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  "name": "THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. BENNIE WILLIAMS, Appellant",
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      "THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. BENNIE WILLIAMS, Appellant."
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        "text": "JUSTICE STAMOS\ndelivered the opinion of the court:\nFollowing a jury trial in the circuit court of Cook County, defendant, Bennie Williams, was convicted of murder and armed robbery. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, pars. 9 \u2014 1(a), 18 \u2014 2(a).) Defendant waived a jury for the sentencing phase of his trial. Upon finding defendant eligible for the death penalty, weighing aggravating and mitigating factors, and determining that there were no mitigating factors sufficient to preclude imposition of the death penalty, the trial judge sentenced defendant to death. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, par. 9 \u2014 1(h).) The sentence was stayed pending direct appeal to this court. Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, \u00a74(b); Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, par. 9 \u2014 l(i); 107 Ill. 2d Rules 603, 609(a).\nOn procedural and substantive grounds, defendant contends that the trial judge erred in holding that certain evidence obtained as a result of his custodial interrogation was attenuated from the taint of his unlawful arrest. See Brown v. Illinois (1975), 422 U.S. 590, 45 L. Ed. 2d 416, 95 S. Ct. 2254; Wong Sun v. United States (1963), 371 U.S. 471, 9 L. Ed. 2d 441, 83 S. Ct. 407.\nDefendant\u2019s first procedural contention is that the trial judge erred in considering the suppression question\u2019s attenuation component more than a year after an earlier judge had already entered an order suppressing the evidence, and when the State had neither completed an appeal from nor sought reconsideration of that order.\nDefendant\u2019s second procedural contention is that the trial judge erred in basing a finding of attenuation on evidence that was not new and had been before the original judge for consideration.\nDefendant\u2019s substantive contention is that the trial judge erred in finding that attenuation had occurred.\nDefendant raises numerous other issues, but we reverse and remand on the first procedural issue.\nFACTS\nI. The Crimes and Defendant\u2019s Interrogation\nOn the night of May 28-29, 1983, shortly after midnight, 17-year-old Tony Long was fatally shot and robbed of a radio he was carrying. On the evening of May 30, police received an anonymous telephone call implicating the 18-year-old defendant by name. On the basis of the call, their records on defendant, and descriptions by crime witnesses of a suspect\u2019s height, police called at defendant\u2019s home at about 11 p.m. and asked him to accompany them to the police station. There, they gave him Miranda warnings and questioned him at length.\nDefendant initially denied knowing anything about the crimes. When asked, he agreed to take a lie detector test, which could not be scheduled until the next day at the earliest. He remained at the police station overnight and until the evening of May 31, when he was taken to another police station for the test. Upon completing the test, he was told by the examiner that his answers were suspect, whereupon he replied that it was because he actually knew who had committed the crimes.\nUpon being returned to the first police station, he was given another set of Miranda warnings and informed that he had failed the test. He then told investigating officers that he had seen two persons named Kuykendoll and Gito in the act of shooting and robbing the victim. He said that afterward he had gone to the apartment of Ruthie Jackson and there had told Loneill Davis and his and Davis\u2019 \u201cgirlfriends,\u201d Leatha Erving and Kelly Adams, what he had seen.\nWhile police searched for Kuykendoll and Gito, defendant remained for a second consecutive night in the police station. On the following day, June 1, defendant\u2019s friend Leatha Erving arrived at the police station and, at about 5 p.m., told investigating officers that, at about the time of the crimes, defendant and Davis had left her company and that, when they later returned, defendant was carrying a large radio.\n. At about 9 p.m. on June 1, police gave defendant another set of Miranda warnings and informed him of Erving\u2019s statement, whereupon he told them that, after he and Davis had left Erving\u2019s company, Davis disappeared, then later reappeared carrying the radio, after which they returned to the house where Erving was waiting.\nLater in the evening of June 1, police received a telephone call from Davis, met him at a certain location, and escorted him and his friend Kelly Adams to the police station. There, at about 12:30 a.m. on June 2, Davis was given Miranda warnings and gave the police a statement. According to the statement, Davis had been with defendant when defendant had said that he had to have the victim\u2019s radio. Davis told the police that defendant had then shot and robbed the victim during a struggle.\nPolice thereupon informed defendant of Davis\u2019 statement, and defendant confessed to the crimes, some 50 hours after the police first encountered him. Defendant also told the police that he had taken the gun and radio to the apartment of Debra Glenn. Shortly afterward, police called at Glenn\u2019s apartment and recovered a radio. Later the same day, police again called at Glenn\u2019s apartment in search of a gun, and she and Patricia Barnes took police to another dwelling some distance away, where the police took possession of the gun.\nII. The Suppression Motion, Hearing, and Order\nThe case against defendant first appeared on the call of Judge John H. McCollom (the original judge). Defense counsel filed a \u201cMotion To Quash Arrest and Suppress Confessions, Admissions and Statements and Physical Evidence.\u201d Besides seeking to quash defendant\u2019s arrest, the motion requested that the court \u201csuppress from introduction into evidence\u201d the following:\n\u201cA. Physical evidence discovered directly and indirectly as a result of the arrest and detention.