People v. White , 2022 IL App (1st) 200713-U ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (1st) 200713-U
    No. 1-20-0713
    Order filed July 12, 2022.
    Second Division
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,                           )   Appeal from the
    )   Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                  )   Cook County.
    )
    v.                                                         )   No. 12 CR 9459
    )
    SAMUEL WHITE,                                                  )   The Honorable
    )   Thaddeus L. Wilson,
    Defendant-Appellant.                                 )   Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Howse and Cobbs concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1        Held: The dismissal of defendant’s postconviction petition is affirmed where he failed to
    make a substantial showing that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by
    failing to call a witness or that his postconviction counsel provided unreasonable
    assistance by failing to supplement his petition.
    ¶2        Defendant Samuel White appeals from the circuit court’s order granting the State’s motion
    to dismiss his pro se petition for relief filed under the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725
    ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2016)). On appeal, he contends the circuit court erred in dismissing
    No. 1-20-0713
    his petition, where he made a substantial showing his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance
    by failing to call a witness who would have testified that she owned the firearm defendant was
    charged with possessing. In the alternative, defendant argues postconviction counsel provided
    unreasonable assistance by failing to supplement his petition with a copy of the complaint the same
    witness filed against the Chicago Police Department (CPD). We affirm.
    ¶3     Following a 2012 bench trial, defendant was found guilty of armed habitual criminal
    (AHC), armed violence, unlawful use of a weapon by a felon, and possession of a controlled
    substance. He was sentenced to concurrent terms of 18 years’ imprisonment each for one count of
    AHC and two counts of armed violence. On direct appeal, we vacated his AHC conviction and
    one armed violence conviction, and remanded for resentencing. People v. White, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 131111
    . On remand, defendant was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of 18 years for armed
    violence and 6 years for possession of a controlled substance. On appeal, this court reduced the 6-
    year sentence to 3 years but otherwise affirmed. People v. White, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 170242-U
    . As
    a recitation of the trial evidence is necessary to provide context for defendant’s postconviction
    claim, we reiterate much of the statement of facts from our decision in defendant’s direct appeal
    (White, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 131111
    , ¶¶ 4-14).
    ¶4     At trial, Officer Brian McDevitt testified that at about 10 p.m. on March 21, 2012, he was
    working with Officer May and Officer Carey in an unmarked car. At about 10:30 p.m., the officers
    responded to a call of shots fired at 6535 South California Avenue. No one was in the courtyard at
    that address but defendant and another man were in the next courtyard over at 6527 South
    California. No other individuals were in the area. The courtyard adjoined a three-story apartment
    building and was enclosed with a gate.
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    No. 1-20-0713
    ¶5     McDevitt entered the courtyard and approached the two men with his gun drawn. He saw
    defendant reach into his waistband, remove a “small silver handgun with light shining from the
    metal,” and walk toward the building's door. Despite seeing a handgun, Officer McDevitt did not
    immediately inform his partners that defendant was armed. After defendant opened the door to the
    building and threw the handgun inside, he walked a “few” steps away from the entrance. Officer
    Carey secured defendant and the other individual together, while Officer McDevitt opened the
    door to the building.
    ¶6     Inside the building, a second door with a lock separated the hallway from the apartments,
    although it was possible that the door was not locked. Officer McDevitt retrieved a loaded silver
    .22–caliber handgun from the hallway floor. No other items were in the area and the handgun
    looked like the item that defendant removed from his waistband. After securing the weapon,
    Officer McDevitt performed a custodial search of defendant, which revealed 1 clear plastic bag
    holding 12 smaller bags of suspect cannabis and another bag holding 6 multicolored pills
    containing suspect Ecstasy. The parties later stipulated that the substances found on defendant's
    person contained cannabis, 5–Methoxy–N, N-diisopropyltryptamine, and N–Benzylpiperazine.
    ¶7     Officer McDevitt further testified that, after Mirandizing defendant, defendant told him the
    gun belonged to him but he had not known he had it “on him.” Moreover, defendant said he had
    heard gunshots but that examining his handgun would confirm that it had not been fired. The
    individual with defendant was permitted to leave when a search revealed no contraband. Officer
    McDevitt did not run a check on either man's name and did not know whether the other officers
    did.
