2025 IL App (4th) 240155-U NOTICE This Order was filed under FILED Supreme Court Rule 23 and is December 10, 2025 NO. 4-24-0155 Carla Bender not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed 4th District Appellate under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL
OF ILLINOIS
FOURTH DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Rock Island County IGNACIO A. SAGUILAN, ) No. 06CF333 Defendant-Appellant. ) ) Honorable ) Clayton R Lee, ) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Doherty and Lannerd concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of defendant’s postconviction petition at the second stage of postconviction proceedings because defendant failed to make a substantial showing of a due process violation.
¶2 In February 2007, a jury found defendant, Ignacio A. Saguilan, guilty of
possession with intent to deliver more than 900 grams of cocaine (720 ILCS 570/401(a)(2)(D)
(West 2006)) and criminal drug conspiracy (id. § 405.1(a)). At trial, the State presented a series
of recorded phone calls between defendant and Maribel Cortes, who had agreed with law
enforcement officials to record those calls, arranging for the sale of cocaine to an undercover
agent posing as a buyer secured by Cortes. The State also presented evidence that defendant
arrived at the meeting place and was arrested with four kilograms of cocaine in his car. Cortes
and three law enforcement officials testified that Cortes had received nothing in exchange for her
cooperation. ¶3 In May 2007, the trial court sentenced defendant to 45 years in prison for each
count, to be served concurrently. In December 2009, defendant filed a postconviction petition
that ultimately resulted in his sentence being reduced to 40 years and his conviction for criminal
drug conspiracy being vacated.
¶4 In February 2015, defendant filed a petition pursuant to section 2-1401 of the
Code of Civil Procedure (Procedure Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2014)), which the trial
court construed as a postconviction petition pursuant to the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (Act)
(725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2014)), and in September 2022, defendant filed an amended
postconviction petition, which is the subject of this appeal. In that amended petition, defendant
alleged that while in prison reviewing his trial documents, he discovered a statement by Jose
Lao, a special agent with the Illinois State Police, to Cortes at the end of one of the recordings in
which Lao referenced Cortes receiving “credit” for her husband, Rigoberto Corrales, who was
incarcerated in federal prison and received a sentence reduction several months after defendant’s
own sentencing hearing. Defendant asserted, therefore, that his due process rights were violated
because the State (1) concealed the existence of a cooperation agreement between Cortes and law
enforcement and (2) allowed witnesses to testify falsely that no such agreement existed.
¶5 In May 2023, the State filed a motion to dismiss the petition, which the trial court
granted following a hearing in December 2023.
¶6 Defendant appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by dismissing his amended
successive postconviction petition because (1) the Act does not authorize untimeliness as a basis
for dismissing a successive petition, (2) defendant demonstrated cause and prejudice for the
filing of his successive petition, and (3) defendant made a substantial showing that the State
violated his due process rights by (a) failing to disclose the existence of a cooperation agreement
-2- between law enforcement and Cortes and (b) eliciting false testimony about the absence of such
an agreement at trial. Defendant also argues on appeal that his postconviction counsel provided
unreasonable assistance by failing to amend defendant’s postconviction petition to allege that
trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to use Lao’s “credit” statement at trial to
impeach prosecution witnesses.
¶7 We disagree and affirm.
¶8 I. BACKGROUND
¶9 A. The Charges and the Jury Trial
¶ 10 In April 2006, the State charged defendant with possession with intent to deliver
more than 900 grams of cocaine (count I) (720 ILCS 570/401(a)(2)(D) (West 2006)) and
criminal drug conspiracy (count II) (id. § 405.1(a)). Both counts were Class X felonies carrying
mandatory prison sentences of 15 to 60 years.
¶ 11 In February 2007, the trial court conducted defendant’s jury trial. The State
presented evidence that in February 2006, defendant became the target of a joint drug
investigation between the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and Quad City Metropolitan
Enforcement Group (MEG) after Cortes came forward with information about defendant. Cortes
testified that she knew defendant through Corrales, who was in federal prison following a 2005
arrest in Nevada. Defendant had been arrested with Corrales, but only Corrales was charged.
Cortes stated that in early 2006, defendant called her and asked her to work with him to sell
cocaine. She told her husband, who advised her to call the DEA. As a result, Cortes agreed to
work with law enforcement to record her phone calls with defendant. Cortes testified that she
came forward as a “concerned citizen” and did not receive anything in exchange for her
cooperation.
-3- ¶ 12 Special Agent Jose Lao, who was employed by the Illinois State Police and was a
member of MEG, testified that he posed as an undercover buyer that Cortes would introduce to
defendant to purchase four kilograms of cocaine for $80,000. Lao worked with Cortes to record
approximately 17 phone calls with defendant occurring on March 5, March 6, and April 11,
2006. Lao was with Cortes when each phone call occurred. During those phone calls, which were
played for the jury and which we discuss in more detail in our analysis, Cortes and defendant
discussed a “guy” coming into town and arranged to meet at a hotel. Defendant arrived at the
hotel and was found to have four kilograms of cocaine in his car.
¶ 13 After the State rested, defendant elected not to testify and offered no evidence.
¶ 14 The jury found defendant guilty of both possession with intent to deliver cocaine
and criminal drug conspiracy, and in May 2007, the trial court sentenced defendant to concurrent
terms of 45 years in prison on each count. In June 2008, this court denied defendant’s request to
file a late notice of appeal and his direct appeal was dismissed.
¶ 15 B. Posttrial Proceedings
¶ 16 1. Defendant’s Initial Postconviction Petition
¶ 17 In December 2009, defendant filed a petition for relief under the Act, alleging that
his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by (1) erroneously advising him that he faced a
maximum of 30 years in prison when he actually faced 60 years in prison and (2) failing to file a
timely motion to reconsider sentence and notice of appeal. In June 2010, following a hearing, the
trial court denied defendant’s first claim but found that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to
file a timely notice of appeal and allowed defendant to file his notice of appeal and motion to
reconsider his sentence.
