People v. Little , 432 Ill. Dec. 225 ( 2018 )


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  • No. 1-15-1954
    
    2018 IL App (1st) 151954
                                                                                  FIRST DISTRICT
    THIRD DIVISION
    September 28, 2018
    No. 1-15-1954
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                 )             Appeal from the
    )             Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                           )             Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                   )             No. 12 C6 60111
    )
    JERMON LITTLE,                                       )             Honorable
    )             Brian Flaherty,
    Defendant-Appellant.                          )             Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Howse concurred in the judgment and
    opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Defendant Jermon Little was convicted after a bench trial of aggravated battery of a
    peace officer (720 ILCS 5/12-3.05(d)(4) (West 2012)) and criminal damage to government-
    supported property (id. § 21-1.01). On appeal, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to
    sustain these convictions. And he contends that the trial court’s premature finding of guilt,
    announced before counsel was permitted to argue the case, denied him his constitutional right to
    make a closing argument.
    ¶2     But this case has an uncommon (albeit not unique) twist: The trial court acknowledged its
    inadvertent error, reopened the case after judgment, and promised to “keep an open mind” while
    hearing counsel’s (admittedly belated) argument. In the end, the trial court stood by its initial
    conclusion—that the three police officers who testified for the State were more credible than
    defendant and two relatives who testified on his behalf—and reaffirmed its findings of guilt.
    1
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶3      The question thus presented is whether—and if so, under what circumstances—reopening
    a bench trial after a premature judgment preserves a defendant’s constitutional right to make a
    closing argument. We hold that reopening the case preserves this right, unless the record shows
    that the trial judge was unable or unwilling to give defense counsel’s belated argument all due
    consideration before finalizing its judgment(s) of guilt.
    ¶4      The record here reveals quite the opposite. And the trial court could reasonably find that
    the testifying officers were more credible than defendant and his witnesses. We therefore affirm
    defendant’s convictions.
    ¶5                                       BACKGROUND
    ¶6      The charges in this case arose from a confrontation between defendant and three officers
    of the Burnham Police Department, on January 8, 2012, in the parking lot of a sports bar. The
    details of that confrontation were thoroughly disputed at trial. Chief Belos, and Officers Bolin
    and Russell, testified to one version of events for the State. Defendant, his sister, and his niece
    testified to another.
    ¶7      Around 2:00 a.m., Chief Belos drove through the parking lot of the bar while on routine
    patrol. He testified that he saw defendant and a woman walking through the lot, having a “heated
    argument” and a “pushing and shoving match.” He called for backup and parked his car. As he
    approached defendant and the woman on foot, he identified himself and asked what they were
    arguing about. Defendant separated himself from the shoving match and walked toward the front
    door of the bar.
    ¶8      Chief Belos followed defendant to the door and ordered him to remove his left hand from
    underneath his coat, fearing that he may have been holding a gun. Defendant refused and walked
    2
    No. 1-15-1954
    back to the center of the parking lot. Chief Belos followed him and repeated his order five or six
    times. Defendant refused to comply, so Chief Belos eventually grabbed his arm. Defendant broke
    free and ran back toward the front door of the bar.
    ¶9      Chief Belos followed defendant back to the door, where defendant eventually removed
    his hand from underneath his coat. He was holding an open beer bottle. Chief Belos asked him
    what the argument was about. Defendant erupted in profanity and tried to walk away again.
    ¶ 10   In the meantime, a crowd of people had gathered around. Chief Belos asked defendant to
    step over to his vehicle, away from the crowd, to talk about the argument. Instead, defendant hit
    Chief Belos in his left shoulder. At that very moment, Officers Bolin and Russell were arriving.
    ¶ 11   Officers Bolin and Russell testified that that they arrived at the same time but in separate
    cars. They both parked at the edge of the lot and approached, on foot, a crowd that included
    defendant, Chief Belos, and 8 to 12 other people surrounding them. Defendant was wrangling
    with Chief Belos. Officer Bolin testified that Chief Belos was holding defendant by the arm or
    jacket, but defendant pulled away and pushed Chief Belos. Officer Russell testified that he saw
    Chief Belos “fall back,” but he could not be sure, from his vantage point, if Chief Belos was
    pushed in the arm or punched in the mouth.
    ¶ 12   As they approached, Officers Bolin and Russell identified themselves, and Chief Belos
    instructed them to arrest defendant. They tried, but defendant resisted. He was combative, drunk,
    and shouting defiant profanities at the officers. While Officers Bolin and Russell struggled with
    defendant, Chief Belos turned his attention to the rest of the crowd, which had grown loud and
    unruly, and called for additional backup.
    ¶ 13   Officer Bolin grabbed defendant’s arm, but he pulled away and started to run. Officer
    Bolin caught up with defendant, grabbed him from behind, and tried to cuff him. By this time,
    3
    No. 1-15-1954
    they were near a storefront window in the strip mall where the bar was located. Defendant
    lunged backward forcefully, ramming Officer Bolin’s back into the plate-glass window. The
    window cracked but did not fully break. Defendant then fell to the ground, face-forward, and
    Officer Bolin fell on top of or next to him. Officer Bolin tried again to cuff him, but defendant
    kept kicking, punching, and pulling away. At least one of defendant’s kicks landed, striking
    Officer Bolin in the shin.
