People v. Buckhana , 2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    No. 2-21-0655
    Order filed May 19, 2023
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
    except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Kane County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 99-CF-2461
    )
    WILLIE BUCKHANA,                       ) Honorable
    ) David P. Kliment,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE KENNEDY delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Jorgensen and Birkett concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1     Held: The trial court did not err in dismissing defendant’s second stage postconviction
    petition, as he failed to make a sufficient showing that he received ineffective
    assistance of trial and appellate counsel. Therefore, we affirm.
    ¶2     Defendant Willie Buckhana appeals the dismissal of his petition for postconviction relief
    at the second stage. Defendant argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his amended
    postconviction petition because it made a substantial showing of ineffective assistance of both trial
    and appellate counsel. For the following reasons we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    ¶3                                      I. BACKGROUND
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    ¶4     At approximately 12:30 p.m. on August 16, 1999, Gangster Disciples street gang members
    Anthony Cooper, Tremayne Thomas, Taiwon Jackson, and Corey Boey were victims of a shooting
    at an apartment building in Elgin, Illinois, known as “the schoolhouse.” Only Boey survived. As
    a result, defendant and seven other members of the Black Disciples street gang were charged with
    various criminal offenses.
    ¶5                                  A. Procedural Background
    ¶6     In Kane County case No. 99-CF-2069 defendant was charged with unlawful delivery of a
    controlled substance (720 ILCS 570/401(c)(2) (West 1998)) and unlawful delivery of cannabis
    (720 ILCS 550/5(d) (West 1998)). These drug offenses allegedly occurred on the same date as the
    schoolhouse shootings. In Kane County case No. 99-CF-2461 defendant was charged with three
    counts of first degree murder (720 ILCS 5/9-1(a)(2) (West 1998)), one count of attempt (first
    degree murder) (720 ILCS 5/8-4(a) (West 1998)), and one count of aggravated battery with a
    firearm (720 ILCS 5/12-4.2(a)(1) (West 1998)). Boey was the alleged victim in the latter two
    charges. The State sought the death penalty. The two cases were joined for trial, which was
    conducted simultaneously with the trial of co-defendant Sherman Williams, but with two separate
    juries. Defendant was ultimately found guilty on all counts except the charge of attempt first degree
    murder.
    ¶7     After determining that defendant was eligible for the death penalty, the trial court found
    sufficient mitigation to preclude imposition of the death penalty, and defendant was sentenced to
    three concurrent terms of natural life on each of the first degree murder counts. He was also
    sentenced to concurrent terms of 25 years’, 12 years’, and 5 years’ imprisonment on the aggravated
    battery with a firearm, unlawful delivery of a controlled substance, and unlawful delivery of
    cannabis counts respectively. Defendant moved to reconsider sentence, and his motion was denied.
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    He then timely appealed.
    ¶8      On direct appeal defendant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence regarding his first
    degree murder and aggravated battery with a firearm convictions, certain jury instructions, certain
    remarks made by the prosecution, and the trial court’s refusal to order several codefendants to
    answer pretrial deposition questions.
    ¶9      On June 13, 2006, this court affirmed defendant’s convictions and sentences in an
    unpublished order, holding, inter alia, that there was sufficient evidence to find defendant guilty
    as the principal in the murders of Thomas and Cooper, and the aggravated battery with a firearm
    of Boey. People v. Buckhana, Nos. 2-04-0123 & 2-04-0137 cons. (2006) (unpublished order under
    Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23). We likewise held that there was sufficient evidence to find
    defendant guilty under a theory of accountability for the three murders and aggravated battery with
    a firearm, as there was ample evidence that he aided and abetted his fellow gang members in the
    commission of the crimes. 
    Id.
    ¶ 10    Following the disposition of his direct appeal, defendant filed a pro se postconviction
    petition pursuant to the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act) (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2006))
    on August 15, 2007 (file stamped September 7, 2007). On December 16, 2010, appointed counsel
    filed an amended second-stage petition for postconviction relief. On February 17, 2011, the State
    filed a motion to dismiss the amended petition. On June 16, 2011, the trial court granted the State’s
    motion to dismiss, and a notice of appeal was filed that day. On June 19, 2011, defendant filed a
    motion to withdraw his appeal, and his request was granted on July 8, 2011. On April 23, 2015,
    the dismissal order was vacated, and further second-stage proceedings were held. On April 16,
    2021, a second amended postconviction petition was filed, which is the petition at issue in the
    instant case.
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    ¶ 11   The second amended petition alleged ineffective assistance of both trial and appellate
    counsel. The petition alleged that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to have various witnesses
    testify and for unduly influencing defendant not to testify. The petition alleged that appellate
    counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the admission of gang evidence on appeal.
    ¶ 12   On May 17, 2021, the State filed a motion to dismiss the second amended postconviction
    petition at the second stage. The trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss on November 4,
    2021. Defendant was granted leave to file a late notice of appeal.
    ¶ 13                               B. Evidence Presented at Trial
    ¶ 14   We previously summarized the evidence adduced at defendant’s trial on direct appeal.
    People v. Buckhana, Nos. 2-04-0123 & 2-04-0137 cons. (2006) (unpublished order under Illinois
    Supreme Court Rule 23). We restate those facts below:
    ¶ 15   At trial, Elgin police officers testified that they were called to the schoolhouse at
    approximately 12:30 p.m. on August 16, 1999. Officers found Anthony Cooper lying dead on the
    second-floor landing of the south stairwell, near the door to apartment 23. Inside apartment 23,
    officers found Tremayne Thomas lying dead on the living room floor and Taiwon Jackson shot
    but still alive on a couch. Jackson was later pronounced dead at the hospital. Officers found a
    fourth shooting victim, Corey Boey, in the back bedroom. Boey was transported to the hospital
    where he underwent surgery, and ultimately recovered.
    ¶ 16   Willie “Bay Bay” Fullilove testified pursuant to an agreement with the State. Fullilove
    explained that he was charged with three counts of first degree murder, one count of attempt first
    degree murder, and one count of aggravated battery with a firearm in connection with the August
    16, 1999, shooting. Fullilove said that he pleaded guilty to aggravated battery with a firearm and
    received a 20-year sentence. The other four counts remained pending, and unless he provided
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    truthful testimony at the trials of his co-defendants, the State would pursue those charges. In
    connection with his guilty plea, Fullilove admitted that he was responsible for the shooting of
    Corey Boey by accountability. He did not admit to actually shooting Boey.
    ¶ 17   Fullilove testified that he, defendant, Sherman Williams, Avery Binion, Jeffrey Lindsey,
    Willie “Pooloo” McCoy, Kewhan Fields, and Chris Smith were members of the Black Disciples
    street gang. In August 1999, he was 15 years old and living with a woman named Claudia Lopez
    in apartment 12 at the schoolhouse. At that time Fullilove was selling cocaine. Fullilove was aware
    that a person nicknamed Gouda (later identified at trial as Quanson Carlisle), and possibly Charles
    Keys, were selling drugs out of apartment 23 in the schoolhouse. Fullilove explained that the
    individuals in apartment 23 kept a small safe in apartment 28 containing marijuana, cocaine, and
    a few pistols. Fullilove stole the safe on August 14, 1999, and he and Byron “Tray One” Lemon
    broke it open by throwing it over a third-floor railing. The day after he stole the safe, Carlisle and
    Charles Keys confronted Fullilove about the safe. Fullilove denied stealing it and Keys took a
    swing at him.
