People v. Johnson , 2017 IL App (2d) 141241 ( 2017 )


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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
                                      No. 2-14-1241
    Opinion filed June 23, 2017
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Du Page County.
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 13-CF-1600
    )
    CALVIN JOHNSON,                        ) Honorable
    ) Kathryn E. Creswell,
    Defendant-Appellant.             ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justice Spence concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    Justice Hutchinson concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Following a bench trial in the Du Page County circuit court, defendant, Calvin Johnson,
    was convicted of criminal sexual assault (720 ILCS 5/11-1.20(a)(1) (West 2012)), aggravated
    domestic battery (720 ILCS 5/12-3.3(a-5) (West 2012)), aggravated battery (720 ILCS
    5/12-3.05(c) (West 2012)), and two counts of unlawful restraint (720 ILCS 5/10-3(a) (West
    2012)). He was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment for criminal sexual assault and four
    concurrent terms of 30 months’ probation, including 160 days in jail, for the other offenses. He
    appeals, contending that (1) he was not proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; and (2) the trial
    
    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    court committed plain error by requiring him to submit to a sex-offender evaluation when he was
    subject to a mandatory prison sentence. We affirm.
    ¶2     Defendant had been married to C.J. for 19 years and they had three children together.
    However, the couple had experienced “rough patches” and had separated twice. In late February
    2013, C.J. moved out of the family’s apartment.
    ¶3     Defendant and C.J. communicated periodically throughout February and March 2013.
    They spoke over the phone and in person. Defendant wanted to reconcile, but C.J. did not. They
    often engaged in heated arguments. Defendant left angry and threatening messages on C.J.’s
    voicemail. By the end of March, both parties had changed their phone numbers.
    ¶4     However, defendant also sent roses to C.J. at her workplace and wrote her letters.
    Defendant sometimes met C.J. in the parking lot after she finished work. C.J. testified that
    encountering defendant at her workplace made her nervous, to the point that she began walking out
    of the building with a coworker, Latrina Martin. Martin would wait to see if defendant’s car was
    in the parking lot before going home.
    ¶5     Sometime in late March, defendant went to C.J.’s workplace on a night when she was
    working the late shift. He approached her in the parking lot and asked to talk in the car. She
    initially refused, but changed her mind because she was nervous and did not want to be
    embarrassed. Martin assured C.J. that she would not leave until she was sure that C.J. was okay.
    ¶6     C.J. testified that defendant told her that she would be served with child-support papers.
    She said that she did not care and was filing for divorce, which made him mad. When defendant
    saw C.J.’s coworkers, he said, “You got your fucking cheerleaders with you. *** [W]hat the
    fuck are they looking at, *** you my wife. *** I’ll take you out and make a scene.”
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    ¶7     Defendant stepped out of the car and told Martin, “[T]his is my fucking wife. *** I
    never hit my wife.” Martin testified that he said that he could do what he wanted. When C.J. got
    back in the car, she was crying because she was so embarrassed. Defendant said, “[C]an nobody
    [sic] stop me from getting to you. [Y]ou are my wife. No police, no coworkers.” He got out of
    the car and said that he would never go to her workplace again.
    ¶8     C.J. filed reports with the Hillside and Oak Brook police departments. She sought an
    order of protection the following Monday, but her request was denied.
    ¶9     On April 11, 2013, C.J. was getting into her car to drive home from work. Martin was not
    working that night. C.J. heard a knock on the passenger-side window. It was defendant.
    According to C.J., defendant got into the car and said, “[B]itch, I’m trying to talk to your ass for
    four months.” He held a black bag and pulled from it a white sock with a knife inside.
    Defendant said, “[S]hut the fuck up, bitch. I will kill your ass right now.” Defendant then pulled
    from the bag a white bag with a gun in it. He did not pull the gun all the way out of the bag, but
    C.J. could see the silver handle.
    ¶ 10   Defendant returned the gun to the bag and held the knife, which he had pulled out of the
    sock. He told C.J. that he would kill her if she made a scene. He directed C.J. to drive to a motel.
    She did not want to go, and initially drove past it, but defendant forced her to turn around, saying
    that he would stab her if she made a scene. She turned around and pulled into the entrance of a
    Motel 6.
    ¶ 11   C.J. resisted going into the motel. As a black truck pulled up, she raised her voice, hoping
    to attract attention. Defendant said that she was making a scene and that he was going to stab her.
    He said that he had another gun in his pants and would kill her if she tried to run. They “tussled”
    over her purse.