\nB. Statements, utterances, reports of gestures and responses by Defendant during the detention following the arrest.\nC. Witnesses who viewed Defendant during the detention following the arrest, as well as witnesses discovered as a result of the arrest, provided that Defendant has the right to call said witnesses to testify for the purpose of protecting his Constitutional Rights.\nD. Photographs, fingerprints, and other information, the product of the processing of Defendant following his arrest, and the fruits thereof.\nE. All other knowledge and the fruits thereof, witnesses, statements, whether written, oral or gestural and physical evidence which is the direct and indirect product of the arrest.\u201d\nAfter June 5, July 5, and August 2, 1984, hearings on the motion, the original judge ruled on September 20, 1984, that defendant had been seized and detained in police custody without probable cause, adding: \u201cTherefore, the Court grants the Defendant\u2019s motion to quash arrest and allows the Defendant\u2019s motion to suppress confessions, admissions, statements and physical evidence.\u201d\nMost of the parties\u2019 argument on defendant\u2019s motion before the original judge concerned whether defendant had been seized prior to the time he confessed, not whether defendant\u2019s statements had been attenuated from the taint of any unlawful arrest. However, at one point during defense counsel\u2019s citation to the appellate court\u2019s opinion in People v. Townes (1981), 94 Ill. App. 3d 850, affd (1982), 91 Ill. 2d 32, counsel quoted from the appellate court\u2019s discussion of the attenuation issue that had been developed in Dunaway v. New York (1979), 442 U.S. 200, 60 L. Ed. 2d 824, 99 S. Ct. 2248, and Brown v. Illinois (1975), 422 U.S. 590, 45 L. Ed. 2d 416, 95 S. Ct. 2254. (See Townes, 94 Ill. App. 3d at 853.) At another point, the prosecutor referred to the appearance of Leatha Erving at the police station as having been \u201ca totally independent factor\u201d that led the police to realize that defendant was not a mere witness but was a suspect. Thus, the original judge heard at least brief argument related to attenuation before making his suppression ruling.\nOn October 19, 1984, the State filed a notice of appeal from the original judge\u2019s suppression ruling. However, on November 2, 1984, the State informed the court that it would not prosecute the appeal, and on December 19, 1984, the State informed the court that on November 21, 1984, the appellate court had granted its motion to dismiss its appeal and that the appellate court\u2019s mandate was being awaited. On May 29 and June 17, 1985, after the mandate had apparently been received, the State informed judges sitting in the original judge\u2019s stead that the State intended to argue before the original judge that certain items of evidence suppressed by him would have been inevitably discovered and should be admitted. On July 1, 1985, appearing before Judge Robert Boharic (the trial judge), who had succeeded the original judge because of reassignment, the State advised the court that it had been considering filing a motion for reconsideration of the suppression motion on which the original judge had ruled but that the State was not \u201cat the present time\u201d moving for reconsideration.\nIII. The Attenuation Motion, Hearing, and Order\nOn November 12, 1985, the State, through an assistant State\u2019s Attorney who had recently been assigned to the trial judge\u2019s courtroom, filed a motion to reconsider the issue of probable cause for defendant\u2019s arrest or, in the alternative, to conduct a hearing on attenuation. On November 13, 1985, the trial judge heard argument on the State\u2019s motion and stated that, while he was inclined not to reopen the issue of probable cause on which the original judge had ruled, he was inclined to allow the State to offer additional evidence on \u201cattenuation or independent basis\u201d under Brown, Dunaway, and other cases, because the trial judge did not \u201cbelieve that Judge [McColIom] specifically ruled on this precise point.\u201d\nDefense counsel argued that, under Wong Sun v. United States (1963), 371 U.S. 471, 9 L. Ed. 2d 441, 83 S. Ct. 407, the original judge could not properly have based a suppression order solely on the primary illegality of defendant\u2019s arrest but was also obliged to consider a second question: whether the suppressed evidence was obtained by exploiting that illegality, rather than by some other means so distinguishable from such exploitation as to attenuate the evidence from the taint of the unlawful arrest. Defense counsel argued that the State therefore had simply failed to raise and thus had waived the attenuation issue, rather than the original judge\u2019s having failed to consider it. Defense counsel also argued that all the facts alleged in the State\u2019s pending motion for an attenuation hearing were reflected in the transcript of the first suppression hearing and therefore must have been considered by the original judge. Defense counsel also pointed out that the State could have appealed or moved to reconsider the original judge\u2019s suppression order and that the State did file a notice of appeal but then chose to procure dismissal of the appeal, thus abandoning it.\nThe trial judge expressed doubt that, at a suppression hearing, a judge such as the original judge would have reason to know whether certain physical evidence might have had \u201ca source other than the defendant\u2019s statements that flowed from the arrest,\u201d or to know whether there were any question about \u201c[attenuation] or independent basis or inevitability during the course of the usual Motion to Suppress.\u201d\nThe State argued that the original judge had not addressed the attenuation issue and that he had not addressed \u201cwhich evidence was suppressed and which evidence was not suppressed.\u201d\nAfter considering the State\u2019s motion, defendant\u2019s written response, and the parties\u2019 oral arguments, the trial judge cited case law on the power of a court to correct its errors, as well as People v. Althide (1979), 71 Ill. App. 3d 963, to hold that the original judge\u2019s suppression order had not decided such questions as independent basis, inevitability, or attenuation and that the State should be granted a hearing on \u201cattenuation and independent basis\u201d in order to show by clear and convincing evidence that there was \u201can independent basis or inevitability or attenuation.