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                                Appellate Court                            Date: 2019.07.17
                                                                           14:09:57 -05'00'



                  People v. Goodwin, 2018 IL App (1st) 152045



Appellate Court    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption            JOSEPH GOODWIN, Defendant-Appellant.



District & No.     First District, Sixth Division
                   Docket No. 1-15-2045



Filed              September 21, 2018



Decision Under     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 14-CR-8078; the
Review             Hon. Joseph G. Kazmierski, Judge, presiding.



Judgment           Reversed and remanded with directions.


Counsel on         Michael J. Pelletier, Patricia Mysza, and Sean Collins-Stapleton, of
Appeal             State Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.

                   Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg
                   and Brian K. Hodes, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the
                   People.



Panel              JUSTICE CONNORS delivered the judgment of the court, with
                   opinion.
                   Justices Hoffman and Cunningham concurred in the judgment and
                   opinion.
                                              OPINION

¶1       Defendant, Joseph Goodwin, was charged with threatening a public official, intimidation,
     and unlawful restraint after he yelled obscenities at an assistant state’s attorney and followed
     her down the hall of the courthouse to her office. After a jury trial, defendant was convicted of
     threatening a public official and unlawful restraint. He was ultimately sentenced to two and a
     half years’ imprisonment. Defendant appeals, arguing that (1) the State failed to prove him
     guilty of threatening a public official beyond a reasonable doubt because there was no
     evidence that he threatened the victim, (2) in the alternative, he was deprived of a fair trial due
     to ineffective assistance of counsel, (3) the threatening a public official statute is
     unconstitutional, and (4) the State failed to prove him guilty of unlawful restraint beyond a
     reasonable doubt. For the reasons that follow, we find that the State failed to prove defendant
     guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of threatening a public official and reverse his conviction.
     We also remand this matter to the circuit court to impose a sentence for defendant’s unlawful
     restraint conviction.

¶2                                        I. BACKGROUND
¶3       A grand jury charged defendant with the following respectively-numbered counts: (I)
     threatening a public official (720 ILCS 5/12-9(a)(1) (West 2014)), (II) intimidation (id.
     § 12-6(a)(2)), and (III) unlawful restraint (id. § 10-3(a)). The indictment named Assistant
     State’s Attorney Nora Gill as the public official at issue. The charges arose from an incident
     that occurred on the fourth floor of the Richard J. Daley Center (Daley Center) on March 19,
     2014. Defendant’s jury trial began on February 17, 2015, and ended on February 19, 2015,
     with the jury finding defendant guilty on counts I and III, and not guilty on count II.
¶4       After opening statements, the State called Gill to testify. Gill stated that she had been an
     assistant state’s attorney for eight years and that, on March 19, 2014, she was assigned to
     traffic court in courtroom 402 of the Daley Center. On that date, Gill was four and a half
     months’ pregnant. Gill testified that typically there are two assistant state’s attorneys assigned
     to a courtroom, but on that date, her partner was on vacation and law clerk Allison Kudzy was
     assisting her. Gill described the court call on March 19, 2014, as “very, very heavy,” and said
     the courtroom was “packed.” Gill stated that the court call was supposed to start at 9 a.m., but
     that Judge Dan Gallagher did not get to courtroom 402 until about 9:40 or 9:45 a.m. Gill stated
     that while she was waiting for the judge to take the bench, she spoke to some of the present
     defense attorneys. Specifically, she spoke with attorney Patrick Boyle, who represented
     Alfredo Montes. Gill testified that around 9:30 a.m., Boyle told her that he needed to get to
     federal court. Boyle asked Gill to let the judge know that he had been there and that Montes
     was represented and to request another date. Gill stated that the judge took the bench and
     Montes’s case was called first. Montes then approached the bench from the gallery and Gill
     informed the judge that Montes had an attorney who had to be in federal court at 10 a.m., and
     had asked that Gill put his name in the record and ask for a short date. In response, the judge
     “yelled” at Gill “ ‘[H]ow dare you let attorneys leave, I wanted this case called.’ ” Gill stated
     that the judge gave the case a very short date and “threw some papers and stormed off the
     bench and yelled at me to get my shit together.”
¶5       Gill testified that Montes was standing next to her at that point and looked confused. She
     thought Montes might think the judge was yelling at him, so she told Montes to come to her

                                                  -2-
     office down the hall to call his attorney and let him know what happened. Gill stated that she
     and Montes then turned towards the back of the courtroom and walked down the aisle towards
     the double doors, only one of which opened. Gill further stated that a man, whom she identified
     as defendant, was standing by the door that did not open and “approached me and he was like
     laughing and kind of pointing his finger, oh, you made the judge mad; ha, ha, you made the
     judge mad.” Gill testified that she responded, “between the two of us you are here on bond, so
     why don’t you find a seat.” As a result, defendant “got really loud and really angry, and he
     started putting his finger in my face and said, come back here and say that to my face, get back
     here and say that to my face.” Gill further stated that she then went to walk out the door with
     Montes still to her right, and that defendant “sort of edged *** Montes out and squeezed
     through the door with me at the exact same time, so he was like right in my face.” Gill testified
     that the small satellite office to which she took Montes was 40 feet from courtroom 402. Gill
     stated that the satellite office had a phone, a desk, a computer, and a couple of chairs.
¶6        Gill testified that on the way to the office, “[defendant] followed me. He stayed right here.
     I tried to move to the left closer to the wall, and he came right with me, just right in my face.
     The whole time he was just screaming louder and louder; fuck you bitch, come back here and
     say that to my face, you can’t talk to me, fuck you bitch. Just screaming just right in my face.”
     Gill indicated that defendant was about six to eight inches from her face. Gill stated that she
     felt scared and had not had a defendant do that to her in the previous four and a half years she
     had been assigned to traffic court. Gill testified that she did not say anything in response to
     defendant’s yelling. Gill testified that when she attempted to enter her office, she reached for
     the door handle and defendant “turned like right in front of the door, like right in front of me so
     I [could not] get into the door.” Gill stated that she could not get into her office at this point
     because defendant’s body was blocking the door. When asked what happened next, Gill
     responded:
                  “Montes was right behind us. He had been next to me, and the defendant squeezed
              him out. He reached through. The defendant reached with his hand like he was going to
              go for the handle, but [Montes] put his arm in and he pushed on the handle and he
              pushed open the door and I was able to get through between the wall and [Montes].
              [Montes] moved in between us.”
¶7        Gill testified that she and Montes then went into the office. Inside the office was Gill’s
     coworker, Assistant State’s Attorney Debra Chessick. Gill stated that once in the office, she sat
     down in a chair that was not visible from the door because she did not want defendant to be
     able to see her. Gill testified that Chessick was on the phone and she asked her to hang up so
     that she could call Montes’s attorney. While Gill made the phone call, defendant was “[r]ight
     outside the glass door.” Gill could see defendant’s hair and could hear him talking, but could
     not hear what he was saying. After Gill spoke to Montes’s attorney, Montes asked if he should
     stay or leave. Gill told him it was okay for him to go. Montes then opened the door to leave and
     shut the door behind him. Gill stated that when the door opened, she could hear defendant say
     “come out here and talk to me, come out here and talk to me you bitch.” Gill stated that a law
     clerk named Bobby then came into the office, and a couple minutes later, law clerk Kudzy
     came in. Gill testified that defendant was standing outside the door to the office for three or
     four minutes and “[i]t felt like a really long time.” Gill stated that at that point, she felt “really
     scared that [defendant] was going to do something.” Gill further stated that she did not feel free
     to leave the office. Specifically, she stated, “There was no way I could have gotten out of the