¶ 18 In July 2010, defendant filed a motion to reconsider his sentence and notice of
-4- appeal from the partial denial of his postconviction petition. In August 2010, the trial court
conducted a hearing on his motion to reconsider and reduced his sentence to 40 years in prison.
¶ 19 Later in August 2010, defendant filed notice of direct appeal of his conviction and
sentence. In 2012, the Third District Appellate Court vacated defendant’s conviction for criminal
drug conspiracy pursuant to the one-act, one-crime doctrine but affirmed his conviction and
sentence for possession with intent to deliver more than 900 grams of cocaine. People v.
Saguilan, 2012 IL App (3d) 100562-U, ¶ 21.
¶ 20 2. Defendant’s Successive Postconviction Petition
¶ 21 a. The Allegations in the Petition
¶ 22 In February 2015, defendant filed a petition pursuant to section 2-1401 of the
Procedure Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2014)), in which he alternatively asked that the trial
court construe his petition as a motion for leave to file a successive postconviction petition and a
successive petition under the Act. Defendant requested a new trial, alleging “(1) newly-
discovered evidence of concealed benefits to the principal witness or witnesses for the
prosecution; and (2) the related, knowing use of perjury at defendant’s jury trial in order to
mislead defendant’s jury.”
¶ 23 Essentially, defendant alleged that Cortes and law enforcement agents testified
falsely at trial that Cortes had not been promised any consideration in exchange for her
testimony. Defendant attached to his petition a police report that transcribed the recordings of the
phone calls. According to the transcription, after one of the April 11, 2006, phone calls between
Cortes and defendant ended, Cortes and Lao continued speaking while the recording device was
still recording. Cortes asked Lao, “[What] if nothing happens?” Lao replied, “Well, we’ll let him
go and we’ll try to catch him a different way but okay, but for this to work, we are close but if
-5- you want to try to give credit to [Corrales], let[’s] do it today and we have to do [it] at this hotel.”
¶ 24 Defendant asserted that he did not read or write English and became aware of this
statement by Lao only when he was in prison sometime in 2013, when he “obtained some of his
trial transcripts and discovery materials” and another inmate translated all of defendant’s
discovery for him. He contended that his trial counsel may not have been aware of the statement
on the recording because he never discussed it with defendant or cross-examined any of the
witnesses about it.
¶ 25 Defendant explained that he thereafter obtained counsel to investigate “whether
there could be any explanation, for the statement *** concerning ‘credit’ for *** [Corrales],” and
counsel discovered that (1) in January 2006, Corrales was sentenced to 240 months in federal
prison, (2) in June 2007, a “ ‘sealed motion’ ” (emphasis omitted) was filed in Corrales’s federal
case, and (3) in February 2008, following a hearing, the federal court granted the sealed motion
and reduced Corrales’s sentence to 190 months.
¶ 26 Defendant contended that the “likely meaning of the word ‘credit’ ” referred to an
agreement to reduce Corrales’s sentence, which was not disclosed to defendant and was not
“uncovered” until defendant learned of Corrales’s sentence reduction. As a result, according to
defendant, witnesses for the State who had testified that no agreement existed had testified
untruthfully, and this merited a new trial.
¶ 27 b. Procedural Matters
¶ 28 In April 2015, the trial court entered a written order construing defendant’s
section 2-1401 petition as a postconviction petition and docketing it for further proceedings
under the Act.
¶ 29 In November 2015, defendant’s posttrial counsel, Dennis Doherty, moved to
-6- withdraw as counsel, alleging he had been “fired” by defendant. That same month, the trial court
entered a written order granting Doherty’s motion to withdraw and also finding, “On motion of
defendant’s counsel the pending post-conviction pleadings are withdrawn, without prejudice.”
(Emphasis omitted.)
¶ 30 In January 2016, defendant pro se filed a new petition pursuant to the Act
alleging, among other things, that “[Cortes] and the state deliberately and indifferently
committed ‘subordination [sic] of perjury’ where the state induced another to commit perjury
where *** [Cortes] deliberately and knowingly lied when asked if she received any payment or
was promised anything for her cooperation and she replied, ‘No.’ ” Defendant attached to his
petition the same police report containing the transcription of Lao’s “credit” statement to Cortes
that had been attached to his withdrawn petition.
¶ 31 In March 2016, the trial court appointed new counsel to represent defendant
concerning his postconviction petition. In June 2019, that counsel, Nate Nieman, moved to
withdraw, and the court granted his request, appointing a new attorney, Matthew Paulson, to
represent defendant in his postconviction proceedings.
¶ 32 c. The Amended Petition and the State’s Motion To Dismiss
¶ 33 In September 2022, defendant, through counsel, filed an “Amended Petition for
Post-Conviction Relief Pursuant to 725 ILCS 5/122-1,” which is the subject of this appeal. Under
a heading titled “Timeliness of Petition,” defendant cited both (1) section 122-1(c) of the Act
(725 ILCS 5/122-1(c) (West 2022)), which provides that initial petitions under the Act must be
filed within six months from the date for filing a certiorari petition unless the petitioner shows
that the delay was not due to his culpable negligence, and (2) People v. Ortiz, 235 Ill. 2d 319
(2009), and People v. Morgan, 212 Ill. 2d 148 (2004), for the proposition that a successive
-7- postconviction petition may be filed upon a showing of good cause for failing to raise the error
earlier and actual prejudice resulting from the error.
¶ 34 Defendant’s amended petition “incorporate[d] all previously filed evidence,
affidavits, exhibits and arguments regarding post-trial relief” and generally repeated the
arguments that had been set forth in his earlier petition. Defendant asserted that his due process
rights were violated because the State concealed an agreement with Cortes to cooperate with law
enforcement in exchange for a reduced sentence for her husband. Defendant also alleged that he
had established cause and prejudice for the filing of a successive petition.
