Lead Opinion
Amyn Kapadia was convicted in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois of burglary and arson of a Jewish community center. The trial court judge meted out the harshest sentence possible under state law, a fourteen year term of imprisonment, after a courtroom deputy testified that Ka-padia uttered a number of anti-Semitic slurs on his way out of court after being convicted. Kapadia complains that enhancing his sentence because he professes vile beliefs violates his First Amendment rights. However, the trial court enhanced Kapadia’s sentence because of his poor rehabilitative potential and his future dangerousness and not because of his antiSemitic speech, and we therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Kapadia’s petition for habeas coi"pus.
I.
We take the facts as the trial court found them to be. In November 1993, Amyn Kapadia and Jason Wiederhold burglarized and set fire to the Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe center (the “F.R.E.E. center”). The F.R.E.E. center was a Jewish Orthodox organization that provided services to recent Russian Jewish immigrants. In addition to a reception area, kitchen, business offices, vocational offices and a study, the center housed a small synagogue where religious services were held. After a bench trial, the court found both defendants guilty and set a date for a sentencing hearing. On his way out of the courtroom, Kapadia said to Deputy Joseph Bennett, “You can tell the Judge for me ... that he’s a bitch and fuck the Jews.” Later that day, while in lockup, Kapadia asked Deputy Bennett whether “that Judge is a Jew, too?” and then answered his own question by stating, “I’ll bet he is that fucking schmuek.” At another time, Deputy Bennett also heard Kapadia mutter, “Those fucking Jews.” Another deputy also heard Kapadia say, “Fucking Jews, man,” as he was being escorted into lockup after a court date in his case. Deputy Bennett passed these remarks on to the trial judge before the sentencing hearing, and the trial judge
The trial court then solicited argument regarding mitigation from Kapadia’s counsel. Kapadia’s counsel stated:
Judge, by way of argument, I object strenuously for the state’s attorney trying to introduce race into this argument. There has been absolutely no suggestion during the trial, the conduct of the trial, the conduct of the people involved in the trial, that the fact that this was a Jewish synagogue had anything to do with anything, especially the conduct of my client.
R. 1, Ex. C at A-ll. The trial judge replied:
You’re absolutely right. That’s why Deputy Bennett has to be here. Order of court, this matter is put over to September 23rd. Subpoena Deputy Bennett. Your point is well-taken. It’s important aggravating information. You, of course, were informed by Deputy Bennett, because I told him to inform you, so you are not unaware of this. But based upon that information that I received that is of record, I have to dispute'what you have to say. Since I’m actually aware of that, I ought to be also legally aware of that.
R. 1, Ex. C at A-ll through A-12. At the continued sentencing hearing, Deputy Bennett testified to the anti-Semitic remarks Kapadia uttered at various times. The sentencing judge then heard the argument of counsel and remarked that he had been called more names than any other professional except a tax collector. He continued:
What troubles me, of course, is the vitriol directed towards the group that also happens to be the victims. Talk about the larger group, the societal group, East European Jews who are the victims in this case. I did take the comments into consideration because one of the things I have to consider is the possibility of reformation of the defendant. How likely is this defendant to be restored to useful citizenship.
R. 1, Ex. C at C-25. The court went on to comment on the lessons of history, and the anti-Semitic hooliganism that preceded Krystalnaeht, the “night of broken glass” in 1938 when 1700 synagogues and Jewish-owned businesses were destroyed by mobs led by Nazi party members, leading to the deaths of a very large number of Jewish individuals. The court then remarked:
I take these matters into very, very serious consideration in the case of Mr. Kapadia, therefore, because his virulent anti-Semitism is indicative of the fact [that] he is not likely to change his ways. He is not likely to become a productive member of society. So, it’s certainly a[n] aggravating factor.
