine whether there was reasonable cause for authorization of

    the eavesdropping device.  Section 108A--4 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of

    1963 provides that a judge may authorize the use of an eavesdropping device when

    he finds that one party to the conversation has consented to the use of the

    device, there is reasonable cause for believing that an individual is committing,

    has committed, or is about to commit a felony, and there is reasonable cause for

    believing that particular conversations concerning the felony will be obtained

    through use of the eavesdropping device.  725 ILCS 5/108A--4 (West 1994).  The

    term "reasonable cause" as used in the statute is established when the totality

    of the facts and circumstances existing at the time are sufficient to warrant the

    belief by a person of reasonable conscience that an offense has been, is being,

    or will be committed.  People v. White, 209 Ill. App. 3d 844, 876 (1991).  This

    court has taken the position that the application for an eavesdropping order

    should be viewed in a commonsense fashion, and neither proof beyond a reasonable

    doubt that a crime has been committed nor a prima facie case need be established;

    rather, only a probability of criminal activity need to be shown.  People v.

    Stewart, 161 Ill. App. 3d 99, 105 (1987).  The issuing judge's conclusions

    regarding the existence of reasonable cause are to be accorded great deference

    by subsequent judges in reviewing his actions.  Stewart, 161 Ill. App. 3d at 105.

        We have reviewed the State's application for the order authorizing use of

    the eavesdropping device.  We find the totality of the facts and circumstances

    existing at the time of the application was sufficient to establish reasonable

    cause for believing that the defendant had committed a felony against K.M. and

    for believing that conversations concerning the felony would be obtained through

    use of the eavesdropping device.   

        We next examine whether the application for issuance of the eavesdropping

    device was lawful.  The defendant contends that it was unlawful because it was

    not authorized by the State's Attorney.  On the other hand, the State contends

    that the application was lawful because the application was authorized by an

    assistant State's Attorney in the absence of the State's Attorney.

        Section 108A--1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 expressly

    provides: "The State's Attorney may authorize an application to a circuit judge

    *** [for] an order authorizing or approving the use of an eavesdropping device

    ***."  725 ILCS 5/108A--1 (West 1994).  The defendant argues that the word "The"

    in the statute shows a legislative intention that only the State's Attorney can

    authorize application for use of an eavesdropping device.  In light of the

    decision of the Appellate Court, First District, in People v. Silver, 151 Ill.

    App. 3d 156 (1986), we disagree.  In Silver, the defendant offered a similar

    argument to that asserted now on appeal.  The appellate court found the signing

    of the application by an assistant State's Attorney after a good-faith attempt

    to contact the State's Attorney to be merely a technical violation of the

    statute.  Silver, 151 Ill. App. 3d at 159.  Where the State's Attorney was

    unavailable, the appellate court refused to find that such a technical violation

    undermined the purpose of the statute, which is to protect individual privacy

    against unwarranted invasions.  Silver, 151 Ill. App. 3d at 159.

        In the case at hand, an assistant State's Attorney signed the authorization

    for application and order approving use of the eavesdropping device.  While the

    assistant State's Attorney erroneously signed his name on the signature line for

    the State's Attorney rather than in the space below, the authorization expressly

    states that the signature was in the absence of the State's Attorney.  Since the

    State's Attorney was unavailable, we find the signing of the application by an

    assistant State's Attorney to have been merely a technical violation of the

    statute.

        The fifth contention of the defendant on appeal is that the trial court

    erred in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment because the criminal sexual

    assault statute is unconstitutionally vague, resulting in a denial of due

    process.

        The defendant first maintains that section 12--13(a)(4) of the Criminal

    Code of 1961 (720 ILCS 5/12--13(a)(4) (West 1994)) is so vague it renders the

    statute unconstitutional in general.  We disagree.

        When a penal statute which does not involve first amendment freedoms is

    challenged as unconstitutionally vague on its face, courts will invalidate the

    statute only if no standard of conduct is specified at all.  Smith v. Goguen, 415

    U.S. 566, 578, 39 L. Ed. 2d 605, 614-15, 94 S. Ct. 1242, 1249-50 (1974); People

    v. Taylor, 138 Ill. 2d 204, 211 (1990).  In other words, to sustain a facial

    challenge, the defendant must demonstrate that the law is incapable of any valid

    application.  People v. Haywood, 118 Ill. 2d 263, 270 (1987).  

        In this case, the defendant does not contend that section 12--13(a)(4)

    infringes upon any right protected by the first amendment, nor do we discern any

    such infringement.  We must therefore consider whether the statute is capable of

    any valid application.  In People v. Secor, 279 Ill. App. 3d 389 (1996), the

    Appellate Court, Third District, faced a similar challenge to the general

    constitutionality of section 12--13(a)(4) on vagueness grounds.  It found the

    application of the statute to be unquestioned in circumstances such as those

    involving baby sitters, teachers, day-care workers, priests and ministers, scout

    leaders and a host of other positions of trust, authority or supervision.  Secor,

    279 Ill. App. 3d at 395.  Accordingly, it did not find the statute facially

    invalid.  In keeping with that decision, we do not find the statute to be

    unconstitutionally vague on its face.          

