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    "parties": [
      "THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Defendant-Appellant."
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        "text": "JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE\ndelivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.\nJustice Lytton concurred in the judgment and opinion.\nJustice McDade specially concurred, with opinion.\nOPINION\nA jury convicted the defendant of driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI) and failure to yield. The trial court sentenced him to 18 months of conditional discharge with community service and alcohol treatment conditions and imposed over $1,300 in fines and costs. On appeal, the defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial because the trial court did not strictly comply with the requirements of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 431(b) (eff. May 1, 2007) during voir dire. Alternatively, the defendant argues that he is entitled to a $5 credit against the DUI fine for the one day that he spent in custody on that charge, as required by section 110 \u2014 14(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (the Code) (725 ILCS 5/110\u201414(a) (West 2008)). We affirm the defendant\u2019s conviction and modify the lower court\u2019s judgment to reflect a credit of $5 against the DUI fine.\nFACTS\nJury selection in the defendant\u2019s trial began on March 10, 2009. At the beginning of the voir dire, the trial court addressed all of the members of the venire collectively and stated, in relevant part:\n\u201cYou must follow the laws as I give it [sic] to you. You may not use your own ideas about what you think the law should be in deciding this case. ***\nUnder the law, a defendant is presumed to be innocent of the charges against him and this presumption remains with him throughout every stage of the trial and during your deliberation on a verdict. It is not overcome unless from all the evidence in this case you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty. The State has the burden of proving the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt and this burden remains on the State throughout the case. ***\nThe defendant is not required to *** prove his innocence nor is he required to present any evidence on his own behalf. He may rely on the presumption of innocence. ***\n*** DQt\u2019s essential during the course of the trial that you not arrive at any decision or conclusion of any kind until you\u2019ve heard all the evidence, the argument of the lawyers, and my instructions on the law. I\u2019m going to repeat that more than once because you might be back in the jury room at a break or something. I\u2019m going to tell you, don\u2019t make your mind up about anything. Now is not the time to do that. ***\n*** [W]hen deciding this case, you must not allow sympathy or prejudice to influence you. Our system of law is based on the principle that a jury will decide the case on the law and evidence only. If you\u2019re selected as jurors, that\u2019s the oath that you\u2019ll take and I\u2019m sure you\u2019ll be faithful to it if you are selected.\u201d\nThe trial court then seated the potential jurors in groups of six and questioned them both as a group and individually. Five of the six persons seated in the initial group were eventually chosen to serve as jurors. While addressing this group, the trial court stated that \u201cyou must follow the law as I give it to you even if you disagree with it.\u201d The court then asked each potential juror a series of questions, including whether he or she would \u201cfollow the law even if you disagree with it,\u201d \u201chold the State to the burden of proving all elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt,\u201d and \u201cpresume the defendant is innocent as he sits here now and *** throughout the course of the trial.\u201d Each individual chosen to serve as a juror answered \u201cyes\u201d to each of these questions. The defense raised no objections during voir dire.\nAfter the jury was empaneled, the State presented its evidence. The State called three witnesses. Cindy Henry testified that, on the evening of April 21, 2008, she was driving her pickup truck eastbound on Starr Street in Peoria, approaching the intersection with Folkers Street. She saw another vehicle traveling toward her going westbound on Starr. Just as she reached the intersection of Starr and Folkers, the other vehicle made a left turn in front of her (turning from Starr onto Folkers). Henry put her car in neutral and hit the brakes, but the vehicles collided; the passenger\u2019s side of Henry\u2019s car hit the passenger\u2019s side of the other vehicle. The vehicles pulled over, and one of the residents of that area called the police.