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    ¶8       The State then submitted a certified copy of defendant's 1997 conviction for committing
    first-degree murder and a certified copy of his 2010 conviction for “Class 4 aggravated domestic
    battery,” which this court determined was actually for a Class 4 felony of “Domestic BTRY/Bodily
    Harm PRI.”
    ¶9       Barbara Taylor testified on defendant's behalf that on the night in question, she was with
    her sister, Fairy Stennis, and her friend, Diane Walton, who were also in court that day. The three
    women were talking and listening to music with the windows down in Stennis' car, which was
    parked in front of Walton's apartment building at 6527 South California. Defendant was sitting in
    a chair in the courtyard and Taylor could hear him searching through music on his phone. Taylor
    knew defendant through Walton, with whom he had an amorous relationship. Although another
    man was standing by defendant, Taylor had never seen him before. Taylor never heard gunshots
    fired.
    ¶ 10     Suddenly, a car pulled up behind the three women and two police officers exited. The
    officers ordered defendant and his companion not to move. Taylor then heard over the police radio
    that gunshots had been reported in the alley of 6535 or 6537 California. When the three women
    exited their car, Stennis and Walton walked into the courtyard while Taylor remained by the
    sidewalk. Taylor did not see defendant throw a gun into the hallway. Nor did she see police recover
    a firearm. The police cuffed defendant's hands behind his back and emptied his pockets, which
    contained his wallet, his cell phone, and keys. After more officers entered the courtyard, the police
    apparently entered the building. Walton did not tell officers she lived in the building or that
    defendant lived with her. Walton argued with one officer who was preventing her from entering
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    the building. The police then exited the building and announced that they were taking defendant
    with them.
    ¶ 11   Stennis testified that the three women sat in Stennis’s car talking while defendant, Walton’s
    boyfriend, sat outside. Defendant was playing a game on his iPod but she could not hear any music
    coming from it because he was too far away. Another man who was near defendant appeared to
    be singing or rapping. The three women never heard gunshots.
    ¶ 12   After about an hour, a police car stopped behind Stennis’s car. An officer, apparently
    Officer McDevitt, proceeded into the courtyard and ordered defendant, who was sitting in a chair,
    not to move. Officer McDevitt's gun was not drawn and Stennis never saw defendant approach the
    door to the apartment building. Stennis and Walton walked into the courtyard while Taylor
    remained by the sidewalk. Defendant was then handcuffed to the other man and searched. Stennis
    never saw any pills on defendant's person. Meanwhile, Stennis heard over the police radio that
    gunshots had been fired in an alley and the police were looking for a man with a white T-shirt and
    dreadlocks. Police officers then entered the building. Over Walton's objection, they went inside
    her apartment. Walton and Stennis followed the officers inside, where the officers threw pillows
    off Walton's couch. The officers returned outside empty handed, however. Both defendant and the
    other man were taken to the police station.
    ¶ 13   Defendant testified that on the night in question, he was visiting Walton. He described her
    as a “[f]riend, more like a girlfriend but more a friend.” He spent time with Walton at her
    apartment, but then she and her friends went to the store. When they returned, he and Walton
    acknowledged each other but did not say hello to one another. Defendant did not want to interrupt
    their “women's talk.” During the 45 minutes that the women sat in the car, defendant played a
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    No. 1-20-0713
    game on an iPod. Another man, whose name defendant did not know, stood nearby and rapped.
    Defendant also talked to the man. He did not hear shots fired.
    ¶ 14   When the police arrived, they told defendant not to move and he complied. He never threw
    a gun into the hallway and Officer McDevitt found no contraband while searching him. His pockets
    did contain, however, a key ring including Walton's apartment key, cell phone, lighter, and wallet.
    Defendant heard over the radio that police were looking for a black man with dreadlocks and a
    white T-shirt, and that the man was standing on the back porch of a building with a gun. After
    defendant was arrested, he learned that he was being charged with possessing a firearm and that
    controlled substances were allegedly found. The police did not tell him where they found the
    firearm. Walton visited him in jail and kept contact with him through the mail but defendant had
    not spoken to Stennis or Taylor since his arrest.