¶ 35 In May 2023, the State filed a motion to dismiss the amended petition arguing
(1) the petition was not timely because it was not filed within six months after his March 2012
resentencing and (2) the evidence defendant relied upon was not “newly discovered” because the
transcript of the conversation during which Lao mentioned “credit” was in defendant’s
possession at the time of his trial. As a result, the State asserted, the petition was “not timely
filed, and *** no excuse exists in this case to expand or relax such filing requirement.”
¶ 36 Later that same month, defendant filed a response to the State’s motion to
dismiss, conceding that under the Act, “no proceedings *** shall be commenced more than 6
months from the date for filing a certiorari petition, unless the petitioner alleges facts that the
delay was not due to his or her culpable negligence.” 725 ILCS 5/122-1(c) (West 2022).
Defendant asserted, however, that he had alleged facts showing no culpable negligence—
namely, that he could only speak and understand Spanish and was aware of the “perjured and
misleading testimony offered by [Cortes] and law enforcement that demonstrated the high
likelihood that Cortes received a benefit [of a five year sentence reduction for her husband as a
result of] her cooperation with the government” only after other inmates translated his discovery
-8- materials for him in prison.
¶ 37 d. The Trial Court’s Order
¶ 38 In September 2023, the trial court conducted a hearing on the State’s motion to
dismiss and, in December 2023, issued a written ruling dismissing defendant’s amended petition.
The court found that the petition was not timely filed and defendant had not shown a lack of
culpable negligence for filing outside of the six-month time frame. The court explained its ruling
as follows:
“The defendant claims lack of culpable negligence as he cannot read or write, and
can only speak Spanish. He claims it also took him some time to secure
transcripts in this case, and found out about the benefits offered [Cortes] for her
testimony only after a subsequent investigation by post-trial counsel.
*** The defendant admits himself in the Amended Post-Conviction
Petition that such evidence was in defendant’s possession at trial. It’s referenced
in paragraph 15(b)(ii) in the defendant’s amended Post-Conviction Petition. It
appears the defendant and his counsel had recordings in Spanish, and transcripts
which show potential credit for the witnesses’ cooperation. The Court doesn’t
know if it was trial strategy, or if it was overlooked, but it’s clear defendant and
counsel had the relevant information.
The Court, knowing the defendant and his counsel were aware of the
information as alleged in their own Post-Conviction Petition, therefore FINDS
that there is culpable negligence by the defendant in this case, and the culpable
negligence precludes any extension of the six-month filing period for the
post-conviction [petition].”
-9- ¶ 39 This appeal followed.
¶ 40 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 41 Defendant appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by dismissing his amended
successive postconviction petition because (1) the Act does not authorize untimeliness as a basis
for dismissing a successive petition, (2) defendant demonstrated cause and prejudice for the
filing of his successive petition, and (3) defendant made a substantial showing that the State
violated his due process rights by (a) failing to disclose the existence of a cooperation agreement
between law enforcement and Cortes and (b) eliciting false testimony about the absence of such
an agreement at trial. Defendant also argues on appeal that his postconviction counsel provided
unreasonable assistance by failing to amend defendant’s postconviction petition to allege that
trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to use Lao’s “credit” statement at trial to
¶ 42 We disagree and affirm.
¶ 43 A. Timeliness
¶ 44 As an initial matter, we briefly address defendant’s timeliness argument. As we
have noted, the trial court found that defendant’s petition was filed outside of the six-month time
limit set forth in section 122-1(c) of the Act and defendant had not shown that the delay was not
due to his own culpable negligence. See 725 ILCS 5/122-1(c) (West 2022) (“No proceedings
under this Article shall be commenced more than 6 months after the conclusion of proceedings in
the United States Supreme Court, unless the petitioner alleges facts showing that the delay was
not due to his or her culpable negligence.”).
¶ 45 On appeal, defendant asserts that because he had filed a successive petition, the
time limitations of section 122-1(c) did not apply in this case. Instead, he asserts, the provisions
- 10 - of section 122-1(f) applied, which allow a successive petition to be filed when the petitioner
“demonstrates cause for his *** failure to bring the claim in his *** initial post-conviction
proceedings and prejudice results from that failure.” Id. § 122-1(f). Defendant contends that he
did demonstrate both cause and prejudice.
¶ 46 The State responds that the trial court correctly dismissed defendant’s petition
pursuant to section 122-1(c) because it was an initial petition and not a successive one. The State
asserts that although defendant filed an earlier petition in 2009, that petition resulted in his
sentence being reduced to 40 years, meaning the petition at issue in this appeal, filed in 2016,
was a new initial petition attacking that new judgment. See People v. Jenkins, 2016 IL App (1st)
133286, ¶ 1 (“We hold that the court should treat [a new petition filed after a postconviction
petition leads to resentencing] as an initial postconviction petition.”).
¶ 47 In this case, we need not determine whether defendant’s amended petition was a
successive petition to which the cause and prejudice test of section 122-1(f) applied or a new
initial petition to which the six-month and culpable negligence provisions of section 122-1(c)
applied because, as we next discuss, regardless of which test we applied, defendant has failed to
make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation. That is to say, even if we agreed with
defendant, his underlying claim—that his right to due process was violated by the State’s
knowing use of false testimony and failure to disclose an agreement with Cortes—fails on its
merits.
¶ 48 B. Substantial Showing of a Due Process Violation
¶ 49 1. Proceedings Under the Act
¶ 50 “The [Act] (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2018)) is the statutory procedure by
which a defendant can pursue a claim that his conviction or sentence was based on a substantial
- 11 - denial of his constitutional rights.” People v. Clark, 2023 IL 127273, ¶ 38. A proceeding under
the Act consists of three stages. People v. Tate, 2012 IL 112214, ¶ 9.