    ¶ 18   According to Fullilove, defendant, Fields, Lindsey, McCoy, Smith, and Williams came to
    apartment 12 around noon on August 16, 1999. Defendant gave Fullilove a McDonald’s bag
    containing some cocaine, marijuana, and a digital scale. Fullilove hid the drugs and scale in the
    “toilet bowl.” Williams asked Fullilove if he had a “strap,” meaning a pistol. Fullilove told
    Williams that he did. Fullilove identified State’s exhibit number 19 as his .25-caliber semi-
    automatic Beretta pistol. Fullilove testified that he observed defendant with a .357 magnum
    revolver in his hand, which he identified as State’s exhibit number 2C.
    ¶ 19   According to Fullilove, defendant said that they were going upstairs to try to “squash” the
    issue. Before the group left apartment 12 for apartment 23, McCoy, who had hit the buzzer for
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    apartment 23 on the intercom, indicated that the occupants of apartment 23 were present. Fullilove
    said that McCoy called Fullilove’s cellular telephone with his cellular telephone and told Fullilove
    to leave his telephone on so that Fullilove could hear the conversation that was about to take place.
    According to Fullilove, everyone left apartment 12 except him. Fullilove listened on his cellular
    telephone for a minute or two before the phone went dead. After a few minutes, shots rang out.
    Fullilove checked on Claudia’s children, who he was watching, and who were in the back of
    apartment 12, and then Fullilove heard a few more gunshots. Next, Fullilove got a call from McCoy
    who told him to leave the building. Fullilove left the apartment with the children, having put his
    .25-caliber Beretta inside a Teletubby doll belonging to one of the children. Police officers arrested
    Fullilove outside of the building, and one of the children picked up the Teletubby doll.
    ¶ 20   On cross-examination, Fullilove admitted to making five or six false statements to police
    detectives on August 16 and 17, 1999. Initially, Fullilove gave a false name and date of birth,
    claimed to know nothing about the shooting, and denied knowing McCoy and Williams. In one or
    more of the statements that followed his initial statement, Fullilove told the detectives that he fired
    two shots from the back stairwell when he saw someone come out of apartment 23, and that he ran
    to the door and threw the gun over the parking lot fence. Fullilove later told the detectives that he
    did not throw the weapon over the fence but, rather, placed it in a Teletubby doll. Fullilove also
    admitted that, in the parking lot after the shooting, Eric Matthews and Victoria Cooper were yelling
    at him and Victoria Cooper said, “You killed my boy, you shot my baby.” Fullilove admitted
    further that he refused to answer questions at a pre-trial deposition.
    ¶ 21   Other evidence established that Barbara Lopez, Claudia Lopez’s mother, took custody of
    Claudia’s two children after the shooting and, thereafter, gave police a Teletubby doll containing
    State’s exhibit number 19, a .25-caliber semi-automatic Beretta Pistol. Also, police officers
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    recovered a green leafy substance, a yellowish-white rock-like substance, and a small digital scale
    from the toilet tank in apartment number 12. The parties stipulated that the green leafy substance
    was 69.6 grams of cannabis, and the rock-like substance was 4.1 grams of cocaine.
    ¶ 22   Kewhan Fields testified pursuant to a plea agreement with the State and explained its terms.
    The agreement was the same as the one entered into by Fullilove. Fields agreed that he had a 1998
    conviction of possession of a controlled substance. Fields explained that in August 1999, he was
    one of eight members of the Elgin Black Disciples. Avery Binion, as chief, was the leader;
    Sherman Williams, as director, was the second-ranking member; and defendant, as Chief of
    Security, was the third-ranking member. Fields said that on the morning on August 16, 1999, he
    went to Binion’s house to attend a gang meeting about a stolen safe. In all defendant, Binion,
    Fields, Lindsey, McCoy, Smith, and Williams attended the meeting. Binion told the group to go
    over to the schoolhouse and to handle that business about the safe. Defendant passed out firearms
    that were obtained from the stolen safe. Fields saw a .357 magnum revolver in defendant’s
    possession at the meeting. Binion gave Fields a .380-caliber semi-automatic handgun at the
    meeting. After the guns were issued, Fields rode with defendant to the schoolhouse while Lindsey,
    McCoy, and Williams rode in a minivan driven by Smith.
    ¶ 23   Fields explained that the group went to Fullilove’s apartment where defendant said
    something to the effect of, “If they get out of line we gonna hurt or kill them.” Defendant checked
    to make sure that all the guns were loaded. After McCoy indicated that Carlisle was upstairs,
    defendant, Fields, Lindsey, McCoy, Smith, and Williams proceeded upstairs to tell Carlisle to
    leave Fullilove alone about the safe. Fields said that only he, defendant, Lindsey, and Williams
    were armed.
    ¶ 24   When they got upstairs McCoy knocked on the door of apartment 23. Carlisle and Cooper
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    came out and Williams and Carlisle had a heated conversation about the stolen safe that ended
    with Carlisle going back inside apartment 23 saying, “fuck this shit.” At that point, Cooper was
    still sitting on the stairs going up to the third floor. Fields testified that Williams, while standing
    over Cooper, asked Cooper if he was riding with them, and Cooper said “yeah.” Defendant was
    right next to Williams at the time. Fields testified that defendant and Williams both pulled out their
    guns and a shot sounded. Fields could not tell whether Williams or defendant shot Cooper.
    Williams said, “I’m tired of this shit, it’s on, fuck these n***s” and, followed by defendant and
    Lindsey, went through the hallway door toward apartment 23. With that, Fields ran down the stairs
    shooting his gun once up the stairs into the wall. Fields later learned from police that his bullet hit
    Cooper in the arm. As he ran away, Fields heard gunshots coming from apartment 23.
    ¶ 25   Fields testified that he, McCoy, and Smith ran to the minivan and waited for Williams,
    defendant, and Lindsey before driving away. As they drove off, Williams said something to the
    effect of “we got the mother fucker[s], got the n***s.” Defendant said that he shot somebody in
    the head, and Williams said that he shot someone wearing red who tried to jump out a window.
    Defendant asked, “did we kill everybody?” In the fleeing minivan, defendant gathered his,
    Williams’s, Lindsey’s, and Fields’s guns into a paper bag. When Smith stopped the minivan on
    Route 19, McCoy got out and placed the paper bag containing the guns near a tire in the grass.
    Fields testified that the guns marked State’s exhibit numbers 1C (a .380 caliber Walther PPK), 2C
    (a Colt King Cobra .357 magnum), 3C (a Ruger P89 9-millimeter semi-automatic pistol) and 4C
    (a Browning 9-millimeter semi-automatic pistol) were handguns that he, defendant, Williams, and
    Lindsey, respectively, carried on August 16, 1999.
    ¶ 26   On cross-examination, Fields agreed that when he first spoke to the police, he claimed that
    he was not at the schoolhouse on the date in question and had nothing to do with the shootings.
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    Fields said that he initially lied to the police in an effort to stay out of trouble. Fields admitted that
    when he gave his May 17, 2000, proffer to the State, he had said that Williams shot Cooper in the
    head. However, on cross-examination, Fields maintained that it could have been either Williams
    or defendant who shot Cooper. Fields also admitted that at Smith’s trial he testified that he was
    not sure who had the gun marked State’s exhibit number 2C, that it was either Williams or
    defendant; that he thought Lindsey had the gun marked State’s exhibit number 3C; and that he did
    not know who had the gun marked State’s exhibit number 4C.
