People v. Nitz Opinion corrected 12/07/04

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 10, 2004
Docket5-98-0657 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Nitz Opinion corrected 12/07/04 (People v. Nitz Opinion corrected 12/07/04) 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. Nitz Opinion corrected 12/07/04, (Ill. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

(text box: 1) NO. 5-98-0657

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

_____________________________________________________________________________________________

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, )  Appeal from the

)  Circuit Court of

    Plaintiff-Appellee, )  Williamson County.

)

  1. )  No. 88-CF-162

RICHARD C. NITZ, )  Honorable

)  John Speroni,

    Defendant-Appellant. )  Judge, presiding.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE KUEHN delivered the opinion of the court:

At one time, Richard Nitz knew when he was to rendezvous with death, for the State of Illinois had set the appointed hour.  Death was to be Nitz's punishment for killing Michael Miley and mutilating his body.  However, his last meal was never served.

After losing his direct appeal, Nitz sought collateral relief from his conviction and death sentence, questioning his fitness to stand trial.  Nitz had ingested a psychotropic drug called Tranxene during the trial.  The drug had been administered to quell anxiety.  The trial had been conducted without a prior fitness hearing to determine the effect of the psychotropic medication on Nitz's mental well-being.  In the absence of a hearing, our high court presumed Nitz to be unfit because of the medication's use and found that the process to the verdict and death sentence had been constitutionally infirm.   People v. Nitz , 173 Ill. 2d 151, 670 N.E.2d 672 (1996).  It reversed the conviction, vacated the sentence, and ordered a new trial.

 The State prosecuted Nitz again for the same crime, but it did not charge Nitz in the same manner, and it did not seek capital punishment.  It charged three counts of first-degree murder.  Each count alleged that Nitz had shot Miley with a gun and thereby caused Miley's death.  The counts differed only in alleging different mind-sets under which Nitz had performed that act.  A Jackson County jury engaged in lengthy deliberations before arriving at its verdict.  It found that Nitz had not intended to kill Miley and that Nitz had no knowledge that shooting Miley would in fact cause Miley's death.  It acquitted Nitz on the two charges that called for those findings.  The jury returned a guilty verdict on a third count, finding that Nitz was aware of the fact that shooting Miley created a strong probability of death or great bodily harm.  Based upon the jury's finding of guilt and the trial judge's finding that this particular first-degree murder had been accompanied by brutal and heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty, the trial judge sentenced Nitz to imprisonment for the rest of his life.  Nitz appeals the verdict and sentence.

The particular facts surrounding the offense for which Nitz was again convicted are recounted in detail by the Illinois Supreme Court in People v. Nitz , 143 Ill. 2d 82, 572 N.E.2d 895 (1991).  We address only those limited facts necessary to an understanding of the legal issues raised on this appeal.

Nitz challenges the validity of the verdict, based upon the following arguments: (1) that he was deprived of the constitutional right to testify in his own defense when the trial judge ruled that his testimony, if given, could be impeached with prior sworn testimony given during the first trial, (2) that jurors lied during voir dire and convicted him based upon knowledge of his earlier conviction and his failure to testify and that during voir dire the jury foreman lied about his impartiality and concealed his preconceived belief in Nitz's guilt, (3) that he was improperly prevented from presenting evidence of other possible suspects who might have murdered Miley, (4) that the jury should have been instructed on the offense of second-degree murder, and (5) that he was improperly prevented from impeaching certain State witnesses with evidence of their prior convictions.   

Nitz also challenges the validity of his sentence, based upon the following arguments: (1) that his conduct was not brutal or heinous behavior suggestive of wanton cruelty and therefore cannot support the judge's factual finding, (2) that the trial judge should have eased the sentence based upon certain evidence offered in mitigation, and finally, (3) that the receipt of a natural-life sentence based upon a factual finding not determined by a jury under a reasonable doubt standard violated his constitutional rights to due process, notice, and a trial by jury.  

For the following reasons, we affirm.   

The first argument is premised upon Nitz's absolute right to testify in his own defense.  He maintains that this right was taken from him when the trial judge ruled that the State could use his testimony from the first trial, provided that it proved to be inconsistent with testimony tendered at this second trial.  Nitz tried to bar the testimony's use, based upon his presumptive incompetence during the first trial.  He maintains that if an involuntary confession cannot be used for impeachment purposes, prior testimony from an incompetent defendant should not be used as well.  

We note that the foundation for this argument–Nitz's presumptive incompetence and his prior testimony's unreliability because of that fact–has fallen prey to a supreme court that has come full circle in its understanding of our fitness statute.  The same court that reversed Nitz's conviction, vacated his death sentence, and granted him a new trial because a fitness hearing had not been held no longer believes that the legislature intended to require one.  We now know what only three members of the supreme court knew in 1996 when Nitz was granted postconviction relief.   People v. Nitz , 173 Ill. 2d 151, 165, 670 N.E.2d 672, 678 (1996) (Miller, J., dissenting, joined by Bilandic, C.J., and Heiple, J.).  We cannot presume Nitz unfit simply because he was treated with Tranxene to manage anxiety disorders during the trial.  

The supreme court has entirely abandoned the legal basis for Nitz's earlier reprieve.   People v. Mitchell , 189 Ill. 2d 312, 328-31, 727 N.E.2d 254, 265-67 (2000).  Had the supreme court read our fitness statute in the same manner a few years ago, in all likelihood Nitz would be appealing in that undiscovered forum from whose bourn no traveler returns.

Nitz counters this legal turnabout with several arguments that pertain to the question of his actual fitness and his prior testimony's arguable unreliability, given the ingestion of mood-altering medication.  We need not address them.  Nitz was not deprived of the right to give testimony at his trial.  He was simply not afforded the luxury of doing so without challenge from earlier sworn testimony that might have proven to be inconsistent.  We have no way of knowing what prejudice, if any, resulted from the trial court's ruling.  Nitz did not testify at the trial.  We suspect that the choice was thrust upon him by virtue of the State's power to use prior testimony sharply at odds with what he wanted to say.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Nitz Opinion corrected 12/07/04, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nitz-opinion-corrected-120704-illappct-2004.