¶ 51 At the first stage, the trial court conducts its own review of the petition to
determine if it states the gist of a constitutional claim. People v. Allen, 2015 IL 113135, ¶ 24. “If
the postconviction petition is not summarily dismissed at the first stage, the proceedings move to
the second stage.” People v. House, 2021 IL 125124, ¶ 16.
¶ 52 At the second stage of postconviction proceedings, which the present case
involves, counsel may be appointed to represent the petitioner (id. ¶ 17), and the State is
permitted to file a motion to dismiss or an answer to the petition (People v. Gaultney, 174 Ill. 2d
410, 418 (1996)). To avoid dismissal, a defendant must set forth in his petition a substantial
showing of a constitutional violation and attach any accompanying documentation. House, 2021
IL 125124, ¶ 17. At this stage, the “trial court must examine the legal sufficiency of the
defendant’s allegations taking all well-pleaded facts as true.” People v. Lucas, 203 Ill. 2d 410,
418 (2002). “Upon a substantial showing of a constitutional violation, the petition must be
advanced to the third stage, where the [trial] court conducts an evidentiary hearing.” People v.
Brown, 2017 IL 121681, ¶ 24.
¶ 53 “A defendant is not entitled to an evidentiary hearing on his claims as a matter of
right.” Lucas, 203 Ill. 2d at 418. “Rather, a defendant is only entitled to an evidentiary hearing
where the allegations contained in the petition, supported by the trial record and any
accompanying affidavits, make a substantial showing of a constitutional violation.” Id. “Upon no
showing, the petition should be dismissed.” Brown, 2017 IL 121681, ¶ 24.
¶ 54 The dismissal of a postconviction petition without an evidentiary hearing is
reviewed de novo. Id.
- 12 - ¶ 55 2. This Case
¶ 56 Defendant argues that the trial court erred by failing to advance his petition for a
third-stage evidentiary hearing because the allegations in his petition make a substantial showing
of a due process violation. Specifically, defendant asserts that the State had an “undisclosed
agreement with Cortes and Corrales to benefit them through favorable treatment in Corrales’s
criminal case in exchange for their cooperation in the investigation and prosecution of
defendant.” Defendant contends that his right to due process was violated by (1) the State’s
knowing use of false testimony by multiple witnesses that no such agreement existed and,
relatedly, (2) the State’s failure to disclose the agreement.
¶ 57 We disagree that the allegations in defendant’s petition, taken as true, make a
substantial showing of a due process violation.
¶ 58 a. Knowing Use of False Testimony
¶ 59 It is well established that “[a] conviction obtained through the use of false
testimony implicates due process concerns and is subject to reversal.” Lucas, 203 Ill. 2d at 422.
However, the mere existence of some false testimony does not automatically warrant reversal.
See id. “[W]here the State’s case includes [false] testimony, and the State knew, a strict standard
of materiality applies, and a court of review must overturn the conviction if there is any
reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the judgment of the jury.”
(Emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. “This standard is equivalent to the
harmless error standard.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.
¶ 60 Applying these principles, the Illinois Supreme Court has held in some instances
that the presence of false testimony was not harmless (People v. Olinger, 176 Ill. 2d 326 (1997);
People v. Jimerson, 166 Ill. 2d 211 (1995)), and in other instances, it has held that the presence
- 13 - of false testimony was harmless (Lucas, 203 Ill. 2d at 424; People v. Barrow, 195 Ill. 2d 506
(2001)). An examination of these cases and how they differ is helpful to our resolution of the
case before us.
¶ 61 i. False Testimony Was Not Harmless: Olinger and Jimerson
¶ 62 In Olinger, 176 Ill. 2d at 333, the defendant was found guilty of the murders of
three individuals and was sentenced to death. The defendant filed a petition for postconviction
relief, alleging that the State had solicited false testimony from a witness, Edward Stalder, that he
had received immunity from prosecution for a single unrelated burglary in exchange for his
testimony against the defendant when, in fact, Stalder had obtained a “multijurisdictional deal”
that resulted in the dismissal of several charges against him in multiple states. Id. at 342. The
trial court dismissed the defendant’s petition without affording him an evidentiary hearing. Id. at
333.
¶ 63 The supreme court, after “considering the particular facts and circumstances of
[the] case,” held that it could not “conclude that evidence that Stalder obtained a
multijurisdictional deal in exchange for his testimony against [the] defendant would not have
affected the jury’s verdict.” Id. at 348-49. The court noted that had the jury known of the
multijurisdictional deal involving the dismissal of “several charges pending against [Stalder] in a
number of jurisdictions,” the jury “may well have concluded that [he] was unworthy of belief
because he had an overwhelming incentive to fabricate testimony.” Id. at 349. This incentive to
fabricate was important because “Stalder’s testimony was the only evidence placing the murder
weapon in [the] defendant’s hands. In addition, Stalder provided the only evidence which
attributed a motive to [the] defendant for the killings.” (Emphases in original.) Id. As a result,
“[m]aintaining Stalder’s credibility was *** crucial to the State’s case against [the] defendant.”
- 14 - Id. The supreme court held that “any error in this regard may not be considered harmless” (id.)
and remanded for an evidentiary hearing (id. at 371).
¶ 64 Similarly, in Jimerson, 166 Ill. 2d at 211, the defendant was convicted of
murdering two people and was sentenced to death. He subsequently filed a postconviction
petition, alleging that “the State’s primary witness, Paula Gray, was allowed to testify falsely at
the defendant’s trial that she had not been promised anything in exchange for her testimony”
when “[she] had, in fact, been promised by the State that the murder charges [against her] would
be dropped if she testified against the defendant [and two codefendants].” Id. at 221-22. The trial
court summarily dismissed the defendant’s petition without an evidentiary hearing. Id. at 211.