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    ¶ 12    They eventually entered the motel. C.J. waited in the lobby while defendant talked to the
    desk clerk. At one point, C.J. tried to walk out. Defendant grabbed her arm and told her to get
    back inside or he would kill her.
    ¶ 13    Earnest King, the desk clerk, testified that as defendant checked in King heard someone
    crying from the east side of the building. He saw a woman enter from that side, but he did not
    hear her crying anymore. During the transaction, defendant stepped away and walked to where
    the woman was going back outside. King did not know what was said. When defendant
    returned to the desk, King asked if everything was alright and defendant said that everything was
    fine.
    ¶ 14    Defendant and C.J. drove to the west side of the building and went into a room. C.J.
    initially sat on the bed with her coat on while defendant paced around the room. Defendant said
    that he just wanted to talk to her. He seemed less angry than before. He asked her why she
    would not come home. When she said that she was not going home, his mood changed. He
    called her a bitch.
    ¶ 15    Defendant said that he wanted “closure.” He pulled her up off the bed and took off her
    coat. He grabbed her arms and took off her shirt, while she kept saying “no.” Defendant took off
    his pants and removed C.J.’s clothes except for her underwear. He laid her down on the bed,
    saying that he missed his wife. He began kissing her. She kept saying “no” and crying. She
    tried to push him off her but he was too strong.
    ¶ 16    Defendant put her arms toward the top of the bed and had intercourse with her. C.J. “just
    laid there” and could not push him away. She was limp, just wanting it to stop. Afterward,
    defendant got dressed and told C.J. to wash up in the bathroom.
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    ¶ 17   Defendant’s demeanor changed again. He told her that if she ever needed anything she
    should call him. They left the motel and drove back to the parking lot of C.J.’s workplace.
    When they arrived, C.J. retrieved her purse from the trunk. Defendant returned to his car and they
    drove away in opposite directions.
    ¶ 18   C.J. noticed that she had missed several calls from her sister, Monique, and C.J.’s daughter
    Sierra. C.J. would typically call Monique when she finished her late shift. Monique testified
    that she became worried when she did not hear from C.J. after her shift on April 11.
    ¶ 19   When C.J. arrived at Monique’s home, Monique could tell that she was upset and had been
    crying. C.J.’s hair was messed up. C.J. did not tell Monique what happened. According to
    Monique, C.J. still looked upset the following morning, but she did not tell Monique anything
    before she left for work. On her way, C.J. started crying and pulled over. She called Monique
    and told her what happened.
    ¶ 20   C.J. then drove to Sierra’s house. Sierra testified that C.J. was crying and was “kind of
    stiff.” C.J. then told Sierra and her husband what had happened. Sierra’s husband went outside
    and flagged down a police officer. C.J. was taken by ambulance to Elmhurst Hospital.
    ¶ 21   Oak Brook police detective Jason Wood met C.J. at the hospital. He testified that she was
    in a “very emotional state,” crying, shaking, and “extremely upset.” C.J.’s daughter Quinterra’-+
    also saw her at the hospital. She said that her mother’s eyes looked glassy and that she was
    shaking.
    ¶ 22   Nurse Denise Trimble conducted a sexual-assault exam. The exam showed a right
    shoulder injury, a bruise on her right hand, and a slight tear in the perineum area of her vagina.
    Trimble opined that the injuries were consistent with C.J.’s story and with sexual trauma.
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    ¶ 23   On April 13, police executing a search warrant at defendant’s home found a clean butcher
    knife matching C.J.’s description of the knife defendant used during the incident.
    ¶ 24   Defendant testified that in late March he spoke with C.J. at her workplace.          They
    discussed her paying him child support, but he did not serve her with child-support papers. C.J.
    became irate because she did not want child support deducted from her paycheck. At one point,
    someone walked past the car and looked at defendant. Believing that this was rude, he asked C.J.
    who it was. She said, “[O]h, my God, you’re going to embarrass me.” Defendant responded,
    “[N]o, they’re your friends. Please ask them to walk away. This is embarrassing to both of us.”
    ¶ 25   Defendant got out of the car and said, “[t]here’s nothing going on here. I’m not going to
    hurt this woman. I never laid a hand on a woman never in my life.”
    ¶ 26   Defendant testified that on April 11, 2013, he again met C.J. at her workplace. Defendant
    got into her car. He suggested that they go somewhere and talk. He did not tell her where to
    drive. They ended up at a Motel 6 that they had visited in the past. They sat in the car for about
    20 minutes, reminiscing. The mood was somber. Defendant went in to request a room while
    C.J. stayed outside. Defendant thought that he heard her come in, so he yelled at her to get the
    license plate number of her car, but she did not hear him. Defendant went out and wrote the
    number on his hand. They entered the room and had consensual sex. Defendant never displayed
    a weapon or threatened her.