                                                   -3-
     office door. He was right there, and the whole time he was still yelling.” Gill explained that she
     did not try to leave the office because “[defendant] was right in the door and he was screaming;
     come out here, come out here you bitch, fuck you bitch.” Additionally, Gill stated that she tried
     to call her supervisor to tell her what had happened but she was “choked up” so Chessick took
     the phone and explained what happened. Gill stated that when law clerk Bobby came into the
     office, he stayed. Law clerk Kudzy, however, asked Gill if she was okay, and when Gill replied
     that she was not, Kudzy stated that she was going to get the sheriff who was assigned to
     courtroom 402. Shortly thereafter, the sheriff came to the office, and defendant left.
¶8       On cross examination, Gill stated that after the incident was over she had a “brief”
     conversation with Leann Goshen, an investigator from the sheriff’s department, within one or
     two hours of the incident. When asked if she ever told Goshen that defendant had said “fuck
     you, bitch” to her, Gill stated that she told Goshen that defendant was screaming in her face,
     but that she did not recall if Goshen asked for the specific words defendant used. Gill admitted
     that defendant never verbally threatened her with bodily harm. Gill also stated that while
     defendant was standing outside her office, he was on the phone. She clarified that she did not
     see him on the phone, but that she “heard conversation where it seemed like he was talking on
     the phone.” Gill denied that defendant was continuously asking for her name and denied that
     she ever threatened to have defendant locked up. On recross examination, Gill testified that she
     called Montes’s attorney when she was in the office, and did not call anyone in the sheriff’s
     department.
¶9       The State next called Montes, who testified that on March 19, 2014, he went to courtroom
     402 of the Daley Center because he had a case pending in that courtroom. Montes stated that on
     that date he arrived at 9 a.m. and saw his attorney, Patrick Boyle, in courtroom 402. Montes
     stated that he and Boyle had a conversation and then Boyle left to go to federal court. Montes
     testified that Judge Gallagher did not take the bench in courtroom 402 until 9:40 or 9:45 a.m.
     When asked what happened when he stepped up in front of the judge, Montes stated that “[the]
     State’s attorney told the judge that my lawyer had to go to federal court. [The judge] got really
     upset and started yelling at the state’s attorney and gave me a continuation date. Then she was
     going to do me a favor and call my attorney to let him know when was my continuation date.”
     Gill told Montes to follow her to one of the offices in the hallway so that she could call his
     attorney. Montes stated that when he stepped out into the hallway there was no one else in the
     hall, except Gill and a man who was about five feet, eight inches or five feet, nine inches tall,
     weighed about 140 or 150 pounds, and had dark skin and dreadlocks. Montes testified that he
     saw this man approach Gill, and heard her saying, “ ‘[Y]ou shouldn’t have said that,’ in a polite
     way.” Montes stated that the man then started yelling and following Gill towards the office, but
     that he did not know what the man was yelling about. Montes further stated, “Then we got to
     that office, he was standing right with his side part of his body blocking for her to get in. So
     when I walked to the door, I got in between them and I opened the door to allow [Gill] to get
     in.” Montes also explained this encounter at the office door by stating, “[W]hen I approached
     them, I got in between them two and opened the door handle and allowed—I had to push the
     guy to give me space to open the door and allow [Gill] to get in, and then I followed her.” After
     Montes opened the door, Gill walked in, and Montes followed her and closed the door. Montes
     testified that, at this point, Gill was “very upset” and had “watery eyes.” Montes stated that
     while in the office, he could see the man with dreadlocks standing outside the office door for
     “[a]t least a good five minutes.” Montes testified that Gill called his attorney once inside the


                                                 -4-
       office. After the phone call, Montes asked if it was okay to leave, and Gill said it was, so he left
       and went home. Montes stated that when he and Gill first walked into the office, there was a
       man and a woman already in the office. Montes also stated that he could tell Gill was pregnant
       at that time because “[h]er belly was pretty big.”
¶ 10        On cross examination, Montes stated that he did not see anyone put his finger in Gill’s face,
       and did not hear or see anyone say anything to Gill inside the courtroom. Montes also stated
       that he never heard the man with dreadlocks call Gill a bitch, did not hear him say “fuck you,
       bitch,” and did not hear that man threaten any physical harm to Gill. Montes also testified that
       he never saw the man with dreadlocks put his hands in Gill’s face or use any hand gestures in
       her face. Montes explained that he was “facing down,” was “wondering about [his] own case,”
       and did not hear what the man with dreadlocks was saying as he followed Gill to the office.
       Montes testified that he spoke with an investigator from the sheriff’s department and gave a
       written statement in connection with his interview. Montes stated that his written statement
       included that he pushed the man with the dreadlocks in the chest, but when pressed, the State
       volunteered to stipulate that it was not in Montes’s statement.
¶ 11        Assistant State’s Attorney Debra Chessick testified next. She stated that, in March 2014,
       she worked in the traffic courtrooms on the fourth floor of the Daley Center. Around 10 a.m. on
       March 19, 2014, Chessick was on the phone in the small satellite office when she heard some
       commotion, including “loud noises, maybe some yelling.” Chessick explained that when the
       door to the office is closed, a person could not hear exactly what is going on outside the door.
       Chessick testified that she saw Gill and two men entering the office. She stated that Gill was on
       the right, Montes in the middle, and defendant on the left. Chessick explained that “[a]s ***
       Montes was in the middle, he kind of had his arm stretched out to be a barrier in between the
       defendant and [Gill]. His hand was either on the glass or on the handle of the door to allow
       [Gill] access to the room.” Chessick stated that defendant did not come into the office, but
       stayed outside of the door, pacing back and forth and yelling. Chessick described Gill as “very
       upset” because her face was flushed and she looked like she was about to start crying. Chessick
       stated that Gill asked her to use the phone, so Chessick put the phone down, and Gill made a
       short phone call. Chessick testified that a law clerk, Bobby Cannatello, came into the office,
       and shortly thereafter law clerk Kudzy also came into the office.
¶ 12        Chessick further testified that she stepped one or two feet out of the office and told
       defendant to get away and that he had to get out of there. Chessick stated that defendant
       stepped back about seven feet, but was still visible from the office and was just across the
       hallway. Chessick testified that defendant was still loud at this point and demanded that
       Chessick give him Gill’s name and her information. Chessick also testified that defendant had
       his cell phone in his hand and said he was talking to his lawyer. Chessick described
       defendant’s voice as “demanding like he needed to get that information right that very second.”
       When asked how she felt at that moment, Chessick responded that she felt “scared” and stated
       “I [did not] feel safe. I [did not] know what he was going to do next, and I wished that there had
       been a sheriff that was close by to make him step away to get further away from our office.”
       When Chessick stepped back into the office, Gill tried to call their supervisor but was too
       upset, so Chessick took the phone and told the supervisor what had happened. Then, a sheriff’s
       deputy came over to speak with defendant.
¶ 13        On cross examination, Chessick testified that she never heard defendant say “fuck you
       bitch.” Chessick also testified that she was sure she briefly spoke to investigator Goshen, but

                                                    -5-
       did not remember the conversation very well. She recalled that she told the investigator that
       she saw defendant on his cell phone. Chessick stated that she “[did not] hear [defendant]
       threaten [Gill] with words,” but “the way his body was when she was coming into the room
       was threatening.” Chessick also testified that she never saw defendant physically grab or put
       his hands on Gill. She also never heard defendant threaten to grab Gill.
¶ 14       On redirect examination, Chessick testified that she saw defendant trying to get into the
       office. On recross examination, Chessick stated that defendant was trying to get into the office
       “[i]nitially when they were in the doorway.” When asked if she told the investigator that
       defendant tried to get into the office, Chessick responded that she did not remember.
¶ 15       The State’s final witness in its case-in-chief was Deputy Joe Glover of the Cook County
       Sheriff’s Department, who testified that on March 19, 2014, he was assigned to courtrooms
       402 and 404 of the Daley Center, which meant that he was to go back and forth between those
       two courtrooms throughout the day. Deputy Glover testified that Judge Gallagher was “pulling
       double duty” and also going between the two courtrooms that day. Deputy Glover testified that
       Judge Gallagher ran through the call in courtroom 404 and then they went to courtroom 402,
       where Gill was working. Deputy Glover stated that when the first case was called in courtroom
       402, Gill and a defendant were at the bench, and “Judge Gallagher got up visibly upset.”
       Deputy Glover stated that he could hear the “displeasure” in the judge’s voice, and the judge
       then left the bench and took a recess. Deputy Glover stated that Gill then left the courtroom
       through the doors leading out to the hallway, and that defendant, who was standing at the back
       of the room, “mentioned something to her, turned towards her and exited the courtroom with
       her.” Deputy Glover could not hear what defendant had said to Gill and could not hear whether
       Gill said anything back to defendant. After Gill left the room, Deputy Glover went to
       courtroom 404 with Judge Gallagher through the private hallway behind the courtrooms.
       Deputy Glover further testified that while in the private hallway, he was approached by law
       clerk Kudzy, who was frantic, and told him that “there was some guy yelling and screaming at
       [Gill].” Deputy Glover called the security supervisor to report the disturbance and then went
       into the public hallway with Kudzy, where she pointed to defendant, who was down the hall
       approximately six feet from the state’s attorney’s satellite office door. Deputy Glover testified
       that he observed defendant on his phone at this time, though defendant did not appear to be
       doing anything while on the phone. Deputy Glover then instructed defendant “to step back into
       [r]oom 402 where he started his day to wait for his case to be called” and defendant complied.
       Deputy Glover stated that after defendant’s case was called, he and other security officers took
       defendant into custody.
¶ 16       On cross examination, Deputy Glover testified that he never heard defendant yell or curse
       at anyone.
¶ 17       The State then rested its case-in-chief, and the trial court denied defendant’s motion for a
       directed verdict.
¶ 18       The defense first called defendant to testify. Defendant testified that at approximately 9
       a.m. on March 19, 2014, he was in courtroom 402 on the fourth floor of the Daley Center to
       pay off a fine for a traffic matter. Defendant testified that the courtroom was standing room
       only, so he stood in the back of the courtroom with a few other people. Defendant stated that
       court started “a little late,” and that Montes’s case was about the third case called. Defendant
       further stated that the judge became upset with Gill, raised his voice, and threw some papers
       down before calling a recess and going to the courtroom next door. Defendant testified that