    ¶ 14    Officer Russell warned defendant that he would be tased if he kept resisting. Defendant
    did just that, so Officer Russell gave him a “drive stun” to the arm. (That is, he held his taser to
    defendant but did not put the prongs into him—a method, he testified, that delivers a lower-level
    jolt.) Apart from that, Officer Russell testified, he never struck defendant in any way.
    ¶ 15   Officer Bolin testified that the rest of the crowd was “beating on” him and Officer
    Russell the whole time, hitting them from behind while they tried to subdue defendant.
    ¶ 16   After defendant was tased, Officer Bolin handcuffed him, put him in the back of his
    squad car, and drove him to the station. According to Officer Bolin, defendant kicked out the
    rear passenger-side window of the car. Chief Belos testified that when he saw Officer Bolin’s car
    at the station, one of the rear windows was broken and the frame around the window was bent;
    earlier in the evening, when he saw Officer Bolin on patrol, the window was intact.
    ¶ 17   Officer Bolin testified that he did not notice any injuries to defendant at the station.
    ¶ 18   Defendant, his niece Kandis McMiller, and his sister Tasheena Givens testified to a very
    different version of events.
    ¶ 19   Defendant and his family had gathered at the bar to celebrate his niece Lanique’s
    birthday. Givens was escorted out of the bar by security guards after lighting a cigarette inside.
    McMiller and defendant went outside to talk to her. Defendant testified that McMiller left them
    4
    No. 1-15-1954
    at some point, but he was still talking to Givens when the police arrived. He testified that “I
    guess we were loud because I’m telling her to calm down.”
    ¶ 20   Twenty or more other people, according to the defense witnesses, had also gathered in the
    parking lot by the time the police arrived. McMiller testified that the scene was peaceful, and that
    nobody was arguing. Givens testified that there was a “confrontation” brewing in another “group
    of girls” in the lot, and that the “whole lot was lit up like fireworks with noise.”
    ¶ 21   The defense witnesses estimated that upwards of a dozen police cars descended upon the
    lot. One of the officers drove past Givens and defendant, with his window rolled down, and said
    “come here.” They walked away because they didn’t think the officer was talking to them. The
    officer got out of his car, walked over, and said, “You heard me talking to you.”
    ¶ 22   Without any warning, that officer—whom defendant identified as Officer Russell—hit
    defendant in the face with his baton. The defense witnesses all denied that defendant said
    anything to Officer Russell or made any contact with him before he hit defendant. Defendant
    either fell to his knees or was thrown to the ground by Officer Russell. He was bleeding heavily
    from his mouth.
    ¶ 23   While defendant was on the ground, Officer Russell handcuffed and tased him several
    times in the back. Officer Russell then pulled defendant back up and tased him again, this time in
    his chest, while walking him to the squad car. Whenever defendant was tased, he foamed from
    his mouth, and his eyes rolled back in his head.
    ¶ 24   Givens and McMiller testified that the police also tased and arrested several other family
    members, including Givens. According to Givens, the police “just went berserk on people.”
    ¶ 25   Defendant denied that he touched or said anything to Officer Russell. He denied pushing
    Officer Bolin into the storefront window or breaking the window of the squad car. He testified
    5
    No. 1-15-1954
    that he never had his hand underneath his coat, and that nobody ever told him to remove his hand
    from his coat.
    ¶ 26   Defendant introduced into evidence four photos depicting the injuries allegedly inflicted
    by Officer Russell. Three of those photos, defendant’s Exhibits 1 through 3 (all dated January 11,
    2012, three days after the incident), depict swelling on his face and lip. Exhibit 4 (dated January
    18, 2012, ten days after the incident), he claims, depicts the area on his chest where he was tased.
    Defendant did not offer any photos of the areas on his back where allegedly he was tased.
    ¶ 27   After the defense rested, the trial court continued the case, so the judge could review his
    notes and the trial transcripts. The court did not hear closing arguments at that time.
    ¶ 28   When the case was eventually recalled on December 12, 2014 (nearly three months after
    the close of evidence), the trial court immediately announced its findings. The court found that
    the case boiled down to a credibility contest; that the officers testified credibly; and that
    defendant’s relatives “had a motive not to be truthful” on the stand.
    ¶ 29   The trial court found defendant guilty of several counts of aggravated battery of a peace
    officer. The counts were all based on making physical contact of an insulting or provoking nature
    with Chief Belos or Officer Bolin; defendant was acquitted of the counts charging him with
    causing bodily harm to the officers. The trial court also found defendant guilty of one count of
    criminal damage to government-supported property.
    ¶ 30   As soon as the court announced its findings, defense counsel pointed out that the court
    had not heard closing arguments. After some discussion, the court conceded its error and offered
    counsel a chance to argue, promising “that I will keep an open mind.” Counsel then made his
    argument, which focused on the failure of the bar’s security guards to testify. The State waived
    both its closing argument and rebuttal.