    ¶ 27   The trial court found defendant not guilty of four counts alleging stalking and aggravated
    stalking. However, the court found defendant guilty of criminal sexual assault, aggravated
    domestic battery, aggravated battery, and two counts of unlawful restraint. The court specifically
    found C.J.’s testimony credible and defendant’s testimony not credible. The court noted evidence
    of the parties’ contentious relationship in the months before this incident, and the testimony of
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    several witnesses that C.J. was crying and upset the day after. In light of this evidence, the court
    did not find credible defendant’s testimony that she voluntarily accompanied him to a motel and
    had consensual sex.
    ¶ 28   The court noted that both defendant and C.J. were impeached to some degree with
    inconsistent testimony at a May 2013 order-of-protection hearing.            The court found this
    unsurprising, given that such hearings are often emotionally charged and that “testimony in those
    types of proceedings is often exaggerated.” The court also observed that, when parties represent
    themselves, pertinent details are often omitted.
    ¶ 29   The court also observed that defendant’s demeanor during cross-examination changed
    quickly, as C.J. had described. The court observed that defendant’s tone and intensity changed
    instantly. He was “angry, aggressive, defiant and combative” with the prosecutor and tried to
    control the cross-examination.
    ¶ 30   The court ordered a presentence report, which was to include a sex-offender evaluation.
    The court set the matter for sentencing.
    ¶ 31   At sentencing, the court stated that it had considered the presentence report, including the
    sex-offender evaluation. The evaluation found that defendant was a pedophile. The evaluator
    also reported that defendant was dishonest during the evaluation and that the best way to manage
    the risk he posed was to place him in a secure setting. The court stated that it did not believe that
    defendant was a pedophile, but it commented on his attempts to “deceive” and “outsmart” the
    evaluator. After noting defendant’s steady work history and lack of criminal history, the court
    stated that the “aggravation here is really just the facts of the case themselves, the nature and
    circumstances of what occurred.” The court sentenced defendant to six years’ imprisonment for
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    criminal sexual assault, to be followed by a term of 30 months’ probation and 160 days in jail for
    the less serious offenses. Defendant timely appeals.
    ¶ 32      Defendant first contends that he was not proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. He
    contends that C.J.’s testimony was not credible, that she was impeached by inconsistent statements
    she made to the police and at the May 2013 order-of-protection hearing, and that his own
    testimony was more credible.
    ¶ 33      Where a defendant challenges on appeal the sufficiency of the evidence, the relevant
    question is whether, after viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, a
    rational trier of fact could have found all the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    People v. Collins, 
    214 Ill. 2d 206
    , 217 (2005). A reviewing court may not substitute its judgment
    for that of the trier of fact on questions involving the weight of the evidence, the credibility of the
    witnesses, or the resolution of conflicting testimony. People v. Campbell, 
    146 Ill. 2d 363
    , 375
    (1992).
    ¶ 34      Here, C.J. testified clearly and consistently that defendant got into her car, threatened her,
    displayed a knife and a gun, and forced her to drive to a motel, where he forcibly had sex with her.
    The testimony of a single witness, if positive and credible, is sufficient for a conviction. People v.
    Mister, 
    2016 IL App (4th) 130180-B
    , ¶ 104.
    ¶ 35      Moreover, C.J.’s testimony was corroborated by other evidence. There was substantial
    evidence that defendant and C.J. had had a contentious relationship for several weeks prior to April
    11, 2013. C.J. moved out and they were in the process of getting a divorce. They had arguments
    and defendant left angry messages on her voicemail. C.J. had consistently resisted defendant’s
    attempts at reconciliation. Both parties had changed their phone numbers at least once.
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    ¶ 36   C.J. testified about an argument that occurred in the parking lot of her workplace a few
    days before the incident in question. Martin witnessed this altercation.           She testified that
    defendant said that C.J. was his wife and that he could do what he wanted.
    ¶ 37   Several witnesses, including Monique, C.J.’s daughters, and Wood, testified that they saw
    C.J. the day after the incident and that she was crying and extremely upset. Trimble testified that
    the results of her examination of C.J. were consistent with “sexual trauma.”
    ¶ 38   The trial court noted that defendant’s demeanor while testifying corroborated C.J.’s
    testimony about his volatile temper.         The court described defendant’s demeanor during
    cross-examination as “angry, aggressive, defiant and combative.”