\u201d The trial judge also held that the original judge had not decided whether defendant\u2019s statements were voluntary for purposes of the fifth and sixth amendments; accordingly, the trial judge ruled that at the hearing the defense could also present evidence concerning unresolved issues that might benefit defendant, including raising the issue of voluntariness. The trial judge ruled that, if the defense presented evidence showing involuntariness, the State would have the burden of showing by clear and convincing evidence that defendant\u2019s statements were voluntary.\nAfter conducting the hearing that he had granted in response to the State\u2019s motion, the trial judge found that the State had proved by clear and convincing evidence that defendant\u2019s statements were voluntary for purposes of the fifth and sixth amendments. Applying tests for attenuation derived from Brown v. Illinois, the trial judge also found that the State had proved by clear and convincing evidence that all statements made by defendant after being confronted with Davis\u2019 statement were attenuated from defendant\u2019s unlawful arrest, and the trial judge ordered that they would not be suppressed. However, the trial judge ordered that defendant\u2019s statements made prior to being confronted with Davis\u2019 statement would be suppressed.\nAs for physical evidence, the trial judge ordered that all items in defendant\u2019s possession when he was taken into police custody would be suppressed. By contrast, the trial judge found that the State had proved by clear and convincing evidence that the gun and the radio were obtained through an independent source purged of the taint of defendant\u2019s unlawful arrest, and the trial judge ordered that these items of evidence would not be suppressed.\nFinally, the trial judge found that the State had proved by clear and convincing evidence that \u201cthere is an independent basis and attenuation\u201d with respect to all witnesses, and the trial judge ordered that their testimony would not be suppressed.\nThe matter was then set for trial, defendant was convicted, and this appeal followed.\nANALYSIS\nDefendant contends that, because the original judge in his case had entered an order holding his arrest unlawful for lack of probable cause and suppressing evidence derived from his custodial interrogation, and because the State procured dismissal of its appeal from that order (see People v. Taylor (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136, 140; People v. McBride (1983), 114 Ill. App. 3d 75, 80; People v. Schlemm (1980), 82 Ill. App. 3d 639, 648; People v. Circella (1972), 6 Ill. App. 3d 214, 216) and never sought reconsideration of the order (see People v. Heil (1978), 71 Ill. 2d 458, 461; People v. Wagner (1981), 100 Ill. App. 3d 1051, 1053), the order operated as what defendant terms the law of the case, binding the State and the trial judge. In effect, defendant contends that the suppression order must be presumed to have taken into account the evidence on which the State later relied in support of its eventual attenuation argument and that therefore the trial judge improperly reopened the already decided suppression issue in order to reconsider the attenuation question.\nThe State responds, as did the trial judge, that, although the original judge\u2019s order disposed of the then pending issue whether certain evidence should be suppressed, the court entered the order without considering all the pertinent legal questions. On the implicit ground that a trial court is generally permitted to change its ruling on a pretrial suppression motion at any time before final judgment (see People v. Caballero (1984), 102 Ill. 2d 23, 35-36; People v. Braden (1966), 34 Ill. 2d 516, 520; People v. Fox (1925), 319 Ill. 606, 609 (cases not cited to us by the parties, though the trial court relied in part on Braden)), the State contends that the trial judge properly heard evidence and argument on issues left unaddressed by the original judge and then decided those issues for the first time when holding that attenuation had occurred.\nIn short, the parties dispute whether the \u201cissue\u201d or \u201cquestion\u201d decided by the original judge\u2019s suppression order was indeed the general suppression question or merely the question of the unlawfulness of defendant\u2019s arrest. If the lawfulness of the arrest was all that was decided, then other matters pertinent to suppression-such as the question of attenuation \u2014 arguably remained to be litigated and thus may later have been properly considered by the trial judge. But if the overall suppression question is what must be viewed as having been decided, then former-adjudication principles arguably precluded relitigation of any part of that question, unless a court\u2019s authority to change its ruling on a suppression motion would allow a contrary result.\nSo stated, the parties\u2019 controversy would seem to present an interesting clash of legal rules, springing from a metaphysical or semantic dispute about decision-making. However, in Illinois,, the rules are harmonized, at least in the case of an order that was not merely interlocutory but was appealable when entered: If an order is appealable when entered, and no timely reconsideration is obtained from the judge who entered it or from that judge\u2019s successor, a dissatisfied party\u2019s remedy is appeal, not relitigation before a second coordinate judge. This principle has been repeatedly recognized by our court. It applies a fortiori to the present cause, in which the State not only could have appealed but did appeal the original suppression order, even though the appeal was later abandoned. See People v. DeJesus (1989), 127 v. 2d 486; Balciunas v. Duff (1983), 94 Ill. 2d 176; People ex rel. Kelly, Ketting, Furth, Inc. v. Epstein (1974), 61 Ill. 2d 229; People v. Taylor (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136.