2022 IL App (1st) 180192-U No. 1-18-0192 Order filed June 13, 2022
First Division
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ___________________________________________________________________________ IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ___________________________________________________________________________ ) THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) No. 02 CR 15430 v. ) ) The Honorable JAMES DEGORSKI, ) Vincent Michael Gaughan, ) Judge, presiding. Defendant-Appellant. )
PRESIDING JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Walker and Coghlan concurred in the judgment. ORDER
¶1 Held: We affirm the second-stage dismissal of Degorski’s postconviction petition because he failed to make a substantial showing that the State violated its obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and he failed to make a substantial showing that any of his trial or appellate counsels’ many alleged deficiencies prejudiced him.
¶2 The State charged James Degorski and co-defendant, Juan Luna with multiple counts of
first degree murder for the 1993 killings of seven employees at a Brown’s Chicken restaurant in
Palatine, Illinois. Following a severed jury trial, a jury found Degorski guilty, and he received a
sentence of natural life imprisonment. No. 1-18-0192
¶3 After direct appeal where this court affirmed the convictions, Degorski petitioned for
postconviction relief. The trial court dismissed the petition at the second stage. Degorski now
appeals, arguing: (i) the State violated its obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963),
by failing to disclose evidence that a key witness had a monetary motive to testify, and (ii) his trial
and appellate counsels were ineffective on several grounds.
¶4 We do not agree with any of Degorski’s arguments. A common theme runs through our
decision: Degorski has failed, either as a matter of law or due to insufficient factual support, to
make a substantial showing that the claimed errors—if they are errors—impacted the outcome of
his trial. Under Brady, he failed to show that the evidence the State withheld was material to his
guilt or innocence; as to his ineffective assistance claims, he failed to show that counsels’ allegedly
deficient actions prejudiced him. We affirm.
¶5 Background
¶6 We recited the underlying facts in our opinion from Degorski’s direct appeal. People v.
Degorski, 2013 IL App (1st) 100580. During Degorski’s trial, the parties presented multiple
witnesses and exhibits. A jury found Degorski guilty and eligible for the death penalty but instead
sentenced him to natural life in prison. We limit our description of the facts to those that relate to
this appeal.
¶7 Motion to Suppress
¶8 Evidence at a hearing on Degorski’s pretrial motion to quash arrest showed that on May
16, 2002, Palatine police officers, who had been surveilling Degorski for several days, went to
Indiana to “pickup” Degorski for questioning. See People v. Degorski, 382 Ill. App. 3d 135, 138
(2008). The police stated that they did not have an arrest warrant. Still, they asked Degorski if he
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would voluntarily accompany them to Illinois for questioning. Id. Degorski agreed, and the officers
took him to the Streamwood police station for interrogation. Id. The officers Mirandized Degorski
and questioned him for about 10 hours, accompanied by an Assistant State’s Attorney. Ultimately,
Degorski admitted his involvement in the murders. Id. at 138-139. The State used his oral,
unrecorded statements against him at trial.
¶9 At the hearing, both former Assistant State’s Attorney Michael McHale and Palatine police
sergeant Bill King testified that Degorski was not subjected to any coercive measures and freely
and voluntarily spoke to them. They repeatedly gave him opportunities to eat, sleep, and use the
washroom. McHale testified that Degorski told him he was treated well by the officers. Chief
Koziol testified that he did not have any contact with Degorski and denied grabbing or squeezing
Degorski’s shoulders. Based on this evidence, the trial court ruled that Degorski’s oral statements
were voluntarily made, but his videotaped statement would be suppressed due to a Miranda violation.
The State appealed, and this court reversed and remanded for the remainder of the trial
proceedings. Id. at 147-48.
¶ 10 Trial Evidence
¶ 11 On the night of the murders, January 8, 1993, Brown’s Chicken closed at 9:00 p.m. Shortly
after closing time, seven employees were shot to death. The restaurant’s trash cans were empty
except for the remains of a four-piece chicken meal, a paper cup and napkins, and a cash register
receipt. The cash register appeared to have been closed and reopened to sell a meal at 9:08 p.m.
The receipt was consistent with the meal discovered in the trash can. A fingerprint found on a
paper napkin matched codefendant Luna’s fingerprint. DNA from one of the chicken bones
matched Luna’s DNA profile and excluded Degorski as a contributor to the sample.
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¶ 12 In January 1993, the Village of Palatine passed a resolution to establish a fund for anyone
with information leading to the arrest and conviction of whomever committed the murders. The
fund existed until Degorski’s and Luna’s convictions, Luna in 2007 and Degorski in 2009.
¶ 13 At Degorski’s trial, Eileen Bakalla testified that she was friends with Degorski and Luna.
On the night of the murders, she received a telephone call from Degorski, asking her to meet them
in a grocery store parking lot in Carpentersville, Illinois. Degorski said they had “done something
big.” Bakalla left work at 9:30 p.m. When she met up with Luna and Degorski, she noticed green
rubber gloves in the back seat of Luna’s car. Bakalla drove them to her townhouse. On the way,
she asked about a canvas money bag they had with them. They told her that it contained money
they had taken from Brown’s Chicken.