    ¶ 39   In light of this corroborating evidence, the trial court could reasonably credit C.J.’s
    testimony and reject defendant’s testimony that, in the midst of a contentious divorce, he and C.J.
    calmly drove to a motel and had consensual sex.
    ¶ 40   Defendant identifies 10 points on which C.J.’s trial testimony was inconsistent with either
    her statement to police or her testimony at the May 2013 order-of-protection hearing. The vast
    majority of these points are collateral. The only one directly relevant to the offenses is the last: at
    trial, C.J. testified that she tried to push defendant off of her, while at the order-of-protection
    hearing she said that there was no struggle.
    ¶ 41   It is perhaps possible to harmonize the two statements, as one might not necessarily equate
    a push with a struggle. Semantics aside, the trial court noted that both parties were impeached to
    some extent with their inconsistent testimony at the earlier hearing. The court found the relatively
    minor inconsistencies unsurprising given the “emotionally charged” nature of order-of-protection
    proceedings and the fact that the parties appeared pro se. In any event, minor inconsistencies in a
    party’s testimony do not, of themselves, create a reasonable doubt of a defendant’s guilt. People
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    v. Adams, 
    109 Ill. 2d 102
    , 115 (1985). Given the relative overall strength of C.J.’s testimony and
    the substantial corroborating evidence, the relatively minor inconsistencies defendant raises did
    not require the trial court to reject her testimony.
    ¶ 42    Defendant next contends that the trial court erred by ordering him to submit to a
    sex-offender evaluation when he was to be sentenced to prison. Defendant concedes that he did
    not raise this issue in the trial court, but he asks us to consider it as plain error. To obtain relief
    under the plain-error rule, a defendant must first show “a clear or obvious error.” People v.
    Hillier, 
    237 Ill. 2d 539
    , 545 (2010). “In the sentencing context, a defendant must then show either
    that (1) the evidence at the sentencing hearing was closely balanced, or (2) the error was so
    egregious as to deny the defendant a fair sentencing hearing.” 
    Id. Under either
    prong, the
    defendant has the burden of persuasion. 
    Id. ¶ 43
       We hold first that defendant has shown a clear or obvious error. Section 5-3-2(b-5) of the
    Unified Code of Corrections provides as follows:
    “In cases involving felony sex offenses in which the offender is being considered for
    probation only *** the [presentence] investigation shall include a sex offender evaluation
    ***. In cases in which the offender is being considered for any mandatory prison
    sentence, the investigation shall not include a sex offender evaluation.”          730 ILCS
    5/5-3-2(b-5) (West 2014).
    ¶ 44    “The fundamental rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the
    legislature’s intent.” People v. Davison, 
    233 Ill. 2d 30
    , 40 (2009). The best indication of that
    intent is the statutory language itself, which we give its plain and ordinary meaning. 
    Id. Where the
    language is clear and unambiguous, we apply the statute as written without resort to aids of
    statutory construction. People v. McChriston, 
    2014 IL 115310
    , ¶ 15. The construction of a
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    statute is a question of law, which we review de novo. DeLuna v. Burciaga, 
    223 Ill. 2d 49
    , 59
    (2006).
    ¶ 45      Here, defendant was convicted of criminal sexual assault, a nonprobationable Class 1
    felony. 720 ILCS 5/11-1.20(a)(1) (West 2014); 730 ILCS 5/5-5-3(c)(2)(H) (West 2014). Thus,
    defendant was not being considered for “probation only,” but instead was to receive a mandatory
    prison sentence. Thus, the statute’s plain language provides that he should not have been required
    to submit to a sex-offender evaluation.
    ¶ 46      The State cites People v. Hillier, 
    392 Ill. App. 3d 66
    (2009), aff’d, 
    237 Ill. 2d 539
    , for the
    proposition that ordering the evaluation was within the trial court’s discretion. There, the court
    found that section 5-3-2(b-5) did not prohibit the trial court from ordering a sex-offender
    evaluation for a defendant who was not eligible for probation, and it saw “no reason to disallow a
    sex offender evaluation in nonprobationary cases if the trial court deems it helpful.” 
    Id. at 70.
    ¶ 47      Hillier, however, was decided prior to the most recent amendment to section 5-3-2(b-5).
