2020 IL App (1st) 180198 No. 1-18-0198 Order filed April 27, 2020 First Division
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ______________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 13 CR 3867 ) JEREMIAH CHERRY, ) Honorable ) Kenneth J. Wadas, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.
JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Griffin and Justice Pierce concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: We affirm defendant’s convictions for criminal sexual assault and unlawful use of a firearm by a felon where: (1) the record did not rebut the presumption that the trial judge relied only on competent evidence in finding him guilty; and (2) any improper reliance on other crimes evidence would be harmless error, given the other evidence of defendant’s guilt.
¶2 Defendant Jeremiah Cherry was convicted of criminal sexual assault 720 ILCS 5/11-
120(a)(1) (West 2012) and two counts of unlawful use or possession of a weapon by a felon
(UUWF) (720 ILCS 5/24.1.1(a) (West 2012)), and sentenced to consecutive terms of 10 and 7
years’ imprisonment, respectively. On appeal, Cherry contends that he was deprived of a fair No. 1-18-0198
trial by the admission of other crimes evidence, notwithstanding the trial court’s statements that
it did not rely on this evidence in reaching its verdict.
¶3 We affirm. The issue on appeal is not whether the other crimes evidence was improperly
admitted, but whether the court improperly relied on it, causing prejudice to Cherry. After a
thorough review of the record, we cannot say that it amounts to an “affirmative showing” that the
trial court actually relied on evidence of other crimes. Rather, the trial court’s ruling makes clear
that it relied on the competent evidence of the sexual assault in finding Cherry guilty. In addition,
given the ample evidence of the sexual assault, we have no reason to doubt that Cherry would
have been convicted, even had the trial court never heard any evidence regarding the other
crimes evidence.
¶4 Background
¶5 Cherry was charged by information with one count of criminal sexual assault of K.B. and
two counts of UUWF in connection with events that occurred in January 2013. Before trial, the
State filed a “motion to allow other crimes evidence” under section 115-7.3 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure of 1963 (725 ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2014)), concerning evidence of Cherry’s
July 2012 sexual assault of another woman, T.P. At a pretrial hearing, the trial court granted the
State’s motion, finding “substantial similarities between the two offenses.”
¶6 At trial, K.B. testified that in January 2013, she went on a trip to Chicago following her
graduation from college in Michigan. She stayed with a cousin on her father’s side. K.B. also had
relatives in Chicago on her mother’s side, including two cousins, T.R. and Cherry. K.B. had not
previously met them.
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¶7 Cherry’s mother put K.B. in contact with Cherry. K.B. and Cherry made plans to go
“paint ball shooting.” Cherry picked K.B. up in a car, with two other men whom she had never
met. Cherry drove the group to his home, where they began “chilling a little, partying,” drinking
and smoking marijuana. K.B. drank some vodka, but she was not intoxicated. She saw other
people in the group use the drug “molly” (a term for methylenedioxymethamphetamine, also
known as “ecstasy”). K.B. declined to take any. K.B. observed a younger woman at the home,
N.T., who was “intoxicated” to the point that she “didn’t know what was going on around her.”
¶8 K.B. recalled seeing a handgun as well as a larger gun that looked like an AK-47. Cherry
and one of his friends were “playing with the guns and taking pictures with the guns.” Cherry
referred to them as his “toys.” K.B. identified People’s Exhibits 1 and 2 as firearms that appeared
to be the same weapons she saw in the home.
¶9 At one point, K.B. saw two men taking N.T. to a bedroom. K.B. felt uncomfortable
because she did not “believe [N.T.] knew what was going on with the two guys that were with
her.” K.B. went to a restroom and texted T.R. because she wanted to leave. When she came out
of the bathroom, K.B. heard Cherry state: “I’m going to f*** my cousin.” K.B. responded “no,
you’re not.”
¶ 10 K.B. returned to the bathroom and tried to call either R.T. or her sister. She was “trying to
get in contact with somebody” because she wanted to leave. When K.B. left the bathroom,
Cherry “was standing there” and “blocked” her. She and Cherry began “tussling.” Cherry pushed
K.B. into another bedroom and onto the bed. Cherry and K.B. began “fighting over [her] pants
and [her] belt,” as Cherry tried to pull them down. K.B resisted and told him to stop. Cherry
eventually pulled her jeans down; he could not pull them off completely because K.B. was
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wearing tall boots. Cherry pushed her legs up toward her chest, so that she “could hardly
breathe.” She tried to “buck[] him off the bed” and push him away, but he penetrated her vagina
with his penis.