        The defendant further maintains that section 12--13(a)(4) is

    unconstitutional as applied to him in the present case.  Again, we disagree.  

        Under section 12--13(a)(4), the State is required to prove that the

    defendant "held a position of trust, authority or supervision in relation to the

    victim" when committing an act of sexual penetration.  720 ILCS 5/12--13(a)(4)

    (West 1994).  The indictment in this case charged that defendant "held, as a

    [k]arate instructor of [K.M.], a position of supervision in relation to [K.M.]."

    The defendant claims that the term "supervision" as utilized in the statute is

    vague and undefined; thus, it fails to give fair notice of what conduct is

    prohibited and provides no standards to guide police, judges, and juries in

    determining when the statute is violated.

         Statutes enjoy a presumption of constitutionality.  People v. Caffrey, 97

    Ill. 2d 526, 530 (1983).  Due process does not require impossible levels of

    specificity; instead, a statute must convey sufficiently definite warnings that

    can be understood when measured by common understanding and practice.  Secor, 279

    Ill. App. 3d at 395-96.  

        Here, the defendant correctly points out that the term "supervision" is not

    defined in the statute.  However, undefined words in a statute are presumed to

    have their ordinary and popularly understood meanings.  People v. Anderson, 148

    Ill. 2d 15, 28 (1992).  In denying the defendant's motion to dismiss the

    indictment, the trial judge stated, "I think the cases are quite clear that

    supervision has a meaning that everybody can understand."  Indeed, "supervision"

    has been defined as involving the act of overseeing or inspection.  Secor, 279

    Ill. App. 3d at 396.  Moreover, in arguments on the defendant's original motion

    to dismiss the indictment, defense counsel acknowledged that "supervision is

    something that can be [objectively] determined."       We believe the term is

    sufficiently definite to warn a defendant of the type of conduct that is

    prohibited and to channel the discretion of police, judges, and juries.  See

    Secor, 279 Ill. App. 3d at 396.  We find that section 12--13(a)(4) is not

    unconstitutionally vague as applied to this defendant.

        A sixth contention of the defendant on appeal is that the trial court

    abused its discretion in ruling he was barred from presenting impeachment

    evidence on hearsay grounds.

        The admission of evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial

    court, and its ruling should not be reversed absent a clear showing of abuse of

    that discretion.  People v. McCarthy, 213 Ill. App. 3d 873, 881 (1991).  

        In the case at hand, defense counsel called Robert Holguin, investigator

    with the Du Page County Children's Center, as a defense witness.  Holguin's

    investigation of the charges against the defendant led to the defendant's

    eventual indictment.  Holguin testified that he interviewed K.M. and several

    others.  When asked whether during the course of his interviews with K.M. she had

    ever given him different versions of the events that had transpired between K.M.

    and the defendant, he replied in the negative.  Defense counsel next called the

    defendant's wife to the stand.  In an offer of proof, defense counsel informed

    the court that he would seek to elicit testimony from the defendant's wife that

    Holguin previously had told her that he could not get the same story twice out

    of K.M.  Defense counsel also informed the court that it could offer similar

    testimony from another witness previously called on behalf of the defendant.  The

    State objected to the proposed line of questioning directed at the defendant's

    wife on hearsay grounds.  The State argued that the prosecutor was seeking to get

    into evidence a statement allegedly made by Holguin characterizing K.M. as a liar

    under the guise of impeachment of Holguin.  The trial court sustained the State's

    objection to the line of questioning.

        Supreme Court Rule 238(a) provides that the credibility of a witness may

    be attacked by any party, including the party calling the witness.  134 Ill. 2d

    R. 238(a).  As a general rule, such an attack may be accomplished by impeaching

    the witness with evidence of a prior inconsistent statement.  People v. Cruz, 162

    Ill. 2d 314, 358 (1994).  The defendant argues that the trial court improperly

    prevented the impeachment of Holguin by prior inconsistent statements allegedly

    made to two defense witnesses.  

        Hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the

    matter asserted and is generally inadmissible unless it falls within an exception

    to the rule.  Laughlin v. France, 241 Ill. App. 3d 185, 192 (1993).  In criminal

    cases, evidence of a statement made by a witness is not made inadmissible by the

    hearsay rule if (1) it is inconsistent with the witness' trial testimony; (2) the

    witness is subject to cross-examination at trial; (3) the statement explains an

    event within the personal knowledge of the witness; and (4) the witness

    acknowledged at trial that he had made the prior inconsistent statement.  People

    v. Coleman, 187 Ill. App. 3d 541, 547 (1989).

        In this case, the prior statements alleged to have been by Holguin were

    being offered not simply to impeach Holguin but to prove the truth of the matter

    asserted, that K.M. was lying about her version of the events in question.  The

    alleged prior statements are made inadmissible by the hearsay rule because at

    trial Holguin denied having made the statements.  We find the trial court did not

    abuse its discretion in barring introduction of the statements.   