¶ 65 On appeal, the State argued that the use of false testimony was harmless error. Id.
at 228. The court rejected that argument, noting that “Paula Gray’s testimony was the only
evidence to link the defendant to these crimes” and was, therefore, “crucial to the State’s case
against the defendant.” (Emphasis in original.) Id. The court also noted that Gray’s first
statement to the police implicated the codefendants but not the defendant, making the credibility
of her trial testimony against the defendant “suspect.” Id. at 228-29. The court held, “[B]ecause
of the unique importance of Gray’s testimony at the defendant’s trial, we find that this error
cannot be considered harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. at 229.
¶ 66 Because the State “admitted [on appeal] that it had ‘agreed’ to drop the murder
charges against Gray if she testified” (id. at 227), the court remanded the case for a new trial
instead of an evidentiary hearing (id. at 231).
¶ 67 ii. False Testimony Was Harmless: Lucas and Barrow
¶ 68 In contrast, in Lucas and Barrow, the supreme court affirmed the dismissals of the
defendants’ postconviction petitions because the use of false testimony at their trials was
- 15 - harmless error.
¶ 69 In Lucas, 203 Ill. 2d at 412, the defendant was convicted of murder and was
sentenced to death. The defendant subsequently filed a postconviction petition, alleging that the
State allowed witness Harry Martin to testify that “he had no cooperation agreement with the
State in exchange for his testimony,” when in fact, within days of the murder, investigators
offered Martin various forms of consideration for his cooperation in the investigation, and Martin
ultimately received significant sentence reductions in state and federal court. Id. at 419-21. The
trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss defendant’s postconviction petition without an
evidentiary hearing. Id. at 412.
¶ 70 On appeal, the defendant argued that “similar to Olinger and [People v. Steidl,
177 Ill. 2d 239 (1997)], the State’s knowing use of perjured testimony prevented the jury from
assessing the witness’ credibility or motive to testify falsely, such that he was prejudiced.” Id. at
423. The supreme court disagreed, noting that, in Olinger, “the witness’ credibility was crucial to
the State’s case because his testimony was the only evidence to connect the murder weapon to
the defendant and the only evidence to supply motive,” and in Steidl, “the witness who falsely
testified about her cooperation agreement was the State’s only direct identification witness.” Id.
The court added that the witness in Steidl was also crucial to the State’s case because she
“participated in the crime and testified about the intimate details of the murder, including [the]
defendant’s participation during the killing.” Id. at 423-24.
¶ 71 In contrast to the witnesses in those cases, the Lucas court noted, “Martin did not
offer direct identification evidence against [the] defendant and did not connect [the] defendant to
the murder weapon.” Id. at 424. “Rather, Martin testified in support of the State’s motive theory
and notably did not provide the only evidence of motive.” Id.
- 16 - ¶ 72 Specifically, the record revealed that the defendant was an inmate at Pontiac
Correctional Center when he and a codefendant murdered Robert Taylor, the superintendent of
the prison. Id. at 413. Two other inmates gave eyewitness testimony at trial, stating the defendant
beat Taylor in the head with a pipe while another inmate stabbed him. Id. Martin, a member of
the same gang as the defendant, testified that (1) he learned the gang planned on committing a
retaliatory assassination of Taylor, (2) the defendant was a member of the gang’s “security
group,” which carried out attacks or murders against other inmates or prison staff, and (3) the
defendant was present at a gang meeting during which retaliation against the prison
administration was discussed. Id. at 415-16.
¶ 73 Considering these facts, the supreme court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of
the defendant’s postconviction petition without an evidentiary hearing, concluding as follows:
“[I]n this case, we cannot equate the prejudice caused by the failure to disclose an
agreement with a nonoccurrence witness with the prejudice caused by the State’s
failure to disclose evidence of a cooperation agreement with a direct identification
witness. That is, Martin’s testimony, although helpful, was not crucial to the
State’s case.
Certainly, we do not condone the State’s use of perjured testimony, and in
those cases where it is proven we condemn it. The State had an obligation to
correct the falsity [citation]; however, whether [the] defendant is entitled to an
evidentiary hearing on his claim is a separate issue that requires us to consider
whether [the] defendant has made a substantial showing of a due process
violation. That is, [the] defendant is only entitled to an evidentiary hearing if there
is a substantial showing of a reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could
- 17 - have affected the judgment of the jury. In this case, because the record contains
overwhelming evidence of guilt, in the form of two eyewitnesses who offered
identification testimony, we find that [the] defendant does not make the requisite
substantial showing.” Id. at 424.
¶ 74 Likewise, in Barrow, 195 Ill. 2d at 511, 529, the defendant, who was also
convicted of murder and sentenced to death, filed a postconviction petition alleging that “his
constitutional right to due process was violated at trial because the State elicited false testimony
from Harold ‘Smokey’ Wrona regarding what promises were made to him in exchange for his
testimony against [the] defendant.” At trial, Wrona testified that he did not have any agreement
with Illinois authorities in exchange for his testimony (although he had an agreement with
Maryland authorities that resulted in his release from prison), but the defendant alleged that
Wrona in fact had an agreement with Illinois authorities for the dismissal of two felony charges
in Bureau County, Illinois, which occurred three weeks after the defendant was sentenced. Id. at
530. The trial court dismissed the defendant’s petition without an evidentiary hearing. Id. at 511.
¶ 75 On appeal, the supreme court affirmed the judgment of the trial court, concluding
“Even if we assume that an agreement existed and that the State failed to
disclose it, the substantial nature of the evidence against the defendant establishes
that there is no reasonable likelihood that the allegedly false testimony could have
affected the jury’s verdict in this case. [Citation.] As we have already discussed in
detail, the evidence of the defendant’s guilt was overwhelming. A great deal of
evidence placed the defendant in the vicinity of Cedar Point during the week
preceding the victim’s murder. Moreover, the record contains the defendant’s own
- 18 - incriminating words describing his role in these offenses. The jury heard the
recording of the defendant’s conversation with Wrona in the Maryland hotel
room. The defendant gave Wrona a detailed account of the crimes, providing
information that only the offender could have known. The defendant told Wrona
that ‘everything went just like *** we had planned it.’ ” Id. at 532.