\nPeoria police officer Winfred Fallert was dispatched to the scene. Fallert testified that he had been trained and educated as an accident investigator and accident reconstructionist and that his primary responsibility is investigating auto accidents. Fallert also testified that he had received training in DUI detection and had personally arrested over 200 DUIs and assisted in \u201cprobably over a hundred\u201d other DUI arrests. At the accident scene, Fallert spoke with the defendant, who identified himself as the driver of the car that had collided with Henry\u2019s pickup truck. According to Fallert, the defendant smelled of alcohol, his speech was slurred, and he did not have a steady balance. Fallert testified that the defendant admitted that he had a few beers or drinks that evening, although he did not include this information in his police report. In addition, Fallert thought that the defendant was confused as to which way he had been going at the time of the accident. In Fallert\u2019s opinion, the defendant was under the influence of alcohol. Moreover, after examining the physical evidence (including the skid marks, accident debris, and damage to both vehicles), Fallert concluded that the defendant had been traveling westbound on Starr and had turned left in front of Henry\u2019s truck when the accident occurred.\nPeoria police officer Ron Hartzell also testified for the State. Hart-zell came to the accident scene to conduct a DUI investigation at Fal-lert\u2019s request, and he spoke with the defendant at the scene. Hartzell testified that the defendant smelled of alcohol from three feet away and had bloodshot eyes and slurred speech. Hartzell had the defendant perform two field sobriety tests, which the defendant failed. The defendant stated that he could not perform the tests (which required standing on one leg for 30 seconds and walking several heel-to-toe steps in a straight line) because he had a low leg or ankle injury. Believing the defendant to be intoxicated, Hartzell arrested him and put him in a squad car. After arresting the defendant, Hartzell offered him a Breathalyzer test, which he refused. A video recording of the field sobriety tests was admitted into evidence and played for the jury.\nThe defense called defendant\u2019s girlfriend, Jeanette Berry, as its only witness. Berry testified that, on the day of the accident, the defendant had come to a barbeque at her sister\u2019s house after he got off from work in the afternoon. Although Berry claimed that the defendant was not intoxicated when the two left the barbeque together in defendant\u2019s car later that evening, she admitted that defendant had IV2 beers at the barbeque. Berry was in the passenger\u2019s seat when the defendant drove westbound on Starr, toward Folkers. She testified that, as they started to make a left turn on Folkers, Ms. Henry\u2019s pickup truck seemed to speed up and hit them on the passenger\u2019s side. Berry also testified that the defendant has complained to her about having a fractured fibula and, ever since she has known him, he has received military disability benefits because of the condition of his feet. As long as she has known him, the defendant has walked with his feet out to the side while leaning over. Berry took pictures of the defendant\u2019s feet the day after the accident, which were admitted into evidence. The defendant did not testify during the trial, and the defense called no other witnesses.\nThe jury convicted the defendant of both charges. The court imposed the sentence recommended by the parties. For driving under the influence, the defendant was sentenced to an 18-month term of conditional discharge with specific community service and alcohol treatment conditions. The court also imposed a $1,000 fine plus other fines and costs. For the traffic offense of failing to yield, the court ordered the defendant to pay a $300 fine. The defendant timely appealed.\nANALYSIS\nA. Rule 431(b) Compliance\nThe defendant maintains that the trial court committed reversible error by failing to conduct an adequate voir dire under Supreme Court Rule 431(b). He concedes that he did not raise this issue below, either at trial or in a posttrial motion. Nevertheless, he urges us to disregard his forfeiture of this issue and hold that the trial court\u2019s failure to comply strictly with the requirements of Rule 431(b) requires automatic reversal of his conviction. In the alternative, the defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial under the plain error doctrine notwithstanding his forfeiture of the issue because the trial court\u2019s violation of Rule 431(b) deprived him of a \u201csubstantial right.\u201d We disagree.\nBecause the voir dire in this case occurred in March 2009, the current, amended version of Rule 431(b) governs this case. That rule provides:\n\u201cThe court shall ask each potential juror, individually or in a group, whether that juror understands and accepts the following principles: (1) that the defendant is presumed innocent of the charge(s) against him or her; (2) that before a defendant can be convicted the State must prove the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; (3) that the defendant is not required to offer any evidence on his or her own behalf; and (4) that the defendant\u2019s failure to testify cannot be held against him or her; however, no inquiry of a prospective juror shall be made into the defendant\u2019s failure to testify when the defendant objects.