    ¶ 15   Officer Elliot Flagg testified in rebuttal that on the night in question, he responded to a call
    of shots fired in the 6500 block of South California. There had been multiple calls, some of which
    were directed toward South California. Officer Flagg found no one in the alley but subsequently
    observed Officer May, Officer McDevitt, their partner, defendant and another man in the courtyard
    at 6527 South California. Defendant was already handcuffed at this time. At no time did Officer
    Flagg see women near the courtyard. Additionally, he never heard a radio transmission describing
    a man with a white T-shirt and dreadlocks who was alleged to be standing in any particular
    location. Officer Flagg did not see the police recover anything from the building and did not see a
    handgun.
    ¶ 16   Defendant argued in closing that the police officers’ account was not credible because he,
    as an “ex-con,” would not possess “guns and drugs,” and would not have thrown a gun into the
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    No. 1-20-0713
    apartment building’s hallways “in plain view of the police.” Rather, defendant asserted he was
    “probably walking to go into that hallway,” when the police arrested him, found his keys, and
    entered Walton’s apartment, where they found the “guns and drugs.” Defendant argued that the
    officers then arrested him and said “this was where the guns and drugs were,” knowing they could
    not say it was in Walton’s apartment since the apartment did not belong to him.
    ¶ 17   The trial court found defendant guilty on all counts. The court stated police officers
    responded to a call of shots fired, saw defendant reach in his waist and throw a “shiny object” into
    a hallway, and arrested him. The firearm and ammunition were recovered and inventoried, and
    “illegal narcotics” were recovered from defendant’s person.
    ¶ 18   The court imposed three concurrent sentences of 18 years’ imprisonment each for one
    count of AHC and two counts of armed violence, and merged the remaining counts.
    ¶ 19   On direct appeal, we vacated defendant’s AHC conviction and one armed violence
    conviction, and remanded for resentencing, finding in part that (1) his prior domestic battery
    conviction did not constitute a “forcible felony” necessary to sustain his AHC conviction, and (2)
    the armed violence statute does not authorize multiple armed violence convictions for multiple,
    simultaneous underlying felonies. White, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 131111
    . We otherwise affirmed. 
    Id.
    ¶ 20   On remand, defendant was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of 18 years for armed
    violence and 6 years for possession of a controlled substance. In 2018, this court reduced his 6-
    year sentence to 3 years and affirmed as modified. People v. White, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 170242-U
    .
    ¶ 21   In May 2014, defendant filed a petition for relief from judgment pursuant to section 2-1401
    of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2014)), which the circuit court
    dismissed. Defendant initiated two appeals from the dismissal (appeal numbers 1-14-3799 and 1-
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    No. 1-20-0713
    15-0451). We consolidated the appeals and affirmed. People v. White, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 143799-U
    .
    ¶ 22    On November 8, 2016, defendant filed the instant pro se postconviction petition under the
    Act, alleging, inter alia, that police officers entered Walton’s apartment without a search warrant,
    recovered evidence, and “charge[d] it to” him. Walton filed a complaint against the CPD “for
    coming into her apartment.” She also told defendant’s trial counsel that an officer recovered
    evidence from her apartment and “put it on” defendant. However, counsel failed to call her despite
    being aware of her “exonerat[ing]” testimony.
    ¶ 23    Defendant attached to his petition the affidavit of Walton, who averred that police officers
    arrested defendant while he sat in the courtyard. 1 Walton exited Stennis’s vehicle, approached the
    officers, and asked why they were “messing with” defendant. She then entered her residence to
    call the officers’ supervisor. As she did so, the officers “forced [their] way into [her] house” and
    “ranshacked [sic]” the house without a warrant. They recovered a firearm inside and “placed it on”
    defendant. Walton “called and filed” a complaint against the officers. However, she was “forced
    and threaten[ed]” by the officers to “drop the complaint or be placed under arrest for any crime
    they wanted to place on [her],” and so she could not “pursue” her complaint. Defendant had never
    pulled anything from his waistband. The handgun was hers; she kept it at home for protection.
    Defendant’s trial counsel told her he would call her as a witness to testify but never did, even
    though she had attended all of defendant’s court dates, including trial.