    When Hillier was decided, that section read, “In cases involving felony sex offenses in which the
    offender is being considered for probation *** the investigation shall include a sex offender
    evaluation ***.” 730 ILCS 5/5-3-2(b-5) (West 2008). In 2009, the statute was amended. The
    amendment added “only” after “probation” and added the last sentence providing that, where a
    defendant is eligible for any mandatory prison sentence, “the investigation shall not include a sex
    offender evaluation.” Pub. Act 96-322, § 5 (eff. Jan. 1, 2010) (amending 730 ILCS 5/5-3-2(b));
    see People v. Guerrero, 2011 IL App (2d) 090972, ¶ 69 n.5. Thus, when Hillier was decided, the
    statute did not specifically prohibit a trial court from ordering a sex-offender evaluation in a case
    where a defendant was subject to a mandatory prison sentence. Accordingly, Hillier did not
    authorize the trial court to order an evaluation here.
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    ¶ 48      The State, in what defendant aptly describes as a “circuitous” argument, appears to contend
    that, because defendant received sentences of probation for the less serious convictions, a sex-
    offender evaluation was authorized. This contradicts the statute’s explicit language. The statute
    provides for an evaluation where a defendant is being considered for “probation only” and
    prohibits one where a defendant is subject to “any” mandatory prison sentence. 730 ILCS
    5/5-3-2(b-5) (West 2014). Defendant here was subject to a mandatory prison sentence for the
    criminal sexual assault, and thus an evaluation was not permitted even though he was being
    considered for, and in fact received, probation for the less serious offenses.
    ¶ 49      We recognize the potential for confusion in cases such as this one, where defendant was
    sentenced to probation terms to be served consecutively to his prison sentence. However, this
    does not permit us to depart from the statute’s plain language.
    ¶ 50      Having found a clear or obvious error, we turn to whether defendant has met his burden of
    persuasion on either prong of the plain-error rule. To some extent, defendant conflates the two
    prongs. He explicitly invokes the second prong, asserting that the error denied him a fair
    sentencing hearing. However, he also argues that, in light of the strength of the mitigating
    evidence, the sex-offender evaluation “prejudiced” him, i.e., it might have affected his sentence.
    This is an argument under the first prong. See People v. Jackson, 
    2013 IL App (3d) 120205
    , ¶ 23
    (under first prong, defendant must show prejudice). In fairness to defendant, we will address both
    prongs.
    ¶ 51      We begin with the second prong. Although that prong applies where an error denied a
    defendant “a fair sentencing hearing” 
    (Hillier, 237 Ill. 2d at 545
    ), it is crucial to recognize that, for
    these purposes, only an extraordinarily serious error will render a proceeding “unfair.” Indeed,
    the supreme court has “equated second-prong plain error with structural error.” (Emphasis
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    added.) People v. Clark, 
    2016 IL 118845
    , ¶ 46. This does not mean that second-prong plain
    error is restricted to “the [six] types of structural error that have been recognized by the [United
    States] Supreme Court” (id.), but it does mean that the error nevertheless must be of a similar kind:
    an error “ ‘affecting the framework within which the trial proceeds, rather than simply an error in
    the trial process itself’ ” (Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 8 (1999) (quoting Arizona v.
    Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. 279
    , 310 (1991))). Defendant does not show how the error here—a
    violation of a “purely statutory requirement,” which resulted merely in the introduction of
    improper evidence—rises to that level. See People v. Williams, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 130585
    , ¶ 11
    n.2. Thus, defendant has not met his burden of persuasion on the second prong.
    ¶ 52   We turn to the first prong. As noted, defendant argues that the evidence as a whole was
    such that the sex-offender evaluation might have affected his sentence. The State responds that
    the trial court did not rely on the evaluation in any substantive way.
    ¶ 53   We have found no case involving a trial court’s consideration at sentencing of an
    unauthorized sex-offender evaluation. However, in People v. Abdelhadi, 
    2012 IL App (2d) 111053
    , we faced the analogous issue of whether to find plain error in a trial court’s consideration
    of an improper factor in aggravation. We noted that, “[w]hen a trial court considers an improper
    factor in aggravation, the case must be remanded unless it appears from the record that the weight
    placed upon the improper factor was so insignificant that it did not lead to a greater sentence.” 
    Id. ¶ 18.
    Of relevance to that inquiry were “(1) whether the trial court made any dismissive or
    emphatic comments in reciting its consideration of the improper factor; and (2) whether the
    sentence received was substantially less than the maximum sentence permissible by statute.” 
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    Because, in that case, we could not “determine how much weight was placed on that factor,” we
    found plain error and remanded the cause for a new sentencing hearing. 
    Id. ¶ 20.