                                                   -6-
       Gill “seemed to be physically a little bit upset at how the judge handled her at that point.”
       Defendant stated that at this point, he was “in conversation with a young lady at the back of the
       courtroom in regards to what was going on.” Specifically, he said that he and this unknown
       woman were “conversing back and forth” and the unknown woman commented that it seemed
       as though the deputy was trying to lock up Montes. Defendant testified that, in response, he
       said “yeah, wow, that [assistant state’s attorney] really pissed the judge off.” Defendant stated
       that he did not know that Gill was coming out of the courtroom at the same time as he and the
       unknown woman, and that Gill interrupted their conversation by stating “well, don’t you worry
       about who is getting locked up today, you worry about yourself getting locked [up].” In
       response to Gill, defendant testified, “Simultaneously, as I asked her, are you threatening me
       ma’am, I put my right hand in my pocket and grabbed my cell phone, instantly called my
       attorney, William Laws, at that point.” Defendant testified that he took Gill’s words as a threat
       because he had not appeared before the judge yet and he felt threatened by Gill because “she
       say[s] she is not a person that can have [me locked up], but look at what [I am] going through
       now. Off her word I was arrested that day.” Defendant stated that he then headed down the
       hallway to retreat to the bathroom to have a private conversation with his attorney to find out
       why the assistant state’s attorney “was saying she is going to lock me up or I could be locked
       up.” Defendant explained that his attorney had told him that it was okay to attend court by
       himself on that date. He also explained that he wanted to go to the bathroom to have a private
       conversation because there were people in the hallway coming in and out of the courtrooms.
       Defendant testified that when he was walking to the bathroom, Gill was about three steps
       behind him. Defendant saw Gill go into the state’s attorney’s satellite office, which he
       described as being “pretty much adjacent to the men’s bathroom.” Defendant then asked his
       attorney where he could file a complaint, and looked through the door of the office Gill entered
       “to see if there was a name on the front of the desk to go and make my complaint.” Defendant
       stated he was about seven or eight feet from the door when he was looking in. Defendant
       denied ever trying to touch the door of the office. Defendant also denied that Montes ever
       touched him and stated that Montes “never even came near me.”
¶ 19       Defendant further testified that, eventually, someone came out of the office and got
       “Deputy Joe,” who approached defendant and said, “[H]ey, when you get done with your call,
       just step back into the courtroom for me.” Defendant testified that when he went back into
       courtroom 402, he asked the clerk what the name of the female state’s attorney that was
       previously before the judge in that courtroom. The clerk did not know her name and told
       defendant to ask a male assistant state’s attorney who was present, but he turned his back and
       walked away from defendant. Defendant testified that when his case was finally called, he was
       told to sit in the front because one of the assistant state’s attorneys stated that defendant was to
       be “locked up today.” Thereafter, defendant was arrested. Defendant denied ever saying “fuck
       you” to Gill, denied ever calling her a bitch, and denied ever trying to touch her. Defendant
       also testified that he never put his hands in Gill’s face and never threatened her.
¶ 20       On cross examination, defendant testified that the men’s bathroom is “down the hall” from
       the state’s attorney’s satellite office. He also testified that he had his attorney’s phone number
       on speed dial. Defendant stated that on the date in question he did not know that Gill was
       pregnant and explained that Gill “is shorter than I am, so when she made the comment to me
       when I was leaving out the courtroom, when I turned around, the only thing I actually saw was
       her face.” Defendant also stated that he did not know the name of the woman he spoke with at


                                                    -7-
       the back of the courtroom. Additionally, defendant testified that Montes’s testimony that he
       went in between Gill and defendant was untrue. Defendant further stated that he never raised
       his voice at Gill, but that she, in fact, yelled at him. Defendant stated that Gill raised her voice
       similar to how the prosecutor was currently raising his voice at defendant during cross
       examination. When asked if he felt threatened by the prosecutor, defendant responded that he
       did not feel threatened but felt intimidated. The prosecutor then asked, “Though I am
       intimidating you, nothing is stopping you from saying a lot of things to me, is it?” Defendant
       responded:
                    “You have to look at it like this, sir. Once again, there is a time and place for
                everything. Any time as a black man you are in a courthouse, you have to be conscious
                of what [sic] and what you do. So me responding to you negatively will not do anything
                positive for me, nor would it have done anything for me responding negative[ly] to
                [Gill] down at the Daley Center.”
¶ 21        Subsequently, defendant was asked what his race had to do with this case, and defendant
       responded that “we can say it has nothing to do with it, we can say it has everything to do with
       it, but I mention my race just as much as you mention her pregnancy.” Defendant further
       testified that he was about 5 feet, 9 inches tall, but did not know how much he weighed. When
       asked by the prosecutor if, as a 5-foot, nine-inch man, he was threatened by “this pregnant
       woman,” defendant responded, “Yes, sir. You can get pulled over by [an] officer [that is]
       4’10”. We are not talking about [stature] that makes a person a threat.” Defendant confirmed
       that Gill was not wearing a gun or badge on the date in question and explained, “Without the
       gun and badge, she still has me here today, so I was very much threatened at that point in time
       in my life.” Defendant also confirmed that he never filed a complaint against Gill.
¶ 22        The defense next called investigator Leann Goshen from the Cook County Sheriff’s
       Department. Goshen testified that on March 19, 2014, she was called to the Daley Center to
       investigate an incident involving a threat to a public official. Goshen said that she and her
       partner conducted interviews with Gill and defendant and stated, “There might have been a
       couple other interviews.” Goshen testified that during the interviews she took notes and
       ultimately prepared a report. When asked if during the interview Gill ever told her that
       defendant said, “[C]ome out here and talk to me bitch,” Goshen responded, “In my notes I
       didn’t write that because things are in summary. It is not verbatim.” Goshen further testified
       that she did not write that defendant said, “[F]uck you bitch” in her report. The report also did
       not state that defendant tried to grab the handle of the satellite office door, but did state
       defendant had blocked the doorway. Goshen also testified that her report only stated that
       defendant was making gestures, but did not state that he pointed a finger in Gill’s face. Goshen
       testified that she also interviewed Montes, but stated her report did not mention of Montes ever
       pushing defendant in the chest. Goshen also interviewed Chessick and testified that Chessick
       never told her that defendant attempted to enter the satellite office.
¶ 23        On cross examination, Goshen read the following excerpt from her report:
                    “[Defendant] approached *** Gill making rude comments. [Defendant] followed
                *** Gill to her office yelling, pointing her finger in his—excuse me—pointing his
                finger in her face. [Defendant] blocked the doorway of *** Gill’s office, not letting ***
                Gill enter her office.”
       Goshen then clarified that, in fact, defendant’s finger pointing was included in her report.
       Goshen also stated that she never asked Gill what exact words defendant yelled at her. Goshen