\nThe court\u2019s method of inquiry shall provide each juror an opportunity to respond to specific questions concerning the principles set out in this section.\u201d Ill. S. Ct. R. 431(b) (eff. May 1, 2007).\nIn the instant case, the court admonished the jury venire regarding the first three principles listed in the rule but neglected to mention during voir dire that the defendant\u2019s failure to testify cannot be held against him. Moreover, although the trial court asked each potential juror individually whether he or she would \u201cpresume the defendant is innocent *** throughout the course of the trial\u201d and \u201chold the State to the burden of proving all elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt,\u201d the court never explicitly asked the jurors whether they understood and accepted that the defendant was not required to offer any evidence on his own behalf or that his failure to testify could not be held against him. Accordingly, the trial court did not strictly comply with the terms of Rule 431(b).\nThe defendant argues that this fact, standing alone, mandates an automatic reversal of his conviction. He acknowledges that we have rejected a bright-line rule of automatic reversal for violations of Rule 431(b) when the defendant fails to raise the issue below and have instead applied a plain error analysis. See, e.g., People v. Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d 586, 592-96 (2009); People v. Alexander, 396 Ill. App. 3d 563, 574-77 (2009); People v. Russell, 395 Ill. App. 3d 926, 939-40 (2009). The defendant nevertheless argues for automatic reversal \u201cin order to preserve the issue\u201d should the Illinois Supreme Court adopt such a rule.\nOur Illinois Supreme Court recently rejected the argument that violations of Rule 431(b) are automatically reversible and confirmed that forfeited Rule 431(b) claims like those asserted in this case should be analyzed under the rubric of plain error. People v. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d 598 (2010); see also People v. Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d 173, 193-203 (2009) (ruling that a violation of a prior version of Rule 431(b) did not require automatic reversal). In Thompson, the trial court admonished members of the venire regarding only three of the four Rule 431(b) principles during voir dire, asked the individual jurors whether they understood only two of the four principles, and asked them whether they accepted only one of the principles. Nevertheless, the court refused to apply a rule of automatic reversal. The court ruled that \u201cautomatic reversal is required only when an error is deemed \u2018structural.\u2019 \u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 608 (quoting Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 197). An error is typically designated as \u201cstructural\u201d only if it \u201cerode[s] the integrity of the judicial process and undermine[s] the fairness of the defendant\u2019s trial\u201d and therefore \u201cnecessarily renders a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or an unreliable means of determining guilt or innocence.\u201d (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 608-09 (citing Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 196-98). The court held that a trial court\u2019s failure to question jurors regarding the Rule 431(b) principles during voir dire did not rise to the level of structural error \u2014 even though full compliance with the rule\u2019s requirements is both \u201cimportant\u201d and mandatory \u2014 because \u201cviolation of the rule does not necessarily render a trial fundamentally unfair or unreliable in determining guilt or innocence.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 611. The questioning mandated by Rule 431(b) \u201cis simply one way of helping to ensure a fair and impartial jury,\u201d and failure to comply with the rule \u201cdoes not necessarily result in a biased jury.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 610-11. The court found that there was \u201cno evidence that [the] defendant was tried by a biased jury\u201d in the case before it, particularly considering that \u201cthe trial court did address some of the Rule 431(b) requirements in its voir dire and *** the jury was admonished and instructed on Rule 431(b) principles\u201d before it began its deliberations. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 611. Accordingly, the court concluded that the trial court\u2019s violation of amended Rule 431(b) \u201cd[id] not require automatic reversal of [the] defendant\u2019s conviction.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 611.