¶ 14 While at Bakalla’s home, Degorski and Luna split up the money. Degorski gave Bakalla
$50 he owed her. The three smoked marijuana and stayed for a few hours. Bakalla then dropped
Luna at his car. Bakalla and Degorski then drove past Brown’s Chicken, where they saw
ambulances and squad cars in the parking lot. Degorski told her that Luna had gone “ballistic and
started killing people,” “slit the owner’s throat from ear to ear,” and “put the rest of the employees
in the cooler [and] in the freezer.” Degorski said Luna shot four people in the cooler and handed
the gun to him, and he shot two people in the freezer. They wore gloves, mopped the floor
afterward, and threw the gun in the Fox River. Bakalla and Degorski went to Degorski’s home,
where they spent the night. The following day, they cleaned Luna’s car at a carwash.
¶ 15 Bakalla testified she did not tell police about the murders until they approached her on
May 15, 2002. Bakalla did tell her husband, Keith Abel, about the murders before their 1998
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wedding. Abel testified that, in 1998, Bakalla told him that Degorski and Luna had done
“something big” and mentioned Brown’s Chicken.
¶ 16 Anne Lockett testified that she had dated Degorski and remained friends with him. She was
also friends with Luna and Bakalla. In 1992 and 1993, Lockett frequently abused drugs and alcohol
and twice attempted suicide. On January 9, 1993, she was hospitalized after a failed attempt, during
which time she received a telephone call from Degorski, telling her to watch the news that night
because he had “done something big.” The lead story that night was about the murders.
¶ 17 Lockett left the hospital on January 25 and later met up with Degorski and Luna at
Degorski’s home. Degorski told her about the Brown’s Chicken robbery and said they had already
told Bakalla because they had to use her as an alibi. Degorski and Luna told Lockett that on the
night of the murders they drove Luna’s car to the restaurant. They placed a wedge behind the back
door to prevent the employees’ escape. Luna ordered a chicken dinner, upsetting Degorski, who
was worried that Luna would leave fingerprints. Luna finished the meal and put the chicken bones
in the restaurant garbage can. Luna and Degorski then went into the bathroom and put on gloves.
¶ 18 When they came out of the bathroom, Degorski and Luna crowded the employees into the
freezer and cooler and shot them. Luna slit one woman’s throat. Degorski and Luna then mopped
the floor and wiped the area down to remove fingerprints. They later threw their clothes into a
dumpster and threw the gun into the Fox River.
¶ 19 Degorski and Luna explained to Lockett that they had chosen Brown’s Chicken because
Luna had worked there. They also told Lockett that Luna wanted to see what it was like to kill
someone, and Degorski agreed to help. They said they would kill Lockett if she told anyone.
¶ 20 Lockett also testified that Degorski owned a silver .38-caliber revolver that he kept in his
bedroom, but she never saw it after her hospital discharge.
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¶ 21 Degorski did not testify. The trial judge questioned Degorski:
THE COURT: Mr. Degorski, I know your attorneys have explained to you that you have a right to testify in this case. They told you that?
DEGORSKI: Yes.
THE COURT: You heard me during voir dire examination say that anybody accused of a crime has two Constitutional rights. One is to testify and if they testify, their testimony would be judged as anybody else’s; is that correct?
THE COURT: All right. And then on the other flip side of that, of the Constitutional issue, is that you have a right not to testify; do you understand that, Mr. Degorski?
THE COURT: And if you decide not to testify, then no inference can be drawn from your silence and I will instruct the jury as to that?
DEGORSKI: Yes.”
This exchange followed:
“THE COURT: After consulting with your attorneys and knowing [these] Constitutional protections that you have, what is your desire about testifying?
DEGORSKI: They said there’s no need.
THE COURT: I’m sorry. What do you say?
DEGORSKI: No.”
¶ 22 The jury found Degorski guilty of seven counts of murder, and he was sentenced to natural
life imprisonment. In 2010, Lockett and a friend shared the $100,000 reward offered by the Village
of Palatine because they “provided information that directly led to the conviction of Juan Luna and
James Degorski.”
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¶ 23 Direct Appeal
¶ 24 On direct appeal, Degorski argued he was denied a fair trial because: (i) the trial court
allowed the testimony of one of the State’s witnesses, a former assistant state’s attorney, that he
believed Degorski’s testimony was reliable—at the time of trial he was a Cook County circuit
court judge; and (ii) Degorski was prejudiced when the jury viewed a video of the removal of
bodies from the walk-in freezer in the restaurant. See id. ¶ 48. This court affirmed, finding the
prejudicial effect of the witness’s status as a judge did not outweigh its probative value, and any
abuse of discretion was harmless. Id. ¶ 65. Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion in admitting
the video because its probative value outweighed any prejudice. Even if the video had been
erroneously admitted, that error would be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. ¶¶ 102-103. We
noted that “[e]ven though no physical evidence connected Degorski to the murders, both DNA and
fingerprint evidence inculpated Luna, [who was] Degorski’s best friend with whom Degorski was
seen almost immediately after the offense.” Id. ¶ 103. In addition to his relationship with Luna,
Degorski’s conviction rested on his statements to McHale, King, Lockett, and Bakalla. Id.