\nThis harmonizing principle is not vitiated by the fact that a new legal argument may occur to a litigant after it is too late to appeal. Not only does case law reject the notion of making an exception for such tardiness, but logic dictates that, if parties were permitted to reopen the subject matter of a decided order each time a new legal theory came to mind, litigation would seemingly have no end. Or, in the words of a trial judge in an analogous context, as quoted in People v. Shlensky (1983), 118 Ill. App. 3d 243, 246:\n\u201c \u2018A judgment is broader and deeper than the State\u2019s conception of a judgment. *** It is a finding that the State has not prevailed in the litigation. *** The State cannot thereafter retrace its steps, prowl back into the litigation, pull out separate issues not referred to by a Judge in observations made at the time of rendering judgment and upon these selected issues build a new indictment.\u2019 \u201d\nFor the reasons just summarized and on which we now elaborate, we hold that the trial judge improperly reopened an issue that had already been adjudicated.\nI. The Taylor Rule\nThe foundation of our rationale today lies in our decisions in People v. Taylor (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136, and its precursors. The parties have argued this phase of the present cause in terms of collateral estoppel, res judicata, and law of the case, yet none of these legal doctrines controls here, although the issue in Taylor has occasionally been described in terms of one or another of them. (See People v. McBride (1983), 114 Ill. App. 3d 75, 80 (\u201ccollateral estoppel\u201d); People v. Taylor (1970), 124 Ill. App. 2d 268, 274, rev\u2019d (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136 (circuit and appellate courts used res judicata label); People v. Schlemm (1980), 82 Ill. App. 3d 639, 648 (\u201claw of the case\u201d).) Regardless of rubric, Taylor\u2019s procedural rule is simple: A suppression order may be an appealable order under our Rule 604(a)(1) (107 Ill. 2d R. 604(a)(1)), and, if it is, the State must either appeal or not. Except for seeking timely reconsideration by the same or a successor judge of the court in which the order was entered (see People v. Heil (1978), 71 Ill. 2d 458, 461-62), the State \u201ccannot now have [the] order reviewed by another trial judge\u201d and \u201ccannot [before such a judge] retry the issues therein decided\u201d (Taylor, 50 Ill. 2d at 140 (citing People ex rel. MacMillian v. Napoli (1966), 35 Ill. 2d 80, and People v. Quintana (1967), 36 Ill. 2d 369)).\nThe Taylor rule represented no new departure in the law. For example, much earlier than Taylor, we announced a similar principle in Harris v. Chicago House Wrecking Co. (1924), 314 Ill. 500, a case in which an earlier judge\u2019s order reinstating a suit had never been presented to a reviewing court but was held by another judge in the same case, more than five years later, to have been entered without jurisdiction. We held that it was the later judge who lacked jurisdiction to review the earlier judge\u2019s order, which, because of not having been reviewed by writ of error, appeal, or certiorari, bound the defendant, \u201cno matter how erroneous it may have been at the time it was entered.\u201d The earlier judge\u2019s error \u201ccould only be corrected by a review of the order,\u201d not by the later order of a judge of coordinate authority. Harris, 314 Ill. at 507-08.\nOf course, the Taylor rule\u2019s bare reference to \u201cthe issues therein decided\u201d might be thought to leave open the question already outlined, i.e., whether the original judge\u2019s order decided the suppression issue or merely the subsidiary unlawful-arrest issue. However, Taylor also clearly stated that it is the earlier \u201corder\u201d itself that cannot be \u201creviewed by another trial judge\u201d (Taylor, 50 Ill. 2d at 140), thus going far toward obviating any ambiguity in the reference to \u201cissues therein decided.\u201d In any event, none of our Taylor line of cases limited the Taylor rule only to those subsidiary issues that may actually have been considered by a judge whose appealable order a judge of coordinate authority later undertakes to modify. In the present cause, the order was to quash an arrest and suppress evidence, period. Each of the Taylor line of cases speaks of an order itself, not merely of issues upon which the order may or may not have turned.\nFor example, in People v. Steskal (1973), 55 Ill. 2d 157, 161, we cited Taylor in observing that the prior grant of a suppression motion could not be relitigated. In People v. Kent (1972), 54 Ill. 2d 161, 164, we cited both Taylor and its precursor, People v. Quintana (1967), 36 Ill. 2d 369, as establishing that the State is bound by an appealable pretrial order unless the State appeals and that it is improper for a second trial judge to redetermine whether the order was correct. In People v. Holland (1974), 56 Ill. 2d 318, the State was the party contending that denial of a pretrial suppression motion should bind the later trial judge; but we rejected the State\u2019s contention, pointing out that Taylor\u2019s, \u201cclearly distinguishable\u201d rule applies to grants, not denials, of such a motion, only the grant being appealable interlocutorily (see 107 Ill. 2d R. 604(a)(1)). Holland, 56 Ill. 2d at 321.\nIn People ex rel. Kelly, Ketting, Furth, Inc. v. Epstein (1974), 61 Ill. 2d 229, 230-31, which cited inter alia the Taylor precursor, People ex rel. MacMillian v. Napoli (1966), 35 Ill. 2d 80, we held it to be \u201centirely clear\u201d that defendants dissatisfied with restraining orders should appeal rather than seek a countervailing injunction from another judge; we said that the second judge should have declined to act; and we noted that \u201c[rjeview of the orders of one judge by another judge of the same court in the same case is neither consistent with the orderly administration of justice nor with our judicial system.\u201d And in Balciunas v. Duff (1983), 94 Ill. 2d 176, we distinguished an unappealable interlocutory discovery order, entered by one judge and later modified by another, from the appealable orders governed by the Taylor rule. See also People v. Baker (1988), 177 Ill. App. 3d 342, 344, 346; City of Rolling Meadows v. Kohlberg (1980), 83 Ill. App. 3d 10, 14.