                                                    -8-
       further testified that for each interview she conducted, she was just looking for a summary or a
       “general sense” of what occurred.
¶ 24       In rebuttal, the State called law clerk Bobby Cannatello, who testified that on the date at
       issue, he was working as a law clerk for the State’s Attorney’s Office and was assigned to
       courtroom 408. Cannatello testified that at approximately 9:45 a.m., he left courtroom 408 to
       go to the satellite office down the hall. He estimated that the walk between the courtroom and
       the office took 45 seconds. Cannatello testified that while he was walking down the hallway to
       the office, he “heard a man’s voice, a deep voice fairly loud.” He identified defendant as the
       man whose voice he heard. Cannatello testified that defendant was approximately one foot
       from the satellite office door and was yelling, “This is fucking bullshit, come out of the office.
       I want your fucking name, bitch.” Cannatello then entered the office, where he observed Gill,
       Chessick, and “a Latino gentleman.” Cannatello testified that when he entered the office, the
       door was closed, and is always closed because “[i]t automatically closes.” Cannatello further
       testified that he noticed that Gill was “red, teary-eyed” and was crying “kind of hysterical.”
       Cannatello asked if there was anything he could do, such as get the sheriff’s bailiff, but he
       remained in the office because he “felt uncomfortable leaving [Gill] and [Chessick] alone.”
       Cannatello testified that while in the office, he could hear defendant in the hallway screaming,
       “[C]ome out of the office you fucking bitch, give me your fucking name, this is bullshit.”
       Shortly after Cannatello arrived in the office, law clerk Kudzy came in, but she left
       immediately to get the sheriff’s bailiff, who arrived about 30-45 seconds later. Cannatello
       testified that he then saw the sheriff and defendant walking down the hallway.
¶ 25       On cross examination, Cannatello testified that defendant never spoke to him, and he could
       not recall whether defendant was on the phone during the occurrence. Cannatello also testified
       that he spoke with investigator Goshen approximately two or three hours after the occurrence.
       Cannatello stated that he told Goshen that defendant had said, “[T]his is fucking bullshit.”
       Goshen was taking notes during their interview, but Cannatello could not see what she was
       writing down. Cannatello stated that his conversation with Goshen was “less than a minute
       long” but that he told her that defendant said, “I want your name, bitch” and “come out of the
       fucking office.” Cannatello testified that while he was in the office with Gill and Chessick, he
       did not make any attempt to contact any sheriffs or police officers.
¶ 26       The defense then re-called Goshen in rebuttal, who testified that she spoke with Cannatello
       after the incident in question and took notes during their conversation. Goshen also testified
       that she recalled Cannatello saying that an individual was yelling, but could not recall what his
       exact words were. When presented with her report from her interview with Cannatello, Goshen
       testified that neither her notes nor her report included that defendant said, “[T]his is fucking
       bullshit,” “I want your name, bitch,” or “come out of the fucking office, bitch.” Goshen
       explained that her notes are not verbatim.
¶ 27       On cross examination, Goshen testified that her interview with Cannatello lasted less than
       a minute. She also stated that he could have told her all of the expletives that defendant was
       yelling, but that she just did not include them in her report. Goshen stated that her notes are
       merely “summaries.”
¶ 28       After closing arguments, the jury was instructed about the offense of threatening a public
       official by Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal, Nos. 11.49 and 11.50 (4th ed. 2000)
       (hereinafter IPI Criminal 4th). The court also instructed the jury that “[a] person holding the
       position of assistant state’s attorney is a public official” pursuant to IPI Criminal 4th No.

                                                   -9-
       11.49A. Further, the jury was given an instruction regarding the definition of a threat based on
       IPI Criminal 4th No. 13.33F (1)-(2), (5). Specifically, the court stated, “The word threat means
       a menace, however communicated, to inflict physical harm on the person threatened or any
       other person or on property or subject any person to physical confinement or restraint or
       expose any person to hatred, contempt, or ridicule.” The defense did not object to the giving of
       this instruction, and did not request that an instruction be given regarding the definition of a
       “true threat.”
¶ 29       The jury found defendant guilty of threatening a public official and unlawful restraint, but
       acquitted him of intimidation. Defendant filed a motion for new trial, arguing, inter alia, that
       the jury’s verdicts were legally and factually inconsistent and against the manifest weight of
       the evidence. The motion was denied on April 14, 2015. Also on that date, the court merged the
       unlawful restraint count into the threatening a public official count and sentenced defendant to
       two-and-a-half years’ imprisonment. Defendant subsequently filed a motion to reconsider his
       sentence, which was denied on June 3, 2015. Defendant filed his timely notice of appeal on
       June 16, 2015. Oral argument was held in this case on August 30, 2018.

¶ 30                                          II. ANALYSIS
¶ 31       Defendant raises four arguments on appeal: (1) defendant’s conviction for threatening a
       public official should be reversed because the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
       that he intended to convey any threat, much less a true threat; (2) in the alternative, defense
       counsel deprived defendant of a fair trial when counsel argued that the jury should acquit him
       of threatening a public official because his speech was protected by the first amendment, but
       failed to request a true threat jury instruction; (3) the threatening a public official statute
       violates the constitutional guarantees of free speech and due process because the statute does
       not require proof that a defendant had the subjective intent to make a true threat; and
       (4) defendant’s unlawful restraint conviction should be reversed because his speech, directed
       to a public official, cannot be categorized as “fighting words” that conveyed a true threat, and
       thus his speech was protected from criminal sanction by the first amendment. We address each
       below.

¶ 32                 A. Sufficiency of the Evidence for Threatening a Public Official
¶ 33       We first address defendant’s contention that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a
       reasonable doubt of the offense of threatening a public official.
¶ 34       Section 12-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012 (Code) (720 ILCS 5/12-9 (West 2014))
       provides, in relevant part:
                   “(a) A person commits threatening a public official or human service provider
              when:
                       (1) that person knowingly delivers or conveys, directly or indirectly, to a public
                   official or human service provider by any means a communication:
                           (i) containing a threat that would place the public official or human service
                       provider or a member of his or her immediate family in reasonable
                       apprehension of immediate or future bodily harm, sexual assault, confinement,
                       or restraint; or
                           *** and

                                                   - 10 -
                        (2) the threat was conveyed because of the performance or nonperformance of
                    some public duty or duty as a human service provider, because of hostility of the
                    person making the threat toward the status or position of the public official or the
                    human service provider, or because of any other factor related to the official’s
                    public existence.”
¶ 35        Generally, the critical inquiry on review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a
       criminal conviction “is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
       prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
       beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Emphasis in original.) Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319
       (1979). Citing Duncan v. Peterson, 408 Ill. App. 3d 911 (2010), defendant asserts that the
       Jackson standard does not apply to this matter. In Duncan, the court recognized that “[w]e
       review de novo whether a statement qualifies as constitutionally protected speech under the
       first amendment.” Id. at 918. In response, the State points out that the court in People v. Dye,
       2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 11, a case upon which defendant heavily relies for its substance,
       applied the Jackson standard, and contends that defendant’s argument regarding Duncan is
       misplaced because that case examined whether a statement was constitutionally protected as
       religious opinion and this case is not about whether a specific statement was protected. The
       State further contends that the Jackson standard is proper because the facts of this case involve
       the totality of defendant’s conduct toward Gill, which cannot be distilled into a “statement.”
       We agree with the State’s characterization of the issues before this court, and thus must
       determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found defendant guilty beyond a
       reasonable doubt of threatening a public official.
¶ 36        Defendant does not contest that Gill was a public official at the time he confronted her or
       that he knew this to be the case. Instead, defendant argues that he did not convey a threat, let
       alone a “true threat” as was necessary in order to convict. Defendant advances two arguments
       on this point. First, defendant contends that the State’s evidence failed to prove that he
       threatened a public official because the evidence shows that he did not convey any threat to
       Gill and Gill herself testified that defendant did not verbally threaten her with bodily harm. In
       the alternative, defendant argues that the State failed to prove that he intended to convey a “true
       threat,” and thus his conviction violates the first amendment of the United States Constitution.
¶ 37        Various Illinois statutes, including section 12-9 of the Code, criminalize the making of
       threats. The first amendment, applicable to the states through the fourteenth amendment,
       prohibits the enactment of laws “abridging the freedom of speech.” U.S. Const., amends. I,
       XIV. The first amendment signifies that the government does not have the power to prohibit
       expression based on its subject matter, message, ideas, or content. Ashcroft v. American Civil
       Liberties Union, 535 U.S. 564, 573 (2002). However, the United States Supreme Court has
       recognized that there are categories of expressions that are not protected by the first
       amendment, such as “true threats.” United States v. Alvarez, 567 U.S. 709, 717 (2012)
       (plurality opinion). We have consistently held that if the State charges a defendant with making
       a threat of violence, the threat must be a “true threat,” or else the prosecution would violate the
       first amendment. People v. Wood, 2017 IL App (1st) 143135, ¶ 13, appeal denied, No. 123250
       (Ill. May 30, 2018); Dye, 2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 8; People v. Sucic, 401 Ill. App. 3d 492,
       502-03 (2010).
¶ 38        Further, when interpreting section 12-9 of the Code, “we have held that intentionality on
       the defendant’s part is required.” Wood, 2017 IL App (1st) 143135, ¶ 13 (citing Dye, 2015 IL