¶ 25 Postconviction Petition
¶ 26 Degorski, through counsel, filed a postconviction petition and, after amending it twice,
raised two sets of claims. First, he alleged the State improperly withheld material evidence in
violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). Degorski claimed the State failed to disclose
that Lockett “was promised and received $100,000 in reward money in exchange for her testimony
against Degorski.” His petition alleged the Village of Palatine established a reward fund shortly
after the murders, publicized on a local billboard. Several articles in local publications, including
the Daily Herald and the Chicago Tribune, discussed the reward money and had speculated that
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Lockett may have been considered as a recipient. Indeed, the petition alleges that police “Sergeant
Kozial assured Lockett that if she testified well and her testimony produced a conviction, she
would receive the money.” Degorski attached an affidavit from Richard James Bilik, an old
romantic partner of Lockett’s, attesting that “it seemed like [Lockett] was very interested in
collecting on the substantial reward money and was willing to implicate anyone.”
¶ 27 A resolution from the Village of Palatine and an accompanying monetary statement, also
attached to the petition, showed that Lockett eventually received $49,064.50 for “provid[ing]
information that directly led to the conviction of *** James Degorski.”
¶ 28 Degorski further alleged that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective under Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), for several reasons: (i) failing to investigate and present
evidence of Lockett’s monetary incentive to testify, (ii) failing to impeach Lockett on other matters
affecting her credibility, (iii) failing to present evidence supporting Degorski’s pretrial motion to
suppress evidence, (iv) failing to object to, and later challenge on appeal, DNA evidence showing
Luna’s DNA on a chicken bone found at the scene, and (v) improperly preventing Degorski from
exercising his right to testify at trial.
¶ 29 The State moved to dismiss Degorski’s petition. As to the Brady claim, the State denied
the existence of monetary promises made to Lockett in exchange for her testimony, emphasizing
that any award came from the Village of Palatine and was contingent on a successful trial. The
State also focused on the trial evidence. It argued, even if it had failed to tender information about
Lockett’s monetary motive to testify, that information would not have changed the outcome of
the trial. Turning to Degorski’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, the State largely did
not dispute their factual basis. Instead, the State chalked each of his claims up to an unassailable
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trial strategy. It repeated its argument that the outcome of trial would not have been different even
if counsel had performed in the ways Degorski argued they should have.
¶ 30 The trial court dismissed Degorski’s petition without an evidentiary hearing, finding “there
is no Brady violation. I also find that there was no ineffective assistance of counsel and my final
finding is that there is no substantial showing of a violation of constitutional right to demand relief
under the Postconviction Act.”
¶ 31 Analysis
¶ 32 In this court, Degorski raises the same claims arguing each should have advanced to a third
stage evidentiary hearing; the State echoes the same rejoinders it made in the trial court. Although
we are persuaded by the State’s analysis, both parties at oral argument took positions requiring us
to clarify the standard we use to evaluate second-stage dismissals of postconviction petitions.
¶ 33 The Postconviction Hearing Act requires a third-stage evidentiary hearing “whenever the
petitioner makes a substantial showing of a constitutional violation.” People v. Coleman, 183 Ill.
2d 366, 381 (1998). When determining whether a petition should advance to the third stage, the
trial court makes no factual findings and considers all well-pled factual allegations true. Id. at 380-
81. At this stage, we still construe all claims liberally in Degorski’s favor. Id. at 382. Here we offer
our first clarification. At oral argument, Degorski’s counsel urged us to find that our obligation to
take the claims in his petition as true alleviated his burden to provide evidence supporting those
claims, including his own affidavit. Though our second-stage review is deferential to the pleadings,
Degorski asks us to go further than Illinois Supreme Court precedent allows.
¶ 34 Starting in People v. Collins, 202 Ill. 2d 59, (2002), the supreme court distinguished
between verification affidavits required by section 122-1 of the Act and evidentiary affidavits
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required by section 122-2 of the Act. Id. at 66-67. The former serves only to attest that the pleading
is made in good faith; the latter, on the other hand, provides evidence that the allegations in the
petition are capable of independent corroboration. Id. at 67. Even at the first stage, failure to attach
evidentiary affidavits dooms a postconviction petition. Id. at 69. The supreme court has softened
the harsh edges of its decision in Collins, but never in a way that excuses a postconviction
petitioner from providing his or her own evidentiary affidavit. E.g., People v. Hall, 217 Ill. 2d 324,
333 (2005) (where defendant provided his own affidavit, and only other affidavit that could support
his claim was trial counsel’s, failure to attach additional affidavit would be excused for ineffective
assistance claim); People v. Delton, 227 Ill. 2d 247, 258 (2008) (chastising defendant for failing
to attach evidentiary affidavit where contents would have been within defendant’s knowledge);
People v. Allen, 2015 IL 113135, ¶ 34 (forgiving failure to notarize evidentiary affidavit where
attached evidence in form of affidavit was “capable of independent corroboration”). Our appellate
court has similarly forgiven the failure to attach affidavits where the underlying record supports
the petitioner’s claims. E.g,. People v. Hanks, 335 Ill. App. 3d 894, 898-99 (2002).