\nThe Taylor rule is thus a discrete rule of Illinois procedure, independent of such related doctrines as collateral estoppel, law of the case, or even res judicata. Of these three doctrines, the Taylor rule most resembles res judicata. Under res judicata, if the parties and the cause of action are the same as in an earlier action in which a final judgment on the merits was rendered, the earlier judgment binds the parties with regard to all issues that were or could have been raised in the earlier proceeding. (People v. DeJesus (1989), 127 Ill. 2d 486, 493; Housing Authority v. YMCA (1984), 101 Ill. 2d 246, 251.) Because the Taylor rule likewise applies only when the parties and the cause of action remain the same and an appealable order has been entered earlier, the rule\u2019s resemblance to res judicata provides further support for treating the Taylor rule as applying to prior orders per se (that is, as applying to all issues that were or could have been raised earlier), not as applying simply to such issues as can be shown to have been actually litigated in the prior proceedings.\nBy contrast, invoking the law of the case might still not preclude reconsideration of an earlier judge\u2019s order if the facts before the court changed or error or injustice were manifest (see, e.g., People ex rel. Parker v. Whealan (1938), 370 Ill. 243, 244; People v. McCarty (1973), 11 Ill. App. 3d 421, 422; Redfield v. Continental Casualty Corp. (7th Cir. 1987), 818 F.2d 596, 605; 14 Ill. L. & Prac. Courts \u00a774 (1968); but see People v. Douglas (1981), 100 Ill. App. 3d 181), and attempting to invoke collateral estoppel would be beside the point if, as here, the parties and the cause of action (a claim for suppression of evidence) were identical for each judge involved (see Telegraph Savings & Loan Association v. Schilling (1984), 105 Ill. 2d 166, 177-78; Housing Authority v. YMCA (1984), 101 Ill. 2d 246, 251-52). Moreover, unlike the Taylor rule and res judicata, the application of collateral estoppel (see, e.g., Housing Authority, 101 Ill. 2d at 251-52) or law of the case (see, e.g., Connett v. City of Jerseyville (7th Cir. 1940), 110 F.2d 1015, 1018) would be limited to the precise factual or legal issues actually litigated and decided when a prior order was entered.\nHowever, despite the close resemblance between res judicata and the Taylor rule, the latter has its own roots in case law, statutory provisions, and court rules regarding the appealability of otherwise interlocutory orders such as suppression orders; the Taylor rule is not doctrinally identical with res judicata. For example, the Taylor rule applies only when later proceedings in the same case are involved; res judicata is applicable to later proceedings in a separate case. (See Housing Authority, 101 Ill. 2d at 251.) In addition, for purposes of the Taylor rule, when the State filed its notice of appeal the circuit court immediately lost jurisdiction, and the order bound both the parties and the circuit court; not even the judge who entered it, much less another judge of the same court, had authority to modify it thereafter except (if at all) upon reacquiring jurisdiction. Yet, for purposes of the res judicata rule as applied in some States (but historically not in Illinois or in many other jurisdictions), once the State\u2019s notice of appeal to the appellate court was filed in the present cause, the original judge\u2019s suppression order would not have been regarded as binding until sustained on appeal or until the appeal had been dismissed. (See Annot., \u00a75, 9 A.L.R.2d 994 (1950); Brown v. Schintz (1903), 203 Ill. 136, 139; People ex rel. Arns v. Rickert (1896), 159 Ill. 496, 499; Restatement (Second) of Judgments \u00a713, comment g; \u00a716, comment a (1982).) (Even though the Taylor rule\u2019s closest analogue is res judicata doctrine, we judge that the rule admits of one comparison to law-of-the-case doctrine: As with law of the case, if the facts before the court change materially, the court should not be bound by its former interlocutory ruling but can correct-itself in light of the newly presented facts. In order to prevent this exception from swallowing the rule, the new evidence should not be of a nature that with due diligence could have been presented earlier. Thus, the exception that we recognize has no application to the present cause.)\nUnless a notice of appeal is actually filed, the Taylor rule has been held not to apply to an appealable order until the time has elapsed during which a litigant is permitted to request reconsideration of the order by the same or a successor judge of the court in which it was entered. (People v. Heil (1978), 71 Ill. 2d 458, 461-62.) This is because statutory and judicial policy favors giving a circuit court \u201cthe opportunity to reconsider final appealable judgments and orders within 30 days of their entry\u201d as long as no notice of appeal has yet been filed. (Heil, 71 Ill. 2d at 461.) Nothing in the Taylor line of cases supports forbidding a party \u201cto seek correction of the alleged error by means of a motion timely filed in the circuit court\u201d (emphasis added) (Heil, 71 Ill. 2d at 461-62), even though the party was entitled to appeal immediately after the order was entered. However, the Heil situation is not present here. The State did perfect an appeal here, and nearly a year had elapsed between dismissal of the State\u2019s appeal and the time when the State sought the trial judge\u2019s consideration of the attenuation argument. Therefore, Heil\u2019s refinement of the Taylor rule does not validate the second judge\u2019s considering or deciding the attenuation question.