    1
    We note that, in the record on appeal, the very bottom of the first page of Walton’s affidavit is cut
    out and not visible. “[I]t is defendant’s burden as the appellant to provide a sufficiently complete record on
    appeal so that this court can be fully informed about the issues.” People v. Carrion, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 171001
    , ¶ 34.
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    No. 1-20-0713
    ¶ 24   Defendant’s postconviction petition was docketed for second-stage proceedings, and
    defendant was appointed counsel.
    ¶ 25   On July 10, 2018, defendant’s attorney filed a certificate pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court
    Rule 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017), alleging that he “consulted with the petitioner, Samuel White, by
    phone, mail, electronics [sic] means or in person to ascertain his contentions of deprivations of
    constitutional rights.” Counsel alleged he “obtained and examined the record of proceedings at the
    trial and sentencing in this case.” He further certified, “I have not prepared a Supplemental Petition
    for Post-Conviction Relief as the petitioner’s previously-filed pro se petition for post-conviction
    relief adequately sets forth the petitioner’s claims of deprivation of his constitutional rights.”
    ¶ 26   On March 26, 2019, the State filed a motion to dismiss the petition, arguing in part that
    trial counsel’s decision not to call Walton as a witness was a reasonable decision where the record
    “roundly impeaches” her statements. The State also argued it was not clear that Walton had filed
    a complaint against the CPD, as a complaint would need to be written, signed, and filed with the
    police department. Walton, however, claimed she had only filed a complaint by phone and could
    not pursue the complaint once officers threatened her.
    ¶ 27   In July 2019, defendant filed a pro se “motion for Krankel hearing,” alleging his
    postconviction counsel never formed a “client and lawyer bond/Relationship,” never met him in
    person, and failed to supplement his petition. Subsequently, defendant’s postconviction counsel
    retired and the court appointed new counsel to represent him during postconviction proceedings.
    ¶ 28   On November 5, 2019, defendant filed a pro se “motion to supplement” his petition with
    exhibits that he had asked his postconviction counsel to add to his petition. Those exhibits
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    No. 1-20-0713
    included, inter alia, portions of prior police reports, an indictment, and a response to a Freedom
    of Information Act request.
    ¶ 29   On December 17, 2019, prior to the hearing on the State’s motion to dismiss defendant’s
    petition, defendant told the court he was moving to “[r]emove” his postconviction counsel because
    she would not amend his petition to include “exhibits.” Defendant’s new counsel told the court
    that defendant’s initial postconviction counsel, who had investigated the case and filed the Rule
    651(c) certificate, had indicated to her there was no need to supplement the petition. Counsel
    stated, “I have examined the court file, and I have spoke[n] with [defendant] on at least a couple
    of occasions,” and defendant’s initial postconviction counsel “was correct in his assessment.”
    Defendant withdrew his motion to withdraw his attorney. However, at a subsequent hearing, he
    told the court he wanted to proceed pro se. After being admonished, he elected to represent himself
    during the hearing on the State’s motion to dismiss.
    ¶ 30   At the hearing, the State added that defendant failed to attach any supporting documents
    supporting his claim that Walton had filed a complaint with the CPD, and even had it been filed,
    it would not have “established anything” at trial.
    ¶ 31   Defendant argued there was a “second suspect” at the scene, but the police did not take his
    name and he was “let go.” He claimed that McDevitt completed two separate case reports: one that
    said he never recovered a weapon and one that said he recovered “evidence” belonging to a person
    named Valadez. Defendant claimed evidence inventory sheets showed that the inventory numbers
    of the evidence he was charged with possessing matched the inventory numbers of evidence
    belonging to Valadez. The court asked if Walton’s address was his house, and defendant
    responded, “I stayed there. My state ID and mail.”
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    No. 1-20-0713
    ¶ 32    On February 25, 2020, the circuit court granted the State’s motion to dismiss. In its written
    order, the court found, in relevant part, that Walton’s affidavit was “mostly cumulative” of other
    testimony presented at trial and was “refuted” by testimony that no women were at the scene. It
    also noted Stennis’s testimony that police emerged empty handed from Walton’s apartment. The
    court also stated that counsel’s decisions regarding the evidence to present at trial were matters of
    trial strategy, which were generally immune from ineffective assistance claims.