\nThompson forecloses the defendant\u2019s argument that the trial court\u2019s noncompliance with Rule 431(b) in this case requires automatic reversal. Like the trial court in Thompson, the trial court here admonished the potential jurors collectively regarding three of the four Rule 431(b) principles and questioned each juror regarding some of the Rule 431(b) principles but failed to ask each juror whether he or she understood and accepted all four principles. Also, as in Thompson, all of the Rule 431(b) principles were accurately conveyed to the jury through the jury instructions, and there is nothing to suggest that the jury in this case was biased. Accordingly, Thompson\u2019s holding controls. The trial court\u2019s failure to strictly comply with the dictates of the rule during voir dire does not fall within the very limited class of structural errors that would require automatic reversal.\nIn the alternative, the defendant argues that his conviction is reversible under the plain error doctrine. As noted, the defendant concedes that he raised no objection to the trial court\u2019s violation of Rule 431(b), either during the voir dire or in a posttrial motion. Thus, the issue has been forfeited. People v. Allen, 222 Ill. 2d 340, 350 (2006); Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 592. However, the plain error rule bypasses normal forfeiture principles and allows a reviewing court to consider unpreserved claims of error in two specific circumstances. Specifically, courts will apply the plain error doctrine when:\n\u201c \u2018(1) a clear or obvious error occurred and the evidence is so closely balanced that the error alone threatened to tip the scales of justice against the defendant, regardless of the seriousness of the error, or (2) a clear or obvious error occurred and that error is so serious that it affected the fairness of the defendant\u2019s trial and challenged the integrity of the judicial process, regardless of the closeness of the evidence.\u2019 \u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 613 (quoting People v. Piatkowski, 225 Ill. 2d 551, 565 (2007)).\nAs noted above, the trial court\u2019s failure to ask each potential juror whether he or she understood and accepted each of the Rule 431(b) principles was error. The defendant does not argue that the evidence was closely balanced. Instead, he argues only that the trial court\u2019s failure to comply fully with the requirements of Rule 431(b) deprived him of a substantial right. Thus, we limit our plain error analysis to the second prong of the plain error test. See Alexander, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 575; see also Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 613.\nOur supreme court has equated the second prong of plain error review with structural error, asserting that reversal is required under this prong only for fundamental, systemic errors that \u201c \u2018erode the integrity of the judicial process and undermine the fairness of the defendant\u2019s trial.\u2019 \u201d (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 608-09 (quoting Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 197-98). A finding that the defendant was tried by a biased jury \u201cwould certainly satisfy the second prong of plain-error review because it would affect his right to a fair trial and challenge the integrity of the judicial process.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614. However, the defendant \u201chas the burden of persuasion on this issue,\u201d and a court \u201ccannot presume the jury was biased simply because the trial court erred in conducting the Rule 431(b) questioning.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614. Thus, where a defendant presents no evidence of juror bias resulting from a violation of Rule 431(b), his claim of plain error must fail. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614-15.\nApplying these principles in Thompson, the supreme court rejected a claim of plain error very similar to the claim presented in this case. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 613-15. In Thompson, the prospective jurors \u201creceived some, but not all, of the required Rule 431(b) questioning,\u201d and \u201c[t]he venire was also admonished and instructed on Rule 431(b) principles.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 615. Moreover, although the defendant complained that the trial court failed to fully comply with Rule 431(b), he \u201c[did] not present[ ] any evidence that the jury was biased\u201d as a result. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614. Accordingly, the court found that the defendant had \u201cfailed to meet his burden of showing the error affected the fairness of his trial and challenged the integrity of the judicial process,\u201d and held that \u201cthe second prong of plain-error review [did] not provide a basis for excusing defendant\u2019s procedural default.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 615.\nWe applied similar reasoning and reached the same conclusion in Amerman, a case that is strikingly similar to the instant case. Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 592-96. In Amerman, as in this case, the trial court admonished the potential jurors regarding the first three Rule 431(b) principles but failed to mention during voir dire that the defendant\u2019s failure to testify cannot be used against him. Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 588. As in this case, the trial court never explicitly asked the jurors whether they understood and accepted that principle and did not ask each of the jurors whether they understood and accepted that the defendant was not required to present any evidence. Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 592-96. Moreover, as in this case, the jury instructions addressed all four of the Rule 431(b) principles, and that was the first time in the proceedings that the jurors were told that a defendant\u2019s failure to testify cannot be held against him. Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 588-89.\nThis court affirmed the defendant\u2019s conviction, with Justice McDade dissenting. Relying on the supreme court\u2019s decision in Glasper, we reasoned that the trial court\u2019s failure to strictly comply with Rule 431(b) did not result in a biased jury, particularly because the record showed that \u201cthe jury was instructed [on] the [Rule 431(b)] principles before its deliberations.\u201d Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 595 (citing Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 201). We noted that a contrary conclusion \u201cwould require us to presume that citizens sworn as jurors ignore the law and the jury instructions given to them,\u201d which is contrary to our precedent. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 595. We also found it significant that our supreme court has expressly \u201cmoved away\u201d from the portion of its holding in People v. Zehr, 103 Ill. 2d 472 (1984), which stated that the Rule 431(b) questions must be covered \u201cin the course of interrogation on voir dire\u201d and that \u201cthe failure to ask these questions amounts to \u2018prejudicial error.\u2019 \u201d (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 595 (quoting Glasper, 234 Ill. 2d at 197).\nThompson and Amerman dictate the result in this case. As noted above, the trial court\u2019s violations of Rule 431(b) in this case closely parallel the errors discussed in those cases, and the jury instructions given in each case were substantially identical. Like the defendants in Thompson and Amerman, the defendant in this case offers nothing to suggest that the trial court\u2019s errors during voir dire resulted in juror bias. The defendant alludes in vague and conclusory fashion to unspecified \u201cprejudice\u201d and the deprivation of \u201csubstantial rights,\u201d but he simply presumes that such consequences flow automatically from the violation of Rule 431(b); he does not provide any evidence or argument purporting to show that jury bias or any other prejudice actually resulted from the trial court\u2019s violation of the rule in this case. As our supreme court has made clear, that is not enough. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614 (ruling that \u201c[wje cannot presume the jury was biased simply because the trial court erred in conducting the Rule 431(b) questioning,\u201d and holding that defendant failed to meet his burden under the plain error doctrine where he offered no evidence of juror bias); see also Amerman, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 592-96.\nThe case for affirmance is even stronger here than it was in Amer-man, because the trial court in this case took additional steps during voir dire to ensure that the jurors would faithfully apply the law in an unbiased fashion. Specifically, the court admonished the entire venire that \u201c[y]ou must follow the laws as I give it [sic] to you. You may not use your own ideas about what you think the law should be in deciding this case ***.\u201d While addressing this first group of six potential jurors in the jury box (when all members of the venire apparently still were present), the court stated that \u201cyou must follow the law as I give it to you even if you disagree with it.\u201d (Emphasis added.) The court then asked each potential juror a series of questions, including whether he or she would \u201cfollow the law even if you disagree with it.\u201d Each individual chosen to serve as a juror answered \u201cyes\u201d to each of these questions. The court also admonished the entire venire that \u201cit\u2019s essential during the course of the trial that you not arrive at any decision or conclusion of any kind until you\u2019ve heard all the evidence, the argument of the lawyers, and my instructions on the law\u201d (emphasis added), that \u201cwhen deciding this case, you must not allow sympathy or prejudice to influence you,\u201d and that \u201c[o]ur system of law is based on the principle that a jury will decide the case on the law and evidence only.