    6
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 31   The trial court reiterated its findings of guilt after hearing counsel’s belated argument. As
    the judge explained, “I spent probably—probably six or seven hours going over this case in my
    mind, again reviewing everything that I have, and my opinion does not change after your closing
    argument.” The judge apologized to counsel for not letting him argue the case first, but added,
    again, that “nothing that you said, [counsel], would have changed my mind.”
    ¶ 32   The trial court merged the various counts of aggravated battery to a peace officer into two
    (one for each victim), and sentenced defendant—who had no prior felony convictions and was
    gainfully employed—to two years’ probation.
    ¶ 33                                        ANALYSIS
    ¶ 34                                          I
    ¶ 35   Defendant first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his convictions for
    aggravated battery of a peace officer and criminal damage to government-supported property.
    ¶ 36   In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we ask whether a rational trier of fact,
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, could have found the essential
    elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Wright, 
    2017 IL 119561
    , ¶ 70;
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979). In applying this standard, we draw all reasonable
    inferences in favor of the State. People v. Beauchamp, 
    241 Ill. 2d 1
    , 8 (2011). And we afford
    great deference to the trial court’s findings on witness credibility, the weight to be given certain
    testimony, the balancing of conflicting evidence, and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from
    the evidence. Wright, 
    2017 IL 119561
    , ¶ 70. Those findings, however, are not conclusive, and
    may be reversed on appeal if “the record evidence compels the conclusion that no reasonable
    person could accept” them. People v. Cunningham, 
    212 Ill. 2d 274
    , 280 (2004).
    7
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 37   A person commits aggravated battery of a peace officer when he commits a battery, other
    than by discharge of a firearm, against a victim he knows to be a peace officer performing his or
    her official duties. 720 ILCS 5/12-3.05(d)(4)(i) (West 2012). As relevant here, a person commits
    a battery when he intentionally or knowingly, and without legal justification, makes physical
    contact of an insulting or provoking nature with an individual. 
    Id. § 12-3.
    ¶ 38   Defendant does not dispute that he knew Chief Belos and Officer Bolin were police
    officers performing their official duties. (Defendant was not charged with aggravated battery to
    Officer Russell.) Thus, the only question is whether the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt
    that defendant made “physical contact of an insulting or provoking nature” with either of them.
    ¶ 39   The evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the State, was sufficient to prove that
    he did. Chief Belos was trying to conduct a field interview of defendant. Standing near the bar
    entrance, surrounded by a growing crowd, he asked defendant to walk with him to his car, away
    from the crowd, to discuss the earlier quarrel that he had observed. Instead of cooperating with
    Chief Belos, defendant hit him.
    ¶ 40   All three officers testified to that allegation. Chief Belos testified that defendant hit him
    in his left shoulder with his hand. Officer Bolin’s testimony that he saw defendant “push” Chief
    Belos is consistent, in essentials, with Chief Belos’s own. And Officer Russell similarly testified
    that he saw Chief Belos “fall back” after being struck, but he was not sure whether Chief Belos
    was struck in the arm or the mouth. Any variations in the officers’ accounts, perhaps owing to
    their respective vantage points, were incidental; and they certainly did not render the officers’
    testimony “illogical and inconsistent,” to the point of “strain[ing] credulity,” as defendant claims.
    A rational trier of fact could have found that defendant hit Chief Belos, and thus committed an
    aggravated battery.
    8
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 41   At Chief Belos’s command, Officer Bolin (along with Officer Russell) tried to arrest
    defendant. After defendant initially slipped away, Officer Bolin caught up to him, grabbed him
    from behind, and tried to cuff him. Officers Bolin and Russell testified that defendant lunged
    backward, pushing Officer Bolin’s back into a storefront window. They both fell to the ground
    after the impact, and Officer Bolin again tried to cuff defendant. But defendant continued to
    resist, throwing kicks and punches at Officer Bolin. And at least one of those kicks, according to
    Officer Bolin, hit him in the shin. A reasonable trier of fact could credit this testimony and thus
    find that defendant committed an aggravated battery against Officer Bolin.
    ¶ 42   As defendant acknowledges, his trial was a credibility contest. The trial court heard
    testimony from three police officers, who testified that a drunk and unruly defendant resisted
    their efforts to subdue him, making the prohibited physical contact with two officers in the
    process. The trial court also heard “diametrically opposed” testimony from defendant and two of
    his relatives, who testified that a swarm of police officers descended upon the bar’s parking lot
    and “just went berserk on people,” including defendant, for no particularly obvious reason. And
    the trial court found the officers more credible.
    ¶ 43   That should be the end of the matter. We do not reweigh the evidence on appeal, and
    unless they are clearly irrational, we honor the trial court’s determinations about the relative
    credibility of the witnesses. Wright, 
    2017 IL 119561
    , ¶ 70. Defendant nevertheless argues that
    we should find the State’s evidence insufficient because it consisted entirely of “dubious” officer
    testimony that “conflicted with” three “reliable” defense witnesses. To this end, he offers two
    principal reasons why any rational trier of fact should reject the officers’ testimony as objectively
    implausible. Neither reason is convincing.