    ¶ 27    Igna Baldwin testified that in August 1999, she and her boyfriend Eric Matthews were
    living in apartment 23 at the schoolhouse. According to Baldwin, Matthews’s cousin Quanson
    “Gouda” Carlisle and Charles Keys were selling drugs out of apartment 23. In the morning on
    August 16, 1999, Baldwin returned to her apartment from work. Upon arrival at the door to the
    building, McCoy, who she knew as Avery Binion’s cousin “Pooloo,” and Williams opened the
    door to the building for her. Baldwin related that she had known Williams practically all her life
    and had known McCoy for about a year. Baldwin also saw Smith, Fullilove, Lindsey, and two men
    she did not know, standing inside the doorway to the building. As they ascended the stairs to the
    second floor, Williams and McCoy gave her a dirty look.
    ¶ 28    Baldwin heard Williams arguing with Carlisle. As Williams stood on the staircase going
    up to the second floor, he said something to the effect of, “We’re going to get these pussy mother
    fuckers[,]” to Carlisle who, along with Anthony Cooper, was standing at the top of the stairs. At
    that point, Baldwin went into apartment 23 where she saw, among others, Corey Boey.
    ¶ 29    Next, Baldwin heard gunshots out in the hallway. Baldwin panicked, stood outside her
    room for a second, and then “heard a whole bunch of people coming into the apartment.” Baldwin
    saw people jumping out the window, and she went into the bathroom from where she heard four
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    or five gunshots coming from the living room. She also heard Williams say “We got these pussy
    mother fuckers now; let’s bounce.” When Baldwin came out of the bathroom she saw that Boey
    had been shot and she called 911. On cross-examination, Baldwin agreed that a police officer had
    showed her a photograph array on April 19, 1999, that included a photograph of defendant but that
    she had not identified defendant. Baldwin clarified that she heard both Williams and McCoy in the
    living room after the shooting stopped.
    ¶ 30   Quanson “Gouda” Carlisle testified that he and his friends were selling cocaine and
    marijuana out of apartment 23 in the schoolhouse in August 1999. Carlisle identified State’s
    exhibit 2C as the .357 magnum revolver that, along with other firearms, marijuana, and cocaine,
    was in the safe that he and his friends kept in apartment 28. After the safe was stolen, Carlisle and
    his friends suspected Fullilove (“Bay Bay”). On August 16, 1999, Carlisle walked out of apartment
    23 and saw defendant, Fields, Fullilove, McCoy, Smith, Williams, and others that he did not know
    by name. Carlisle explained that Williams was all the way at the top of the stairs “in his face,” and
    defendant was “kind of like at the bottom of the stairs.” According to Carlisle, Williams said,
    “What’s up with that stuff with you and Bay Bay[?] Man I came over to holler at you for chief.”
    Carlisle explained that he took “chief” to mean Binion. In response, Carlisle said, “Man, I ain’t.
    Fuck you[,]” and he turned around and went back into apartment 23. Minutes later, Carlisle heard
    a gunshot and “then they started kicking the door and came in there shooting.” Carlisle and Charles
    Keys ran to the back bedroom from where they heard a “whole bunch of gunshots.” Carlisle did
    not see who entered the apartment. When the gunshots stopped, Boey crawled into the bedroom.
    ¶ 31   On cross-examination, Carlisle denied membership in the Gangster Disciples street gang,
    admitting only to being an associate of that gang. Carlisle said sometimes the Black Disciples and
    the Gangster Disciples get along, and sometimes they do not. Carlisle said that the safe incident
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    was not a gang dispute but, rather, a financial dispute. Carlisle agreed that he had not been
    prosecuted for dealing drugs out of apartment 23.
    ¶ 32   Corey Boey testified that he was serving a 12-year sentence for armed robbery, possession
    of a controlled substance, possession of cannabis, and possession of a look-alike substance. Boey
    also admitted that he had prior convictions of misdemeanor and felony theft and had been
    adjudicated delinquent based on a finding that he had committed the offenses of attempt burglary
    and aggravated battery. Boey said that he did not receive any promises or deals from the State in
    exchange for his testimony.
    ¶ 33   Boey testified that he and his friend Taiwon Jackson went to see his cousin Carlisle at
    apartment 23 in the schoolhouse on the morning on August 16, 1999. Also present in apartment
    23 were Baldwin, Carlisle, Cooper, Keys, and Thomas. At approximately 12:30 p.m. Boey was on
    the living room floor shooting dice when he heard gunshots coming from outside the door. Boey
    jumped up and sat on the couch. Next, he saw the door kicked open and defendant, Williams, and
    McCoy entered the apartment. Three or four shots were fired, and Boey remained on the couch.
    Next, Williams walked up to Jackson, who was seated on the couch, and shot him in the head.
    Williams then shot Thomas in the head. Boey thought that he was going to be killed so he rolled
    over onto the floor on the side of the couch and went into the fetal position. Boey said that he was
    shot once in the right side before he hit the floor. Boey saw the legs of someone standing alongside
    him and then a bullet entered his left thigh followed by shots to his left and right ankles. Boey
    played dead and the intruders left. Boey crawled to the bedroom and was ultimately taken to the
    hospital by ambulance.
    ¶ 34   On cross-examination, Boey said that he was smoking marijuana on the morning in
    question and was high. Boey said that he remembered talking to the police at the scene but told
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    them that he did not want to say anything, he just wanted to go to the hospital. Boey said that he
    did not remember talking to the police at the hospital or telling his mother and stepfather that Chris
    Smith shot him and his friends. Boey did not recall identifying Smith from an array of photographs
    shown to him while he was at the hospital and then starting to cry. Boey also did not recall giving
    the police a tape-recorded statement on August 18, 1999, in which he stated that Smith and McCoy
    entered apartment 23, and that he could not tell if anyone else had entered. Boey did not remember
    telling Detective Brictson that Williams, McCoy, and Smith entered apartment 23, and that Smith
    shot him. Boey did not remember talking to police on August 18, 1999, or to Detective Brictson
    at the jail in March 2000, or telling Detective Brictson that he was nervous about testifying against
    Smith at that time. Boey agreed that he testified at Smith’s and McCoy’s trials but did not
    remember telling prosecutors shortly before the Smith trial that when the door to apartment 23
    opened, Smith was standing in the doorway. Boey did not remember admitting during his
    testimony at the McCoy trial that he had previously told Detective Padron that Smith shot him.
    Boey agreed that at the McCoy trial he admitted that he could have told the police that Smith had
    a gun in his hand. Boey explained that he did not recall telling the police that Smith came into
    apartment 23 and shot him, but indicated that he was not denying that he may have said so. Boey
    indicated that he had memory problems since he was shot on August 16, 1999. Boey did not
    remember telling police that it may have been Fullilove that was behind Smith and McCoy in the
    doorway or telling Candice Van Dyke that Smith had shot him.