    ¶ 33    On appeal, defendant first argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his postconviction
    petition, where he made a substantial showing that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance
    by failing to call Walton to testify.
    ¶ 34    The Act provides a three-stage method for persons under criminal sentence to “assert that
    their convictions were the result of a substantial denial of their rights under the United States
    Constitution or the Illinois Constitution or both.” People v. Hodges, 
    234 Ill. 2d 1
    , 9-10 (2009).
    Defendant’s petition was dismissed at the second stage of proceedings, in which counsel is
    appointed to represent the defendant if necessary, and the State is permitted to file responsive
    pleadings. People v. Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d 239
    , 245-46 (2001). At the second stage of
    postconviction proceedings, “the circuit court must determine whether the petition and any
    accompanying documentation make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation.” 
    Id. at 246
    .
    “[A]ll well-pleaded facts that are not positively rebutted by the trial record are to be taken as true.”
    People v. Pendleton, 
    223 Ill. 2d 458
    , 473 (2006). The second stage of postconviction review tests
    the legal sufficiency of the petition. People v. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 35.
    ¶ 35    “The inquiry into whether a post-conviction petition contains sufficient allegations of
    constitutional deprivations does not require the circuit court to engage in any fact-finding or
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    No. 1-20-0713
    credibility determinations,” as such determinations are made during the evidentiary third stage of
    postconviction proceedings. People v. Coleman, 
    183 Ill. 2d 366
    , 385 (1998). “An evidentiary
    hearing is only required when the allegations of the petition, supported by the trial record and
    accompanying affidavits, make a substantial showing of a violation of a constitutional right.”
    People v. Flowers, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 113259
    , ¶ 31. We review de novo the circuit court’s second-
    stage dismissal of a postconviction petition. Pendleton, 
    223 Ill. 2d at 473
    .
    ¶ 36   Under the sixth amendment to the United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. VI), a
    criminal defendant is guaranteed the right to effective assistance of counsel. People v. Cole, 
    2017 IL 120997
    , ¶ 22. To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance under Strickland v. Washington,
    
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984), a defendant must demonstrate both “that counsel’s performance fell below
    an objective standard of reasonableness and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Tate, 
    2012 IL 112214
    , ¶ 19. During second-stage
    postconviction proceedings, the defendant must make “(1) a substantial showing that counsel’s
    performance was objectively unreasonable under prevailing professional norms and (2) a
    substantial showing that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
    errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” People v. White, 
    2021 IL App (1st) 170903
    , ¶ 35 (citing Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 36). Because a defendant must satisfy both
    prongs of the Strickland test, failure to establish either one is fatal to the claim. People v.
    Clendenin, 
    238 Ill. 2d 302
    , 317-18 (2010).
    ¶ 37   To establish the deficient performance prong, a defendant must show that counsel’s
    performance “was so inadequate that counsel was not functioning as the counsel guaranteed by the
    sixth amendment and, also, must overcome the strong presumption that any challenged action or
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    inaction may have been the product of sound trial strategy.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    People v. Dupree, 
    2018 IL 122307
    , ¶ 44. This is a “high bar to clear,” as matters of trial strategy
    are generally immune from ineffective assistance claims. 
    Id.
    ¶ 38   “[T]he decision whether to call a certain witness for the defense is a matter of trial strategy,
    left to the discretion of counsel after consultation with the defendant,” and “such decisions will
    not ordinarily support a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.” People v. Peterson, 
    2017 IL 120331
    , ¶ 80. Even a mistake in trial strategy will not alone render representation constitutionally
    defective unless counsel’s trial strategy “is so unsound that he entirely fails to conduct meaningful
    adversarial testing of the State’s case.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     Defense counsel
    need not call a particular witness if he reasonably believes that “under the circumstances the
    individual’s testimony is unreliable or would likely have been harmful to the defendant.” People
    v. Flores, 
    128 Ill. 2d 66
    , 106 (1989).