R. 1, Ex. C at C-27 through C-28. The court then sentenced Kapadia to a fourteen year term of imprisonment, the longest term allowed under Illinois law for burglary and arson. The court sentenced Wiederhold to a five year term of imprisonment, reasoning that his conduct was caused at least in part by his association with “the tumultuous and virulent Mr. Ka-padia,” and that he was therefore less culpable than Kapadia, and could conceiv
Kapadia appealed his sentence through the Illinois courts. The Appellate Court affirmed, and the Illinois Supreme Court declined to hear the case. Kapadia then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court, contending that enhancing his sentence on the basis of his anti-Semitic remarks was unconstitutional because the sentencing judge made no finding tying the remarks to his motivation to commit the crime. He argued that the trial court violated his First Amendment rights when the court used his protected speech as evidence of character and rehabilitative potential. The district court denied his petition and he appeals.
II.
Under the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), we defer to state court merit adjudications. Sanchez v. Gilmore,
A.
In Barclay v. Florida,
The Court expounded on this theme in Dawson v. Delaware,
Because the evidence of membership proved nothing more than Dawson’s abstract beliefs, the Court held that the admission of that evidence violated Dawson’s Fust Amendment rights.
The Court considered a slightly different permutation of this theme in Wisconsin v. Mitchell,
The Court upheld the Wisconsin statute because the legislature believed that bias-inspired conduct inflicted greater individual and societal harm. For example, such crimes are more likely to provoke retaliatory crimes, inflict distinct emotional harms on their victims, and incite community unrest. Mitchell,
The State’s desire to redress these perceived harms provides an adequate explanation for its penalty-enhancement provision over and above mere disagreement with offenders’ beliefs or biases. As Blackstone said long ago, “it is but reasonable that among crimes of different natures those should be most severely punished which are the most destructive of the public safety and happiness.”
Mitchell, 508 U.S at 498,
B.
Kapadia, of course, argues that enhancing his sentence for his post-trial anti
Kapadia’s counsel argued to the court that there was no evidence that the fact that this was a Jewish organization had anything to do with Kapadia’s conduct. The court replied, “You’re absolutely right. That’s why Deputy Bennett has to be here.” In other words, the court considered the deputy’s testimony to be evidence of a connection between Kapadia’s conduct and the Jewish affiliation of the F.R.E.E. center. Implicit in the court’s comments is the finding that Kapadia’s conduct was tied to his anti-Semitic bias, and that the court wanted the deputy’s statement on the record to lend support to that finding. The sentencing judge, after receiving the deputy’s statement into evidence, said that he took Kapadia’s comments into consideration because he believed Kapadia was less likely to be reformed. He found Kapadia more dangerous because he held anti-Semitic views and attacked a Jewish community center. In other words, because Kapadia held these views and had committed a bias-motivated crime, there was a greater probability he would not be rehabilitated. The timing of Kapadia’s slurs also played into the sentencing court’s analysis. Because Kapadia’s remarks came after his conviction, the sentencing judge was free to conclude that he lacked remorse and was less likely to be rehabilitated. This is just another way of stating that Kapa-dia presented a threat of future dangerousness to the community, a proper consideration ■ under Barclay and Mitchell. Finally, the court noted the tie between Kapadia’s behavior and crimes which occurred in Europe during the rise of the Nazi regime. Under Mitchell, this was also an appropriate consideration, not barred by the First Amendment.
The court’s comparison of Kapadia’s criminal destruction of the F.R.E.E. center to Nazi attacks on synagogues removes any doubt that the court enhanced Kapa-
Our conclusion is bolstered by the findings of the Illinois Appellate Court, whose interpretation we owe deference as well. See People v. Kapadia,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the sentencing court could have enhanced Kapadia’s sentence under state law for his criminal history, there is no indication in the record that this is what the court actually did. Because this theory is without support in the record, we therefore reject the state's argument that criminal history was an adequate basis for the sentence enhancement.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur with the court’s decision to affirm the district court’s denial of Kapa-dia’s petition for habeas corpus. But under the circumstances of this case, there is no need to explore the question of whether Kapadia was motivated by religious or national origin bias when he committed the burglary and arson. Evidence of one’s beliefs and associations is admissible where it is relevant to the statutory aggravating factors. Barclay v. Florida,