\nMeanwhile, our recent opinion in People v. DeJesus (1989), 127 Ill. 2d 486, involving a second judge\u2019s order that undid the effect of an earlier judge\u2019s denial of a State motion to permit prosecution of a juvenile under criminal laws, would seem already to have clarified the Taylor rule sufficiently. In DeJesus, although the matter before the second judge was presented within 30 days after the first judge\u2019s order, the second judge was not the first judge\u2019s successor in the Heil sense. Rather, the second judge was a criminal court judge who had originally presided at the juvenile defendant\u2019s trial on charges of first-degree murder and armed robbery. (See Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 37, par. 805 \u2014 4(6)(a).) Because a jury had acquitted the defendant of the murder charge even though it convicted her of armed robbery, proceedings were statutorily required to continue under juvenile rather than criminal laws. (See Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 37, par. 805 \u2014 4(6)(c).) Thus, a juvenile court judge was assigned to hear the State\u2019s motion to permit further proceedings under the criminal laws notwithstanding the contrary statutory directive. After the juvenile court judge dismissed the State\u2019s motion, the State presented other motions to the original trial judge, who granted them and proceeded to sentence the defendant under the criminal rather than the juvenile laws.\nThough DeJesus was decided after the present cause had been submitted, neither party has since requested leave to cite it as additional authority. We stated there:\n\u201c[WJhere a ruling is immediately appealable, an aggrieved party\u2019s remedy is to appeal, and the second judge should decline to act. ***\n* * *\n*** [The first judge] advised the State that her order was final and appealable. The State should have taken \u00bfn appeal if it believed the ruling was incorrect. ***\n*** [The first judge\u2019s] order terminated the criminal prosecution prior to final judgment and was therefore appealable. [The second judge] should have declined to act.\u201d (Emphasis in original.) DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 494-98 (citing Balciunas, 94 Ill. 2d 176, Epstein, 61 Ill. 2d 229, and Napoli, 35 Ill. 2d 80).\nSignificantly, before the second judge in DeJesus, the State raised issues of constitutionality and statutory construction that it contended were not shown to have been presented to the first judge in the case. (DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 491-92.) The defense replied that the State had waived pursuit of \u201cother matters,\u201d such as its constitutional challenge, that might have been but were not raised before the first judge. (DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 491.) On review, we stated our belief that the second judge was aware of the \u201cscope\u201d of the first judge\u2019s order. (DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 498.) However, rather than rely on this presumed awareness by the second judge or explore the scope question further, we based our holding on the simple fact that the first judge\u2019s order constituted \u201ca judicial pronouncement *** that the criminal prosecution had terminated.\u201d (DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 494.) Therefore, we said, the second judge should not have ruled on the State\u2019s subsequent motions seeking further criminal proceedings. DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 494, 498.\nThough we found \u201cjudge-shopping\u201d to have occurred in DeJesus (127 Ill. 2d at 497) and we make no such finding in the present cause, judge-shopping was merely an aggravating, not a decisive, factor. We specifically stated in DeJesus:\n\u201cThe addition of a constitutional challenge in proceedings before [the second judge] does not alter our conclusion that the same claim was presented before both judges. The constitutional challenge should have been presented to [the first judge] and the failure to do so resulted in waiver.\u201d (DeJesus, 127 Ill. 2d at 498.)\nLike the constitutional challenge in DeJesus, the attenuation argument in the present cause should have been presented to the original judge. It cannot be detached from the suppression question so as to form a separate \u201cissue\u201d exempted from the force of the Taylor rule, any more than if res judicata itself were applicable. Therefore, the trial judge erred procedurally in permitting the State to argue the attenuation question belatedly and in ruling on the question.\nII. Attenuation and Ceccolini\nThough we dispose of this appeal on the procedural grounds just discussed, we deem noteworthy one element in the State\u2019s substantive arguments regarding attenuation.\nAs one basis for finding that defendant\u2019s confession was attenuated from the taint of his unlawful arrest, the State contends that, even though Erving\u2019s name first came to police attention because of statements by defendant, and even though Davis was implicated by both Erving and defendant, the police would eventually have discovered Erving and Davis independently in any investigation of defendant, since they were known associates of his. The State cites United States v. Ceccolini (1978), 435 U.S. 268, 55 L. Ed. 2d 268, 98 S. Ct. 1054, for its discussion of why a willing witness should be allowed to testify at trial even if the witness was first found as a result of a defendant\u2019s statements following an unlawful arrest, as long as the witness\u2019 testimony is not compelled by exploiting the defendant\u2019s tainted statements. (Ceccolini, 435 U.S. at 274-79, 55 L. Ed. 2d at 276-79, 98 S. Ct. at 1059-62.) Ceccolini also said that even putative defendants should be permitted to testify if there is no exploitation of their statements to compel the testimony. Ceccolini, 435 U.S. at 276-77, 55 L. Ed. 2d at 277, 98 S. Ct. at 1060-61.\nThe flaw in the State\u2019s Ceccolini analysis is that Ceccolini dealt with the jurisprudential policy reasons for permitting live testimony at trial by a willing witness, not with whether the witness\u2019 supposed willingness or the inevitability of the witness\u2019 discovery can constitute an intervening circumstance as far as admissibility of the defendant\u2019s own confession is concerned. Ceccolini drew specific attention to this distinction. (Ceccolini, 435 U.S. at 277-79, 55 L. Ed. 2d at 277-78, 98 S. Ct. at 1061.) Conceivably, Ceccolini would permit the elicitation of trial testimony by Erving or Davis despite their having been initially named by defendant in an arguably tainted statement, but Ceccolini is inadequate to support an attenuation argument as to defendant\u2019s confession itself. See Ceccolini, 435 U.S. at 278, 55 L. Ed. 2d at 278, 98 S. Ct. at 1061, quoting Michigan v. Tucker (1974), 417 U.S. 433, 450-51, 41 L. Ed. 2d 182, 196-97, 94 S. Ct. 2357, 2367.