¶ 35 We recognize a tension between a requirement that a petitioner supply, at minimum, his or
her own evidentiary affidavit with the supreme court’s repeated admonishments that we take the
allegations in the petition as true at the first and second stages. E.g., People v. Sanders, 2016 IL
118123, ¶ 31. But the legal inquiry on review from second stage dismissals always includes our
“assessment of the allegations of the petition and supporting documentation,” if there is any. See
id. (Emphasis added). To the extent tension remains, the supreme court must resolve it. Without
more explicit guidance, we see no basis on which to excuse Degorski, who was represented by
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counsel at the second stage, from including his evidentiary affidavit addressing the claims for
which his testimony would be relevant.
¶ 36 We would be remiss if we did not address one of the State’s pervasive misstatements of
our second-stage review standards. The state repeatedly—at oral argument in particular—argued
that many of Degorski’s claims were “positively rebutted by the record” simply because they are
based on factual allegations inconsistent with testimony or other evidence in the original trial
record. In People v. Robinson, 2020 IL 123849, the supreme court clarified that new evidence is
only positively rebutted by the record where “no factfinder could ever accept the truth of that
evidence, such as where it is affirmatively and incontestably demonstrated to be false or
impossible.” Id. ¶ 60. The court in Sanders offered a concrete example: a witness’s recantation
testimony explaining the witness shot a murder victim once is irreconcilable with forensic
testimony that the victim was shot twice. Sanders, 2016 IL 118123, ¶ 48. Though Sanders and
Robinson arose in a different procedural posture, we see no reason their definition of “positively
rebutted by the record” fails to apply here. Were it any other way, no postconviction claim would
ever succeed because, by definition, such claims are inconsistent with the trial record.
¶ 37 With these clarifications we proceed to the merits, reviewing the trial court’s second-stage
dismissal of Degorski’s postconviction petition de novo. People v. Gonzalez, 2016 IL App (1st)
141660, ¶ 25.
¶ 38 Brady Violation & Related Ineffective Assistance Claim
¶ 39 Degorski first argues that the State violated its obligation to disclose favorable evidence
under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), by withholding “Lockett’s financial incentive to
testify against [him].” He argues Lockett “expected to receive” the reward money set aside by the
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Village of Palatine. The State responds that it did not withhold any evidence of Lockett’s motive
to testify because no monetary “promise” ever existed. And, says the State, even if someone had
promised Lockett the reward money in exchange for her testimony, the evidence was
“overwhelming” such that her motive was not material evidence. Though we agree Degorski made
a substantial showing that the evidence of Lockett’s monetary motive to testify was favorable
impeachment evidence that the State failed to disclose, it was not material to his guilt. For similar
reasons, he suffered no prejudice from his counsel’s failure to discover Lockett’s monetary motive
and cross-examine her about it. Degorski’s Brady claim and related ineffective assistance of
counsel claim fail.
¶ 40 Under Brady, prosecutors must disclose all evidence favorable to the accused. People v.
Beaman, 229 Ill. 2d 56, 73 (2008). The prosecutor’s obligation extends to “evidence known to
police investigators” or “other government actors.” Id. To succeed on a Brady claim, a defendant
must show three things: (i) the undisclosed evidence is favorable to the accused as either
exculpatory or impeaching, (ii) the State withheld the evidence from the accused, either
intentionally or inadvertently, and (iii) the evidence was material to the accused’s guilt or
punishment. Id., at 73-74. The State, in some fashion, challenges all three elements of Degorski’s
Brady claim.
¶ 41 First, the State argues that any monetary benefit Lockett may have received was not
“undisclosed.” The State points to the exhibits attached to Degorski’s petition showing news
articles about the award and speculation that Lockett might receive it as evidence that any
information about the award was public at the time of trial. The State then argues there was no
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evidence of any “promise” to Lockett, meaning nothing left for the State to disclose. We find this
part of the State’s argument foreclosed by Degorski’s pleadings.
¶ 42 Degorski’s petition alleges that Sergeant Kozial of the Palatine Police Department,
“assured Lockett that if she testified well and her testimony produced a conviction, she would
receive the money.” Though we have no affidavits from any of the officers, James Bilik’s affidavit
explains that Lockett knew that “whoever came forward with information [about the Brown’s
Chicken murders] would be entitled to reward money.” He also averred that “it seemed like Anne
[Lockett] was very interested in collecting on the substantial reward money.” At this stage, we
take these allegations as true and construe them liberally. Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d at 380-82.
Degorski’s allegation that Sergeant Kozial promised Lockett the reward money is supported by
Bilik’s affidavit explaining that Lockett expected to receive the reward money and was “willing
to implicate anyone.”
¶ 43 The State offers two counters to this conclusion: (i) the State’s relationship with the trustees
of the Palatine reward fund was too tenuous to impute the knowledge of any promise to the State,
and (ii) Lockett’s ultimate receipt of the reward was too tenuous at the time any alleged promise
was made to support Brady relief. We find neither argument persuasive.