    1
    ¶ 54   Here, by contrast, the record shows that the sex-offender evaluation did not influence the
    sentence. In light of the substantial mitigating factors, including defendant’s complete lack of
    criminal history, the trial court imposed a sentence only two years above the statutory minimum.
    In explaining that slight increase above the minimum, the court stated that the “aggravation here is
    really just the facts of the case themselves, the nature and circumstances of what occurred.”
    Indeed, defendant’s conduct during the criminal sexual assault, threatening the victim repeatedly
    with a knife and a gun, was more than sufficient to justify a six-year sentence.
    ¶ 55   The court did reference the evaluation, but its comments were largely dismissive. The
    most damaging aspect of the evaluation was the conclusion that defendant was a pedophile. The
    court specifically rejected that conclusion.     The court then discussed defendant’s lack of
    cooperation during the evaluation, but only in the context of explaining that the evaluator’s finding
    was “kind of what happens when the defendant attempts to deceive the evaluator.” The court
    1
    Like defendant’s argument here, our decision in Abdelhadi was somewhat confused as to
    which prong of the plain-error rule we invoked. We stated that the issue implicated the second
    prong “because when a trial court considers erroneous aggravating factors in determining the
    appropriate sentence of imprisonment, the defendant’s ‘fundamental right to liberty’ is unjustly
    affected, which is seen as a serious error.” 
    Id. ¶ 7
    (quoting People v. James, 
    255 Ill. App. 3d 516
    ,
    531 (1993)). (Notably, in equating second-prong plain error with a merely “serious” error, we
    arguably did not abide the supreme court’s equation with structural error.) However, in assessing
    whether the trial court’s consideration of the improper factor might have led to a greater sentence,
    we seemed to be assessing whether the error was prejudicial under the first prong.
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    never indicated that it was increasing defendant’s sentence because of his lack of cooperation with
    the evaluation. To the contrary, as noted, the court stated that the “aggravation here is really just
    the facts of the case themselves.”
    ¶ 56    Although the trial court erred by ordering a sex-offender evaluation when defendant was
    subject to a mandatory prison sentence, it is clear that the evaluation did not affect defendant’s
    sentence. Thus, defendant has not met his burden of showing first-prong plain error.
    ¶ 57    The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed. As part of our
    judgment, we grant the State’s request that defendant be assessed $50 as costs for this appeal.
    55 ILCS 5/4-2002(a) (West 2014); see also People v. Nicholls, 
    71 Ill. 2d 166
    , 178 (1978).
    ¶ 58    Affirmed.
    ¶ 59    JUSTICE HUTCHINSON, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    ¶ 60    Although I agree with the majority that the evidence was sufficient to sustain defendant’s
    convictions, I believe that a new sentencing hearing is necessary due to the erroneously ordered
    sex-offender evaluation. The majority concludes that “it is clear that the evaluation did not affect
    defendant’s sentence.” Supra ¶ 56.      It is not so clear to me.
    ¶ 61    I understand that the judge did not specifically mention the evaluation when she discussed
    the aggravating factors, and I am mindful that the facts adduced at trial would have justified a
    sentence two years above the statutory minimum. However, I cannot overlook the degree to
    which the evaluation tainted these proceedings. Simply put, defendant’s sentencing hearing was
    not fair.
    ¶ 62    In contravention of the relevant statute, defendant was forced to view 180 slides depicting
    children, teens, and adults, plus depictions of various deviant sexual behaviors. His responses to
    these images could serve no purpose other than to damage his prospects at sentencing. With that
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    in mind, he provided the same response to every slide. The evaluator noted that defendant “did
    not refuse to answer any questions but did not add much additional information.” This led to
    findings that he was a pedophile and, for lack of a better term, a liar. Had the statute in question
    been followed, none of this would have taken place. But the statute was not followed, and the
    adverse findings from the evaluation were incorporated into the presentence report. The error
    was then compounded when the prosecutor made the evaluation a focal point of her argument
    during the sentencing hearing.
    ¶ 63   For instance, the prosecutor argued that defendant would say whatever he needed to say to
    get out of trouble. She asserted that defendant had presented himself as blameless and that he was
    instead blaming the victim. She pointed to the evaluation and argued that this was “textbook
    behavior for a sex offender like [defendant].” She then stated:
    “The evaluation classifies [defendant] as having obsessive compulsive personality
    disorder with histrionic and schizoid personality features. Now, reading the presentence
    report and the sex offender evaluation, it is evident that this defendant *** is manipulative,
    deceitful, and he is a vile individual whose dark side has, up until now, managed to escape
    detection for the most part.