¶ 11 During the assault, one of Cherry’s friends, Darius Edwards, entered the room and “kind
of asked [Cherry] like that’s your cousin, you know, like why would you do that, are you serious,
he was kind of shocked I guess.” K.B. asked Edwards to “get [Cherry] off [her].” Cherry told
Edwards to get out and close the door, and Edwards complied.
¶ 12 After the assault, K.B. called T.R., who drove to the house. As soon as she entered T.R.’s
car, K.B. began calling relatives in Michigan. K.B. was “a little frantic.” K.B. reached a godsister
on the phone and told her that she had been raped. When T.R. heard this, she turned the car
around and began to drive back toward the house. K.B. stayed in the car. T.R. went into the
house for about five minutes. T.R. drove K.B. to her mother’s house. K.B. told T.R.’s mother
that she had been assaulted. T.R. and T.R.’s mother took K.B. to the police station and then to a
hospital, where a criminal sexual assault kit was collected from her.
¶ 13 T.R. testified that Cherry was her cousin and she had known him her whole life. She
described K.B. as a “distan[t] cousin” whom she had first met on January 16, 2013. On January
18, K.B. sent her a text message asking to pick her up from the residence where Cherry lived.
T.R. had been to that house numerous times, and had her mail sent there.
¶ 14 She drove to the home and texted K.B. When K.B. entered the car, T.R. noticed that she
was “very panicky, very emotional, [and] upset.” She recalled that K.B. was “rummaging
through her phone trying to call people.” K.B. eventually reached someone on her phone and
said that she was raped. When T.R. heard this, she asked K.B. what happened and K.B.
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responded “I will tell you later, I just need to get away from here.” T.R. turned the car around
and drove back to her aunt’s house because she wanted to identify who was at the house.
Because K.B. was from out of town, “she wouldn’t have recognized them at a later date.”
¶ 15 T.R. entered the house while K.B. stayed in the car. Cherry met here at the front door;
She then went to the living room “to act like [she] was looking for mail.” She noticed four men
and one woman, but she did not recognize anyone one besides Cherry. One of the men began to
argue with T.R. and “pulled out a gun on [her]” but Cherry intervened and took the gun away
from him. People’s Exhibit 1 appeared to be the same gun. She left the house and went back to
the car, where K.B. was waiting. She drove to her mother’s home, and all three later went to the
police station and then to the hospital.
¶ 16 The State then proceeded by stipulation. If called, Dr. Rashid Kysia, an emergency room
physician, would testify that he examined K.B. on January 18. K.B. told him that she was raped
by her cousin at his house. Dr. Kysia noted a tear to the interior vaginal wall and that K.B. had
blood in her vaginal vault and in her urine. Dr. Kysia collected a criminal sexual assault kit.
¶ 17 Chicago Police officer McDermott would testify that, on January 18, he went to a
residence in response to a reported sexual assault. Cherry answered the door and said “I know
what this is all about.” Cherry spontaneously stated: “I didn’t rape her. I f***ed her. She’s my
cousin. We had a p**** eating contest.” McDermott would testify that there were three other
men in the house, who were identified as Trent Peppers, Arthur Moss, and Edwards, as well as a
woman, N.T. Edwards and N.T. were having sex when police arrived. N.T. was extremely
intoxicated and could not be interviewed. McDermott recovered a loaded semi-automatic rifle
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and ammunition from beneath an enclosed porch at the home. Another responding officer would
testify that he recovered a semi-automatic pistol beneath the porch.
¶ 18 Through other stipulations, the parties agreed that forensic scientists with the Illinois
State Police would testify that DNA collected from K.B.’s criminal sexual assault kit positively
matched a DNA sample taken from Cherry.
¶ 19 T.P. testified about a 2012 incident in which Cherry sexually assaulted her. T.P. met
Cherry in June 2012. On July 14, 2012, she went with Cherry to a barbecue. She got sick at the
barbecue and then went to the home of a man she knew as “Peanut” (later identified as Antwon
Hebron). The next day, Cherry told her that he had given her molly without her knowledge. T.P.
did not know K.B.