¶ 76 iii. The Present Case Is Similar to Lucas and Barrow
¶ 77 We conclude that the present case is similar to Lucas and Barrow because, even if
an agreement existed with Cortes that her husband would receive a sentence reduction in
exchange for her testimony, the evidence of defendant’s guilt was so overwhelming that any trial
testimony that Cortes did not have such an agreement could not have affected the jury’s verdict.
¶ 78 (a) The Overwhelming Evidence of Defendant’s Guilt
¶ 79 It cannot be overstated that defendant was arrested at the location of a controlled
buy in possession of four kilograms of cocaine. Such direct evidence itself could be considered
overwhelming. Aside from this physical evidence, similar to Barrow, defendant’s guilt was
premised primarily on recordings of defendant himself discussing the crime. During Agent Lao’s
testimony, the State played a series of phone calls for the jury, capturing defendant’s own words,
translated by a neutral, court-certified translator. Those phone calls unquestionably established
defendant’s participation in the planning of a meeting with a “guy” at a hotel for a drug
transaction.
¶ 80 For instance, on March 5, 2006, Cortes told defendant that the “guy” was delayed
by a snowstorm but would arrive in three hours and would get a hotel room. Defendant asked,
“So he’s coming?” Cortes answered affirmatively, and they agreed to talk again the following
day.
- 19 - ¶ 81 The following day, Cortes called defendant to tell him she was with the “guy” at
his hotel, she “saw it and it’s ready,” and they were waiting for defendant. Defendant responded
that he wanted to see Cortes first so he could give her a cotton T-shirt. Specifically, defendant
stated, “I want him to see it first, because maybe he’ll see something that is wrong and maybe the
T-shirt—the T-shirt because it’s, you know, they are cotton. But I want him to see it first
because…because I don’t want any problems.”
¶ 82 The remaining phone calls took place on April 11, 2006. Cortes told defendant
she was with her “brothers” at the “house that you told us that they were renting.” Defendant told
Cortes, “Don’t speak that in your phone because I don’t know what your phone has in there.” He
then told her to make the phone call from “somewhere else” and “from a house phone.” He
emphasized, “And do not speak to me from that phone. Talk to me from another phone.”
¶ 83 In the next phone call, defendant said he was going to “have to change all the
phones,” then asked Cortes, “So did I give you that beach shirt, T-shirt?” He also asked Cortes,
“Do you remember how it’s done right? Like I told you?” When Cortes answered, “Um,”
defendant instructed, “You just count the little puppies, and then you count them for me and you.
And then you put them in a bag and you give me my puppies and you get your puppies. And I
want you to count them.” Cortes responded that she had already counted, and defendant asked,
“You counted the ones that are ours?” Cortes answered affirmatively, and defendant stated, “So
then I will call you and then we’ll get together where we are going to get together and then…
And it will happen in an hour and you wait for me.” Cortes said, “Okay,” and defendant stated,
“And right now I’m going to locate him because I don’t know where he’s at.”
¶ 84 In the next phone call, defendant stated he was having trouble locating someone
and asked Cortes what time she had to go to work. When she said she had to leave before five
- 20 - o’clock, defendant said, “I think we’ll be ready,” and, “I think it would be like three, two, or
maybe.”
¶ 85 In a subsequent call, defendant asked Cortes to “[g]ive me the address.” Cortes
answered, “12th Avenue, Street 19th,” adding, “It’s not a house,” and, “It’s at 8—Motel 8.”
Cortes told defendant to call her when he arrived and she would “go down.” Defendant asked,
“With everything ready?” Cortes answered, “Uh-huh,” and defendant said, “Okay.”
¶ 86 In the next phone call, occurring around 3:30 p.m., defendant told Cortes the
following:
“Mari, yes, you are not going to go to work. No. You are going to have to
stay there. They are coming all over at 6:00 p.m. They are going to bring all of
these pieces, the big pieces. The buy guy says to stay there and he will pay for
your day not to go to work.”
When Cortes explained that her job would have to look for someone to cover her shift if she told
them she was not coming in, defendant said, “[T]hey are already on their way and I don’t want to
have to call them. They are going to be bringing twelve big things here and, you know, there’s
too much fucking thing [sic] going around.” He stated, “I already gave my word and I cannot
break it.”
¶ 87 During the next phone call, defendant told Cortes to “[c]ount all the papers in the
pinata” and said he would call her “when everything is ready.”
¶ 88 During the next phone call, around 5:21 p.m., defendant told Cortes, “I am
picking up the stuff right now.” Cortes asked, “How long?” and defendant answered, “Fifteen
minutes.” He then told Cortes to come down to the parking lot when he called her.
¶ 89 No more phone calls occurred.
- 21 - ¶ 90 We have presented only a small portion of the phone calls to illustrate the
incriminating nature of defendant’s own words. Although he and Cortes did not speak in explicit
terms, it is eminently clear from the entirety of the phone calls that defendant and Cortes planned
a meeting at which some kind of contraband would be exchanged. In fact, Lao testified that his
“role was to be the undercover and to deliver $80,000 for four kilos of powder cocaine,” which is
precisely what defendant eventually arrived with at the hotel. Lao additionally testified that, in
his experience conducting narcotics investigations, the terms “children” and “kids” referred to
U.S. currency and “white T-shirt” meant cocaine.