    ¶ 39   As an initial matter, the State argues that defendant forfeited this issue, as he did not raise
    it on direct appeal despite knowing of Walton’s proffered testimony. However, as defendant’s trial
    counsel did not call Walton to testify, her proposed testimony was not included in the original
    appellate record and defendant’s claim could not have been considered on direct appeal. See
    People v. Elder, 
    73 Ill. App. 3d 192
    , 196 (1979) (on direct appeal from a criminal conviction, our
    review is limited to what appears in the record). Accordingly, because defendant could not have
    raised this issue on direct appeal, we relax the doctrine of forfeiture and proceed to the merits.
    People v. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 22.
    ¶ 40   We find defendant failed to make a substantial showing that trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance, as he has not shown counsel’s decision not to call Walton was “so unsound
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    No. 1-20-0713
    that he entirely fails to conduct meaningful adversarial testing of the State’s case.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Peterson, 
    2017 IL 120331
    , ¶ 80.
    ¶ 41   At trial, Officer McDevitt testified that he responded to a call that shots had been fired and
    saw defendant and another man in an apartment complex’s courtyard. There were no other people
    present in the area. As the officers approached the two men, defendant threw a shiny handgun into
    an apartment building. Officer McDevitt then recovered a silver handgun, which looked like the
    item he saw defendant throw, from the hallway floor of that building. He next searched defendant
    and recovered bags containing controlled substances. Defendant told McDevitt that the firearm
    was his, but he did not know the firearm was on his person. Officer Flagg testified there were no
    women at the scene of defendant’s arrest.
    ¶ 42   Defendant’s trial counsel called multiple witnesses to testify on defendant’s behalf. Taylor
    testified that Walton lived in the apartment building and was in an amorous relationship with
    defendant. Taylor stated defendant never threw a handgun into the building and the officers would
    not allow Walton to enter the building. Stennis, on the other hand, testified that she and Walton
    followed officers into Walton’s apartment in the building, where the officers threw pillows off
    Walton’s couch but ultimately did not leave the apartment with anything. Defendant provided a
    third version of the events, testifying that the officers approached him, searched him, and arrested
    him despite finding “nothing illegal.” He offered no testimony that any officers entered Walton’s
    building or apartment and testified he did not know the police found a firearm until at the police
    station, and the police did not tell him where they found the firearm. Defendant testified Walton
    was “more like a girlfriend,” visited him in jail, and stayed in touch with him via mail. In closing
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    argument, defense counsel asserted that the police officers had actually found the contraband in
    Walton’s apartment and stated they had recovered it from defendant.
    ¶ 43    Defendant now asserts that trial counsel should have presented testimony from Walton. He
    claims Walton would have testified that after he was arrested, she entered her apartment to call the
    officers’ supervisor, but the officers “forced” themselves inside her apartment, recovered a firearm,
    and “placed it on” defendant.
    ¶ 44    The record establishes counsel’s decision not to call Walton to testify was a matter of trial
    strategy. Defendant’s testimony that Walton was “more like a girlfriend,” visited him in jail, and
    kept in touch via mail, taken with Taylor’s testimony that defendant and Walton were in an
    amorous relationship, establishes that Walton was in a close relationship with defendant at the time
    of the incident and thereafter. It is reasonable trial strategy for counsel to forgo presenting a witness
    close to the defendant due to the obvious bias in favor of defendant, where the testimony will be
    accorded little weight. See People v. Lacy, 
    407 Ill. App. 3d 442
    , 466 (2011) (counsel was not
    ineffective for failing to call the defendant’s relative as a witness, as her relation to the defendant
    could have caused the trier of fact to afford her testimony less weight).
    ¶ 45    Further, Walton’s affidavit shows her testimony only would have presented the trial court
    with a version of events inconsistent with the accounts provided by the other defense witnesses.
    Namely, her proposed testimony that she went into her apartment and was followed by police who
    pushed their way in contradicts Taylor’s testimony that police would not let Walton into the
    apartment building and Stennis’s testimony that she and Walton followed police into the
    apartment. Her proposed testimony that defendant was framed with a firearm found in her
    apartment would have contradicted the other defense witnesses’ testimony that nothing was
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    recovered from the apartment or building.2 Ultimately, Walton’s testimony that she was present
    when police recovered her firearm in her apartment undermined the credibility of the other defense
    witnesses. As such, trial counsel’s decision not to call Walton was clearly a matter of sound trial
    strategy, as the testimony would have only raised more doubts as to the accounts of defendant’s
    witnesses that no contraband was recovered from defendant or the apartment building.