    His presentence report and evaluation are riddled with inconsistencies because he
    can’t keep his lies and rationalizations straight. So, he just defaults and says that everyone
    else is lying, except for him.”
    ¶ 64   The evaluation continued to overshadow the sentencing hearing when, in an attempt to
    neutralize the damage from the prosecutor’s scathing comments, defense counsel debated the
    import of the adverse findings. He argued that, beyond defendant’s denial of the offense, nothing
    in the evaluation indicated dishonesty except for his responses to the slides.
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    ¶ 65    Finally, when given an opportunity to address the court, defendant commented:
    “I am not a pedophile. You can’t put pictures in front of me and ask me to rate
    them on one level to ten. I said it was disgusting, and I meant that. I am not a pedophile.
    I am not going to answer a picture that shows a little girl in a bathing suit. That’s sick to
    me. And if that’s making me a guilty man because I refuse to answer it, then what’s the
    test for? Because I failed that test.”
    ¶ 66    Before announcing defendant’s sentence, the judge discussed the mitigating factors.
    Defendant had a full-time job and a long work history. The judge observed that defendant’s lack
    of criminal history was “remarkable,” adding, “[i]t’s not something the Court sees very often.”
    The judge also recognized that defendant had performed charitable work through his memberships
    with the Shriners and the Masons. She then discussed the adverse findings from the evaluation,
    specifically stating:
    “[Defense counsel] points out that the defendant is in a trick bag regarding the
    evaluation. And I agree with that. He basically put himself there. No, I don’t believe
    that [defendant] is a pedophile. Okay?
    I think the history here, getting the big picture, there is certainly nothing to support
    that.   But that’s kind of what happens when the defendant attempts to deceive the
    evaluator. As indicated, his self-reporting ranking of sexual arousal to each of 180 slides
    indicates that he reports no sexual interest.
    It should be noted that [defendant] entered the same response for every slide. That
    pattern of responding usually is an attempt by the client not to reveal his sexual interests.
    So, it’s like he outsmarted himself and he is going to outsmart the evaluator, and the result
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    is something really awful. Looking at the big picture here, I mean, that’s what I find. I
    find he was trying to outsmart the evaluator here.”
    ¶ 67   The majority characterizes these comments as “largely dismissive,” and notes that the
    judge “never indicated that [she] was increasing defendant’s sentence because of his lack of
    cooperation with the evaluation.” Supra ¶ 55. This reasoning seems flawed to me. The judge
    disregarded the statute and ordered the evaluation.       The evaluation then loomed over the
    sentencing hearing like a dark cloud. That the judge did not discuss the evaluation’s adverse
    findings as a reason for increasing defendant’s sentence does not foreclose the possibility that it
    happened. I cannot join the majority in assuming that it did not.
    ¶ 68   Setting aside any further speculation as to the judge’s thought process, I believe that the
    case should be remanded for a new sentencing hearing under both prongs of the plain-error rule.
    To obtain relief under the plain-error rule in the sentencing context, a defendant must show that
    either: “(1) the evidence at the sentencing hearing was closely balanced, or (2) the error was so
    egregious as to deny the defendant a fair sentencing hearing.” People v. Hillier, 
    237 Ill. 2d 539
    ,
    545 (2010).
    ¶ 69   Regarding the first prong, the evidence at the sentencing hearing was closely balanced.
    The mitigating factors were significant. Defendant was facing a statutory four-year minimum
    term of imprisonment. The prosecutor requested a seven-year term. The judge imposed a
    six-year term. I believe that there is a reasonable chance that defendant would have received a
    lesser sentence if the statute had been followed and the evaluation had never taken place.
    ¶ 70   Turning to the second prong, which is the focus of defendant’s argument, I have already
    made it clear that I believe that defendant was denied a fair sentencing hearing. The majority
    notes that second-prong plain error has been “equated” with structural error, and it dismisses
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    defendant’s argument for failure to show how the violation of a “purely statutory requirement”
    rises to that level. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Supra ¶ 51. What does that mean?
    That second-prong plain error can derive only from a constitutional violation? Our supreme court
    may endeavor to establish such a standard in the future, but, for now, there is no proscription
    against second-prong plain error arising out of a statutory violation.
    ¶ 71    To be clear, in People v. Clark, 
    2016 IL 118845
    , ¶ 46, our supreme court expressly rejected
    the notion that second-prong plain errors are restricted to the limited class of errors that have been
    deemed “structural.” The emphasis must remain on fundamental fairness and the integrity of the
    judicial process. 