¶ 20 Later on July 15, T.P. was at Peanut’s house watching television with his girlfriend and
sister. That night, Cherry unexpectedly arrived. He began cursing at her, and hit her. At one point
Cherry left the room, and “Peanut and his girlfriend shut the door and locked it.” But, Cherry
“kicked a hole in the door” to regain entry to the room, and continued to hit her. Cherry later
forced T.P. into a car, and drove her to an alley, where he anally and vaginally raped her. Cherry
then drove T.P. back to his house, where he beat her, raped her again, and choked her. At one
point, she “passed out.” When she woke, Cherry again started hitting her. T.P. also testified that
Cherry threatened to shoot her and put a gun to her head.
¶ 21 A woman named Toddy arrived, and Cherry told her to take T.P. home. When she was
alone with the woman, T.P. told her that Cherry had beaten and sexually assaulted her. The
woman took T.P. to a hospital where a criminal sexual assault kit was collected.
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¶ 22 The parties stipulated that forensic scientists with the Illinois State Police would testify
that Cherry’s DNA matched DNA collected from T.P.’s criminal sexual assault kit. The State
also introduced a certified copy of Cherry’s felony conviction in case 97 CR 0791701 to prove
the offense of UUWF.
¶ 23 After the State rested, Cherry’s motion for a directed verdict was denied.
¶ 24 The defense called Moss, who testified that he knew Cherry for about two years before
the events of January 18, 2013. On that date, Moss was at Cherry’s house with Peppers,
Edwards, and N.T. Moss explained that people began drinking and smoking marijuana. Moss
and Peppers eventually left to pick up K.B., after they “received a phone call from [Cherry’s]
mother saying his cousin was in town and she wanted to hang out with us.” Moss and Peppers
brought K.B. back to the house, where people continued talking, smoking, and doing molly.
¶ 25 Cherry, Edwards, and K.B. had a discussion about an oral sex contest, after which they
went into a bedroom together. Edwards later came out of the bedroom but left the bedroom door
open. Moss could see inside the bedroom and saw Cherry performing oral sex on K.B. Moss
testified that Cherry and K.B. came out of the bedroom at the same time. K.B went into the
bathroom, and Cherry sat on the living room couch. After about five minutes, K.B. came out of
the bathroom and sat on the couch. About 30 to 40 minutes later, another woman whom Moss
did not know arrived. The woman was acting “weird” and talking about the mail. K.B. left with
the woman. Later, Cherry’s mother called and they learned that police may be on the way.
¶ 26 The defense called Antwon Hebron to rebut T.P.’s other crimes testimony. Hebron
testified that he has known Cherry for many years. In July 2012, Cherry visited his house with
T.P., whom Hebron had not met before. About a day later, T.P. called Hebron and she went to
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his house. Shortly thereafter, Cherry arrived; he told T.P. “let’s go” and left with her. Hebron
denied Cherry kicked in the door, or he ever saw Cherry hit T.P.
¶ 27 Edwards testified that he went to Cherry’s house with N.T., whom he described as his
“best friend,” along with Peppers and Moss. The group, including Cherry, began partying,
drinking and using molly. After an hour or two, Peppers and Moss left to pick up K.B. The
group, including K.B., continued to talk, drink liquor, smoke marijuana, and use molly. At some
point, the group had a “sexual conversation,” which got into “a vagina eating contest” between
Edwards and Cherry. Edwards, Cherry and K.B. went to a bedroom. After K.B. pulled her pants
down, Edwards decided not to participate in the contest and he walked out of the room, leaving
the door open.
¶ 28 Edwards went to a nearby room from which he could see into the bedroom. Cherry
performed oral sex on K.B. “[A]fter that they started having sex.” The atmosphere was “calm”
and “never one time did it get aggressively [sic].” Edwards later re-entered the bedroom but he
did not intervene because it “looked like they were enjoying themsel[ves.]” Cherry and K.B.
eventually returned to the living room. K.B. was “acting normal until [Cherry] exposed the fact
that he had sex with his cousin, and her whole vibe changed.” About an hour later, K.B.’s cousin
came to the house, and K.B’s “whole attitude changed” “from a happiness all the way down to a
sadness.” According to Edwards, the police arrived while K.B. and her cousin were still in the
house, and he was having sex with N.T. On cross-examination, Edwards maintained that it was
K.B.’s idea to have a “vagina eating contest.” He admitted that he had sex with N.T. even though
she was intoxicated and could barely walk or talk.