    ¶ 46    Defendant argues that, in dismissing his petition, the court improperly based its findings
    on credibility determinations when it noted that Walton’s testimony was “mostly cumulative” of
    his other witnesses and was “refuted” by the State’s testimony that no women were present during
    his arrest. However, the record does not reflect that the circuit court made any credibility
    determinations in reaching its conclusion. Rather, the court only observed that Walton’s testimony
    would not have added much to the evidence at trial such that counsel was not ineffective for failing
    to call her as a witness. Even had the circuit court made any credibility findings, our review is de
    novo, and so we show no deference to the postconviction court’s judgment or reasoning. See
    People v. Johnson, 
    2021 IL 125738
    , ¶ 28. We may affirm the second-stage dismissal of a
    postconviction petition for any reason apparent from the record regardless of the lower court’s
    rationale. People v. Hopkins, 
    2020 IL App (3d) 170253
    , ¶ 15; see People v. Saleh, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 172979
    , ¶ 62 (affirming the second-stage dismissal of a petition where trial counsel’s decision
    not to call a witness was not objectively unreasonable).
    ¶ 47    In sum, trial counsel’s decision not to call Walton to testify was not “so unsound that he
    entirely fails to conduct meaningful adversarial testing of the State’s case” and thus does not
    2
    Given Walton’s statement that she was “forced and threaten[ed]” by officers to “drop the
    complaint or be placed under arrest for any crime they wanted to place on [her],” we interpret her statement
    that police recovered her handgun from her apartment and “placed it on” defendant to mean they framed
    him with it.
    - 16 -
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    amount to deficient performance. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Peterson, 
    2017 IL 120331
    , ¶ 80; see also People v. Ashford, 
    121 Ill. 2d 55
    , 74-75 (1988) (trial counsel’s decision to
    call a particular witness is a matter of trial strategy where the individual’s testimony would likely
    have harmed the defendant). Because defendant has failed to satisfy one of the two prongs of the
    Strickland test, his ineffective assistance claim must fail. Clendenin, 
    238 Ill. 2d at 317-18
    .
    Accordingly, we find the circuit court properly dismissed his petition. Dupree, 
    2018 IL 122307
    , ¶ 40 (a petition may be properly dismissed at the second stage where the defendant raises
    an ineffective assistance claim based on trial counsel’s failure to call a witness to testify).
    ¶ 48    Defendant argues, alternatively, that his postconviction counsel provided unreasonable
    assistance by failing to supplement his petition with Walton’s alleged complaint against the
    officers.
    ¶ 49    There is no constitutional right to assistance of counsel during postconviction proceedings.
    People v. Custer, 
    2019 IL 123339
    , ¶ 30. “ ‘[T]he right to assistance of counsel in postconviction
    proceedings is a matter of legislative grace, and a defendant is guaranteed only the level of
    assistance provided by the [Act].’ ” People v. Cotto, 
    2016 IL 119006
    , ¶ 29 (quoting People v.
    Hardin, 
    217 Ill. 2d 289
    , 299 (2005)). Our supreme court has therefore concluded that the Act only
    guarantees a petitioner the “reasonable” assistance of counsel. (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Hardin, 
    217 Ill. 2d at 299
    .
