United States Ex Rel. Reed v. Lane

571 F. Supp. 530, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13121
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1983
Docket83 C 3622
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 571 F. Supp. 530 (United States Ex Rel. Reed v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. Reed v. Lane, 571 F. Supp. 530, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13121 (N.D. Ill. 1983).

Opinion

SHADUR, District Judge.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Fred Reed (“Reed”) has petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. 1 For the reasons stated in this *531 memorandum opinion and order, Reed’s petition is granted.

Facts 2

As the result of his participation in two killings and a related robbery, Reed was convicted of two counts of murder and one of armed robbery. All his available state court remedies have been exhausted, and he is now serving concurrent prison terms of 50 to 100 years for each murder and 20 to 30 years for armed robbery.

According to the trial testimony one of the murder victims, Michael Robbins (“Robbins”), was killed over a narcotics trafficking territorial dispute involving Robbins, Lonnie Hall (“Hall”) and others. About 10:30 p.m. August 28, 1977 Hall came into Reed’s apartment with a gun and told Reed he wanted to use Reed to gain entry into Robbins’ apartment (Robbins lived in the courtway right next to Reed’s apartment). Hall threatened Reed, telling him to accompany Hall to Robbins’ place or Reed “would come up dead.” They went to Robbins’ apartment, Reed knocked and identified himself, and Robbins opened the door. Hall forced his way into the apartment, ordered Robbins to lie down on the bed and told Reed to tie him up. Reed tied Robbins’ legs and Hall tied his hands. Hall then covered Robbins’ head with a pillow and shot him twice.

As Hall and Reed left Robbins’ apartment Beverly Truitt (“Truitt”) opened her door and asked what happened. Hall pushed her back into her apartment and shot her twice. When Hall came out of her apartment he had some jewelry. At Reed’s request Hall gave him three or four rings, a bracelet and necklace.

Reed’s Constitutional Claim

Reed claims constitutional error in the trial court’s refusal to give a tendered jury instruction on the affirmative defense of compulsion. Under Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 7-11(a) (“Section 7-11(a)”):

A person is not guilty of an offense, other than an offense punishable with death, by reason of conduct which he performs under the compulsion of threat or menace of the imminent infliction of death or great bodily harm, if he reasonably believes death or great bodily harm will be inflicted upon him if he does not perform such conduct.

Section 7-11(a) and its permissible reading are the focus of this action.

In respondents’ answer here the State maintains (as it did in the state courts) Reed was not entitled to the compulsion instruction because he committed “an offense punishable with death.” 3 Here as in the state courts, Reed counters such a construction of Section 7-11(a) was constitutionally impermissible, because Reed was compelled to help commit Robbins’ murder at a time when Reed had not yet come within the statutory “punishable with death” exception.

*532 In affirming Reed’s conviction, the Illinois Appellate Court rejected his proposed reading of Section 7-11(a). 104 Ill.App.3d at 337-39, 60 Ill.Dec. at 85-86, 432 N.E.2d at 984-85. This Court is bound by that construction in state law terms. Israel v. Odom, 521 F.2d 1370, 1376 (7th Cir.1975); United States ex rel. Hanrahan v. Bosse, 547 F.Supp. 718, 720-21 (N.D.Ill.1982).

At this point, then, the question is whether that binding construction of Section 7-11(a) denied Reed due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. Reed contends:

1. At the time he admittedly participated in Robbins’ murder, Reed had committed no prior murder. Therefore the Robbins murder could not have involved the quality of intent or conduct necessary for sentencing Reed to death under Section 9-l(b)(3).
2. At the time of the Robbins murder Reed could not reasonably have anticipated Hall’s later murder of Truitt. That later murder cannot be the retroactive predicate for making Reed’s involvement in the earlier offense punishable by death.

Essentially Reed relies on the principle that due process requires a person to be fairly apprised of criminal consequences at the time he acts — in this case at the time he reacted to the compulsion he claims Hall visited upon him immediately preceding Robbins’ murder. If such notice is not fairly given by a statute, that statute is deemed unconstitutionally vague under the standard of United States v. Harriss, 347 U.S. 612, 617, 74 S.Ct. 808, 812, 98 L.Ed. 989 (1954):

The constitutional requirement of definiteness is violated by a criminal statute that fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice that his contemplated conduct is forbidden by the statute. The underlying principle is that no man shall be held criminally responsible for conduct which he could not reasonably understand to be proscribed.

Of course every such argument relies on a fiction: the notion that a person bent on criminal activity is indeed aware of what the law provides, as though the potential murderer carries a copy of the Illinois Criminal Code with him (or has it committed to memory). But it is a necessary fiction if the concept of mens rea is not to be subverted. 4 This Court then must look at what Reed was fairly apprised of at the time he was confronted with the decision of how to act in the face of Hall’s menace to his own life. 5

In terms of that necessary fiction, had Reed looked at the statute when forced to decide what action to take in conjunction with Robbins’ murder, he would have known from the plain statutory language the compulsion defense was available to him. Under that defense Reed could yield to Hall’s death threat without putting his own life in jeopardy (via a potential death sentence) by so yielding. 6 That was the legal matrix in which Reed was entitled to make his decision about what action to *533 take. What was surely not obvious from the face of the statute and then-existing case law 7 was that a later event — Hall’s gratuitous murder of Truitt — would deprive Reed of the compulsion defense on the theory that as a whole two or more murders are punishable by death.

Now the Illinois Appellate Court has taught Section 7-ll(a) must be read that latter way. That gloss on the statute binds this Court as a matter of statutory construction. It does not however bind this Court as to the constitutional effect of that construction. Under the standard enunciated in

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Related

People v. Reed
634 N.E.2d 291 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1994)
United States v. Yonan
622 F. Supp. 721 (N.D. Illinois, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
571 F. Supp. 530, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-reed-v-lane-ilnd-1983.