    9
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 44   First, defendant says it would “defy logic” to believe that Officers Bolin and Russell
    could have responded to the call for backup in time to see defendant hit Chief Belos, because this
    would have required them to arrive in a matter of “seconds.”
    ¶ 45   On direct examination, Chief Belos estimated that from the time he first saw defendant in
    the parking lot and called for backup, until the time defendant hit him (or more precisely, until
    the time defendant revealed the beer bottle under his coat, which was immediately before
    defendant hit him), only about “a minute” had passed—hardly enough time, defendant says, for
    Officers Bolin and Russell to respond to the scene. The defense’s account of events, in contrast,
    does not require this implausible, if not impossible, feat.
    ¶ 46    (Defendant also claims that Chief Belos revised his testimony about when he called for
    backup on cross-examination. That is not evident to us, but in any event, it does not change the
    crux of defendant’s argument, which is that Officers Bolin and Russell had no more than about a
    minute, or as defendant says, “mere seconds,” to get to the bar.)
    ¶ 47   The trial court could have reasonably thought that Chief Belos (and the other officers)
    testified truthfully about defendant’s conduct, but that his estimate of the elapsed time was not
    entirely accurate. Chief Belos testified that defendant repeatedly refused to remove his hand from
    underneath his coat, and so he feared that defendant may have been concealing a gun. We would
    not expect an officer to be taking careful note of the precise time as he followed an
    uncooperative and potentially armed individual back and forth through a parking lot in the
    middle of the night.
    ¶ 48   The trial court could have taken Chief Belos’s testimony less literally than defendant
    does, as saying merely that the incident unfolded quickly. Indeed, that is what Chief Belos said
    on cross-examination: “I didn’t have a stopwatch. I didn’t time the whole incident, but it
    10
    No. 1-15-1954
    happened very fast.” But then defendant’s argument is merely that Officers Bolin and Russell
    could not have responded within some unspecified but short period of time—as if they couldn’t
    have been close by when the call for backup came in. It was not unreasonable for the trial court
    to reject that vague and speculative inference.
    ¶ 49    Defendant also says that the officers’ testimony is belied by the photographic evidence of
    his alleged injuries. Specifically, three of the photos, Defendant’s Exhibits 1 through 3, depict
    swelling and bruising on the left side of his face and upper lip. Thus, defendant argues, they
    refute Officer Russell’s denial that he hit defendant in the face with his baton, and, in turn,
    support the defense witnesses’ testimony that he did.
    ¶ 50    The photos may be consistent with the defense witnesses’ testimony, but they do not
    refute the officers’ competing account of their struggle to detain defendant. The officers testified
    that after defendant lunged backward, pushing Officer Bolin’s back into the storefront window,
    he fell face-forward to the ground, where he continued to struggle and forcefully resist Officer
    Bolin’s attempts to handcuff him—so much so that Officer Russell had to subdue him with a
    taser. It is entirely possible that defendant bruised his face and lip in the course of his face-
    forward fall and ensuing on-the-ground tussle with Officer Bolin. Thus, the photos do not show
    that it was irrational for the trial court to credit the officers over the defense witnesses.
    ¶ 51    The rest of defendant’s arguments merit little or no discussion. For example, he says it is
    “unlikely” that a “38-year-old with no prior felony convictions suddenly became so belligerent”
    that he attacked two police officers and could not be restrained without the use of a taser.
    Defendant’s criminal history was not in evidence at trial. And even if it had been, defendant’s
    argument would merely invite us to reweigh that evidence and the credibility of the witnesses for
    ourselves. These are not legitimate grounds for reversal under the Jackson standard.
    11
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 52   In sum, because the trial court could reasonably credit the officers’ testimony, the State’s
    evidence was sufficient to prove defendant guilty of aggravated battery to a peace officer.
    ¶ 53   Next, a person commits criminal damage to government-supported property when he or
    she knowingly damages any property that is supported (in whole or in part) with State funds,
    without the consent of the State. 720 ILCS 5/21-1.01(a)(1), (b) (West 2012). The only element in
    dispute here is whether defendant actually damaged Officer Bolin’s squad car.
    ¶ 54   The evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the State, was sufficient to prove that
    he did. Officer Bolin testified that defendant kicked out the rear passenger-side window of his
    squad car while en route to the station. The testimony of a single witness is sufficient to convict,
    as long as it is “positive and credible,” and even though it is contradicted by the defendant’s own
    testimony. People v. Siguenza-Brito, 
    235 Ill. 2d 213
    , 228 (2009).
    ¶ 55   And although Chief Belos did not see this alleged incident, he testified that when he saw
    Officer Bolin’s car at the station, one of the rear windows was broken, and the window frame
    was bent. When Chief Belos saw Officer Bolin’s car earlier that evening, before the incident at
    the bar, the window and frame were intact. His testimony thus supports Officer Bolin’s.
    ¶ 56   It is true, as defendant says, that the State did not introduce any photos of the squad-car
    window (or other documentary evidence) to corroborate the officers’ testimony. But if believed,
    their testimony was sufficient on its own. See 
    id. The absence
    of any photos merely goes to the
    officers’ credibility and the weight their testimony on this point deserves. The trial court resolved
    those questions in favor of the officers, and those determinations are entitled to significant
    deference on appeal. Wright, 
    2017 IL 119561
    , ¶ 70.