¶ 44 We agree with the State, as a general matter, that the connection between the agency
possessing the allegedly exculpatory or impeaching information and the State’s Attorney’s Office
must be sufficiently concrete to impute knowledge to the State. See, e.g,. In re C.J., 166 Ill. 2d
264, 269-70 (finding relationship between State’s Attorney’s Office and Department of Children
and Family Services investigators insufficient to attribute to State knowledge gained by DCFS).
But based on the allegations in Degorski’s petition, the relevant entity that promised the reward
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was the Palatine Police Department (through Sergeant Kozial), not the trustees of the reward fund.
Moreover, as a matter of law, prosecutors are generally expected to know when the police involved
in their case know of exculpatory evidence. Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 437 (1995) (“individual
prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence known to others acting on the
government’s behalf in the case, including the police”). The State does not challenge its connection
to the Palatine Police Department for Brady purposes and we find the connection sufficient at least
at this stage of postconviction proceedings.
¶ 45 We also find the State’s concern about the remoteness of the connection between the
alleged promise and the eventual payoff does not apply here. For Brady purposes, a promise that
creates an “expectation[ ] of special favor *** in the mind of the witness” is enough to trigger
disclosure obligations. People v. Morales, 2019 IL App (1st) 160225, ¶ 32 (quoting People v.
Triplett, 108 Ill. 2d 463, 467 (1985)). Indeed, the conditional nature of the promise may only
increase a witness’s incentive to testify falsely. Id., ¶ 27 (citing United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S.
667, 663 (1985)). The resolution creating the reward fund expressly conditions the reward on the
Village of Palatine’s satisfaction with the outcome of trial—the fund would only compensate a
person who “provide[d] information that directly l[ed] to the arrest and conviction of the person
or persons responsible for the murders.” The existence of the promise made by Sergeant Kozial,
its contingent nature created by the Village of Palatine, and Lockett’s expectation that she would
receive the award if she implicated someone constitutes impeaching testimony that the State did
not disclose.
¶ 46 We turn, then, to the State’s primary argument: even if it failed to disclose impeaching
evidence, Lockett’s monetary motive to testify against Degorski was not material to his conviction.
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Evidence is material when “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed
to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” People v. Harris, 206 Ill.
2d 293, 312 (2002). We ask not whether the remaining evidence was sufficient but whether the
new favorable evidence could “put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine
confidence in the verdict.” Id. Evidence can be material even if only used for impeachment. Id.
¶ 47 We find the evidence of Lockett’s monetary motive to testify would not have been material
to Degorski’s guilt or innocence. Even if impeaching Lockett would have caused the fact finder to
discount her testimony entirely, Degorski confessed to three other witnesses: Eileen Bakalla,
Officer King, and Assistant State’s Attorney McHale. As we recounted in the direct appeal order,
the confessions were largely consistent and provided detail beyond media coverage of the murders.
See Degorski, 2013 IL App (1st) 100580, ¶¶ 10-11, 20-29. Degorski has not identified, and we
cannot think of, a reason the damage to Lockett’s credibility caused by her monetary motive to
testify would impact the credibility of the remaining confessions. Our confidence in Lockett’s
testimony is shaken, but not our confidence in the verdict.
¶ 48 We reject Degorski’s related claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for similar
reasons. He argues counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach her, assuming counsel knew of
Lockett’s monetary interest in Degorski’s conviction. To prevail on a claim of ineffective
assistance, the defendant must meet the familiar Strickland standard by showing that (i) his or her
counsel’s performance was deficient, and (ii) counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced him or
her. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 697 (1984). Failure to satisfy either prong dooms
a claim. People v. Garcia, 405 Ill. App. 3d 608, 620 (2010). We review claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel de novo. People v. Utley, 2019 IL App (1st) 152112, ¶ 37.
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¶ 49 Degorski has failed to make a substantial showing of Strickland prejudice. To show
prejudice, there must be a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s alleged errors, the result
of the proceeding would have been different. People v. Lucious, 2016 IL App (1st) 141127, ¶ 45.
The only question is whether a not guilty verdict would have been reasonable, so counsel may be
ineffective even if the chance of acquittal is “significantly less than 50 percent.” Id. Even under
that relatively low standard, Degorski’s claim fails. Even if his counsel had significantly
impeached Lockett and Bakalla to the point where a factfinder disregarded their testimony
completely, Degorski confessed to police and prosecutors in multiple consistent statements
relaying specific details of the crime. Degorski’s allegations do not “undermine confidence in the
outcome” of his trial, and, as a result, counsel was not ineffective for the alleged failure to
investigate Lockett’s monetary motive and cross-examine her about it at trial.
¶ 50 Other Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel Claims
¶ 51 Degorski asserts ineffectiveness of trial counsel on several bases in addition to the Brady
claim. Degorski argues he made a substantial showing of ineffective assistance of trial counsel
based on trial counsel’s failure to (i) to investigate and present evidence, unrelated to monetary
motive, that would have undermined Lockett’s credibility, (ii) to present evidence at the pretrial
hearings on the motion to suppress statements showing officers arrested him without probable
cause in Indiana, (iii) to present evidence at the hearing on the motion to suppress statements
showing his confession was involuntary and coerced; (iv) to acquiesce in his testifying in his own
behalf; and (v) to move to bar DNA evidence and appellate counsel’s failure to raise the issue on
direct appeal.