                                                   - 11 -
       App (4th) 130799, ¶ 10). In Dye, this court observed that “a ‘true threat’ requires intentionality
       [citation], in contrast to section 12-9(a)(1) [citation], which, by its terms, requires merely
       knowledge (‘knowingly’).” Dye, 2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 10. This means that in order for
       a defendant’s conviction for threatening a public official to stand, the threat must have been a
       “true threat.” See id. In Virginia v. Black, the Supreme Court explained a “true threat” as
       follows:
                    “ ‘True threats’ encompass those statements where the speaker means to
               communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to
               a particular individual or group of individuals. [Citations.] The speaker need not
               actually intend to carry out the threat. Rather, a prohibition on true threats protect[s]
               individuals from the fear of violence and from the disruption that fear engenders, in
               addition to protecting people from the possibility that the threatened violence will
               occur.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 538 U.S. 343, 359-60 (2003).
¶ 39       Pursuant to Black, the question we must address is whether the State proved beyond a
       reasonable doubt that defendant communicated a serious expression of intent to commit an act
       of unlawful violence against Gill that placed Gill in reasonable apprehension of immediate or
       future bodily harm, sexual assault, confinement, or restraint. The parties disagree over the
       perspective from which we analyze this question. Defendant argues that after Black was
       decided, courts have used a subjective speaker-based test—whether a reasonable person would
       understand that the person making a threatening statement intended to make a true threat under
       the circumstances—when determining whether a statement is entitled to first amendment
       protection. The State responds that the traditional, objective test that was used prior to
       Black—whether an ordinary, reasonable recipient would interpret the defendant’s statement as
       a threat—still applies.
¶ 40       Our supreme court recently acknowledged that “it is unclear whether the true threat
       exemption from the first amendment would apply to a statement made with innocent intent but
       which negligently coveys a message that a reasonable person would perceive to be
       threatening” (People v. Relerford, 2017 IL 121094, ¶ 38), but did not resolve the issue. The
       State relies on People v. Diomedes, 2014 IL App (2d) 121080, to support its position. There,
       the Second District looked to the federal courts and examined this issue as follows:
               “In United States v. Parr [citation], the Seventh Circuit discussed that there also exists
               a split of authority on whether (based on Black’s language that true threats encompass
               statements wherein the speaker means to communicate a serious threat to harm) a
               subjective element was introduced into the analysis or whether the traditional, objective
               reasonable-person test should continue to be applied. In doing so, however, it described
               the traditional objective test as asking whether a reasonable speaker would understand
               that his or her statement would be interpreted as a threat (the ‘objective “reasonable
               speaker” ’ test) or, alternatively, whether a reasonable recipient would interpret the
               statement as a threat (the objective ‘ “reasonable recipient” ’ test). [Citation.] The Parr
               court stated that ‘[t]his circuit has not yet addressed the issue,’ and it described its
               former decision in Fuller as merely ‘a post-Black true threats case applying, without
               reference to Black, the traditional objective “reasonable person” test.’ [Citation.]
                    Accordingly, it appears that the Seventh Circuit’s approach has been, and remains,
               an objective one, which allows evaluation of the speaker’s communication under either
               the reasonable-speaker or the reasonable-recipient test. Further, although courts in this

                                                   - 12 -
                state have not explicitly decided the issue, the approach also appears to be objective.
                For example in Sucic, the defendant relied on Black to argue that a subjective approach
                should be applied to determine whether his statements amounted to true threats.
                [Citation.] In addressing that claim, the court noted that, while there has been a federal
                split of authority interpreting Black, Illinois courts have found that the term ‘threat’
                implies generally that the expression has a ‘reasonable tendency to create apprehension
                that its originator will act according to its tenor.’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
                [Citation.] This definition suggests that an objective, not a subjective, approach
                continues to apply. [Citation.]
                    Therefore, it appears that neither the objective reasonable-speaker nor the objective
                reasonable-recipient approach is foreclosed from our consideration. Indeed, in our
                view, the reasonable-speaker test, by requiring consideration of how others might
                interpret the communication, essentially subsumes or encompasses the
                reasonable-recipient test. In any event, even applying, per defendant’s request, the
                reasonable-speaker approach, we conclude that the evidence here is such that a speaker
                would reasonably foresee that a listener would reasonably interpret the communication
                as a serious expression of intent to harm.” (Emphases in original.) Id. ¶¶ 33-35.
¶ 41        Conversely, defendant relies on Dye and Wood as support for a test with a subjective
       component. In Dye, the Fourth District applied a subjective test in reaching its conclusion that
       the evidence did not prove that when the defendant told an assistant public defender, “ ‘ “I’m
       gonna get you,” ’ ” the defendant intended to convey the idea of violent retribution, as opposed
       to nonviolent retribution. Dye, 2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 12. Similarly, in Wood, this court
       determined that the Supreme Court’s decision in Elonis v. United States, 575 U.S. ___, ___,
       135 S. Ct. 2001, 2011 (2015), required that “statutes criminalizing speech for being threatening
       require proof that the speaker intends the communication to be a threat and that a reasonable
       listener would understand the communication to be threatening.” Wood, 2017 IL App (1st)
       143135, ¶ 13.
¶ 42        The State has failed to present, and we have not found, a compelling reason why we should
       depart from the test applied by this court in Wood. The decision in Wood resulted from this
       court’s analysis of the same issue with which we are now faced. As such, we apply the same
       test as in Wood, and thus decide whether the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt that
       defendant intended his communication to Gill to be a threat that a reasonable listener would
       understand to be threatening. See id. Had we opted to apply the State’s version of the test, then
       our question would be whether the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt that a reasonable
       person in defendant’s position would have foreseen that a listener would reasonably interpret
       his communication as a serious expression of intent to harm. See Diomedes, 2014 IL App (2d)
       121080, ¶ 35. We find it difficult to reconcile the State’s proposed test with Black’s declaration
       that “ ‘[t]rue threats’ encompass those statements where the speaker means to communicate a
       serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual
       or group of individuals.” (Emphases added.) Black, 538 U.S. at 359-60. We also fail to see how
       the State could prove the requisite elements of threatening a public official without a subjective
       component because section 12-9 of the Code requires that a person “knowingly” convey a
       communication containing a threat. 720 ILCS 5/12-9 (West 2014). A person acts knowingly if
       he is consciously aware that his conduct is practically certain to cause the prohibited result.
       People v. Lengyel, 2015 IL App (1st) 131022, ¶ 45. Thus, the language of the statute makes


                                                   - 13 -
       clear that defendant’s subjective intent is relevant to determine whether the State satisfied the
       requisite elements.
¶ 43       Defendant asserts that the State failed to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of
       threatening a public official because the evidence did not establish that defendant intended to
       communicate a “true threat.” Specifically, defendant asserts that the State presented no
       evidence that defendant issued a distinct verbal threat to Gill, and instead only presented
       evidence of him yelling obscenities at her. Further, defendant asserts that the State did not
       prove that defendant meant to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act
       of unlawful violence as is required in order to establish a “true threat.” Black, 538 U.S. at
       359-60. The State responds that it satisfied its burden by proving that defendant’s “true threat”
       was communicated by the totality of his unambiguously menacing conduct. We find that,
       viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, no rational trier of fact
       could have found the essential elements of threatening a public official beyond a reasonable
       doubt where the State presented no evidence that defendant meant to communicate a serious
       expression of an intent to commit an unlawful act of violence. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319.
¶ 44       Defendant relies on Wood and Dye as support for his contentions, and we find those cases
       instructive. In Wood, this court was recently faced with a question similar to the one before us
       now. There, the defendant was charged with threatening a public official after he left a
       voicemail for his public defender wherein the defendant stated, inter alia, that he hated the
       judge who presided over his case and “pray[ed] for the death and destruction upon the judge
       and upon every single person who sentenced [him].” Wood, 2017 IL App (1st) 143135, ¶ 4. On
       appeal, the defendant argued that his conviction should be reversed because he did not convey
       any communication to the judge, and because the content of his speech was not a “true threat.”
       Id. ¶ 12. The court began by determining whether the defendant even made a threat to the
       judge, and defined a threat as “ ‘[a] communicated intent to inflict harm or loss on another or
       on another’s property.’ ” Id. ¶ 13 (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 1618 (9th ed. 2009)). The
       court added that intentionality by the defendant is required when interpreting section 12-9 of
       the Code and that intentionality means that for a conviction for threatening a public official to
       stand, the threat must be a “true threat.” Id. The court further explained, “Under recent
       Supreme Court precedent, statutes criminalizing speech for being threatening require proof
       that the speaker intends the communication to be a threat and that a reasonable listener would
       understand the communication to be threatening.” Id. (citing Elonis, 575 U.S. at ___, 135 S.
       Ct. at 2011).
¶ 45       The Wood court focused on the part of defendant’s statements that “ ‘there is not a day that
       goes by since I was sentenced at that courthouse that I have not dreamed about revenge and the
       utter hate I feel for the judge’ and ‘there’s not a day that goes by that I don’t pray for the death
       and destruction upon the judge.’ ” Id. ¶ 14. The court determined that neither of these
       statements, individually or in their entirety, threatened immediate or future bodily harm, sexual
       assault, confinement, or restraint as required by section 12-9 of the Code. Id. Additionally, the
       court stated that the defendant’s statements were not “ ‘serious expression[s] of an intent to
       commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual.’ ” Id. ¶ 15 (quoting Black, 538
       U.S. at 359). In fact, the court opined that the defendant never said he was going to do
       anything, but instead merely hoped and prayed that bad things would happen to those he felt
       had wronged him. Id. The State contended that the circumstances surrounding the phone call
       showed that the defendant intended to make a threat and that a reasonable person could