    ¶ 57   There was nothing so inherently implausible about Officer Bolin’s testimony that no
    rational trier of fact could believe it. Indeed, defendant’s only argument to the contrary is that
    12
    No. 1-15-1954
    Officer Bolin did not testify credibly about defendant’s conduct in the parking lot, and thus his
    testimony about defendant’s conduct in the car deserves no credence, either. This argument fails
    for the reasons we have already given. The evidence was sufficient to convict defendant of
    criminal damage to government-supported property.
    ¶ 58                                             II
    ¶ 59      Defendant next contends that he was denied his right to make a closing argument when
    the trial court prematurely announced its findings of guilt.
    ¶ 60      The sixth amendment guarantees every defendant the right to make a closing argument,
    whether he elects a jury or a bench trial, and no matter how “simple, clear, unimpeached, and
    conclusive the evidence may seem.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Herring v. New York,
    
    422 U.S. 853
    , 856-57, 860 (1975). When this right is completely denied, “[t]here is no way to
    know” what arguments in summation might have affected the outcome of the case. 
    Id. at 864.
    Thus, although Herring did not say so explicitly, courts have universally read that decision to
    require automatic reversal when defense counsel is not permitted to argue the case. See, e.g.,
    People v. Millsap, 
    189 Ill. 2d 155
    , 166 (2000); People v. Stevens, 
    338 Ill. App. 3d 806
    , 810
    (2003).
    ¶ 61      But that is not—or not exactly—what happened here. After the close of evidence, the trial
    court continued the case without hearing closing arguments. The court wanted time to review its
    notes and the transcripts first. When the case was eventually recalled (nearly three months later),
    the trial court immediately announced its findings—that the officers were more credible than the
    defense witnesses, and thus that defendant was guilty of at least several of the charged counts.
    13
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 62     Defense counsel immediately, if sheepishly, asked, “[d]id we ever argue this case?” The
    trial court initially said yes, but soon conceded its error. When counsel then asked, “Do you think
    argument is gonna change your mind?,” the court answered, “I have no idea,” but assured
    counsel “that I will keep an open mind.”
    ¶ 63    Counsel made his closing argument without interruption, focusing on the role of the bar’s
    security guards and their failure to testify. When counsel finished summing up, the trial court
    reiterated its findings of guilt.
    ¶ 64    As the judge explained to counsel, he had spent several hours reviewing his notes and the
    transcripts, and “my opinion does not change after your closing argument.” The judge
    apologized for announcing his findings prematurely, but added, again, that “nothing that you
    said, [counsel], would have changed my mind.”
    ¶ 65    In light of this record, defendant’s description of the issue in his opening brief is (at best)
    incomplete. The trial court did not deny defense counsel an opportunity to make a closing
    argument, full stop. The crux of the issue is that the trial court had to reopen the case, after a
    premature judgment, to hear counsel’s argument. So the question we must answer is whether—
    and if so, in what circumstances—this remedy adequately protects a defendant’s sixth-
    amendment right to make a closing argument, and, as a corollary, his due-process right to a fair
    and open-minded trier of fact.
    ¶ 66    Neither party cites a single case that addresses these questions head-on. But our own
    research has revealed several, and they reach conflicting conclusions about the questions at hand.
    ¶ 67    There is one Illinois case directly on point. In People v. Daniels, 
    51 Ill. App. 3d 545
    , 548
    (1977), the trial court found Daniels guilty without first hearing closing argument. The error was
    clearly inadvertent, as the court “immediately and without question permitted summation” when
    14
    No. 1-15-1954
    defense counsel requested it. 
    Id. Although counsel’s
    summation was belated, coming after the
    judgment was prematurely announced, we found that there was “no violation of the principle set
    forth in the Herring case.” 
    Id. ¶ 68
      We do not read Daniels as adopting a bright-line rule that reopening a case for argument
    is always an adequate remedy for a premature judgment. The opinion offers little detail about the
    trial court’s actual remarks, but our description of the court as allowing argument “without
    question” suggests that the court appeared willing to hear counsel’s argument with an open mind;
    and that we found the trial court’s attitude, as expressed on the record, to be the dispositive fact
    in affirming its judgment. See 
    id. ¶ 69
      The Tenth Circuit adopted that rule explicitly in United States v. Price, 
    795 F.2d 61
    (10th
    Cir. 1986). The federal court of appeals “accept[ed] the view that a trial judge, under these
    circumstances [i.e., hearing argument after a premature judgment], is capable of keeping an open
    mind.” (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at 64.
    The question for a reviewing court is whether the record
    shows that the trial judge was willing to do so. See 
    id. ¶ 70
      In Price, there was “neither an explicit statement nor an implicit suggestion that Mr.
    Price’s closing argument did not receive open-minded consideration.” 
    Id. Rather, the
    record
    showed that the trial court’s error was “inadvertent[ ]” and did not “manifest an unwillingness to
    hear Mr. Price’s closing argument” fairly. 
    Id. Because defense
    counsel “was permitted to make
    his closing argument to an attentive, open-minder trier of fact,” the court affirmed Price’s
    conviction. 