\u201d These admonitions and questions \u2014 in conjunction with the other admonishments, questions, and the jury instructions \u2014 ensured that the jury understood the Rule 431(b) principles and agreed to apply them in rendering its verdict. See Russell, 395 Ill. App. 3d at 941-42 (holding that lower court\u2019s failure to strictly comply with Rule 431(b) was not plain error where, inter alia, the court asked the jurors whether they would apply the law as given in the jury instructions, decide the case without sympathy and prejudice, and wait until the end of the trial to form an opinion). This fully satisfied the spirit, if not the letter, of Rule 431(b).\nThe defendant relies on People v. Blanton, 396 Ill. App. 3d 230 (4th Dist. 2009), to support his claim of plain error, but that case is inapposite. In Blanton, the jurors were never advised or instructed that a defendant\u2019s failure to testify could not be held against him. In this case, by contrast, the jury was instructed on that principle prior to its deliberations, and the trial court posed questions to each juror which helped to ensure that the jurors would apply the jury instructions as given. Moreover, Blanton was decided before Thompson, and its holding rests on an erroneous premise that the supreme court squarely rejected in Thompson. Specifically, Blanton held that Glas-per\u2019s ruling that a violation of Rule 431(b) was not structural error that required automatic reversal applied only to the preamended version of the rule. Blanton, 396 Ill. App. 3d at 238-39. In Thompson, the court expressly rejected that argument and ruled that its analysis in Glasper also applied to the current, amended version of the rule. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614-15. Thus, the defendant\u2019s reliance on Blanton is unavailing.\nThe doctrine of plain error is not \u201c \u2018a general saving clause preserving for review all errors affecting substantial rights whether or not they have been brought to the attention of the trial court.\u2019 \u201d People v. Herron, 215 Ill. 2d 167, 177 (2005) (quoting People v. Precup, 73 Ill. 2d 7, 16 (1978)). Rather, it is a narrow exception to the rule of forfeiture that applies only in the specific circumstances discussed above. Because the defendant does not argue that the evidence in this case was closely balanced and has failed to show that the trial court\u2019s violation of Rule 431(b) amounted to a structural error, his claim of plain error fails.\nB. Per Diem Credit\nThe defendant also argues that he is entitled to $5 credit for the single day that he spent in custody on the DUI charge. Section 110\u2014 14(a) of the Code provides that \u201c[a]ny person incarcerated on a bailable offense who does not supply bail and against whom a fine is levied on conviction of such offense shall be allowed a credit of $5 for each day so incarcerated upon application of the defendant,\u201d provided that the amount of the credit does not exceed the amount of the fine. 725 ILCS 5/110\u201414(a) (West 2008). As the State concedes, a defendant\u2019s entitlement to this per diem credit is mandatory under the statute, and a defendant may be awarded the $5-per-day credit on appeal even when he fails to raise the issue before the trial court. See, e.g., People v. Woodard, 175 Ill. 2d 435, 457 (1997); People v. Scott, 277 Ill. App. 3d 565, 566 (1996). Here, the defendant was incarcerated for a portion of a single day, and he was later fined $1,000 for the DUI offense. Accordingly, as the State concedes, he is entitled to a $5 credit under the statute even though he never asked the trial court to award the credit and did not object when the court neglected to do so sua sponte.\nCONCLUSION\nFor the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgments of conviction imposed by the Peoria County circuit court and modify the judgments to reflect a credit of $5 against the DUI fine for the time that the defendant spent in presentence custody, as required by section 110\u2014 14(a) of the Code (725 ILCS 5/110\u201414(a) (West 2008)). As part of our judgment, we grant the State\u2019s request that the defendant be assessed $50 as costs for this appeal. See People v. Williams, 235 Ill. 2d 286 (2009).\nAffirmed as modified.\nAccording to Fallert, the defendant told him that he was driving southbound on Folkers when Henry\u2019s truck ran into him. Fallert told the defendant that if that were true, Henry\u2019s truck would have had the right of way because there is a stop sign on Folkers at the intersection with Starr. According to Fallert, the defendant denied that there was a stop sign at the intersection and was \u201cadamant\u201d that he had been traveling southbound on Folkers at the time of the accident. Fallert did not include this information in his police report.\nThe defendant erroneously claims that, in People v. Wilmington, 394 Ill. App. 3d 567, 572-76 (2009), and People v. Graham, 393 Ill. App. 3d 268, 275-76 (2009), the First District of the Appellate Court applied a rule of automatic reversal and \u201cheld that a violation of Rule 431(b) does not lend itself to *** plain error analysis.