¶ 91 Lao testified that, after about 35 minutes passed and defendant had not shown up,
they decided to “end the detail because we kept being pushed back and pushed back.” Cortes left
the hotel, and Lao returned the room keys to the office. When Lao was leaving the office,
defendant pulled his car into the motel parking lot. Lao advised other officers that defendant had
just arrived. Defendant sat in his car for “a while” and then drove a short distance away, parked
his car, and began walking back in the direction of the hotel. An arrest team arrived and took
defendant into custody.
¶ 92 Deputy Brian McCollom, a member of MEG, testified that he was part of the
arrest team and he searched defendant’s car, locating four packages of cocaine in a cooler
situated on the front passenger-side floorboard. A forensic scientist testified that the packages
were four bricks of cocaine, weighing a total of 3,944.4 grams—or nearly four kilograms.
¶ 93 The foregoing evidence—defendant’s statements in the recorded phone calls and
his arrival at the hotel with the expected four kilograms of cocaine—illustrates that
overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt exists in this case that had nothing to do with the
alleged false testimony that Cortes had no agreement with the State to testify in exchange for a
- 22 - benefit to her husband, which we now discuss.
¶ 94 (b) The Alleged False Testimony
¶ 95 During trial, the State called 12 law enforcement officers, who testified about
various aspects of the investigation, including its genesis, the recording and preservation of the
phone calls, defendant’s arrest, and the recovery and testing of the cocaine. Defendant asserts
that three of them—namely, Agent Russ Coulter, Deputy Jeffrey Boyd, and Deputy Gina
Lieferman—and Cortes all “denied the existence of an agreement or that Cortes and Corrales
were to receive a benefit in exchange for cooperating with law enforcement.” We discuss their
testimony in turn.
¶ 96 (i) Agent Coulter
¶ 97 Agent Coulter of the DEA testified primarily about how the investigation into
defendant began, the structure of MEG, and the obtaining of federal eavesdrop authority to
record defendant’s phone calls. He stated that Cortes was a confidential source who worked with
law enforcement and Cortes “came to our attention after Mr. Corrales agreed to cooperate after
he was arrested.” Coulter explained that “[Corrales] was detained so he couldn’t do anything to
help himself and Ms. Cortes came forward on his behalf to assist in any investigations that she
could.”
¶ 98 On recross-examination, Coulter testified that Cortes “wanted to help because her
husband was in trouble.” On further redirect examination by the State, Coulter testified that
Corrales had participated in a “proffer interview” in March 2005, explaining that, in the federal
system, when “an individual becomes charged *** [and] wants to cooperate, [he] enters into a
proffer agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office or with the State’s Attorney’s Office.”
Corrales’s proffer interview resulted in Coulter’s generating a five-page written report.
- 23 - ¶ 99 Coulter also testified that he did not promise Cortes anything when she agreed to
cooperate and Cortes wanted to help her husband, not get paid.
¶ 100 (ii) Deputy Boyd
¶ 101 Deputy Boyd of the Rock Island County Sheriff’s Office, who was also the
deputy director of MEG, testified that defendant came to his attention in late February or early
March 2006, when one of his supervisors working on Corrales’s federal investigation alerted him
that Cortes had come forward with information about defendant. Boyd first had contact with
defendant following his arrest in this case, when Boyd and another agent, Tina Noe, drove
defendant to the police station. Boyd, who did not speak Spanish, attempted to Mirandize
defendant (see Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)). When defendant asked to be
Mirandized in Spanish, Boyd stopped and asked for a Spanish-speaking officer to meet them at
the department. Deputy Lieferman, who spoke Spanish, Mirandized defendant. Then Agent Lao,
who also spoke Spanish, translated Boyd’s interview of defendant. During that interview,
defendant generally claimed that someone named “Jorge” offered him $1,500 to deliver a
package; defendant stated that he did not know what was in the package.
¶ 102 During his testimony, Boyd stated that Cortes did not ask to be paid or that her
husband be treated differently, and “there were no arrangements or deals made with her.”
¶ 103 (iii) Deputy Lieferman
¶ 104 Deputy Lieferman testified that she first met Cortes in early 2005, after Cortes
contacted one of the federal agents. Around that time, Lieferman participated in a meeting with
Cortes, Deputy Boyd, and Special Agent Mark VanKlaveren. Lieferman was also present “a
couple other times” when Agent Lao spoke with Cortes. Lieferman read defendant his Miranda
warnings in Spanish after he was arrested. Her role in the case was primarily to conduct
- 24 - surveillance.
¶ 105 During her testimony, Lieferman stated Cortes did not receive anything in return
for helping with the investigation.
¶ 106 (iv) Cortes
¶ 107 Cortes testified that she knew defendant through her husband. After her husband
was arrested in 2005, she did not maintain contact with defendant, but he contacted her about a
year later and asked her to work with him by selling cocaine. She spoke with her husband, who
was in prison, and he suggested she speak “with the agents and tell them what was happening.”
Corrales gave Cortes a phone number, which she called; she told “them” that defendant had
reached out to her, and she agreed to place phone calls to defendant that would be recorded.
¶ 108 During Cortes’s testimony, the State played 11 of the recordings and, after each,
Cortes briefly described the purpose or context of each call.
¶ 109 During her testimony, Cortes testified that (1) neither the DEA nor MEG
promised her anything for her cooperation, (2) she did not receive anything from either agency in
exchange for her cooperation, (3) Corrales received nothing for her cooperation, (4) when she
spoke with Corrales and he told her to call the DEA, she did not do so in hopes of getting him
out early, and (5) she never had any agreement with anyone to help her husband.