\nWe need not actually decide whether the trial judge was substantively correct in finding attenuation. Today we simply hold that the trial judge improperly heard evidence and argument on the attenuation issue after the original judge\u2019s suppression order had already effectively decided it. Thus, we reverse defendant\u2019s convictions, vacate his sentences and the trial judge\u2019s attenuation order, and remand this cause to the circuit court of Cook County for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.\nHowever, the Taylor rule and our holding in this cause, as involving appellate procedure, do not act as limitations on our supervisory power. Given the likelihood of a new trial, and pursuant to our supervisory power, we vacate the original judge\u2019s suppression order insofar as it may have prohibited the introduction into evidence of testimony of witnesses to events other than defendant\u2019s detention, his custodial interrogation, and the recovery of evidence procured as a result of that interrogation. We direct that, at any retrial of defendant, the circuit court shall conduct a hearing in accordance with the principles of Ceccolini to determine whether any proposed testimony by such witnesses was sufficiently attenuated from defendant\u2019s unlawful arrest so as to be admissible. In all other respects, the original judge\u2019s suppression order shall govern any such retrial.\nIn view of our disposition of this cause, we need not address defendant\u2019s other allegations of error.\nSuppression order vacated in part; attenuation order and sentences vacated; judgment reversed; cause remanded with directions.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "JUSTICE STAMOS"
      },
      {
        "text": "JUSTICE MILLER,\ndissenting:\nThe majority holds that the circuit court, having granted the defendant\u2019s motion to suppress evidence on the ground that the defendant was taken into custody without probable cause, lacked authority to consider later whether any of the evidence ordered suppressed was nonetheless attenuated from the primary taint and hence admissible at trial. I do not agree with the majority\u2019s decision that the circuit court\u2019s consideration of that question was unauthorized, and therefore I respectfully dissent.\nThe majority notes that the parties are not in accord on what issues were determined by the original judge in granting the defendant\u2019s suppression motion and, further, that the parties dispute whether the original ruling implicitly determined the attenuation issue later raised by the State. The majority believes that resolution of those questions is not necessary, however, because under Illinois practice, as represented by the decision in People v. Taylor (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136, a party aggrieved by an order that is appealable when it is entered must either appeal the ruling or seek reconsideration in a timely manner. The majority concludes that the State\u2019s failure in the present case to follow either course in the wake of the original judge\u2019s order must mean that the State could not later request a ruling on the separate question whether any of the evidence was nonetheless admissible because attenuated from the primary taint. (138 Ill. 2d at 388.) I do not agree that the dispute in the present case may be so easily avoided, or so readily rephrased. The majority\u2019s formulation begs the question, for it assumes that the scope of the original judge\u2019s ruling necessarily included the attenuation issue raised by the State. Although the majority opinion later declares that the Taylor rule, like the doctrine of res judicata, applies both to issues that were actually presented in the original proceeding and to issues that could have been presented in the original proceeding (138 Ill. 2d at 392), the majority fails to answer why the attenuation question raised by the State, and considered by the trial judge, must also fall within that rule. In my view, we must now decide whether the State waived consideration of the attenuation question by failing to present the issue at the time of the original hearing, or on reconsideration before the original judge.\nThe defendant moved to quash his arrest and to suppress evidence on the grounds that the arrest was made without probable cause and without a warrant, that his statements to authorities were products of physical and mental coercion, and that he made those statements without having received the warnings required by Miranda v. Arizona (1966), 384 U.S. 436, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694, 86 S. Ct. 1602. Although the original judge seemingly granted, in its entirety, the defendant\u2019s motion to quash the arrest and suppress evidence, the original judge decided only that the defendant was arrested without probable cause. The State filed a notice of appeal from the original judge\u2019s order but soon decided to abandon the appeal, and the cause eventually returned to the circuit court. The State subsequently requested a second hearing, at issue here, in relation to the defendant\u2019s suppression motion. The State sought to raise two distinct issues in the new hearing: first, whether the original judge erred in ruling that the defendant\u2019s arrest was made without probable cause, and, second, assuming the correctness of that ruling, whether any of the evidence obtained following the defendant\u2019s arrest was nonetheless admissible because it was attenuated from the primary taint.