    Id. ¶ 71
      Consider, by way of contrast, the trial courts’ remarks in United States v. King, 
    650 F.2d 534
    (4th Cir. 1981), and United States v. Walls, 
    443 F.2d 1220
    , 1223 (6th Cir. 1971). Both courts
    reopened their respective cases for closing argument after prematurely announcing judgment; but
    15
    No. 1-15-1954
    in doing so, each trial court said unequivocally that a belated argument would be futile, because
    the court had already made up its mind and was not amenable to changing it. 
    King, 650 F.2d at 536
    (judge stated that “I have already made by finding. It’s not going to change anything,” and
    told counsel, “If you want to argue the case for the record, for the appeals, that's fine as far as I'm
    concerned”); 
    Walls, 443 F.2d at 1223
    (judge said “argument then would be futile because he had
    made up his mind”).
    ¶ 72   Both King and Walls were granted new trials on appeal. The Sixth Circuit held (in a pre-
    Herring case) that Walls was effectively denied his right to make a closing argument: A futile
    argument—made to a fact-finder decidedly unwilling to change its mind, no matter what counsel
    might have to say—is not the closing argument the constitution guarantees. See 
    Walls, 443 F.2d at 1223
    -24.
    ¶ 73   And in 
    King, 650 F.2d at 537
    , where counsel declined to argue after the judge said, in no
    uncertain terms, that argument would be pointless, the Fourth Circuit held that counsel did not
    make a tactical decision to waive argument. Rather, counsel never had a chance to argue the case
    in “the kind of environment in which a defendant’s interests can be effectively advocated,” and
    therefore was denied “any real opportunity” to argue on behalf of his client at all. 
    Id. at 536-37.
    ¶ 74   We glean the following rule from these cases: Reopening a case for closing argument is
    an adequate remedy for a premature judgment when the record shows that the judge was willing
    to hear the defense’s argument with an open mind—that is, where the judge acknowledges (or at
    least does not overtly reject) the possibility that counsel’s argument could still change the judge’s
    mind about the outcome of the case. But if the record shows that the judge was unwilling to keep
    an open mind, or expressed the view that he simply could not, then the only remedy that would
    protect the defendant’s constitutional rights would be a new trial, before a different judge.
    16
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 75   It is no objection that 
    Herring, 422 U.S. at 864
    , requires automatic reversal, whereas this
    rule does not. The Court adopted an automatic-reversal rule in Herring because it thought
    “[t]here is no way to know” for sure what arguments might have persuaded the trier of fact when
    counsel was denied any chance to make them. See 
    id. That rationale
    does not apply where
    counsel did have an opportunity to marshal the defense’s best arguments in a (admittedly
    belated) summation. If automatic reversal is to be required in this context, the rule will have to
    be justified by different considerations than those offered in Herring.
    ¶ 76   An automatic-reversal rule in this context is not completely without authority. In Spence
    v. State, 
    463 A.2d 808
    (Md. 1983), for example, the Court of Appeals of Maryland (that state’s
    highest court) adopted such a rule. In sharp contrast to 
    Price, 795 F.2d at 64
    , the Spence court
    rejected the view that a judge can keep an open mind after prematurely announcing judgment. It
    would be unrealistic to expect the judge to recover the same attitude of open-mindedness, and to
    “create the same atmosphere of fairness,” that existed before the entry of judgment. 
    Spence, 463 A.2d at 811-12
    . The judge’s good intentions notwithstanding, a fair hearing is no longer
    possible: “ ‘The bell having rung cannot be unrung.’ ” 
    Id. at 811
    (quoting People v. Dougherty,
    
    162 Cal. Rptr. 277
    , 280 (Ct. App. 1980) (ordered deleted from California Appellate Reports)).
    ¶ 77   Defendant echoes this metaphor in his reply brief, where he asserts that the trial court
    “could not unring the bell of premature judgment.” At that point, says defendant, “confirmation
    bias”—the human tendency to seek out data compatible with one’s beliefs, while ignoring
    contrary evidence—prevented the trial court from giving fair consideration to any defense
    arguments that cut against the conclusions it had already reached.
    ¶ 78   We do not deny that human beings may be subject to confirmation bias. And we are
    mindful that a defendant’s right to an unbiased and open-minded trier of fact is of paramount
    17
    No. 1-15-1954
    importance. But we reject the conclusion that defendant, and the court in Spence, draw from
    these principles: That once the trier of fact has reached a conclusion about the case, closing
    argument is necessarily futile, because the trier of fact can no longer hear and consider the
    argument fairly.
    ¶ 79   The Supreme Court rejected (one version of) this conclusion in Herring: “[S]urely, there
    will be cases where closing argument may correct a premature misjudgment and avoid an
    otherwise erroneous verdict.” (Emphasis 
    added.) 422 U.S. at 863
    .
    ¶ 80   Granted, the Court was not referring to a judgment that had been announced prematurely,
    or a closing argument made after that announcement. Rather, the Court’s point was that closing
    argument, no matter how “open and shut” the case seemed “at the close of evidence,” might still
    change the conclusion that the trier of fact had already reached at that stage of the trial. 