    ¶ 35   Edward Rottman, a fingerprint examiner from the Illinois State Police Crime Laboratory,
    testified that he obtained cards containing known finger and palm prints for various suspects in
    this case from the Elgin police department. The examiner attempted to develop latent prints from
    the surfaces of five firearms. After utilizing three methods of lifting latent finger and palm prints
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    from the firearms identified as State’s exhibit numbers 1C, 2C, 3C, 4C, and 19, the examiner found
    no prints suitable for comparison. The examiner did find a print suitable for comparison upon the
    magazine for State’s exhibit number 19, the .25-caliber Beretta. That latent print was matched to
    a standard known to be that of Fullilove. The examiner was also able to obtain a print suitable for
    comparison from an “Eagle Country Market” paper bag (State’s exhibit number 6A) submitted to
    him by the Elgin police department. The latent print on the paper bag matched a standard known
    to be that of McCoy. The examiner also obtained one latent print suitable for comparison from the
    minivan that matched a standard known to be that of Smith.
    ¶ 36   Dr. Bryan Mitchell, a forensic pathologist who performed autopsies on Anthony Cooper,
    Tremayne Thomas, and Taiwon Jackson, opined that each victim died as a result of gunshot
    wounds. The pathologist discovered four bullet wounds in the body of Anthony Cooper. One bullet
    wound was on the right side of the head with a corresponding exit wound on the right side of the
    neck from which two small bullet fragments were recovered. A second bullet wound was located
    on the left chest with a corresponding exit wound on the left back. A third bullet wound was located
    on the backside of the right forearm from which a bullet was recovered. The fourth bullet wound
    was located on the left thigh with a corresponding exit wound on the left buttock.
    ¶ 37   The pathologist discovered three bullet wounds in the body of Tremayne Thomas. One
    wound was above the right forehead just above the hairline from which a bullet was recovered. A
    second wound was on the back of the right shoulder from which a bullet was recovered. The third
    wound was in the left buttock. The bullet inflicting this third wound shattered the femur and was
    fragmented such that it could not be recovered from the body.
    ¶ 38   There were two bullet wounds in the body of Taiwon Jackson. One was to the right
    forehead near the hairline from which a bullet was recovered. The second was a graze wound to
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    the left foot. No bullet was recovered from this wound. All the bullets and bullet fragments
    removed from the bodies were turned over as evidence to Detective Spejcher.
    ¶ 39   Russell McLain, an Illinois State Police forensic scientist, testified as an expert in the field
    of firearms and firearms identification. McLain explained that the rifling inside of the barrel of a
    firearm has spirals called “lands and grooves” that cause a bullet to spin as it travels through the
    barrel in order to stabilize the flight of the bullet. Each firearm leaves unique striation marks or
    scratches on the bullets fired through its barrel. McLain also explained that semi-automatic
    firearms eject the bullet casings or cartridges after each bullet is fired and, in the process, leaves
    unique marks on the casings. McLain explained further that the firing pin of a revolver-type firearm
    leaves unique marks on the shell casings and that those casings remain in the firearm’s cylinder
    until manually removed.
    ¶ 40   McLain identified State’s exhibit number 1C as an Interarms model APDFEG .380-caliber
    semi-automatic handgun, better known as a Walther PPK; State’s exhibit number 2C as a Colt
    King Cobra .357 magnum revolver; State’s exhibit number 3C as a Ruger P89 9-millimeter semi-
    automatic pistol; State’s exhibit number 4C as a Browning high-power 9-millimeter semi-
    automatic handgun; and State’s exhibit number 19 as a Beretta .25-caliber semi-automatic
    handgun. McLain examined these firearms as well as various cartridge casings and fired bullets,
    all submitted to him by Elgin police officers. McLain explained that he performed microscopic
    examinations of the fired bullets and the spent casings submitted to him and took measurements
    of the land and groove impressions left in the bullets. McLain also performed multiple test firings
    of the five firearms in question, collected the projectiles, and took microscopic measurements of
    the land and groove impressions left in those bullets. McLain then made side by side microscopic
    comparisons of the bullets fired during the test firings and the bullets submitted to him by the Elgin
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    police officers. McLain also compared the casings from the bullets fired during the test firings
    with the casings submitted to him.
    ¶ 41   McLain determined that State’s exhibit number 79, the bullet recovered from the right
    forearm of Anthony Cooper, was fired from the .380-caliber Walther PPK (Ex. 1C). McLain
    determined that State’s exhibit number 31, a .380-caliber casing found on the stairs leading from
    the first floor to the second floor of the schoolhouse, was ejected from the .380 Caliber Walther
    PPK. With respect to State’s exhibit numbers 80, 81, and 82, fragments from the front and back of
    the left leg and from the neck of Anthony Cooper, McLain was unable to determine which firearm
    fired the bullets resulting in those fragments. McLain could not definitively identify the firearm
    that fired State’s exhibit number 34, a spent bullet found underneath the body of Anthony Cooper.
    Nevertheless, McLain opined that the bullet could have been fired through the Colt King Cobra
    .357 magnum revolver (Ex. 2C), and definitely could not have been fired through the barrels of
    any of the other four firearms. McLain identified State’s exhibit number 32, which was found on
    the second-floor stairway landing, as a bullet fired through the barrel of the Colt King Cobra .357
    magnum revolver (Ex. 2C).
    ¶ 42   McLain was unable to positively determine from which firearm State’s exhibit number 28,
    a bullet with bullet fragments from the head of Tremayne Thomas, was fired. Nevertheless,
    McLain opined that the land and groove marks on that projectile were consistent with those on
    bullets fired from the Colt King Cobra .357 magnum revolver and inconsistent with bullets fired
    from the other four firearms. McLain explained that the bullet taken from Thomas’s head came
    from a firearm with a barrel having left-spiraling rifling, and the Colt King Cobra .357 magnum
    was the only one of the five firearms with a barrel that had such rifling. McLain said the other four
    firearms had barrels with right-spiraling rifling, such that they could not have fired the bullet taken
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    from inside the head of Thomas.
    ¶ 43   McLain determined that State’s exhibit number 29, a hollow point bullet recovered from
    inside the shoulder of Tremayne Thomas, was fired by the Ruger P89 9-millimeter semi-automatic
    handgun (Ex. 3C). McLain determined that State’s exhibit number 30, the bullet recovered from
    the head of Taiwon Jackson, was fired through the barrel of State’s exhibit number 3C, the Ruger
    P89 9-millimeter semi-automatic handgun. McLain indicated that no bullet or casing submitted to
    him came from State’s exhibit number 19, the Baretta .25-caliber semi-automatic handgun, and
    that all the casings that were recovered from inside apartment 23 were 9-millimeters and ejected
    from State’s exhibit number 3C, the Ruger P89 9-millimeter semi-automatic handgun. Finally,
    McLain determined that State’s exhibit number 43, a bullet that the parties stipulated was removed
    from Corey Boey, was fired through the barrel of the Colt King Cobra .357 magnum (Ex. 2C).
    ¶ 44   Sergeant Sean Rafferty of the Elgin police department, an expert in the area of street gangs
    and street gang activity, testified that in August 1999 there were 10 to 12 gang members in the
    Elgin “set” of Black Disciples. According to Rafferty, defendant was the third highest ranking
    Black Disciple subordinate to Williams and Binion. Other Black Disciple gang members in the set
    included Fields, Fullilove, Lindsey, McCoy, and Smith. Rafferty also related that he and another
    officer went to 635 West Wellington in Elgin, the home of Avery Binion, on August 16, 1999, at
    6:03 p.m. to arrest Willie McCoy. When Rafferty arrived, he observed defendant, Binion, McCoy,
    and Willie Wilder standing on the front lawn of the residence. After officers told McCoy he was
    under arrest, both Binion and defendant had “gotten between” the officers and McCoy. Only
    McCoy was arrested that evening. Rafferty also testified that on August 17, 1999, he recovered a
    small safe in a dumpster located behind the apartment building at 302 West Chicago Street, Elgin,
    where Byron Lemon lived. Rafferty identified State’s exhibit number 46 as the safe he recovered
    - 16 -
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    from that location. On cross-examination, Rafferty explained that street gangs fall into one of two
    categories, Folks or People. Black Disciples and Gangster Disciples are both Folks and, therefore,
    are generally aligned. Rafferty had no information that the Black Disciples and the Gangster
    Disciples were in any dispute prior to August 16, 1999.