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¶ 29 Cherry testified that he and his friends planned to go paintball shooting and to shoot a rap
video. Peppers, Edwards, Moss, and N.T. arrived at his house around noon. His mother called
and told him that K.B., his cousin from Detroit, wanted to hang out with him. He had never met
or spoken to K.B. Moss and Peppers picked up K.B. and brought her back to the house. When
they returned, the group started drinking, listening to music, and using molly for “some hours.”
¶ 30 At one point, Cherry and Edwards were “debating” and having a “conceited”
conversation about who was better at certain things, such as rapping. Eventually, he or Edwards
said “I am a better p**** eater than you” and they asked K.B. “if she wanted to be a judge in a
p**** eating contest.” K.B. agreed, and the three of them went into a bedroom. Cherry testified
that K.B. pulled down her pants, and he performed oral sex on her. She “enjoyed” it, and they
proceeded to have vaginal sex on the bed. Cherry denied that Edwards said anything to him
about having sex with his cousin, or that he told Edwards to leave the room.
¶ 31 After he and K.B. had sex, Cherry went into the living room and “started partying again.”
K.B. went to the bathroom and then sat down on the living room couch. K.B.’s demeanor was
“calm” and “cool.” Cherry began “teasing” K.B., calling her “nasty” for having sex with her
cousin. K.B. “got kind of embarrassed by it” and he stopped teasing her once he saw “she didn’t
like me poking fun at her.”
¶ 32 Cherry saw K.B. use her phone before T.R. arrived at the house. As soon as T.R. arrived,
K.B. left the house. T.R. came inside the house and went to a box where Cherry’s mother kept
mail. T.R. “fake[d] like she’s looking in there for something and then she walk[ed] right out.”
Cherry denied that T.R. had an argument with anyone. Cherry did not see anyone with a gun in
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the home. About an hour after T.R. left the house, Cherry received a phone call from his mother
and learned he had been accused of rape. He stayed at the home until police arrived.
¶ 33 During his direct examination, Cherry was also asked about his interactions with T.P. in
July 2012. He testified that he invited her to a barbecue at his sister’s house. He and T.P. were
drinking at the barbecue until they left to go to Hebron’s home. There, T.P. was in a “room with
ten guys” and “everybody was having sex with her.” According to Cherry, T.P. “formed a Team
A and a Team B” and had sex with “Team A” before “Team B.” Cherry also had sex with T.P.
Cherry stayed at Hebron’s house all night, went home to sleep, and returned to Hebron’s house
six or eight hours later. When he came back, the “same thing was going on” with T.P. and “a
group of guys.” T.P. told Cherry that she “was ready to go,” so he drove her back to her home.
Cherry denied that he raped or struck T.P.
¶ 34 On cross-examination, Cherry maintained that T.P. had sex with about 20 men. At one
point, Cherry was asked: “Did it bother you that the girl that you brought to the barbecue had sex
with the whole neighborhood?” Cherry answered: “No. I like sluts. I like sluts more than I like a
woman who is not a slut. I love sluts.” Cherry was also cross-examined regarding his interactions
with K.B. in January 2013. Cherry said that the oral sex contest was “probably” his idea but
maintained that she agreed to it.
¶ 35 If called, Detective Russell Sutherland would state that, when he interviewed K.B., she
told him that Cherry grabbed her by the arm and told her “we’re going to have a p****-eating
contest.” K.B. “said she told him no and that he attempted to pull her into a bedroom just
adjacent to the bathroom.” Detective Costello would testify that he investigated the alleged
sexual assault of T.P. in July 2012. When Costello interviewed T.P., she had relayed certain
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details that T.P. could not recall during her trial testimony, including that Hebron had told Cherry
to “chill out” when he first attacked her, and that Cherry had punched T.P. after she refused to
hand him a bottle of vodka. The defense rested following these stipulations.
¶ 36 In rebuttal, the State introduced additional stipulations. Detective Sutherland would
testify that he spoke to Cherry about the incident involving K.B. Cherry told Sutherland that “he
was having a rap battle with [Edwards] and stated the p****-eating contest was to see who was
the best rapper.” Cherry stated that the “contest was more like a surprise for the participants.”