\nThe trial judge refused to reconsider the original judge\u2019s ruling that the defendant\u2019s arrest was made without probable cause. Although the trial judge questioned the soundness of that finding, he thought that People v. Taylor (1971), 50 Ill. 2d 136, barred him from reconsidering that particular issue. The trial judge did not believe, however, that he was similarly prevented from considering the second issue raised by .the State: whether any of the evidence obtained following the 'defendant\u2019s illegal arrest was attenuated from the primary taint and hence admissible. The trial judge noted that the original judge\u2019s ruling did not contain any findings with respect to the attenuation issue, and the trial judge observed that a question of attenuation generally does not arise until there is a determination that a constitutional violation occurred. The trial judge concluded that he was authorized to consider the State\u2019s attenuation argument. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial judge ruled that the confrontation of the defendant with codefendant Davis\u2019 statement implicating the defendant in the crimes served to attenuate the taint generated by the illegal arrest. Accordingly, the trial judge ruled that statements made and evidence seized following that time were admissible in evidence. The trial judge also determined two additional issues that had been raised in the defendant\u2019s suppression motion but had not been ruled on by the original judge. The trial judge concluded that all the defendant\u2019s statements were uncoerced and, in addition, that the defendant gave the statements following the receipt of Miranda warnings.\nIn the present appeal, the State makes no challenge to the original judge\u2019s ruling that the defendant\u2019s arrest was illegal, nor does the State question the trial judge\u2019s refusal to reconsider that ruling. Rather, the State contends only that the attenuation issue was a separate matter with respect to which the original judge made no ruling and that the trial judge therefore possessed authority to consider the question later.\nI would conclude that the trial judge, consistent with Taylor, had authority to consider the State\u2019s contention that evidence obtained following the defendant\u2019s arrest was attenuated from that taint and hence admissible at trial. Attenuation properly becomes an issue only if the court finds an underlying illegality. Here, the defendant moved to quash his arrest and suppress evidence on several different grounds. The original judge based his ruling on only one of the grounds asserted in the motion, finding that the defendant\u2019s arrest was made without probable cause. The attenuation question would not arise until the court determined that the defendant had sustained his burden of persuasion on that issue (see Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, par. 114 \u2014 12(b)). Although the subject of attenuation was touched on briefly by the parties in the course of their arguments before the original judge, the issue was not raised at that time, and the original judge, though he made detailed findings, did not render a finding on that particular matter. While it may have been better practice for the prosecution to have requested, at that time, consideration of the attenuation issue, I do not believe that the State\u2019s failure to seek such a ruling at the conclusion of the hearing, or within 30 days thereafter, prevented the trial judge later from considering the attenuation question. The\" original judge did not address the attenuation question in his findings, and it did not become a live issue until there was a ruling in the defendant\u2019s favor on his motion to quash his arrest and to suppress evidence.\nOne additional point appearing in the majority opinion merits brief comment. In straining to distinguish the Taylor rule from the doctrine of law of the case, the majority undermines portions of its own analysis. The majority states that the Taylor rule does not fit within the rubric of the law-of-the-case doctrine because \u201cinvoking the law of the case might still not preclude reconsideration of an earlier judge\u2019s order if the facts before the court changed or error or injustice were manifest.\u201d (138 Ill. 2d at 392.) Apparently, the majority believes that new evidence or the existence of great error or injustice would not warrant reconsideration of an earlier ruling on a motion to suppress evidence. But those are circumstances in which it has been held a defendant may obtain reconsideration of the denial of his suppression motion. (See People v. Nelson (1981), 97 Ill. App. 3d 964, 967-68.) Indeed, that statement is contradicted by the majority\u2019s later acknowledgment that the Taylor rule \u201cadmits of one comparison to law-of-the-case doctrine\u201d because the presentation of new evidence may, under either principle, warrant reconsideration of an earlier ruling. 138 Ill. 2d at 393-94.\nIn sum, I do not agree with the majority\u2019s holding that the trial judge lacked authority to consider the attenuation question raised by the State following the abandonment of its appeal, and I would therefore consider in the present appeal the challenges raised by the defendant to the trial judge\u2019s ruling on that issue. For that reason, I respectfully dissent.",
        "type": "dissent",
        "author": "JUSTICE MILLER,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Paul P. Biebel, Jr., and Randolph N. Stone, Public Defenders, of Chicago (Kyle Public Wesendorf, Assistant Public Defender, of counsel), for appellant.",
      "Neil F. Hartigan, Attorney General, of Springfield, and Richard M. Daley and Cecil A. Partee, State\u2019s Attorneys, of Chicago (Terence M. Madsen, Assistant Attorney General, of Chicago, and Inge Fryklund, Renee Goldfarb and James S. Veldman, Assistant State\u2019s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "(No. 64085.\nTHE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. BENNIE WILLIAMS, Appellant.\nOpinion filed September 19, 1990.\nRehearing denied November 30, 1990.\nMILLER, J., dissenting.\nPaul P. Biebel, Jr., and Randolph N. Stone, Public Defenders, of Chicago (Kyle Public Wesendorf, Assistant Public Defender, of counsel), for appellant.\nNeil F. Hartigan, Attorney General, of Springfield, and Richard M. Daley and Cecil A. Partee, State\u2019s Attorneys, of Chicago (Terence M. Madsen, Assistant Attorney General, of Chicago, and Inge Fryklund, Renee Goldfarb and James S. Veldman, Assistant State\u2019s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People."
  },
  "file_name": "0377-01",
  "first_page_order": 387,
  "last_page_order": 413
}