    ¶ 45   Detective Brian Gorcowski of the Elgin Police Department testified that on August 17,
    1999, after defendant waived his Miranda rights, he and other detectives interviewed defendant at
    the Elgin police department. Defendant told the detectives that he was in Chicago with his
    counselor at the date and time in question. However, after the counselor did not verify defendant’s
    alibi, defendant said that the whole incident began when Fullilove and Tray One stole a safe that
    belonged to individuals in apartment 23. Defendant told detectives that he was at Binion’s house
    in the morning on August 16, 1999. Also present were Fields, Byron Lemon, McCoy, Smith, and
    Williams. Defendant said that Fullilove briefly attended the meeting between 11 a.m. and 11:30
    a.m. and that Binion issued various guns to those in attendance, except for defendant. One of those
    guns was a .357-caliber revolver, given to Fullilove.
    ¶ 46   Defendant explained to detectives that while Fullilove was at Binion’s, defendant agreed
    to deliver some marijuana, cocaine, and a scale to Fullilove at apartment 12 in exchange for an
    ounce of cocaine because Fullilove did not want to take the drugs with him. After the others left
    in a minivan driven by Smith, an individual named Sid dropped defendant off near the
    schoolhouse. Defendant went to apartment 12 carrying a McDonald’s bag containing a quarter
    pound of marijuana, some cocaine, and a scale. Defendant told detectives that inside apartment 12
    he saw Fullilove, Byron Lemon, Smith, and Williams, all armed with guns.
    ¶ 47   As defendant tried to complete the transaction with Fullilove and leave, McCoy said, “Let’s
    go take care of business.” Defendant told detectives that the group left apartment 12 and went into
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    the stairwell leading to the second floor. Defendant said that, as he was standing by the double
    entrance doors, an individual named Myrance Thomas came by and engaged defendant in a
    conversation about an old drug debt. While speaking to Thomas, defendant turned his head and
    saw Fullilove fire twice at a subject standing on the second floor stair landing and saw McCoy
    shoot the same subject once. Defendant ran out of the building and down the street where Smith
    stopped the minivan and told him to get in. Smith stopped the minivan on Route 19, and McCoy
    gathered the guns from everyone in the vehicle and placed them in a paper bag. Defendant told
    detectives that there were four guns, two 9-millimeter semi-automatic handguns, a .380-caliber
    semi-automatic handgun, and a .357 magnum revolver.
    ¶ 48   At this point in the interview defendant led the detectives to the location on Route 19 where
    he said the guns were hidden. At that location detectives recovered the handguns defendant had
    described. After returning to the Elgin police department, defendant told Gorcowski that, at the
    meeting at Binion’s house on the morning before the shooting, Binion told everyone, “[f]uck this.
    You all meet at Bay Bay’s [Fullilove] crib, take care of y’alls business. Do what you have to do.
    Make sure everyone is dead.”
    ¶ 49   Detective Gorcowski testified further that at approximately 5:09 a.m. on August 17, 1999,
    defendant agreed to give a tape-recorded statement. The tape recording was played for the jury,
    and the jurors were given transcripts of the statement. During the taped statement defendant
    admitted that he and Binion were members of the Black Disciples. Defendant indicated that the
    stolen safe was discussed at Binion’s house the morning of August 16, 1999, and then Binion
    issued pistols to Fields, Fullilove, Byron “Tray One” Lemon, McCoy, Smith, and Williams. In the
    taped statement defendant related further:
    “DEFENDANT: Okay, while I was at Avery [Binion’s house], everybody came
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    over there. Um Bay Bay came, he said he couldn’t stay long cause he had to baby-sit. Bay
    Bay gotta a .357, uh, like a silver long pistol with a black grip to it, Bay Bay left. Everybody
    was was [sic] told to be [sic] to meet at Bay Bay’s house. Bay Bay called back and asked
    for his narcotics that he had left. Avery didn’t know he left the narcotics and when he went
    down in the basement and found some, Avery told me to deliver these narcotics over to
    Bay Bay. I called, while I was talking to Bay Bay on the phone, I say, Bay Bay, I’m [sic]
    what I’m gonna get out the deal, and Bay Bay said well, what you want, I said a quarter
    ounce. He said cool, bring it to me, and I give it to you.”
    In explaining what happened when he arrived at apartment 12, the following exchange ensued:
    “DEFENDANT: On Center Street. And I got into the apartment. That’s where
    everybody was at. I says man, I says how y’all beat me here. And they said we came another
    way, so I gave Bay Bay the McDonald’s bag which I was carrying a scale in. It had to ha
    been no more than 2 and ½, I mean, maybe three ounces of crack cocaine. Uh, a half a
    pound a weed. I charged Bay Bay a quarter ounce for deliverin this, uh, package to him,
    but it was already discussed prior with him about how much I was gonna be paid for
    delivering. Okay, I was s’posed to get my quarter ounce and I was s’posa leave.
    GORCOWSKI: Okay.
    DEFENDANT: Okay, but by that time, Bay Bay and alla them went upsta went
    upstairs and we was arguin, I came out from Bay Bay’s house. I looked because there’s
    two kids downstairs and he made them go into their room. I left outta there, came upstairs.
    I made it to the landing. By that time, they was arguin.
    GORCOWSKI: This was the landing by the front door.
    DEFENDANT: By the front door.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    GORCOWSKI: And.
    DEFENDANT: At that time, I came past Myron, Myron was on his way out the
    door. Myron say wh what askin me what I need. I say I don’t need nothing, man, I just
    dropped off this packet. I’m dropping off a packet. And he said well, man, {unintelligible}
    some bullshit. I say I ain’t. By that time, I’m looking at the standin, gunshots was fired.
    Well lem lemme backtrack.
    GORCOWSKI: Let me back you up.
    DEFENDANT: to the lady coming past. She asked em to get by. They let her by.
    By the time the door closed, well, I heard a door, I didn’t see a door close, I heard a door
    close. Cause the doors close loud. Okay, and at that time when the door closed, they was
    arguin in the hallway. Gun fire came up, Okay.
    GORCOWSKI: Lemme stop you there. Who were they arguing with and who was
    arguing?
    DEFENDANT: Ah, um, I dunno. I dunno these guys names, but they
    GORCOWSKI: Oh, you don’t know his name, but there was a guy in the hallway.
    DEFENDANT: There was two guys in the hallway that was arguing with Pooloo
    [McCoy], Tray One [Byron Lemon], Bay Bay [Fullilove], uh, Sherman [Williams], Ke ke
    Kewh Kewhan [Fields], um they was arguing with the two guys in the hallway.
    ***
    DEFENDANT: Okay, what happened after that was that when the argument broke
    down, de one of the guys that was arguing with {unintelligible} went through the entrance
    door. By that time, Bay Bay said man, I’m not gonna keep looking behind my back, man,
    cause I know they gonna do something to me. Bay Bay pulled out a long silver gun, which
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    happened to be, I believe it was a .357 Magnum, fired twice. The guy in the hallway fell
    by the time they broke through the fire door, I left out the entrance door to the building,
    went around the building.