¶ 37 The parties also stipulated that Assistant State’s Attorney Anastasia Harper would testify
that she interviewed Edwards in the presence of another ASA. Edwards told the ASAs that he
had been untruthful in a previous interview with a detective. Edwards recalled that, during the
party, Cherry stated “I’m going to f*** my cousin” and K.B. replied “no, you ain’t.” For two to
three minutes, Cherry was “trying to force her into the bedroom” and she was “trying to get away
from him.” Eventually, Cherry “gained control and threw her on the bed.” Cherry “got her pants
off and then pushed her legs up while holding her down with his hand on her chest” and then
“forced his penis into her vagina.” Edwards “started to feel bad” and went into the bedroom “to
see if he could talk [Cherry] out of sexually assaulting her.” Edwards said to Cherry “man, you
gonna do this to your own cousin is that what you on?” Cherry told Edwards to “get the f*** out
of my room” and close the door. Cherry told everyone to “get our stories straight.” Cherry “came
up with the p****-eating contest story” and “everyone agreed to tell the story.”
¶ 38 After hearing all of the evidence, but before closing arguments, the trial court explained
that it would not rely on the other crimes evidence concerning T.P.
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“I originally made a ruling that the evidence of other crimes was applicable in this
case. I now know that was a serious mistake. The evidence of other crimes took
place at a different point in time, were drastically different than the facts outlined
in this case and in this trial the evidence of other crimes became the trial within
the trial * * * *. And because of that fact I’m discounting the entire testimony of
[T.P.] and I’m discounting the entire testimony of the defense witness [Hebron]
that rebutted her testimony.”
Thus, the court stated that “[t]his case will be decided based on the testimony of [K.B.], [T.R.]
Mr. Moss, Darius [Edwards], the defendant and the stipulations.”
¶ 39 Following closing arguments, the trial court found Cherry guilty on all counts. In
explaining its decision, the court first found that K.B. “testified not just credibly but highly
credib[ly].” The court noted the “way she described the manner in which the defendant used
force on her; the fact that she had boots on, jeans, was unable to actually take off all of her
clothing so that it was just forced partially down * * * .” The court found that her testimony was
“corroborated by vaginal tears and bleeding, circumstantial evidence which proved her to be
testifying credibly on that force.” The court also found that K.B. was corroborated by T.R., who
testified “highly credibly.” The court noted T.R. “would have more bias to be on the side of the
defendant because she’s his first cousin and she hardly knew” K.B., but that her testimony “was
credible and backed up” K.B.’s testimony.
¶ 40 With respect to the defense witnesses, the court remarked that Edwards’ credibility was
“at zero.” The court observed that “[h]e was obviously under the influence of something while he
was testifying” and had the “worst demeanor I ever saw of any witness that has ever testified
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here.” The court also noted that Edwards was “impeached by statements that he made to an
[ASA] wherein he basically corroborates everything that [K.B.] said and confirms that she was
sexually assaulted by the defendant.” The court also found that Moss was “impeached” and “not
believable.” The court then stated:
“The defendant. What do I say about the defendant’s testimony? He’s not
credible, he said he prefers his wom[e]n to be sluts and he doesn’t like a woman
who’s not a slut. That’s exactly the kind of individual with that attitude that would
rape his own cousin.”
¶ 41 The court found Cherry guilty on all counts. The trial court denied Cherry’s motion to set
aside the verdict or grant a new trial. In doing so, the court remarked that it had “completely
discounted the evidence of other crimes witness[es].”
¶ 42 After a sentencing hearing, Cherry was sentenced to 10 years in prison for criminal
sexual assault (count 1), as well as a consecutive 7-year term for UUWF (count 2). He was also
sentenced to a concurrent 7-year term on UUWF (count 3), for an aggregate 17-year prison
sentence. Cherry’s motion to reconsider sentence was denied.
¶ 43 Analysis
¶ 44 Cherry contends that he was deprived of a fundamentally fair trial where the trial court
admitted “overwhelmingly prejudicial uncharged other crimes evidence” related to T.P. In
setting forth this argument, he acknowledges the court’s statement that its initial ruling to allow
this evidence was a mistake, and that it would be “discounting the entire testimony of T.P.” and
of Hebron. Nevertheless, he maintains that he was prejudiced by the admission of the other
crimes evidence because the trial court referred to his testimony about “sluts.” According to
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Cherry, this demonstrates that the trial judge “was incapable of disregarding T.P.’s
overwhelmingly prejudicial other crimes testimony and evidence” which “clearly contributed to
the trial court’s guilt adjudications.” On that basis, he requests that we reverse his conviction and
grant him a new trial.