                                                    - 14 -
       construe the communication as a threat. Id. ¶ 16. The State also pointed out that the defendant
       was upset at the time he called, called from a blocked number, and did not leave his name on
       the voicemail. Id. Additionally, the judge, who was the subject of the defendant’s phone call,
       testified at trial “about his subjective apprehension after the message was played for him by the
       assistant public defender” and that he “became suspicious of others and was scared for the
       safety of himself and his family.” Id. The court acknowledged that the “circumstances
       surrounding the threat are obviously important.” Id. (citing Watts v. United States, 394 U.S.
       705, 708 (1969) (per curiam)). However, the court ultimately held that although “unsettling,”
       the context provided by the State did not transform the defendant’s remarks into a true threat
       because there was no evidence establishing that the defendant intended to convey the idea of
       violent retribution. Id. ¶ 17. The court explained that the statements at issue did not warn of any
       future harm, were vague and ambiguous, and did not indicate any actual intent to carry out a
       threat or any intent to affirmatively do anything. Id. ¶ 22. The court also characterized the
       defendant’s statements as “distasteful, inept, and crude,” but nonetheless “not criminal.” Id.
       The court concluded, “The State cannot criminalize a defendant’s dream for revenge unless,
       along with that expressed dream, the defendant seriously expresses an intention to commit an
       act of unlawful violence to fulfill his dream.” Id.
¶ 46       We also find Dye applicable to the case at bar. In Dye, the defendant and his public
       defender had a meeting where the public defender informed the defendant that she had
       subpoenaed some documents and inadvertently uncovered evidence that would be harmful to
       the defendant’s case, and that the State would receive a copy of this harmful evidence. Dye,
       2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 3. The defendant became irate and pointed at the public defender
       and told her, “ ‘ “I’m gonna get you,” ’ ” two or three times. Id. ¶¶ 4-5. The public defender
       responded, “ ‘ “Are you fucking threatening me?” ’ ” and the defendant stated, “ ‘ “No, no. I
       ain’t threatening you.” ’ ” Id. ¶ 5. During this confrontation, a paralegal stepped between the
       defendant and the public defender because of the defendant’s mannerisms, aggressive speech,
       and posture. Id. The public defender was “scared, trembling, and on the verge of tears.” Id. ¶ 6.
       On appeal, the court reversed defendant’s conviction for threatening a public official because it
       found that it would have been impossible for any rational trier of fact to find, beyond a
       reasonable doubt, that the defendant made a “true threat” within the meaning of Black. Id. ¶ 1.
       Specifically, the court held that the defendant’s threat, “ ‘ “I’m gonna get you,” ’ ” was
       ambiguous as to whether the intended meaning was violent retribution or nonviolent
       retribution, and the context of the threat could not reasonably resolve the ambiguity. Id.
¶ 47       At the outset of its analysis, the Dye court stated, “we interpret section 12-9 as requiring
       intentionality.” Id. ¶ 10. The court then acknowledged that “no witness had direct sensory
       access to defendant’s mind and intent,” and thus “the trier of fact could determine what he
       intended only by drawing inferences from his conduct, including what he said.” Id. ¶ 11. The
       court framed the question before it as, “Looking at the evidence in the light most favorable to
       the prosecution, would it be possible for any rational trier of fact to find, beyond a reasonable
       doubt, that defendant intended to physically threaten [his public defender]?” Id. The court
       concluded that there was no evidence that would justify a reasonable inference that the
       defendant intended to convey the idea of violence. Id. ¶ 12. Specifically, the court noted that
       during the encounter at issue, the defendant and his public defender were both shouting and a
       witness had described the defendant’s speech and posture as “ ‘aggressive.’ ” Id. Nonetheless,



                                                   - 15 -
       the court explained, “When people are angry, however, they tend to become loud and tense and
       to make vigorous gestures—even when threatening to do something nonviolent.” Id.
¶ 48        In this case, like in Wood and Dye, the evidence presented by the State was not sufficient to
       prove that defendant meant for his communications and expressions to Gill to convey a serious
       intent to carry out an unlawful act of violence. Simply put, the State did not meet its burden to
       prove that defendant meant to threaten Gill with unlawful violence. It is undisputed that
       defendant did not make any verbal threats to Gill. Gill testified that defendant never verbally
       threatened her with bodily harm. Gill testified that defendant initially approached her after the
       judge stormed off the bench on the date at issue by laughing, pointing at her, and stating that
       “oh, you made the judge mad; ha ha, you made the judge mad.” Gill stated that she responded,
       “[B]etween the two of us you are here on bond, so why don’t you find a seat.” Defendant, on
       the other hand, testified that Gill stated, “[W]ell, don’t you worry about who is getting locked
       up today, you worry about yourself getting locked [up].” Gill testified that subsequently
       defendant followed her to the satellite office, and told her to “come back here and say that to
       my face, get back here and say that to my face.” Gill also testified that defendant screamed,
       “[F]uck you, bitch, come back here and say that to my face, you can’t talk to me, fuck you
       bitch.” Montes, who was near Gill during the encounter, did not know what defendant was
       yelling about, but testified that he never heard defendant say “fuck you, bitch” or threaten her
       with physical harm. Chessick testified that defendant demanded that she give him Gill’s name
       and her information, but that she never heard defendant say “fuck you, bitch.” Likewise,
       Deputy Glover testified that he did not hear defendant yell at Gill. The only witness besides
       Gill to testify that defendant used expletives was Cannatello, who testified that he heard
       defendant yell, “This is fucking bullshit, come out of the office. I want your fucking name,
       bitch.” Defendant denied ever calling Gill a bitch or saying “fuck you” to her.
¶ 49        This foregoing testimony establishes that there was no evidence that defendant verbally
       threatened Gill. This is significant because, as a result, whether the State met its burden
       depends on whether any rational trier of fact could reasonably infer from defendant’s
       expressions and demeanor that he intended to commit an unlawful act of violence against Gill.
       As stated in Dye, “the trier of fact could determine what [defendant] intended only by drawing
       inferences from his conduct, including what he said.” 2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 11. After
       reviewing the evidence, we find that no rational trier of fact could have found that the State
       proved beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant intended to convey an unlawful threat of
       violence to Gill. Merely because defendant used offensive language in a loud voice does not
       create a reasonable inference that he intended to use violence. As stated in Dye, “When people
       are angry, however, they tend to become loud and tense and to make vigorous gestures—even
       when threatening to do something nonviolent.” Id. ¶ 12. Additionally, the evidence did not
       show beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant made any overtly threatening gestures. Gill
       testified that defendant put his finger in her face. However, this is not an overtly threatening
       gesture, such as shaking a fist at someone, dragging a finger across one’s throat, or pounding a
       fist into an open hand. In the context of the factual scenario here, defendant’s pointing at Gill
       while yelling his desire to learn her name in an expletive-laden tirade does not rationally
       indicate his desire to inflict violent harm on Gill. Defendant argues, and we agree, that there is
       no case wherein conduct similar to his was deemed sufficient to convict someone of
       threatening a public official.