    Id. ¶ 44
    (“The next question is whether that error is so serious that it affected
    the fairness of the defendant’s trial and challenged the integrity of the judicial process.”). The
    majority steers around the holding in Clark (supra ¶ 51), maintaining that a second-prong plain
    error must still be “of a similar kind” as a structural error, meaning that it must be an error
    “ ‘affecting the framework within which the trial proceeds, rather than simply an error in the trial
    process itself’ ” (Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 8 (1999) (quoting Arizona v. Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. 279
    , 310 (1991))). This might be accurate, but, even so, I fail to see how the statutory
    violation in this case did not affect “the framework within which the trial proceeds.” Although I
    cannot say for certain that the sex-offender evaluation affected defendant’s sentence, I believe that
    the error fundamentally altered the framework of the sentencing hearing. This was not “simply an
    error in the trial process itself.”
    ¶ 72    Regardless of whether an improper consideration at sentencing is categorized as plain error
    under the first or second prong, it remains that “[s]entencing issues are regarded as matters
    affecting a defendant’s substantial rights and are thus excepted from the doctrine of waiver.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Wilbourn, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 111497
    , ¶ 9. Here,
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    the judge acknowledged that she had “considered” the erroneously ordered sex-offender
    evaluation. I believe that this consideration violated defendant’s substantial right to a fair
    sentencing hearing. 2
    ¶ 73   At least two cases support the notion that the mere consideration of an improper factor at
    sentencing amounts to plain error, thus requiring a new sentencing hearing.             In People v.
    Abdelhadi, 
    2012 IL App (2d) 111053
    , ¶ 3, the defendant was facing a prison term between 6 and
    60 years for the offense of aggravated arson. Before imposing a 10-year term, the trial court
    stated: “ “[s]pecifically in aggravation the Court has considered that the conduct caused by the
    defendant did, in fact, endanger the lives of individuals.’ ” 
    Id. ¶ 4.
    On appeal, this court held
    that the trial court had improperly considered the threat of harm to others as an aggravating factor,
    as that factor was inherent in the defendant’s offense. 
    Id. ¶ 18.
    We noted that, although the
    10-year sentence was substantially below the maximum sentence, it was also 4 years above the
    minimum sentence. Because the trial court’s comments did not demonstrate how much weight
    was placed on the improper factor, we held that a new sentencing hearing was required. 
    Id. ¶ 19.
    ¶ 74   A similar conclusion was reached in People v. Sanders, 
    2016 IL App (3d) 130511
    , appeal
    denied, No. 121247 (Ill. Nov. 23, 2016). The trial court in that case made the following
    comments during the sentencing hearing: “[A]mong other things, the defendant’s conduct did
    cause or threaten serious harm. It may be inherent in the actual fact that he committed a murder,
    but it did occur, and that the defendant has a history of prior delinquency of criminal activity.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. ¶ 6.
    The appellate court held that the trial court’s
    2
    In that sense, it could be said that there were actually two errors in this case: the first
    occurring when the evaluation was ordered, and the second occurring when the evaluation was
    considered at sentencing.
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    2017 IL App (2d) 141241
    improper consideration of a factor inherent in the underlying offense warranted a new sentencing
    hearing under the second prong of the plain-error rule, specifically finding that the trial court had
    “impinged on the defendant’s right not to be sentenced based on an improper factor and affected
    his fundamental right to liberty.” 
    Id. ¶ 17.
    ¶ 75   Here, the adverse findings from the erroneously ordered sex-offender evaluation were
    considered to at least the same extent that the improper factors were considered in Abdelhadi and
    Sanders. The majority surmises that Abdelhadi is distinguishable from this case because the
    erroneously ordered sex-offender evaluation “did not influence the sentence.” Supra ¶ 54. But
    the majority misses the point. Neither Abdelhadi nor Sanders turned on any determination as to
    whether the trial court’s improper consideration influenced its determination of the sentence. In
    both instances, it was the improper consideration itself that required a new sentencing hearing. I
    believe that the same holds true here.
    ¶ 76   Before I conclude, I ask my colleagues to remember that “[t]he foundation of plain-error
    review is fundamental fairness.” People v. Lewis, 
    234 Ill. 2d 32
    , 47 (2009). We can twist and
    turn and strain to confine plain errors in a pair of tidy formulaic boxes, but, in the end, we must
    always remain mindful of our duties to ensure fundamental fairness and safeguard the integrity of
    the judicial process. Accordingly, I dissent to draw attention to these duties.
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