    ¶ 50    Illinois Supreme Court Rule 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017) ensures “that all indigents are
    provided proper representation when presenting claims of constitutional deprivation under the
    [Act].” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Suarez, 
    224 Ill. 2d 37
    , 47 (2007). Rule 651(c)
    provides that a defendant’s postconviction counsel may file a certificate to support a showing that,
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    No. 1-20-0713
    as required by the rule, the attorney (1) “has consulted with petitioner by phone, mail, electronic
    means or in person to ascertain his or her contentions of deprivation of constitutional rights”; (2)
    “has examined the record of the proceedings at the trial”; and (3) “has made any amendments to
    the petitions filed pro se that are necessary for an adequate presentation of petitioner’s
    contentions.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017). A 651(c) certificate creates a rebuttal
    presumption that postconviction counsel provided reasonable assistance. People v. Custer, 
    2019 IL 123339
    , ¶ 32. The defendant bears the burden of overcoming that presumption by
    “demonstrating his attorney’s failure to substantially comply with the duties mandated by Rule
    651(c).” People v. Profit, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 101307
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶ 51   “ ‘Commensurate with the lower reasonable assistance standard mandated in
    postconviction proceedings,’ Rule 651(c) ‘sharply limits the requisite duties of postconviction
    counsel.’ ” People v. Woods, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 162751
    , ¶ 98 (quoting Custer, 
    2019 IL 123339
    , ¶ 32). Postconviction counsel is obligated under Rule 651(c) to attempt to obtain
    affidavits from witnesses identified in the postconviction petition “for the purpose of shaping the
    allegations in the post-conviction petition into appropriate legal form.” People v. Johnson, 
    154 Ill. 2d 227
    , 247 (1993). However, counsel is “under no obligation to actively search for sources outside
    the record that might support general claims raised in a post-conviction petition,” and is not
    obligated “to engage in a generalized fishing expedition in search of support for claims raised in a
    petition.” 
    Id. at 247-48
    . We review de novo whether postconviction counsel complied with Rule
    651(c), which is also the standard to review the second-stage dismissal of a postconviction petition.
    People v. Jones, 
    2011 IL App (1st) 092529
    , ¶ 19.
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    No. 1-20-0713
    ¶ 52   Here, defendant’s first postconviction counsel filed a Rule 651(c) certificate stating that he
    had consulted with defendant, reviewed defendant’s case, and concluded the petition adequately
    set forth defendant’s claims. Thus, there was a rebuttable presumption that defendant’s first
    postconviction counsel complied with Rule 651(c) and provided reasonable assistance in
    determining no supplements to defendant’s petition were necessary. See Custer, 
    2019 IL 123339
    ,
    ¶ 32; see also Woods, 
    2020 IL App (1st) 162751
    , ¶ 101 (counsel’s statement to the court that he
    had “ ‘looked through,’ ” the record, exhibits, and transcript left “no doubt that counsel complied
    with Rule 651(c)’s requirement”).
    ¶ 53   After the State filed its motion to dismiss, defendant then had the benefit of a second
    postconviction counsel when his first counsel retired. The presumption created by first
    postconviction counsel’s Rule 651(c) certificate carried over to his second counsel. People v.
    Smith, 
    2022 IL 126940
    , ¶¶ 29-32. Further, second counsel informed the court she “examined the
    record of proceedings at the trial and sentencing in this case,” and agreed with initial counsel that
    defendant’s petition adequately stated his claims. We also note that defendant then chose to
    represent himself at the hearing on the State’s motion to dismiss his petition and also filed a pro
    se motion to supplement his petition with several exhibits. See People v. Simpson, 
    204 Ill. 2d 536
    ,
    562 (2001) (“The right of self-representation does not carry with it a corresponding right to legal
    assistance; one choosing to represent himself must be prepared to do just that).
    ¶ 54   In this court, defendant asserts that his postconviction counsels provided unreasonable
    assistance by failing to supplement his petition with Walton’s alleged complaint against the CPD.
    ¶ 55   However, Walton’s own affidavit suggests the complaint may have never been filed. As
    mentioned, Walton did not aver that she filed a written complaint against the CPD such that
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    No. 1-20-0713
    counsel could have supplemented defendant’s petition with an actual document. Rather, she
    averred that she “called and filed” a complaint against the officers, but could not pursue it after
    officers threatened her. Moreover, when defendant attempted to supplement his petition with
    additional exhibits in response to the motion to dismiss, Walton’s alleged complaint was not
    among those exhibits. Even further, neither defendant’s petition nor Walton’s affidavit explains
    exactly what the complaint stated or what it would establish. Although defendant’s petition alleges
    that Walton filed the complaint against the CPD “for coming into her apartment,” even Walton
    does not state this in her affidavit. Thus, it is not clear that Walton’s alleged complaint would have
    supported any claim in defendant’s petition. Accordingly, defendant has failed to show
    postconviction counsel provided unreasonable assistance by not supplementing his petition with
    Walton’s complaint against the CPD. Profit, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 101307
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶ 56   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    ¶ 57   Affirmed.
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