                                                   - 16 -
¶ 50       The State argues that defendant communicated his threat to Gill through the totality of his
       “unambiguously menacing and threatening conduct.” We agree with the State that we must
       look to the totality of defendant’s conduct because “[t]he circumstances surrounding the threat
       are obviously important.” Wood, 2017 IL App (1st) 143135, ¶ 16 (citing Watts, 394 U.S. at
       708). However, we disagree that the totality of defendant’s conduct evidenced his intent, or
       allowed reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom that would evidence his intent, to convey
       a serious threat of unlawful violence against Gill. Rather, the evidence creates a reasonable
       inference that defendant was attempting to obtain Gill’s name so that he could file a complaint
       against her. Gill denied that defendant ever asked for her name, but Chessick and Cannatello
       both testified that defendant asked for Gill’s name. We find this similar to the factual scenario
       in Dye. There, the court found that the defendant did not intend to convey the idea of violent
       retribution when he told his public defender, “ ‘ “I’m gonna get you.” ’ ” Dye, 2015 IL App
       (4th) 130799, ¶ 12. The court reasoned that “ ‘[g]et’ ” was “just as apt a word for nonviolent
       punishment as violent punishment and some additional facts, beyond the mere utterance,
       would be necessary to infer, beyond a reasonable doubt, that ‘I’m going to get you’ was
       intended as a threat of violence.” Id. Here, the evidence established that defendant asked for
       Gill’s name on numerous occasions and was observed talking on the phone by multiple
       witnesses. Defendant testified that he was on his phone because he was calling his attorney to
       seek advice as to how to file a complaint against Gill. The evidence also established that
       defendant demanded Gill give him her name, that defendant demanded Chessick give him
       Gill’s name, and that defendant yelled obscenities outside the office in order to obtain this
       information. Chessick specifically testified that defendant’s speech was “demanding like he
       needed to get that information right that very second.” This indicates that defendant’s intent
       was focused on obtaining Gill’s name, not inflicting violent harm upon her.
¶ 51       In Dye, the defendant’s speech and posture were described as “ ‘aggressive.’ ” Id. Here,
       Chessick testified that, although she did not hear defendant threaten Gill with words, “the way
       his body was when she was coming into the room was threatening.” Chessick also testified that
       she “[did not] feel safe.” However, Chessick’s testimony regarding “the way [defendant’s]
       body was” does not create a reasonable inference of defendant’s intent to threaten Gill with
       violence because defendant’s conduct was not overtly threatening and Chessick did not
       provide an explanation that would lead a rational trier of fact to infer defendant’s intent to
       threaten violence. “We should draw only reasonable inferences in favor of the prosecution; we
       should not make random speculations in favor of the prosecution.” (Emphasis in original.) Id.
       Additionally, like the public defender in Dye who was “scared, trembling, and on the verge of
       tears,” Gill was also described as tearful and hysterical. However, as was done by the court in
       Dye, we consider the victim’s reaction and impression of the defendant in context of the
       totality of the circumstances and do not find that Gill’s reaction to defendant is an appropriate
       source from which to infer defendant’s intent.
¶ 52       We further find it significant that defendant complied when Chessick asked him to step
       back from the office door and complied when Deputy Glover asked him to return to the
       courtroom after he finished his phone call. This indicates that defendant was not seriously
       expressing an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence against Gill. See Black, 538 U.S. at
       359-60. Further, although Gill testified that she did not feel she could leave the office, she also
       testified she never tried, even though two law clerks had come into and gone out of the office
       while she was in there. The totality of the evidence here did not satisfy the State’s burden. It


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       would be purely speculative to infer that defendant intended to convey a threat of unlawful
       violence against Gill based on the evidence presented at trial. Rather, we agree with defendant
       that a reasonable inference could be drawn from defendant’s statements and conduct that he
       was angry about what Gill had said to him in the courtroom, wanted to find out her name so
       that he could file a complaint, and wanted her to come out of the office to provide him with her
       information. While we would characterize defendant’s conduct as “distasteful, inept, and
       crude,” as in Dye, we also view such conduct as “not criminal.” See Wood, 2017 IL App (1st)
       143135, ¶ 22.
¶ 53       Although the State’s closing argument is not raised as an issue on appeal, we find that a
       comment made by the State indicates that it believed that it could meet its burden merely by
       proving that Gill felt threatened because of how defendant appeared to her or how she felt. In
       closing, the prosecutor stated that in order to convict defendant of threatening a public official,
       the jury had to find that “defendant knowingly delivered or conveyed directly or indirectly to a
       public official by any means a communication containing a threat that would place the public
       official in a reasonable apprehension of immediate or future bodily harm, confinement, or
       restraint.” The State went on to explain as follows:
                    “Directly or indirectly; it doesn’t have to be direct. It doesn’t have to be specific.
                [Defendant] didn’t have to tell [Gill] I’m going to hurt you. I am going to confine you.
                I’m going to restrain you. He doesn’t have to use those words at all. He doesn’t have to
                use words, period. A menacing look, a gesture is enough.”
       The defense then made an objection, which was overruled. The State continued with the
       following example:
                    “The boogie man is walking down the street on the same side you are on and you
                see him and just his mere presence scares you, just his mere presence, the way he
                positioned his body, any gestures he may make, the look in his eyes towards you which
                causes you to cross the street, that is an indirect threat.”
¶ 54       While we agree that there are no magic words that indicate a defendant’s intent to convey a
       threat, we believe this example by the State exemplifies why no rational trier of fact could have
       properly found defendant guilty based on the facts of this case. Neither the case that the State
       presented, nor the example given in its closing argument, represents a threat outside the
       protection of the first amendment because neither contains an indication that defendant (or the
       boogie man, in the example) meant to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit
       an act of unlawful violence. See Black, 538 U.S. at 359-60. Simply put, the State’s evidence
       and closing argument improperly focused on defendant’s conduct solely from the perspective
       of the victim. Here, there was no evidence of defendant’s intent to threaten Gill with violence,
       and as such, the State cannot meet its burden. Although there was testimony that defendant
       stood outside the state’s attorney’s satellite office for a number of minutes, continued to yell,
       and paced back and forth, without more, it is not rational to infer defendant’s intent to commit
       violence. For example, there is no evidence that defendant actually attempted to enter the
       satellite office or that he tried to pull the door open while Gill was inside. There was no
       evidence that defendant made overtly threatening gestures while Gill was in the office or that
       he intended to do anything but obtain Gill’s name. Additionally, some of the witnesses felt safe
       enough to go into the office and come out during the time that defendant was standing outside
       the door. During this time, defendant continued to ask for Gill’s name and asked that she come
       out of the office and provide it to him. Based on this conduct, no rational trier of fact could

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       have inferred defendant intended to commit an act of violence against Gill. Because “we
       interpret section 12-9 as requiring intentionality” (Dye, 2015 IL App (4th) 130799, ¶ 10), the
       State was required to prove defendant’s intent to convey a threat of unlawful violence beyond a
       reasonable doubt, but failed to do so. As such, we reverse defendant’s conviction for
       threatening a public official. Because we reverse defendant’s conviction for threatening a
       public official due to insufficiency of the evidence, we need not address his alternative
       argument for reversal—that his counsel provided ineffective assistance.

¶ 55                   B. Constitutionality of Threatening a Public Official Statute
¶ 56       Defendant argues that the threatening a public official statute is unconstitutional because it
       violates guarantees of due process and free speech. Although not raised in the court below, “a
       constitutional challenge to a statute can be raised at any time.” People v. Bryant, 128 Ill. 2d
       448, 454 (1989). However, our supreme court has long recognized that “ ‘cases should be
       decided on nonconstitutional grounds whenever possible, reaching constitutional issues only
       as a last resort.’ ” The Carle Foundation v. Cunningham Township, 2017 IL 120427, ¶ 34
       (quoting In re E.H., 224 Ill. 2d 172, 178 (2006)). As a result, “ ‘courts *** must avoid reaching
       constitutional issues when a case can be decided on other, nonconstitutional grounds,’ and
       such issues ‘should be addressed only if necessary to decide a case.’ ” Id. (quoting People v.
       Hampton, 225 Ill. 2d 238, 244 (2007)). Because we have already determined that the State
       failed to prove defendant guilty of threatening a public official beyond a reasonable doubt, we
       need not address his constitutional challenges.