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¶ 52 Again, to warrant third stage postconviction proceedings on a claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, Degorski must make a substantial showing that (i) his counsel’s performance
was deficient, and (ii) counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced him. Strickland, 466 U.S. 668
at 687, 697. As we said before, failure to satisfy either prong dooms a claim. Garcia, 405 Ill. App.
3d at 620.
¶ 53 Lockett’s Credibility
¶ 54 In addition to the ineffective assistance claim in relation to his Brady claim, Degorski
asserts five reasons to conclude counsel was ineffective for failing to present evidence related to
Lockett’s credibility: (i) readily available evidence that Lockett could not receive phone calls at
the hospital shows that Lockett’s testimony that Degorski called her a few days after the murders
was untrue; (ii) counsel failed to present testimony from Richard Bilik, Lockett’s boyfriend at the
time of the murders; (iii) had counsel conducted a reasonable investigation he would have learned
that Lockett was “actively trying to pin the Brown’s Chicken murders on someone so that she
could claim the $100,000 reward established by the Village of Palatine”; (iv) counsel failed to
present testimony from Degorski’s mother Pat, who would have refuted “several” of Lockett’s
claims—i.e., the basement bedroom Lockett described as the location where Degorski confessed
to her in 1993 did not even exist in 1993 and Lockett’s claim she was afraid of Degorski was false;
(v) counsel failed to apprise the jury through cross-examination or third-party witness testimony
that Lockett had a long a documented history of being dishonest.
¶ 55 We resolve these claims as we did Degorski’s other ineffectiveness claim related to
counsel’s treatment of Brady evidence impeaching Lockett. Even assuming the evidence Degorski
puts forward would have destroyed Lockett’s credibility entirely, he confessed to several other
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people with detailed narratives of the crime; there is no reasonable probability the outcome of trial
would have been different had counsel put this evidence before the jury. Supra, ¶ 51 (citing
Lucious, 2016 IL App (1st) 141127, ¶ 45 (reciting standard for Strickland prejudice)).
¶ 56 Evidence of Degorski’s Unlawful Arrest
¶ 57 Degorski argues trial counsel was ineffective for “fail[ing] to support Degorski’s motion
to suppress statements and quash arrest with available evidence he was illegally arrested in
Indiana.” Much of Degorski’s argument attempts to relitigate the motion to suppress with evidence
already in the record. For example, he argues that the officer’s testimony is implausible, describing
various portions of the hearing testimony as “patently incredible” or “bordering on absurd.” But
postconviction proceedings are not the place to relitigate issues that could have been or were raised
on direct appeal. E.g., People v. Allen, 2015 IL 113135, ¶ 20. Degorski has litigated or has had the
opportunity to litigate the credibility of the officers’ suppression hearing testimony. We will not
reweigh it now.
¶ 58 We will, instead, focus on the new evidence Degorski offers. In his postconviction petition,
Degorski referred to his own testimony he could have offered to show that officers “refused to let
him leave *** ordered him into a police vehicle and denied him the opportunity to grab any of his
personal belongings,” and that he did not subjectively believe he was free to leave. The petition
then refers to another witness, Walter Hanger, who “saw Degorski searched and placed in a police
car.” The petition also mentions possible testimony from the Hamilton County Sheriff “that
Palatine police told them that they were conducting an ‘arrest’ of Degorski.” The last piece of
evidence discussed in the petition is a “Call for Service sheet that clearly indicated that Hamilton
County was informed that Palatine was issuing an ‘arrest warrant’ for Degorski.”
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¶ 59 This evidence does not substantial show ineffective assistance of counsel for several
reasons. First, Degorski’s appellate counsel has abandoned reliance on all of the evidence
referenced in the petition, except for the “Call for Service sheet.” E.g. People v. Lewis, 2017 IL
App (1st) 150070, ¶ 9 (counsel abandons postconviction claims where claims are raised in petition
but not reasserted on appeal). Second, even if most of the evidence were not abandoned on appeal,
it is not adequately presented in the petition. For example, Degorski did not attach his own affidavit
explaining what his testimony would have been at the motion to suppress. Similarly, there are no
affidavits from Hanger or the Hamilton County Sheriff contradicting the testimony in the record.
Cf. People v. Coleman, 2014 IL App (4th) 110463, ¶ 64 (affidavits not necessary only where
petition is otherwise supported by record), superseded on other grounds as stated in People v.
Robinson, 2020 IL 123849, ¶ 78 (Illinois Supreme Court Rule 1101 allows hearsay evidence in
postconviction proceedings)).
¶ 60 Additionally, we cannot locate the “Call for Service sheet” in the record. The only pages
appellate counsel cites in her brief referencing the exhibit purportedly containing the “Call for
Service” are the pages in the petition where the sheet is mentioned. A word search of the common
law record for “Exhibit G,” which contains the “Call for Service sheet,” reveals only a complaint
for a search warrant of a residence and an excerpt of trial testimony.