        The final contention of the defendant on appeal is that the statutory

    sentencing scheme under which he was sentenced is unconstitutional.

        A statute has a strong presumption of constitutionality, and the burden of

    showing its invalidity is on the party challenging the enactment.  People v. La

    Pointe, 88 Ill. 2d 482, 499 (1981).

        The defendant first contends that section 5--5--3 of the Unified Code of

    Corrections (730 ILCS 5/5--5--3(c)(2)(H), (e) (West Supp. 1995)) is

    unconstitutional because it violates the proscription against disproportionality.

        Courts are reluctant to invalidate penalties set by the legislature.

    People v. Bryant, 128 Ill. 2d 448, 456 (1989).  The constitutional guarantee of

    proportionate penalties is violated where the penalty prescribed for an offense

    is greater than the penalty prescribed for a more serious offense.  People v.

    Tucker, 264 Ill. App. 3d 923, 925 (1994).  Legislative judgment will be

    interfered with only if the punishment is cruel, degrading, or so wholly

    disproportionate to the offense committed as to shock the moral sense of the

    community.  People v. McGee, 257 Ill. App. 3d 229, 235-36 (1993), citing People

    v. Gonzales, 25 Ill. 2d 235, 240 (1962).

        Here, the defendant received a mandatory four-year term of imprisonment for

    the criminal sexual assault conviction.  The defendant argues that the sentencing

    scheme is disproportionate to the nature of the offense.  We note that the

    defendant does not argue, as is commonly done in cases involving claims of

    disproportionality, that the offense for which he was punished resulted in a

    sentence which is more severe than that imposed for a greater offense.  Focusing

    solely then on the penalty for criminal sexual assault of a minor, while we

    acknowledge that a mandatory sentence of four years' imprisonment is a strong

    penalty, we cannot say that the penalty fixed in this case is disproportionate

    to the nature of the offense.

        The defendant also contends that section 5--5--3 of the Unified Code of

    Corrections (730 ILCS 5/5--5--3(c)(2)(H), (e) (West Supp. 1995)) is

    unconstitutional because it deprives him of equal protection.    Under

    subsection (c)(2)(H) of the statute in question, criminal sexual assault is a

    nonprobational offense unless the offender meets the criteria of subsection (e)

    and "was a family member of the victim at the time of the commission of the

    offense."  730 ILCS 5/5--5--3(c)(2)(H), (e) (West Supp. 1995).  Section 12--12

    of the Criminal Code of 1961 defines family member as "a parent, grandparent, or

    child, whether by whole blood, half-blood or adoption and includes a step-

    grandparent, step-parent or step-child *** [or], where the victim is a child

    under 18 years of age, an accused who has resided in the household with such

    child continuously for at least one year."  720 ILCS 5/12--12(c) (West 1994).   

        In the present case, the defendant argues that his right to equal

    protection is violated by this statute because it prohibits him from probation

    as a nonfamily member of the victim, but it allows probation for the criminal

    sexual assault offender who is a family member of the victim.

        The equal protection clauses of the United States and Illinois

    Constitutions do not guarantee that all persons will be treated equally; they

    require only that there be a rational basis for a legislative classification that

    differentiates between persons similarly situated.  People v. Blackorby, 146 Ill.

    2d 307, 318 (1992).  If any set of facts may be reasonably conceived which would

    justify the classification by the State, it must be upheld.  People v. McCabe,

    49 Ill. 2d 338, 340-41 (1971); People v. Toliver, 251 Ill. App. 3d 1092, 1099

    (1993).

        We therefore must determine whether any rational basis exists to justify

    the allowance of probation for the criminal assault offender who is a family

    member of the victim as contrasted to the outright denial of probation for the

    nonfamily member offender.  In People v. Robertson, 168 Ill. App. 3d 132 (1988),

    the Appellate Court, First District, faced a similar challenge to the

    constitutionality of section 5--5--3 on equal protection grounds.  The court

    determined that a rational basis for the statute could be the legislature's

    determination that probation should be offered as an alternative where the sexual

    offense has occurred within the family unit in an effort to keep the family

    intact and minimize the disruption to the other members.  Robertson, 168 Ill.

    App. 3d at 137.  In People v. Madura, 257 Ill. App. 3d 735, 739 (1994), this

    court recognized that subsection 5--5--3(e) was designed to allow latitude to the

    trial court in considering the impact upon the child of a sentence against a

    family member.  We find such latitude important even where the offender is simply

    a person who has continuously resided in the victim's household for at least one

    year.  

        We conclude that section 5--5--3 of the Unified Code of Corrections (730

    ILCS 5/5--5--3(c)(2)(H), (e) (West Supp. 1995)) is constitutional and does not

    violate defendant's right to equal protection.      

                                   CONCLUSION

        For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the defendant's conviction, and the

    cause is remanded for a new trial.

        Reversed and remanded.

        McLAREN, P.J., and BOWMAN, J., concur.