¶ 57                       C. Sufficiency of the Evidence for Unlawful Restraint
¶ 58       Defendant also asserts that his unlawful restraint conviction, which the trial court merged
       into his conviction for threatening a public official and did not impose sentence upon, should
       be reversed because his speech, which was directed to a public official, cannot be categorized
       as “fighting words” that conveyed a “true threat,” and thus his speech was protected by the first
       amendment. “In a criminal case, there is no final judgment until the sentence has been
       imposed, and in the absence of a final judgment, an appeal cannot be entertained except as
       specified in Illinois Supreme Court Rule 604 (210 Ill. 2d R. 604).” People v. Thomas, 402 Ill.
       App. 3d 1129, 1131 (2010). Illinois Supreme Court Rule 604 (eff. Dec. 3, 2015) provides
       exceptions for appeals from certain judgments and orders, including appeals by the State;
       appeals when a defendant is placed under supervision or sentenced to probation, conditional
       discharge, or periodic imprisonment; appeals from bail orders by a defendant before
       conviction; appeals by a defendant from a judgment entered upon a guilty plea; appeals from
       an order finding a defendant unfit to stand trial or be sentenced; appeals by a defendant on
       grounds of former jeopardy; and appeals from an order granting a motion to disqualify defense
       counsel. None of these exceptions apply here.
¶ 59       However, our supreme court has recognized other scenarios in which an appellate court has
       jurisdiction to address unsentenced convictions. In People v. Dixon, 91 Ill. 2d 346, 349 (1982),
       the defendant was convicted of armed violence, aggravated battery, mob action, and disorderly
       conduct. The circuit court sentenced the defendant to two concurrent four-year terms on the
       armed violence and aggravated battery convictions and did not impose sentence on the mob
       violence and disorderly conduct convictions, holding that they merged into the sentenced
       convictions. Id. The appellate court affirmed the aggravated battery conviction, reversed the

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       armed violence conviction, and refused to remand for sentencing on the two unsentenced
       convictions. Id. On appeal to the supreme court, the State argued that the appellate court should
       have remanded the cause to impose a sentence on the defendant’s conviction for mob action or
       disorderly conduct, as the State conceded that the defendant could not be sentenced on both. Id.
       at 351. The defendant responded that the appellate court did not have jurisdiction to entertain
       an appeal from the State from a nonfinal order where the defendant did not raise any issues
       concerning its propriety. Id.
¶ 60        In reaching its decision, our supreme court noted that “the final step in a criminal judgment
       is the sentence [citations], and that in its absence an appeal ordinarily cannot be entertained
       because the judgment is not final [citations].” Id. at 352. The court explained that there were
       cases similar to the one at bar where action by the reviewing court was not precluded. Id.
       (citing People v. Lilly, 56 Ill. 2d 493 (1974), and People v. Scott, 69 Ill. 2d 85 (1977)). The
       court further stated that the issue before it differed from those cases because the defendant had
       not appealed from the mob action and disorderly conduct convictions. Id. at 353. The
       defendant, therefore, argued that if the court allowed the case to be remanded to impose a
       sentence on those counts, it would effectively broaden the right of the State to appeal. Id. The
       supreme court rejected the defendant’s argument and held that the matter should be remanded
       to the circuit court to impose a sentence on the defendant’s mob action conviction, determining
       that “[t]he situation before us is an anomalous one in that the trial judge’s failure to impose
       sentence on defendant’s convictions for mob violence and disorderly conduct stemmed from
       his belief that they merged into the other offenses upon which he did not impose sentence.” Id.
       The court ultimately held that although the unsentenced convictions were nonfinal orders, the
       appellate court had jurisdiction to order remand to impose a sentence because the defendant
       had appealed the final judgments entered on the sentenced convictions and because the
       unsentenced convictions were “intimately related to and ‘dependent upon’ the appealed
       convictions within the meaning of Rule 615(b)(2).” Id. at 353-54.
¶ 61        In People v. Relerford, 2017 IL 121094, our supreme court recently reexamined the
       application of Dixon. In Relerford, 2017 IL 121094, ¶ 14, the defendant was convicted of four
       counts—two counts of stalking and two counts of cyberstalking—but was only sentenced on
       one stalking count. The circuit court did not impose a sentence on the three remaining
       convictions, and the record on appeal did not disclose why. Id. The appellate court vacated all
       four of the defendant’s convictions based on its determination that the stalking and
       cyberstalking statutes violated due process. Id. ¶ 15. The supreme court disagreed with the
       appellate court’s reasoning (id. ¶ 22), but ultimately affirmed its decision to vacate defendant’s
       convictions on other grounds (id. ¶ 78). As a final matter, the supreme court addressed the
       appellate court’s decision to address the validity of the defendant’s three unsentenced
       convictions. Id. ¶ 71. The court noted that the appellate court determined that it had jurisdiction
       to address those convictions based on Dixon, and found “the appellate court’s conclusion to be
       unwarranted under the circumstances of this case.” Id. The court stated that the appellate
       court’s reliance on Dixon was misplaced for two reasons. First, the court found Dixon
       distinguishable on its facts because Dixon was “ ‘anomalous’ ” in that “the circuit court
       determined, albeit incorrectly, that sentences could not be imposed on the lesser offenses
       because they merged into the other offenses.” Id. ¶ 74. Our supreme court then made clear its
       view that “the decision in Dixon must be understood to be limited to the type of factual
       situation presented in that case,” which it stated did not exist in the case before it. Id. Second,


                                                   - 20 -
       the court stated that Dixon must be given a narrower interpretation than the one given by the
       appellate court because “[a] close reading of Dixon makes clear that, to the extent the appellate
       court had any jurisdiction to address the nonfinal convictions, that jurisdiction was limited to
       ordering a remand for imposition of sentences on the lesser convictions.” Id. ¶ 75. As a result,
       the court held that the appellate court had interpreted Dixon too broadly and had improperly
       considered the merits of the defendant’s unsentenced convictions. Id. Ultimately, however, the
       supreme court exercised its general administrative and supervisory authority to obtain
       jurisdiction over the unsentenced counts. Id. ¶ 76.
¶ 62       Although defendant was not sentenced on the unlawful restraint count, he nonetheless
       argues that this court should reverse that conviction. In this case, it is clear that the trial court
       did not impose a sentence on the unlawful restraint count because it merged that conviction
       into defendant’s conviction for threatening a public official and imposed a two-and-a-half year
       prison sentence on the threatening a public official count. It is unclear why the court merged
       those two convictions. Defendant states in his reply brief that “the record shows the trial court
       erroneously merged the unlawful restraint conviction into the threatening a public official
       conviction,” but provides no explanation or legal authority to explain why the merger was
       erroneous. Instead, defendant argues that our substantive review is permitted because an
       erroneous merger occurred here as it did in Dixon.
¶ 63       Defendant acknowledges Relerford, but suggests that the court there “held the appellate
       court should not have addressed the validity of the defendant’s unsentenced convictions
       because the record did not disclose the reason for the trial court’s failure to impose sentences
       on those counts.” We agree with defendant that the factual scenario in this case is similar to
       that of Dixon and thus may satisfy the first part of the Relerford holding that requires an
       appellate court’s jurisdiction to review unsentenced convictions be limited to cases factually
       similar to Dixon. However, we disagree with defendant’s interpretation of Relerford because
       defendant ignores the second portion of the Relerford holding, wherein the court stated that
       even when a factual scenario similar to Dixon existed and thus an appellate court had
       jurisdiction, “that jurisdiction was limited to ordering a remand for imposition of sentences on
       the lesser conviction.” Id. ¶ 75. Here, it is possible that the circuit court improperly merged
       counts as in Dixon, but even assuming that the merger was improper, we would still not have
       jurisdiction to review the merits of defendant’s unlawful restraint conviction based on the
       court’s holding in Relerford. As a result, because defendant has included his unlawful restraint
       count in his notice of appeal, we exercise our limited jurisdiction to remand this matter to the
       circuit court to impose a sentence on defendant’s unlawful restraint count. See People v.
       Olaska, 2017 IL App (2d) 150567, ¶ 115 (“[R]egardless of what authority this court has with
       respect to unsentenced convictions, we have no jurisdiction to review convictions that
       defendant has not in fact appealed.”).

¶ 64                                       III. CONCLUSION
¶ 65       Based on the foregoing, we reverse defendant’s conviction for threatening a public official
       because the State failed to prove defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We also remand
       this matter to the circuit court to impose a sentence on defendant’s unlawful restraint
       conviction because we lack jurisdiction to address the merits of defendant’s appeal of that
       issue.


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¶ 66   Reversed and remanded with directions.




                                           - 22 -