¶ 61 Even if we could locate the “Call for Service sheet” and it contained the information
counsel describes, it would not help Degorski’s ineffective assistance claim. Degorski argues the
“call sheet” would show “Palatine police’s intent to arrest, not simply chat, with Degorski.”
(Emphasis in original). But the subjective beliefs of the officer (or Degorski for that matter) are
not relevant to whether officers have seized a person in a constitutionally meaningful way. E.g.,
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In re Tyreke H., 2017 IL App (1st) 170406, ¶ 54 (“the officer’s subjective motivation, and his or
her reason for stopping a citizen *** are irrelevant to the question of whether a seizure occurred.”).
Because the evidence Degorski argues should have been presented would have been irrelevant to
whether he was arrested in Indiana, he cannot show prejudice from counsel’s failure to introduce
that evidence at the hearing on the motion to suppress. See People v. Henderson, 2013 IL 114040,
¶ 15 (to show prejudice for errors in motion practice, defendant must show that “suppression
motion is meritorious”).
¶ 62 Evidence that Officers Coerced Degorski’s Statement
¶ 63 Degorski next argues trial counsel was ineffective for failing to “call available witnesses
to substantiate his claim that his oral, unrecorded confession was the product of police coercion.”
He points to two witnesses: (i) himself, and (ii) Jonathon Simonek, who allegedly experienced
similar coercive interrogation tactics at the hands of police. We find Degorski failed to make a
substantial showing of a constitutional violation because his claim about his own testimony is not
supported by an affidavit and his claim about Simonek’s testimony is both unsupported by an
affidavit and irrelevant to the issue at the hearing on the motion to suppress.
¶ 64 A postconviction petitioner is not relieved of the burden of attaching affidavits or other
supporting documentation to their petition simply by including a verification affidavit at the end
of the petition. Collins, 202 Ill. 2d 49, 67-68 (2002). We can overlook certain deficiencies in
affidavits or the failure to attach evidence in certain circumstances. See Allen, 2015 113135, ¶ 34
(excusing failure to notarize affidavit at first stage); Collins, 202 Ill. 2d at 67-68 (discussing People
v. Washington, 38 Ill. 2d 445 (1967) (excusing failure to attach affidavit where absence explained),
and People v. Williams, 47 Ill. 2d 1 (1970) (excusing failure to attach affidavit where only evidence
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other than petitioner’s own affidavit was that of counsel)). We see no basis on which to excuse
Degorski from providing his own affidavit, which would contain allegations within his knowledge;
this is especially true where counsel represented him at the second stage who could have drafted
the affidavit for him.
¶ 65 Degorski suggests his mother’s affidavit can substitute for his own. We disagree. In his
brief, Degorski says his mother’s affidavit attests that he “wanted to testify” about the coercive
environment he experienced during his interrogation. We do not read the affidavit that broadly.
The affidavit explains that Degorski told his counsel “over and over that he wanted to testify,” but
counsel would not allow it and tried to get Degorski’s mother to convince him not to testify. But
the remaining substance of the affidavit has nothing to do with the suppression hearing and refers
to information from Lockett’s testimony that Degorski’s mother believed to be untrue. The
affidavit makes no mention of coercive interrogation tactics or Degorski’s desire to testify about
such tactics. In short, no evidence supports the allegations in the petition that officers coerced
Degorski’s confession.
¶ 66 Claim that Defense Counsel Prevented Degorski’s Testimony
¶ 67 Degorski then claims his trial counsel was ineffective because he “prevented” Degorski
from testifying on his own behalf. The affidavit of Degorski’s mother attests that Degorski wanted
to testify in his defense and that trial counsel would not let Degorski testify and enlisted his mother
to help persuade him not to testify. Degorski’s petition asserted that had Degorski testified, he
would have (i) discredited Lockett’s testimony that he confessed to her, (ii) testified that Bakalla’s
testimony was a lie, and (iii) testified that the police coerced a false confession from him. He
reasons that the jury would have been presented with conflicting evidence and concludes there was
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‘a reasonable probability that the outcome would have been different if the jury had heard
Degorski’s testimony undermining the State’s evidence.”
¶ 68 Degorski’s argument suffers from the same evidentiary deficiencies as many of his
previous arguments: we cannot evaluate prejudice because he did not execute his own affidavit
explaining what his trial testimony would have been had counsel called him to testify. His petition
sets out some detail relating to his proposed testimony about his treatment at the hands of Palatine
police. But as to his challenges to Lockett’s and Bakalla’s testimony, the petition is conclusory.
For example, he says that he would testify that “Lockett’s testimony claiming that he confessed to
her [was] patently false” or that “Bakalla’s testimony was equally false.” Without elaboration in
an affidavit, we cannot say Degorski made a substantial showing of prejudice from counsel’s
alleged interference with his right to testify.
¶ 69 An affidavit containing specific information would also be helpful in another regard:
explaining why we should not credit Degorski’s decision to waive, on the record, his right to
testify. Generally, on-record admonishments about the right to testify rebut any claim that trial
counsel was ineffective for preventing a defendant from testifying—even when considering an
ineffectiveness claim through the lenient lens of first-stage proceedings. People v. Knapp, 2020 IL
124992, ¶¶ 52-54. Our supreme court appears to have left open the possibility of an exception
where “defense counsel has just silenced the defendant.” Id., ¶¶ 55-57 (discussing Hartsfield v.