\u201d To the contrary, in both cases, the court applied a plain error analysis to forfeited claims that the trial court violated the rule.\nThe court noted that the United States Supreme Court has recognized an error as structural \u201conly in a very limited class of cases,\u201d including \u201ca complete denial of counsel, trial before a biased judge, racial discrimination in the selection of a grand jury, denial of self-representation at trial, denial of a public trial, and a defective reasonable doubt instruction.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 609 (citing Washington v. Recuenco, 548 U.S. 212, 218 n.2 (2006)).\nThe court rejected the argument that the 2007 amendment to Rule 431(b) \u2014 which imposed a duty on trial courts to perform the Rule 431(b) questioning in every criminal case tried by a jury \u2014 made the Rule 431(b) questioning \u201cindispensable to a fair trial.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614-15; see also Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 610. The court reasoned that \u201cthe failure to conduct Rule 431(b) questioning does not necessarily result in a biased jury, regardless of whether that questioning is mandatory or permissive under our rule. Although the amendment to the rule serves to promote the selection of an impartial jury by making questioning mandatory, Rule 431(b) questioning is only one method of helping to ensure the selection of an impartial jury. [Citation.] It is not the only means of achieving that objective.\u201d Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE"
      },
      {
        "text": "JUSTICE McDADE,\nspecially concurring:\nI concur in this decision because that result is required by the supreme court\u2019s recent decision in People v. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d 598 (2010).\nI write separately to emphasize to defense counsel that they rely on the language of Rule 431(b) (Ill. S. Ct. R. 431(b) (eff. May 1, 2007)) to the peril of their clients.\nIn the 2007 amendment to Rule 431(b), the supreme court eliminated language requiring that the defendant ask the court to instruct or question jurors on the four fundamental trial principles included in the rule. In that amendment, the court appeared to place the burden of fully instructing the jury about the Zehr principles wholly on the trial court judges. Now with its decision in Thompson the supreme court, despite both the evolution of Rule 431(b) and its plain language, effectively puts the burden once again on defendant, through his counsel, to ask the court to carry out its responsibility or to object if it does not do so fully.\nIf the defendant fails to do either of those things, he or she is obligated to prove prejudice attributable to that specific error on the part of the trial judge. Thompson, 238 Ill. 2d at 614. I find it virtually impossible to envision a likely situation in which, in the absence of appropriate questioning of the jurors by the trial court or an outright posttrial declaration of a violation by a juror, a defendant could possibly prove the requisite prejudice.\nThe supreme court continues to declare that its rules are not mere suggestions but are mandatory and, while they are not law, they do have the force of law. In re Denzel W., 237 Ill. 2d 285 (2010). Doing the Rule 431(b) voir dire as specified in the rule is not rocket science. Nonetheless, the court requires the defendant to meet a seemingly impossible standard of proof to redress the trial court\u2019s failure to follow the rule.\nFollowing Thompson, defense attorneys and prosecutors who are committed to maintaining the level playing field required for a properly functioning adversarial criminal justice system must be vigilant in ensuring that potential jurors are adequately \u2014 by which I mean in a manner actually compliant with the procedures the supreme court has set out in Rule 431(b) \u2014 instructed on the fundamental principles articulated and protected in People v. Zehr, 103 Ill. 2d 472 (1984).",
        "type": "concurrence",
        "author": "JUSTICE McDADE,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Martin J. Ryan, of State Appellate Defender\u2019s Office, of Springfield, for appellant.",
      "Kevin W. Lyons, State\u2019s Attorney, of Peoria (Terry A. Mertel and Dawn D. Duffy, both of State\u2019s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor\u2019s Office, of counsel), for the People."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. GEORGE WILLIAMS, Defendant-Appellant.\nThird District\nNo. 3\u201409\u20140355\nOpinion filed April 29, 2011.\nMartin J. Ryan, of State Appellate Defender\u2019s Office, of Springfield, for appellant.\nKevin W. Lyons, State\u2019s Attorney, of Peoria (Terry A. Mertel and Dawn D. Duffy, both of State\u2019s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor\u2019s Office, of counsel), for the People."
  },
  "file_name": "0408-01",
  "first_page_order": 424,
  "last_page_order": 436
}