¶ 45 In response, the State emphasizes that the trial court “explicitly said it would not consider
the other crimes evidence.” The State argues that the trial court’s “passing remark” referencing
Cherry’s comments about “sluts” is insufficient to show that the court actually relied on other
crimes evidence to find him guilty. The State maintains that the record shows that the trial court
did not rely on other crimes evidence in finding Cherry guilty but instead relied “on the credible
testimony of K.B., which was corroborated both by medical evidence and the credible testimony
of [T.R.].” The State otherwise argues that “any possible error here was harmless” given the
evidence of Cherry’s guilt. We agree with the State.
¶ 46 “In general, evidence of other crimes is not admissible if it is relevant merely to establish
defendant’s propensity to commit crimes.” People v. Nieves, 193 Ill. 2d 513, 529 (2000). But,
“[s]ection 115-7.3 of the Code (725 ILCS 5/115-7.3 (West 2006)) provides an exception to the
general rule in criminal cases,” permitting evidence that a defendant charged with certain sexual
offenses “has committed other sexual offenses to show the defendant’s propensity to commit sex
offenses.” People v. Nelson, 2013 IL App (1st) 102619, ¶ 40 (citing People v. Donoho, 204 Ill.
2d 159, 176 (2003)). “Like the common law, however, section 115-7.3 permits such evidence to
be admitted only if: (1) it is relevant; and (2) its probative value is not outweighed by its
prejudicial effect. [Citation.]” Id.
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¶ 47 A reviewing court will not reverse the trial court’s decision to admit other-crimes
evidence under section 115-7.3 unless it finds that the court abused its discretion. Donoho, 204
Ill. 2d at 182. That, however, is not the precise question raised in this appeal, given the
procedural history. The trial court initially admitted other crimes evidence regarding T.P., but at
the close of all evidence sua sponte acknowledged that its prior ruling was a “serious mistake.”
The court explicitly said that it would disregard such evidence in deciding the case. Nevertheless,
Cherry claims that he was prejudiced because the court improperly relied on such other crimes
evidence, despite its statement that it would not do so. Thus, the issue on appeal is not whether
the other crimes evidence was improperly admitted, but whether the court improperly relied on
it, causing prejudice to Cherry.
¶ 48 As recognized by Cherry, “the trial judge, as the trier of fact, is presumed to know the
law and to have considered only competent evidence in reaching its determination on the merits
in a bench trial. [Citations.]” People v. Koch, 248 Ill. App. 3d 584, 592 (1993). Our supreme
court has recognized that a trial judge at a bench trial is “capable of compartmentalizing its
consideration of evidence.” People v. Schmitt, 131 Ill. 2d 128, 137 (1989). Thus, although other
crimes evidence presents a “danger” that “it may convince a jury to convict the defendant simply
because he is a bad person,” that “fear is assuaged” in a bench trial, since “it is presumed that the
trial court considered the other-crimes evidence only for the limited purpose for which it was
introduced.” People v. Littleton, 2014 IL App (1st) 121950, ¶ 35 (quoting People v. Nash, 2013
IL App (1st) 113366, ¶ 24).
¶ 49 To rebut the presumption that the court considered “only competent evidence” in a bench
trial, “there must be an affirmative showing in the record that the trial judge actually used the
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evidence improperly as alleged. [Citations.]” Koch, 248 Ill. App. 3d at 592; Schmitt, 131 Ill. 2d
at 138-39 (“We must presume the trial court considered only competent evidence unless the
contrary affirmatively appears of record or the trial court, confronted with serious improprieties
in a case where a defendant’s guilt is not manifest, fails to comment on the irregularities or even
indicate an awareness thereof.”).
¶ 50 The record shows that the trial court sua sponte reversed its earlier ruling granting the
motion in limine, found that the other crimes evidence related to T.P. was improper, and
explicitly stated that it would disregard such evidence in deciding the case. Thus, a presumption
exists that the trial court did not improperly rely on other crimes evidence in finding Cherry
guilty, and Cherry must make an affirmative showing in the record to rebut that presumption.