Dorethy, 949 F.3d 307, 315 n.5 (7th Cir. 2020)). We acknowledge Degorski’s petition alleges that
“trial counsel was adamant that Mr. Degorski was not going to testify on his own behalf and
communicated that sentiment to Mr. Degorski.” Without an affidavit, however, we do not know
the timing of those conversations or the details of those conversations.
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¶ 70 It would be easy to forgive these omissions on first-stage review, where Degorski’s claims
need only have been arguable. At this stage, however, Degorski was assisted by counsel and must
make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation. Even taking his allegations as true, there
simply is not enough detail in the petition itself to make the required showing without additional
information in an affidavit.
¶ 71 Trial Counsel and Appellate Counsel Failed to Challenge DNA Evidence
¶ 72 Degorski next argues trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to exclude DNA
evidence found on a chicken bone showing Luna was present at the time of the murders; he adds
that appellate counsel was also ineffective for failing to raise the issue on direct appeal. He argues
that Luna’s DNA at the scene was irrelevant to his guilt or innocence and points to only one
indicium of prejudice: “juries and courts alike find DNA evidence highly persuasive.” We agree
and have said so. E.g., People v. Wright, 2012 IL App (1st) 073106, ¶ 96 (describing “DNA match”
as “highly persuasive” evidence). Degorski never draws the link between the persuasive nature of
the evidence of Luna’s presence at the scene of the murders and his own guilt. He, therefore, cannot
show prejudice from trial counsel’s failure to challenge the DNA evidence or appellate counsel’s
failure to raise the issue in his direct appeal.
¶ 73 We need not restate the standard governing ineffective assistance of counsel claims other
than to add that ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claims are (i) governed by the same
standard, and (ii) rise or fall on the merits of the underlying claim. See e.g., People v. English,
2013 IL 112890, ¶¶ 33-35. As with Degorski’s previous claims, this turns on assessing prejudice
from counsels’ alleged errors.
¶ 74 In Degorski’s petition, he claims to admit Luna’s DNA evidence in his trial prejudiced him
because “[t]here can be no bout that the jury improperly used that testimony to conclude that Luna
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was guilty of the crime and that if Luna was guilty, Degorski must be guilty.” The petition further
reasons that the State’s case hinged almost entirely on Luna’s and Degorski’s statements to Lockett
and Bakalla, and so the DNA evidence bolstered their testimony as well.
¶ 75 Degorski’s appellate counsel does not adopt these arguments in her brief, focusing
exclusively on the prejudicial nature of DNA evidence more generally. As mentioned, we agree
with that general proposition. We have cited studies describing the “mystical aura” surrounding
DNA evidence to the point that “its mere introduction in a criminal case is sufficient to seriously
impede defense challenges.” Wright, 2012 IL App (1st) 073106, ¶ 96 (citing Joel D. Lieberman et
al., Gold versus Platinum: Do Jurors Recognize the Superiority and Limitations of DNA Evidence
Compared to Other Types of Evidence?, 14 Psychol. Pub. Pol’y & L. 27, 33, 58 (2008)). But every
case Degorski cites involves the prejudicial impact of DNA evidence directly implicating the
defendant in the crime. In re T.W., 402 Ill. App. 3d 981, 993 (2010); see also People v. Safford,
392 Ill. App. 3d 212, 216, 225-26 (making same point about fingerprint evidence showing
defendant’s presence at scene). Degorski does not explain how DNA evidence showing Luna was
present at the time of the murders—powerful evidence though it may be—is prejudicial as to him.
We find it particularly difficult to discern the prejudicial impact of the DNA evidence because, in
Degorski’s own words, “it was not contested that Luna was present at the scene.”
¶ 76 Degorski cannot establish prejudice from trial counsel’s failure to move to exclude Luna’s
DNA evidence. On appeal, he fails to draw any connection between the DNA evidence and his
own guilt, and, even if he had, the evidence was cumulative of other trial evidence by his own
admission. For the same reasons, we conclude that the outcome of Degorski’s direct appeal would
not have been different had appellate counsel raised the issue, and so he suffered no prejudice from
appellate counsel’s alleged deficiency either.
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¶ 77 Our decision to affirm rests mainly on the heightened burden placed on Degorski at the
second stage of postconviction proceedings. Though we construe the allegations in the petition
liberally at this stage, to make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation, “the allegations
in the petition must be supported by the record in the case or by its accompanying affidavits.”
Coleman, 183 Ill. 2d at 381. The only basis for excusing the affidavit requirement, especially at
the second stage, is where “the allegations in the petition are based upon matters of record.” Id.
Each of Degorski’s claims requires us to consider matters outside the record, and without factual
details we cannot glean from the pleadings themselves, we cannot say Degorski made a substantial
showing of a constitutional violation sufficient to warrant further proceedings under the Act.
¶ 78 Affirmed.
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