People v. Corn

832 N.E.2d 897, 358 Ill. App. 3d 825, 295 Ill. Dec. 447, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 616
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 22, 2005
Docket5-04-0351
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 832 N.E.2d 897 (People v. Corn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Corn, 832 N.E.2d 897, 358 Ill. App. 3d 825, 295 Ill. Dec. 447, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 616 (Ill. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JUSTICE KUEHN

delivered the opinion of the court:

William Ronald Corn (Corn) was asked if he had anything to say on his own behalf before his punishment was pronounced. He stated that he had made “a big mistake.” Indeed, the enormity of his decision to assist James Davis (Davis) in Davis’s plot to purloin a vast quantity of anhydrous ammonia from a southern Illinois fertilizer plant was a choice that condemns him to a prison sentence of at least 15 years. The error in judgment will unquestionably harm others whom he will leave behind — an aging mother and three young children — all of whom depended upon him for financial support.

Pleading for the bare minimum 15-year prison term that the offense of unlawful criminal drug conspiracy carries, Corn made a final plea for leniency. He asserted, “I deserve a second chance for once in my life.” He currently serves a 25-year prison term, the punishment imposed for his role in this drug conspiracy.

We now grant William Corn his second chance in life. We vacate the 25-year prison term and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Corn agreed with Davis, his coconspirator, to steal a large quantity of anhydrous ammonia from the Wayne County FS plant, for use in the manufacture of methamphetamine. In furtherance of the conspiracy, Davis and Corn traveled from their homes in Missouri to Hamilton County, Illinois, where they filled various containers with anhydrous ammonia, by tapping a fertilizer nurse tank and siphoning off the substance. The amount of anhydrous ammonia siphoned off was enough to create as much as five kilograms of methamphetamine.

Davis and Corn were caught in the act. When police officers arrested Corn, they asked him whether he was armed. He acknowledged that he was and informed the officers that he had two firearms under the front seat of the vehicle. The guns were loaded with ammunition.

The coconspirators were charged with multiple offenses. This appeal deals only with the sentences meted out to Davis and Corn for conspiring to manufacture a very large amount of methamphetamine.

Davis received a 30-year prison term for the unlawful criminal drug conspiracy. Corn’s sentence was only five years less. One of the questions raised on appeal is whether a 25-year term of imprisonment is a fair and just punishment, in light of the 30-year sentence meted out to Davis, a far more culpable conspirator who indisputably played a leadership role in this crime. Davis also carried a significant history of criminality into the courtroom on the day that he received his sentence. In contrast, Corn was a novice, with no criminal history to aggravate his crime or to heighten the amount of punishment that he deserved.

We will comment upon the fairness argument later in this decision. We focus first upon another question that controls the outcome of the case. The sentence imposed exceeds the 15-year mandatory minimum prison term in large part because Judge Vaughan considered a factor implicit in Corn’s criminal conduct as aggravation of that conduct. A factor implicit in an offense should never be used to aggravate punishment for that offense. See People v. Conover, 84 Ill. 2d 400, 404-05, 419 N.E.2d 906, 908-09 (1981).

The punishment imposed in this case was determined by a judge who was justifiably concerned about the amount of methamphetamine that the stolen anhydrous ammonia was capable of producing. Judge Vaughan was dismayed over the serious societal damage that this conspiracy’s goal, a large quantity of methamphetamine, would create. The Hamilton County prosecutor argued for more punishment because of the conspiracy’s potential threat to the public at large, and Judge Vaughan accepted his position. In pronouncing punishment, he declared that the amount of methamphetamine that the anhydrous ammonia could produce, and its resultant “harm to the community in general,” was a serious threat that aggravated the defendant’s criminal conduct.

The potential quantity of the drug, and the danger to society that such a quantity could entail, was what our legislators had in mind when they authorized a range of punishment for this offense that began at a mandatory minimum of 15 years in prison. Because the potential societal danger from large amounts of methamphetamine constitutes a factor inherent in the crime for which the defendant faced punishment, it could not be used to aggravate his conduct and thereby heighten the punishment he might otherwise have received within the statutory range of penalties. See People v. Maxwell, 167 Ill. App. 3d 849, 852, 522 N.E.2d 288, 291 (1988) (because the question of widespread harm from the use of cocaine is implicit in the crime of unlawful delivery of a controlled substance, it is reasonable to conclude that the legislature weighed this implicit element of harm from the offense when it classified the crime as a Class 1 felony, and thus, the sentencing judge could not properly consider that harm as an aggravating factor in fixing punishment).

The State concedes that under our decision in Maxwell, Judge Vaughan should not have considered the potential threat to society that could stem from the manufacture of five kilograms of methamphetamine. However, it maintains that Judge Vaughan placed more emphasis upon the potential harm to workers at the FS plant from Davis’s tampering with the valves on the anhydrous ammonia tanks and the potential for harm to the arresting officers as a result of the defendant’s possession of two loaded handguns. The State argues that the 25-year sentence can be supported by those aggravating factors, even if widespread societal harm from the quantity of methamphetamine that this conspiracy might have produced was considered in aggravation of the sentence.

We cannot say what weight Judge Vaughan necessarily assigned to those things that he considered in aggravation of Corn’s conduct. However, given the facts that he confronted, we would like to think that the potential for harm to people who work with the fertilizer tanks and the potential for harm to the arresting police officers were not assigned significant weight. There was absolutely no evidence that Davis’s use of the valves left them in any condition other than as he found them. There was nothing to suggest that the tank’s hoses or valves were left in a manner that created some increased hazard or increased risk of harm. The potential for harm to FS workers was sheer speculation over what might have happened but, apparently, did not.

Having two loaded handguns concealed inside the vehicle was certainly a fact that aggravated Corn’s conduct. Notwithstanding, whatever possible harm that existed from the two loaded guns in the car has to be tempered by consideration of how Corn behaved when those guns might have been employed to actually produce harm to someone. While Corn had two readily accessible guns under his seat, he had the common sense and good judgment not to use them when the police pursued his travels and effected his arrest. Whatever reason that Corn possessed for having two loaded guns with him, it appears quite obvious that it was unrelated to a mindset on escaping apprehension and prosecution with the use of gunplay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
832 N.E.2d 897, 358 Ill. App. 3d 825, 295 Ill. Dec. 447, 2005 Ill. App. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-corn-illappct-2005.