    GORCOWSKI: All right, let me stop you there for a second. After Bay Bay fired,
    did anybody else fire their gun?
    DEFENDANT: Bay Bay fired, um, Pooloo fired.
    ***
    GORCOWSKI: Did you hear more gunshots then?
    DEFENDANT: When I was outside the building this like door got shot and it was
    like it was it was a ring of gun shots. A lotta gun shots. At that time.
    GORCOWSKI: And you were runnin away from the building at this time?
    DEFENDANT: I was, yes, I was runnin away from the building. At that time, I was
    goin down the center, is that Center Street?
    GORCOWSKI: Center Street.
    ***
    DEFENDANT: But I know I was going that way and by that time Chris [Smith], it
    was Chris, Kewhan, um, Sherman, um, {unintelligible} it was Chris, Kewhan, Sherman,
    Pooloo was in the van. They was in the van at this time. I did name Chris to be exact it was
    Chris, Kewhan, Sherman, Pooloo was in the van. They came past me. Now Bay Bay wadn’t
    in the van. Bay Bay didn’t, Bay Bay didn’t come back in the van.
    GORCOWSKI: Okay.
    DEFENDANT: Cause he never got in the van {unintelligible}.
    GORCOWSKI: Okay.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    DEFENDANT: Bay Bay never got into the van. We left. They left. We got pa they
    got past me. Chris pulled over, told me to get in the van, said man, come on let’s go let’s
    go let’s go. I said why what’s up? He said man, just get in the van, get in the van. I got in
    the van. That’s when
    GORCOWSKI: Was Tray One in the van, too?
    DEFENDANT: Uh, yes, he was. Tray One, Tray One was in the van, I’m sorry.
    ***
    GORCOWSKI: From there, where’d you go?
    DEFENDANT: From there they made a left and hit the expressway. Took the
    expressway all the way to Route 59 or 59 to Route 19. Then comin down 19, comin back
    into Elgin is where they all put pistols into a bag. A brown paper bag.
    ***
    GORCOWSKI: Who put the pistols up by the
    DEFENDANT: No, um
    GORCOWSKI: fence, did you?
    DEFENDANT: No, Tray One, when we when we stopped the car, Tray One got
    out the car, put the pistols by the fence. He said man that’s a landmark right here, these
    tires will make us remember where we dropped the pistols off at. Okay? Then we came
    into Elgin. I said well, just drop me off. I’m gonna go home, man. And I went to the house.”
    Gorcowski testified further that the four handguns marked State’s exhibits 1C, 2C, 3C, and 4C
    were the four handguns in the paper bag found along Route 19. The State then rested.
    ¶ 50   During his case, defendant first called Detective Chris Troiola, of the Elgin Police
    Department, who testified that Fullilove initially denied involvement in the shooting but then said
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    that Williams went upstairs to talk to Charles Keys about the stolen safe and that Fullilove then
    heard gunshots. Troiola said that Fullilove’s next account was that Williams, McCoy, and Smith
    came over to his apartment armed with guns. Fullilove told Troiola that those three went up the
    south stairway while he went up the north stairway. Fullilove said that he fired twice from a
    distance of five or six feet from the door to apartment 23. Troiola agreed that Fullilove never
    mentioned defendant in any of these accounts.
    ¶ 51    Corey Boey’s mother and step-father, Antoinette Johnson and Lloyd Johnson testified that,
    while at the hospital after being shot, Boey identified Chris Smith as the individual that shot him
    and identified Smith from an array of photographs shown to him by the police. Antoinette
    explained that she had basically raised Smith and that Smith had been a part of their family for 30
    years. On cross-examination, Antoinette admitted that Boey was groggy and under the influence
    of medication when he identified Smith. She also admitted that Boey had memory trouble his entire
    life and had difficulty relating facts accurately.
    ¶ 52    Defendant also called Elgin Detective Jesse Padron who testified that he spoke to Boey at
    the emergency room on August 16, 1999, before Boey went into surgery. Boey told Padron that
    two guys came into the apartment and started shooting up the place. Later that same day, after
    Boey got out of surgery, Padron showed Boey an array of photographs and Boey immediately
    pointed to a photograph of Chris Smith and started to cry. Padron took a taped statement from
    Boey on August 16, 1999, which was played for the jury. In that statement Boey said that he saw
    Smith enter the apartment with a handgun and shoot Taiwon Jackson in the head. Boey said that
    he dove onto the floor and was unsure if Smith shot again. Another subject entered the apartment
    with Smith, but Boey could not identify that person. Padron spoke with Boey again on August 18,
    1999, and showed Boey another array of photographs, which included photographs of Smith and
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    Willie “Pooloo” McCoy. Boey’s taped statement of August 18, 1999, was also admitted into
    evidence and played for the jury. In that statement Boey said that McCoy was the second subject
    to enter the apartment behind Smith. Boey said that he saw Smith shoot Taiwon Jackson. Boey
    also said that a third subject entered the apartment, but that he could not identify that person.
    Padron agreed that Boey did not mention defendant in either the August 16 or 18 interviews.
    ¶ 53   Defendant Mark Bricston of the Elgin Police Department who testified that he spoke to
    Corey Boey on February 24, 2000, at the Kane County Jail when Boey indicated that he was afraid
    to testify against Smith. At that time Boey told Brictson that Williams burst into the apartment
    firing a gun on the day in question. Boey clarified that Smith shot him. Brictson agreed that Boey
    never mentioned defendant.
    ¶ 54   Victoria Cooper testified that she was outside the entrance to the schoolhouse on August
    16, 1999, and saw Fullilove inside on the second-floor stairway landing waving a gun. At the same
    time, she “saw bullets hit the window” and “sparks hit the windows.” She did not see her son
    Anthony Cooper inside the schoolhouse. Victoria ran to the corner liquor store and called the
    police. One hour to ninety minutes later Victoria saw Fullilove on the sidewalk outside of the
    schoolhouse and told him, “You are a dirty son-of-a-bitch, you shot my son. You didn’t see me,
    but I seen you.” On cross-examination, Victoria admitted that in a tape-recorded statement that she
    gave to Detective Brictson on August 16, 1999, she said that she was a good 60 feet from the door
    when she heard four or five gunshots. Victoria also admitted that at a previously held deposition
    she testified that she could not tell if the person she thought was Fullilove had a gun in his hand
    and, in turn, could not tell if he fired a gun. Victoria admitted that the sun caused a glare on the
    window she was looking through, that she did not actually see Fullilove shoot her son, and that
    she could see only the back of the man she thought was Fullilove. Victoria agreed that she merely
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    assumed that Fullilove was the one who shot her son.
    ¶ 55   Finally, defendant recalled Detective Gorcowski who agreed that Victoria Cooper was
    yelling when he arrived at the schoolhouse on the afternoon in question and that she said that
    Fullilove shot her son. When Gorcowski spoke to Kewhan Fields on August 17, 1999, Fields
    initially denied being at the schoolhouse at all on the day in question and then, upon hearing some
    details regarding the investigation, stated that he no longer wanted to speak to Gorcowski and that
    he wanted a lawyer. Gorcowski spoke to Sherman Williams on September 5, 1999, and Williams
    said that while in the fleeing minivan, Fields said “I busted old boy’s shit on the stairs. I busted
    him good” and Lindsey said that “his shit jammed.”