Cherry asserts that the presumption was rebutted because, in the course of finding him guilty, the
court referenced testimony elicited from Cherry when he was cross-examined about his
encounter with T.P. Specifically, the court noted that Cherry “said he prefers his wom[e]n to be
sluts and he doesn’t like a woman who’s not a slut. That’s exactly the kind of individual with
that kind of attitude that would rape his own cousin.”
¶ 51 After reviewing this comment in the context of the court’s other findings, we cannot say
that it amounts to an “affirmative showing” that the trial court actually relied on evidence of any
crimes against T.P. in finding that Cherry assaulted K.B. Rather, the trial court’s ruling makes
clear that it relied on the competent evidence of K.B.’s sexual assault in finding Cherry guilty.
The transcript of the court’s ruling makes plain that, by the time the court commented about
Cherry’s “sluts” remark, it had thoroughly explained why it found that other evidence proved his
guilt. The court first explained that it found K.B. testified “not just credibly but highly
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credibl[y],” citing her detailed testimony about how Cherry forced himself on her. The court also
noted that K.B.’s description of the sexual assault was corroborated by medical evidence. The
court additionally found that K.B.’s testimony was corroborated by T.R., who testified “highly
credibly.” The court explained that T.R.’s testimony was particularly convincing since she
“would have more bias to be on the side of the defendant because she’s his first cousin” whereas
she had just met K.B. at the time of the incident. After crediting that evidence, the court
proceeded to explain that it found that each of Edwards, Moss, and Cherry lacked credibility. It
also noted that a stipulation reflected Edwards’ prior statements to ASAs, in which he
corroborated K.B.’s account of the assault. At no point in its findings did the court make any
mention of T.P.’s testimony.
¶ 52 Although the court referenced Cherry’s testimony about “sluts,” which he gave in
response to a question about his interaction with T.P., this reference does not show that the court
relied on any evidence of a crime against T.P. to find him guilty of assaulting K.B. At most, it
appears the court made the comment to criticize Cherry’s overall attitude towards women,
having already concluded, based on the competent evidence, that he had sexually assaulted K.B.
For these reasons, we reject Cherry’s contention that the court’s comment rebuts the presumption
that the court relied on competent evidence.
¶ 53 We further agree with the State that, even assuming arguendo that the court erroneously
relied on other crimes evidence concerning T.P., this would not be reversible error, given the
overwhelming evidence of Cherry’s guilt with respect to K.B. That is, we perceive no chance
that the verdict would have been different, even if the other crimes evidence had not been
admitted in the first place.
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¶ 54 Although this was a bench trial, we are guided by the harmless error inquiry applied
where other crimes evidence has been improperly admitted in a jury trial. Our supreme court has
instructed: “Although the erroneous admission of other-crimes evidence ordinarily calls for
reversal, the evidence must have been a material factor in the defendant’s conviction such that,
without the evidence, the verdict likely would have been different. If it is unlikely that the error
influenced the jury, reversal is not warranted. [Citation.]” People v. Hall, 194 Ill. 2d 305, 339
(2000); People v. Nieves, 193 Ill. 2d 513, 530 (2000) (“the improper introduction of other-crimes
evidence is harmless error when a defendant is neither prejudiced nor denied a fair trial based
upon its admission. [Citations.]”). Error in the admission of other crimes evidence is harmless
where “the record indicates that the evidence of defendant’s guilt, even with the other crimes
evidence, was overwhelming.” People v. Martin, 2012 IL App (1st) 093506, ¶¶ 43-44; see also
People v. Johnson, 406 Ill. App. 3d 805, 819 (2010) (error in admitting testimony regarding
another sexual assault was harmless where “Given the strength of the evidence presented against
defendant, mixed with the fact that the State did not put undue emphasis on the other-crimes
evidence * * * we cannot say the outcome of his trial would have been different” had other-
crimes evidence been excluded).
¶ 55 As described by the trial court, K.B. gave a detailed account of the assault that the court
found highly credible. Her testimony was corroborated by medical evidence, as well as T.R.’s
recollection of events. In contrast, the testimony of the defense witnesses was inconsistent and
impeached, including Edwards’ prior statements to ASAs. Given the strength of the State’s
evidence, we cannot say that the outcome of Cherry’s trial would have been different had the
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other crimes evidence been excluded. Accordingly, even assuming that the trial court improperly
considered evidence related to T.P., that would not result in reversible error.
¶ 56 Affirmed.
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