    Id. ¶ 81
      Despite this difference (which we will discuss later), the Court’s point in Herring merits
    careful scrutiny. It has important implications for the question presented in this case, because it
    helps to clarify what a defendant’s right to an open-minded trier of fact can realistically mean.
    ¶ 82   A trier of fact should strive to suspend judgment, as best it can, until the end of the trial.
    But that is possible only to a point. Judges and jurors inevitably form beliefs about the evidence
    presented to them as the case unfolds. For instance, a belief that a witness is telling the truth—or
    not—will sometimes impress itself upon the trier of fact in real time, as it observes the witness
    on the stand. And when the evidence as a whole strikes the trier of fact as simple and decisive
    enough—if, for example, the case turns on the testimony of a witness whose credibility seems
    immediately apparent—the verdict, unavoidably, will also seem clear to the trier of fact long
    before closing argument, as Herring frankly acknowledged. See 
    id. 18 No.
    1-15-1954
    ¶ 83    But even in these circumstances, Herring tells us, closing argument may still change the
    trier of fact’s mind. 
    Id. No matter
    how “simple” or “open and shut” the case may seem, it is
    always possible that the trier of fact has missed something—a doubt about a witness, a gap in the
    State’s proof, some connection between various evidentiary facts—and so has misjudged the
    case prematurely. See 
    id. And it
    is always possible that counsel, marshalling the evidence “from
    the point of view most favorable to” the defendant, will bring that error to light, and thus
    “correct” the trier of fact’s “misjudgment,” in closing argument. 
    Id. at 864;
    see also People v.
    Crawford, 
    343 Ill. App. 3d 1050
    , 1059 (2003) (“It is not uncommon for a trial court to change its
    initial impression following argument by defense counsel or the prosecutor.”).
    ¶ 84    The Court’s faith in the power of an advocate’s argument to sway the verdict even in
    these seemingly futile circumstances—where the trier of fact, confident the case was an easy
    one, has already reached its conclusion—is an essential part of why Herring deemed the right to
    closing argument fundamental. But we could not make sense of this holding if we accepted a key
    premise of defendant’s argument—that we cannot reasonably expect closing argument to change
    the trier of fact’s mind, once it has come to a conclusion about the defendant’s guilt. Herring
    tells us that the trier of fact could change its mind.
    ¶ 85    It is not wrong, but it is overly simplistic, to insist that a fair and open-minded trier of fact
    is one that “ ‘hears before it decides.’ ” Spence, 463 A.2d at 811(quoting People v. Diaz, 1 Ill.
    App. 3d 988, 992 (1971)). We need not—because Herring does not—indulge the fantasy that a
    trier of fact will suspend all judgment until the last word is uttered in rebuttal argument. Instead,
    the fair and open-minded trier of fact to which every defendant is entitled is one that—while
    striving to suspend judgment, as best it can—is open to revising the views it does reach along the
    way. It is a trier of fact that remains open, at all times, to the possibility that its impressions and
    19
    No. 1-15-1954
    beliefs thus far may ultimately be wrong, upon further evidence, argument, or reflection. It is a
    trier of fact that listens attentively and patiently, until the very end, for any evidence or argument
    that might sway its verdict.
    ¶ 86    But what about a case like this one—where the trial court took the next step and actually
    announced its judgment before hearing closing argument? Can a judge, in these circumstances,
    still hear a belated argument with an open mind? Or is it too late, at that point, for argument to be
    anything but futile?
    ¶ 87    That next step is not a trivial one. Reversing the order of argument and verdict is not a
    merely formalistic error. The verdict is obviously meant to have a finality that any previous
    impressions or beliefs about the evidence lacked. But we think it goes too far to say that a judge
    who has committed this error at a bench trial is necessarily incapable of giving full and fair
    consideration to a belated defense argument; or of being persuaded, when the argument is
    compelling, that his or her view of the evidence was wrong.
    ¶ 88    We are not convinced that a premature bench-trial verdict is, as it were, a “bell” that can
    never be “unrung.” That metaphor may be apt enough when, for example, a trier of fact is asked
    to disregard prejudicial evidence. Perhaps the clearest case is propensity evidence—evidence that
    is inadmissible despite being relevant. See, e.g., People v. Donoho, 
    204 Ill. 2d 159
    , 170 (2003)
    (propensity evidence “not considered irrelevant”; rather, it has “too much probative value”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). Because such evidence is relevant, a rational person
    ordinarily would want to consider it when trying to get at the truth; and for that reason, such
    evidence, once heard, may simply be too difficult to ignore (even if the law has its reasons for
    asking the trier of fact to do so).
    20
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 89   But a judge who is asked to consider a belated argument is not being asked to disregard
    relevant evidence. The judge is simply being asked to hear an argument with an open mind and
    give it whatever consideration it deserves. True, the argument will be at odds with the judge’s
    conclusion(s) about the evidence. But Herring acknowledged that the verdict will sometimes
    strike the trier of fact as a fait accompli by the close of evidence anyway, and that even in these
    circumstances, an advocate’s closing argument may still convince the trier of fact to change its
    
    mind. 422 U.S. at 863-64
    . Defendant’s burden is to explain why a trial judge’s ability to keep an
    open mind—in the sense we have explained—ends, irrevocably, when a judgment is announced
    prematurely. The metaphor of “unringing the bell,” in this context, explains nothing.