¶ 110 (c) No Reasonable Probability Exists That the Alleged False Testimony,
Taken as True, Could Have Affected the Jury’s Verdict
¶ 111 Having examined the evidence of defendant’s guilt compared against the alleged
false testimony that Cortes did not receive any benefit in exchange for her cooperation or
testimony, we conclude that no reasonable probability exists that the false testimony could have
affected the jury’s verdict. As we have noted, defendant was convicted on the basis of his own
- 25 - words and actions—namely, his statements during the recorded phone calls and arrival at the
hotel with four kilograms of cocaine. The jurors did not have to rely on any witness’s recounting
of the phone calls; they were able to hear defendant’s words directly (as translated by a court-
certified translator) and assess them for themselves. Although defendant attempted to speak in a
veiled manner, the meaning and purpose of the phone calls was apparent even without further
explanation by the witnesses. That meaning and purpose was confirmed when defendant showed
up at the hotel with four kilograms of cocaine. Importantly, defendant does not dispute that he
was in possession of the cocaine when he was arrested but instead argues that he “could have
been an unknowing drug mule and, thus, not guilty of the charged offenses.” We disagree. The
phone calls establish that defendant planned a drug deal, and his arrival with the drugs cements
that conclusion.
¶ 112 Like in Lucas and Barrow, and unlike in Oliger and Jimerson, the testimony of
Cortes, Agent Coulter, Deputy Boyd, and Deputy Lieferman was not material to defendant’s
conviction; they had no role in obtaining or describing the phone recordings or in discovering the
four kilograms of cocaine in defendant’s car. Cortes’s testimony likewise provided context and
background and, although she described the purpose of each call from her perspective, (1) her
descriptions were brief, (2) the jury heard the actual phone calls for themselves through a neutral
translator, and (3) our review of the record shows that Cortes’s descriptions were consistent with
the content of the calls themselves, making her testimony about the calls helpful, but ultimately
cumulative and not material to defendant’s conviction.
¶ 113 b. Failure To Disclose Evidence of a Cooperation Agreement
¶ 114 Interrelated with defendant’s false testimony claim is defendant’s claim that the
State also violated his due process rights by not disclosing to him the existence of the alleged
- 26 - agreement, which would have permitted him to impeach Cortes, Coulter, Boyd, and Lieferman at
trial. Defendant adds that the evidence would have also rebutted the prosecutor’s statements
during closing argument that no agreement existed.
¶ 115 “[A] defendant is deprived of his constitutional right to due process of law where
the prosecution fails to turn over material impeachment evidence to the defense.” Olinger, 176
Ill. 2d at 350 (citing Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150 (1972); Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S.
83 (1963)). “Evidence is material in this context ‘only if there is a reasonable probability that,
had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.’ ” Id. “ ‘A “reasonable probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence
in the outcome.’ ” Id. (quoting United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985)).
¶ 116 Like defendant’s false testimony claim, defendant’s Brady claim also fails
because the impeachment evidence would not have affected the jury’s verdict. We have
discussed in detail the overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt that is unrelated to Cortes’s,
Coulter’s, Boyd’s, and Lieferman’s testimony that no agreement existed. Their testimony was
not material to defendant’s guilt; instead, his overwhelming guilt was established by (1) his own
words on the phone calls arranging the meeting and (2) his showing up at the meeting place with
four kilograms of cocaine. Even if Cortes, Coulter, Boyd, and Lieferman had been impeached
with evidence that an agreement existed, that impeachment would have had no effect on the
jury’s assessment of that independent evidence, which did not rely on, or even involve in any
way, the credibility of any of the aforementioned witnesses.
¶ 117 C. Unreasonable Assistance of Postconviction Counsel
¶ 118 Defendant also argues on appeal that his postconviction counsel rendered
unreasonable assistance by failing to amend the petition to allege a claim of ineffective
- 27 - assistance of trial counsel for counsel’s failure to use Lao’s “credit” statement to impeach Cortes,
Coulter, Boyd, and Lieferman, as well as rebut the prosecutor’s statement during closing
argument that no agreement existed.
¶ 119 A defendant who is represented by counsel in proceedings under the Act is
entitled to “a ‘reasonable’ level of attorney assistance.” People v. Johnson, 2018 IL 122227,
¶ 16. “Reasonable assistance” requires postconviction counsel to perform only the specific duties
set forth in Illinois Supreme Court Rule 651(c) (eff. July 1, 2017), which include (1) consulting
with the defendant by phone, mail, electronic means, or in person, (2) examining the record as
needed to shape the defendant’s pro se claims, and (3) making any amendments necessary for an
adequate presentation of the defendant’s pro se claims. See People v. Greer, 212 Ill. 2d 192,
204-05 (2004). Fulfillment of the third obligation under Rule 651(c) does not require
postconviction counsel to advance a nonmeritorious claim. Id. at 205.
¶ 120 A defendant asserting a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel must show that
“(1) the attorney’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) the
attorney’s performance prejudiced the defendant in that, absent counsel’s deficient performance,
there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
People v. Jackson, 2020 IL 124112, ¶ 90 (citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687
(1984)).
¶ 121 In the present case, defendant’s claim of unreasonable assistance fails because his
underlying claim of ineffective assistance of counsel fails on its merits. Even if we assumed that
trial counsel performed deficiently by failing to use Lao’s “credit” statement for impeachment
purposes at trial, for the reasons we have discussed relating to defendant’s false testimony and
Brady claims, defendant cannot show that he was prejudiced by the alleged error. That is to say,
- 28 - even if trial counsel used Lao’s “credit” statement to impeach Cortes, Coulter, Boyd, and
Lieferman about the existence of an agreement or rebut the prosecutor’s statement at closing
argument, no reasonable probability exists that the jury would have found defendant not guilty of
possession with intent to deliver cocaine in light of the independent, overwhelming evidence of
defendant’s guilt.
¶ 122 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 123 For the reasons stated, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
¶ 124 Affirmed.
- 29 -