The People v. Bogolowski

148 N.E. 260, 317 Ill. 460
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1925
DocketNo. 16678. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 N.E. 260 (The People v. Bogolowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Bogolowski, 148 N.E. 260, 317 Ill. 460 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Morris Bogolowski was indicted jointly with Larry Heffernan, William Cramer and Otto Christensen for the murder of Joseph Lanus. ' Each entered a plea of not guilty, but Bogolowski withdrew his plea, entered a plea of guilty and testified for the People. Lanus was an automobile dealer and the murder was committed in his salesroom in the perpetration of a robbery. Bogolowski participated in the crime though he was not in the room at its actual commission but was acting as a guard outside. His testimony was essential to the conviction of the other three defendants. They were convicted and Heffernan and Cramer were sentenced to death and Christensen to life imprisonment. On a writ of error the judgments were reversed. (People v. Heffernan, 312 Ill. 66.) During the pendency of the writ of error the case against Bogolowski was continued upon motions of his counsel made from time to time at the suggestion of the State’s attorney. On a second trial Heffernan and Cramer were again convicted and were sentenced to life imprisonment. The indictment against Christensen was dismissed by the State’s attorney with leave to re-instate. In the meantime Bogolowski had been confined in the county jail. On November 26, 1924, on motion of the State’s attorney the case against him was stricken with leave to re-instate. This order was, however, on the same da}' vacated arid set aside, Bogolowski entered his motion to withdraw his plea of guilty, and the cause was continued from time to time until December 22, 1924, when the court overruled the motion and sentericed Bogolowski to imprisonment for fourteen years. A writ of error has been’ sued out to reverse this judgment.

Before the trial Bogolowski’s attorney, I. J. Berkson, had a number of interviews with William Scott Stewart, who was the assistant State’s attorney in charge of the case for the People, and he testified that he always got the' impression that Bogolowski would be given immunity, particularly after the first case was tried and the plea was taken. Stewart asked him to make the motions to continue the case to have it go over until the Supreme Court had decided the writ of error, and he made those motions at the request of the State’s attorney. He told Stewart that it might take six months to a year, and Stewart said, “After that time, if he serves that time he probably will not serve any more and again he said, “Your man Bogolowski should never get any more than Christensen gets,” and “Christensen is out and your man will get out, also.” Stewart testified: “At the time that this case went to trial I wanted to be very careful that I made no promises and I practically told Mr. Berkson that would destroy the man’s testimony. Berkson came in day after day and if he has the impression now that he did get a promise, I will say to the court he was warranted in getting the impression. I did not promise him directly. * * * I think I did say, ‘Well, the undisputed evidence is that whatever part your man had he was not in the firing the shot and if he was there at all he was on the outside. Christensen ivas on the outside, and I think you may feel quite sure that we won’t give him any worse than Christensen gets, and as far as I am concerned that will be my recommendation, so you don’t need- to worry about that.’ * * * I think I said to Berkson when the plea of not guilty was withdrawn, ‘You can be sure as far as I am able to control the situation, he will never get any worse than the other man on the outside.’ ” This assurance was given about fifteen minutes before the case went to trial and was with direct reference to changing the plea from not guilty to guilty.

At the hearing of Bogolowski’s motion to withdraw his plea of guilty Stewart had ceased to be an assistant State’s attorney. The State’s attorney was represented by S. M. Hamilton, who declined to express any opinion as to whether or not the plea should be withdrawn, but did say that the People did not have sufficient evidence to make out a prima facie case against Christensen and he did not know whether they had sufficient evidence to make out a prima facie case against Bogolowski.

The plaintiff in error contends that he is entitled to the same treatment that Christensen received, — that is, that the case be stricken with leave to re-instate, — and if that is not done that he is entitled to withdraw his plea of guilty. In Hoyt v. People, 140 Ill. 588, it is said, quoting from Best on Evidence: “No doubt, if it was not absolutely necessary for the execution of the law against notorious offenders that accomplices should be received as witnesses, the practice is liable to many objections; and though under this practice they are clearly competent witnesses, their single testimony, alone, is seldom of sufficient weight with the jury to convict the offenders, it being so strong a temptation to a man to commit perjury if by accusing another he can escape himself. Let us see what has come in lieu of the practice of approvement: a kind of hope that accomplices who behaye fairly, and disclose the whole truth and bring others to justice, should themselves escape punishment. This is in the nature of a recommendation to mercy: The accomplice is not assured of his pardon but gives his evidence in vinculis, — in custody; and it depends on the title he has, from his behavior, whether he shall be pardoned.”

In reference to this same subject it was said in Green-leaf on Evidence, sec. 379: “The admission of accomplices, as witnesses for the government, is justified by the necessity of the case, it being often impossible to bring the principal offenders to justice without them. The usual course is, to leave out of the indictment those who are to be called as witnesses; but it makes no difference as to the admissibility of an accomplice, whether he is indicted or not, if he has not been put on his trial at the same time with his companions in crime. * * * But whether an accomplice already charged with the crime, by indictment, shall be admitted as a witness for the government, or not, is determined by the judges, in their discretion, as may best serve the purpose of justice. If he appears to have been the principal offender he will be rejected. And if an accomplice, having made a private confession upon a promise of pardon made by the Attorney General, should afterwards refuse to testify, he may be convicted upon the evidence of that confession.”

In Wharton on Criminal Law (vol. 1, 3d ed. 785,) it is said: “It has been said in Virginia, that, though a particeps criminis called as a witness for the commonwealth on the trial of his accomplice, voluntarily give evidence, and fully, candidly and impartially disclose all the circumstances attending the transaction, as well those which involve his own guilt as those which involve the guilt of others, he will yet have no right to a pardon for his own guilt, and therefore no right to demand a continuance of his cause until he can have an opportunity of applying to the executive for such pardon. Judge McLean, however, has decided that if an accomplice be admitted to testify, and appear to have acted in good faith in giving testimony, the government is bound in honor to discharge him. The English practice, under such circumstances is, where the witness makes a clean breast, to grant a pardon.”

The decision of Judge McLean referred to is the 'case of United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.E. 260, 317 Ill. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-bogolowski-ill-1925.