    ¶ 90   Defendant’s cursory mention of “confirmation bias” does not fare much better. This bias
    is always with us. It influences every trier of fact’s view of the evidence as the trial unfolds. We
    cannot pretend otherwise without embracing the very fiction that Herring rejected. We hope that
    every trier of fact will fight against this bias, and strive—against its own human tendencies—to
    consider new evidence and arguments fairly, no matter how clear the verdict may seem in light
    of the evidence already presented. Indeed, that is just what we mean by being open-minded, and
    no doubt some triers of fact will succeed more than others.
    ¶ 91   Does a trial court’s confirmation bias strengthen when the court formally announces its
    verdict? Perhaps. But we cannot honestly claim to know. Neither can defendant. Even less can he
    claim to know that the bias becomes decisive at that point, leaving the judge unable to consider a
    belated argument with a fair and open mind.
    ¶ 92   Defendant’s cursory citation to the work of Professor Kahneman on confirmation bias
    (see Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (2011)) falls far short of showing that such a
    blanket presumption of bias is warranted. Most courts to consider the question—including this
    21
    No. 1-15-1954
    one—have rejected any such presumption. And it is at odds with the underpinnings of Herring,
    the very source of the automatic-reversal rule that defendant asks us to extend to the case at
    hand.
    ¶ 93    We have not been given any clear reason to adopt that blanket presumption. And without
    it, there is no basis for applying a bright-line rule of reversal when a trial court reopens a bench
    trial, after a premature judgment, to hear closing argument. We adhere to our holding in Daniels,
    
    51 Ill. App. 3d 545
    , as we have elaborated it here.
    ¶ 94    To recap: Reopening a case for closing argument is an adequate remedy for a premature
    judgment at a bench trial when the record shows that the judge was willing to hear the defense’s
    argument with an open mind. But if the record shows that the judge was not willing to keep an
    open mind, or expressed the view that he or she could not, then the defendant is entitled to a new
    trial before a different judge.
    ¶ 95    All that remains is to apply this rule to the record before us. To begin, as in 
    Price, 795 F.2d at 64
    , and as we suggested in 
    Daniels, 51 Ill. App. 3d at 548
    , the record leaves no doubt that
    the trial court’s error was inadvertent. At the close of evidence, the court expressly continued the
    case for “arguments.” When the case was eventually recalled, the court announced its judgment
    prematurely; but when the parties brought that error to light, the court freely acknowledged and
    corrected it. The court clearly made an honest mistake in thinking, nearly three months after the
    close of evidence, that it had previously heard closing arguments. The trial court never intended
    to deprive defendant of his closing argument, and it never expressed the attitude that closing
    argument was in any way dispensable.
    ¶ 96    Nor did the trial court’s comments in any way “manifest an unwillingness to hear [the
    defendant’s] closing argument” fairly. 
    Price, 795 F.2d at 64
    . Unlike in 
    King, 650 F.2d at 536
    ,
    22
    No. 1-15-1954
    and 
    Walls, 443 F.2d at 1223
    , where the trial courts clearly stated that argument would be futile,
    the trial court here promised to “keep an open mind.” The court could hardly have been clearer
    that it was willing to listen to counsel’s argument and give it whatever consideration it deserved
    on the merits. Nothing in the record suggests that the court’s promise was insincere, or that the
    trial court failed in its “obligation to be attentive, patient, and impartial” while hearing counsel’s
    argument. 
    Crawford, 343 Ill. App. 3d at 1059
    .
    ¶ 97   In its last word on the subject, after apologizing for having announced its judgment
    prematurely, the trial court reiterated that “nothing that you said, [counsel], would have changed
    my mind.” Defendant isolates this remark as evidence of the court’s irreparable “prejudgment”
    of the case. But we do not understand the trial court to be saying here that it was unwilling or
    unable to change its mind, even if counsel’s arguments in summation proved convincing.
    ¶ 98   In the sentence uttered just before this one, the court had said that “my opinion does not
    change after your closing argument.” Taking the court’s remarks as a whole, and in context, we
    think it is clear that the two remarks were intended to mean the same thing: Not that argument
    was futile, because the trial court was unwilling to hear it with an open mind; but rather that the
    argument counsel did make was unconvincing. The trial court believed the officers, and the crux
    of counsel’s argument—that the bar’s security guards were not called to corroborate the officers’
    testimony—did not change that assessment.
    ¶ 99   In sum, defendant was not denied his sixth-amendment right to make a closing argument.
    Nor was he denied a fair trial before an open-minded trier of fact. Having reached these
    conclusions, we do not consider the parties’ forfeiture and plain-error arguments.
    23
    No. 1-15-1954
    ¶ 100                                  CONCLUSION
    ¶ 101 For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s convictions and sentence for aggravated battery of
    a peace officer and criminal damage to government-supported property are affirmed.
    ¶ 102 Affirmed.
    24