    ¶ 56                                       II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 57   At issue in this appeal is whether the summary dismissal of defendant’s postconviction
    petition at the second stage was in error. Defendant maintains that his petition made a substantial
    showing of ineffective assistance of both trial and appellate counsel. He argues that appellate
    counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the trial court’s admission of gang evidence, and
    that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call several witnesses.
    ¶ 58   A postconviction proceeding is a collateral attack on a prior conviction which permits
    defendants to challenge their convictions or sentences based upon a substantial violation of their
    federal or state constitutional rights. People v. Swamynathan, 
    236 Ill. 2d 103
    , 113 (2010).
    Postconviction claims are limited to matters which were not and could not have been previously
    adjudicated. 
    Id.
     The Act provides for a three-stage proceeding. 
    Id.
     At the first stage, the trial court
    reviews the petition to determine whether the defendant has set forth the gist of a constitutional
    claim, or if the petition is frivolous or patently without merit. People v. Edwards, 
    197 Ill. 2d 239
    ,
    244 (2001). At the second stage, defendant may be appointed counsel to amend their petition, and
    - 25 -
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    the state may move to dismiss. People v. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 33. At this stage the trial
    court must determine whether the petition has set forth a substantial showing of a constitutional
    violation. 
    Id.
     If defendant makes the requisite showing, the matter may proceed to a third-stage
    evidentiary hearing. Id. ¶ 34.
    ¶ 59   We review the dismissal of a postconviction petition without an evidentiary hearing de
    novo. People v. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31. A second stage proceeding tests the legal
    sufficiency of the petition. Domagala, 
    2013 IL 113688
    , ¶ 35. On appeal from the dismissal of a
    second-stage postconviction petition, we consider whether the allegations in the petition, when
    liberally construed in favor of the defendant and taken as true, are sufficient to invoke relief under
    the act. Sanders, 
    2016 IL 118123
    , ¶ 31.
    ¶ 60   To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, defendant must demonstrate that
    counsel’s representation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and that such a
    shortcoming was prejudicial in that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-94 (1984); see People v. Albanese, 
    104 Ill. 2d 504
    , 526-27 (1984)
    (adopting Strickland).
    ¶ 61             A. Ineffective Assistance of Appellate Counsel: Gang Evidence
    ¶ 62   Trial counsel made several efforts to bar the admission of evidence of gang activity and
    affiliation of defendant and others, including filing a motion in limine, objecting to Rafferty’s
    testimony as a gang expert, and raising the issue of gang evidence in defendant’s motion for new
    trial. Defendant argues that he made a substantial showing of ineffective assistance of appellate
    counsel where appellate counsel failed to argue on appeal that the admission of gang evidence at
    trial was error. We disagree.
    - 26 -
    
    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    ¶ 63   To establish that appellate counsel was ineffective, respondent must satisfy the standard
    set forth in Strickland. People v. English, 
    2013 IL 112890
    , ¶ 33. “Appellate counsel is not obligated
    to brief every conceivable issue on appeal, and it is not incompetence of counsel to refrain from
    raising issues which, in his or her judgment, are without merit, unless counsel’s appraisal of the
    merits is patently wrong.” People v. Easley, 
    192 Ill. 2d 307
    , 329 (2000).
    ¶ 64   Though jurors may have a strong prejudice against street gangs, particularly in
    metropolitan areas, evidence of gang affiliation need not be excluded if it is otherwise relevant and
    admissible. People v. Smith, 
    141 Ill. 2d 40
    , 58 (1990). “Such evidence may be admitted so long as
    it is relevant to an issue in dispute and its probative value is not substantially outweighed by its
    prejudicial effect.” People v. Johnson, 
    208 Ill. 2d 53
    , 102 (2003). Evidence of a defendant’s gang
    affiliation is generally admissible to show common purpose or design, or to provide motive for an
    otherwise inexplicable act. Smith, 
    141 Ill. 2d at 58
    . “Such evidence, however, is only admissible
    where there is sufficient proof that such membership or activity is related to the crime charged.”
    
    Id.
     Evidence of gang affiliation is relevant if it tends to make the existence of a consequential fact
    more or less probable than it would be without the evidence. People v. Villarreal, 
    198 Ill. 2d 209
    ,
    232 (2001). The trial court’s rulings regarding the admission of gang evidence are reviewed for an
    abuse of discretion. Johnson, 208 Ill. 2d at 102.
    ¶ 65   Defendant argues that it was error to admit evidence of gang affiliation as there was other
    less inflammatory evidence which could have served the same purpose. See People v. Joya, 
    319 Ill. App.3d 370
    , 376-77 (2001). Defendant maintains that the evidence showed that the stealing of
    the safe was purely a financial matter, and there was no evidence of a dispute between the Gangster
    Disciples and Black Disciples. Defendant further maintains that while the gang evidence may have
    been relevant to show why he and the others would act in concert, their behavior is adequately
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    explained by the loyalty of friendship. He also argues that nobody fired shots as a result of a gang
    order.
    ¶ 66     We disagree. While there is no evidence that Fullilove’s initial theft of the safe or the
    subsequent confrontation with Keys and Carlisle had anything to do with the parties’ gang
    affiliations, we cannot say the same regarding the later shooting. Summoning seven armed men to
    kill the associates of those who issue a threat goes beyond the bonds of most friendships.
    ¶ 67     The evidence showed that all of the perpetrators were Black Disciples members. The
    apartment and people they attacked were believed to be affiliated with another gang. The Black
    Disciples assembled at the home of their chief, Avery Binion. met at Binion’s house to discuss
    what to do regarding the safe. According to at least one witness, firearms were distributed by
    defendant, who was the gang’s head of security. Binion then told the assembled members to “take
    care of business.” Defendant himself told police that Binion told them to “make sure everyone is
    dead.” The gang members once again assembled at Fullilove’s apartment and then went upstairs
    to confront the occupants of apartment 23. Accounts differ as to precisely who went where, but
    Carlisle testified that Williams told him, “I came over to holler at you for chief,” which Carlisle
    took to be Binion. The Black Disciples members then shot Cooper, Thomas, Jackson, and Boey,
    when it had been Keys and Carlisle who had confronted Fullilove about the stolen safe. After the
    shooting all but Fullilove fled in a van together and hid the guns in a tire near Route 19.
    ¶ 68     Put simply, the confrontation outside of apartment 23 and subsequent killings were clearly
    gang related. The gang testimony provided important context for the group’s actions, which would
    otherwise be inexplicable, and showed their common motive and design. Of particular importance
    in showing that defendant shared a common design with the other perpetrators was the testimony
    of Fields and Rafferty that defendant was the head of security for the Elgin Black Disciples, which
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    belied his statement to police that he was merely delivering drugs to Fullilove’s apartment at the
    time of the shooting. As such, it was not an abuse of discretion to admit the evidence of defendant’s
    gang affiliation, and therefore, defendant did not make a substantial showing of ineffective
    assistance of appellate counsel.
    ¶ 69           B. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel: Failure to Call Witnesses
    ¶ 70   Defendant argues that his petition made a substantial showing that trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to call Myrance Thomas, Daren Wilder, Candis Van Dyke, Leonard Boey,
    and Teron Lemon to testify for the defense.
    ¶ 71   As an initial matter the State argues that by failing to attach affidavits from the proposed
    witnesses, defendant has failed to make a substantial showing to support his claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. However, an affidavit is not the only manner in which a postconviction claim
    of ineffective assistance for failure to call a witness may be supported. People v. Dupree, 
    2018 IL 122307
    , ¶ 32. (holding that postconviction claims may be supported by affidavits, records, or other
    evidence). In the instant case defendant has proffered the witnesses’ testimony by pointing to the
    record, including police reports, recorded interviews, and trial transcripts. As such, we consider
    the substance of the petition.
    ¶ 72   Decisions regarding whether to call certain witnesses on a defendant’s behalf are matters
    of trial strategy left to the discretion of trial counsel. People v. Enis, 
    194 Ill. 2d 361
    , 378 (2000).
    Matters of trial strategy are “virtually unchallengeable” on ineffective assistance grounds. People
    v. Palmer, 
    162 Ill. 2d 465
    , 476 (1994). Decisions regarding which witnesses to present are matters
    of trial strategy. People v. Perry, 
    224 Ill. 2d 312
    , 355 (2007). To prevail on a claim for ineffective
    assistance of counsel regarding a matter of trial strategy, defendant must show that counsel’s
    strategy was objectively unreasonable. 
    Id.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    ¶ 73   We disagree with defendants’ assertion that he set forth a substantial showing that trial
    counsel was ineffective for failing to call the listed witnesses.
    ¶ 74   Much of what defendant claims the proffered witnesses would testify to are statements
    made by Boey that Smith had shot him. Defendant argues that Daren Wilder, Candis Van Dyke,
    and Leonard Boey would state that Corey Boey told each of them individually that it was
    Christopher Smith who shot him. Further, Wilder would testify that Smith told him that he was
    going to pay Boey to change his statement.
    ¶ 75   Even accepting the proffered testimony as true, trial counsel thoroughly cross-examined
    Boey on his prior identification of Smith as the shooter and introduced a significant amount of
    evidence in rebuttal on this point. This included testimony from Boey’s mother and stepfather that
    while in the hospital after the shooting, Boey identified Smith as the shooter, and identified Smith
    in a photo array shown to him by police. The defense also presented the testimony of Detective
    Padron who spoke with Boey on August 16 and 18, 1999. In those conversations, Boey stated that
    Smith had shot Taiwon Jackson in the head. He also identified McCoy as entering the apartment
    behind Smith, and stated there was a third individual he could not identify. These statements were
    recorded and played for the jury. Finally, the defense called Detective Bricston who testified that
    he spoke to Boey on February 24, 2000. Boey told Bricston that Smith shot him, he was afraid of
    testifying against Smith, and that Williams had burst into the apartment firing a gun. In closing,
    even the prosecution admitted, “[Boey’s] given so many stories, you really don’t know what the
    truth is when he tells you what happened.”
    ¶ 76   As such, any further evidence regarding Boey’s identification of Smith as the shooter
    would have been cumulative, and trial counsel was not deficient for failing to present additional
    testimony on the subject. See People v. Johnson, 
    183 Ill. 2d 176
    , 208 (1998).
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    ¶ 77   Defendant maintains that had Teron Lemon been called he would have testified to seeing
    a group of black men running from the schoolhouse. One of them, who was around 18 to 22 years
    old and about 5’9” tall with a muscular build threw away a silver chrome handgun. Defendant
    argues that Teron Lemon’s testimony would have tended to prove that defendant did not possess
    that weapon, as he was around 40 years old at the time. We do not find that the failure to call Teron
    Lemon arises to the standard of objectively unreasonable.
    ¶ 78   There were five firearms recovered in this case, and along with defendant there were seven
    people in the group that shot up apartment 23. Showing that defendant did not possess that
    particular gun at that particular point would not prove that he did not possess a gun that day. If
    anything, the testimony might have introduced an additional gun to the equation, as the discarded
    gun would not have been among those recovered near the tire on Route 19 or from the Teletubby
    doll. That would make it six guns for seven people. Further, as we held on defendant’s direct
    appeal, there was sufficient evidence to have found defendant guilty on the basis of accountability.
    So, it was not necessary for the jury to have found that defendant actually shot anyone, or even
    possessed a gun at all. Teron Lemon also stated to police that he saw “more than five” people in
    the group that fled the schoolhouse. There were seven Black Disciples members at the
    schoolhouse, and Fullilove went to hide his gun in the Teletubby doll and did not flee with the
    others in the van. If there were more than five people in the group fleeing the schoolhouse, this
    would cut against defendant’s claim that he left the schoolhouse as soon as the shooting began and
    was not with the others when they initially left the schoolhouse. As such, we cannot say that trial
    counsel’s strategy to not call Teron Lemon was objectively unreasonable.
    ¶ 79   Defendant maintains that he made a sufficient showing that trial counsel was ineffective
    for failing to call Myrance Thomas. We disagree.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    ¶ 80   Reviewing the statement Myrance gave to police, and his testimony at Smith’s trial, his
    account of events was as follows: Myrance was at apartment 23 the day of the shooting. He left
    the apartment around 12:25 p.m. and was standing near the door to the building when he saw
    defendant, Fields, Lindsey, McCoy, Smith, and Williams approaching. He opened the first door
    for them, and they buzzed apartment 12, looking for Fullilove. 1 Fullilove came up from his
    apartment on the lower level to meet them. Myrance had a brief discussion with defendant about
    some money defendant owed him from a drug deal. The group went upstairs to the second floor
    and McCoy called Carlisle on his cellphone. Carlisle came out and the group started talking with
    him. Myrance then went outside to talk with Victoria Cooper. After some time, he began to head
    back towards the building. As he got to the door, he heard gunshots and began to run away from
    the building. Myrance looked back to see what was going on, and saw defendant, Williams and
    Smith running out of the building. Smith was holding a silver handgun.
    ¶ 81   Defendant argues that this testimony contradicts the State’s theory that defendant and the
    others met in Fullilove’s apartment to discuss their plans before going to Apartment 23. Defendant
    also argues that it establishes Smith as one of the shooters and corroborates Carlisle’s testimony
    that defendant was standing towards the bottom of the stairs.
    ¶ 82   While this may be true, Myrance’s version of events would also contradict key elements
    of defendant’s account to the police, namely, that defendant merely went to Fullilove’s apartment
    to deliver drugs and found the others already assembled, and that he left the building as soon as
    the shooting started. Further, defendant was charged both as a principal and accomplice for the
    1
    Myrance referred to Fullilove by his nickname, Bay Bay, however Myrance stated that his
    real name was Justin Sommerfield.
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    2023 IL App (2d) 210655-U
    shootings, the jury could have found him guilty whether or not he was one of the shooters.
    Accordingly, trial counsel’s decided to present defendant’s account to the police as the truth, that
    he was at the schoolhouse solely to deliver drugs to Fullilove and that he left once the shooting
    started. In light of this reasonable trial strategy, we cannot say that the decision not to call Myrance
    was objectively unreasonable.
    ¶ 83   Having determined that trial and appellate counsel’s conduct did not fall below an objective
    standard of reasonableness as set forth under the first prong of the Strickland analysis, we need not
    reach the second prong of the analysis. See People v. Colon, 
    225 Ill. 2d 125
    , 135 (2007) (the failure
    to satisfy either prong precludes a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel).
    ¶ 84                                     III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 85   For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Kane County.
    ¶ 86   Affirmed.
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