Andrew Kokoraleis has confessed to killing as many as 18 women. His confessions narrate a ghastly routine: kidnapping, rape, torture, stabbing victims to death with knives or ice picks, mutilating the corpses, and hiding the remains. • Some victims had a breast amputated by piano wire. . Kokoraleis and his confederates (his brother Thomas Koko-raleis, Robin Gecht, and Edward Spreitzer) would masturbate on and then eat the victim’s breast. A jury convicted Kokoraleis of killing Lorraine Borowski and sentenced him to death. The Supreme Court of Illinois affirmed,
Illinois requires the prosecutor to establish a defendant’s eligibility for capital punishment. One way to do so is to demonstrate that the defendant killed at least two people and that “the deaths were the result of either an intent to kill more than one person or of separate premeditated acts”. 720 ILCS 5/9-1(b)(3). (The codification of Illinois law after the trial did not materially change the language; for clarity we use the current citation.) To meet this eligibility requirement, the prosecution introduced into evidence a copy of the judgment convicting Kokoraleis of murdering Davis, a crime the state described as a “separate premeditated act”.
*694
On direct appeal the Supreme Court of Illinois remarked (
The multiple-murder aggravating circumstance ... requires that a defendant have been convicted of murdering two or more persons. That was unquestionably proved here. The sentencing jury had found the defendant guilty of the murder of the victim in the present case, Lori Borowski; whether the defendant was guilty of only one other murder or of several other murders could not have affected the jury’s determination that he had been convicted of at least two such offenses and that the multiple-murder circumstance therefore was established. As we have seen, defense counsel made no challenge to the evidence of the defendant’s prior conviction in Cook County for the murder of Mrs. Davis.,
Notwithstanding this observation, Kokoraleis argued in the district court that he is ineligible for capital punishment because the judgment of conviction does not show that “the deaths were the result of either an intent to kill more than one person or of separate premeditated acts”. The district judge sensibly replied that this contention— not presented to the state courts on direct appeal or collateral attack — has been forfeited.
Seeking to turn the Davis conviction to his advantage, Kokoraleis contends that the jury’s decision in that case to sentence him to life imprisonment precludes a death sentence for the Borowski murder. As he sees it, Illinois is “collaterally estopped” to seek capital punishment a second time for the same series of murders that was before a prior jury. And because
Ashe v. Swenson,
Kokoraleis insists that the state court’s decision to enforce its rules of procedure was so freakish that it is not an adequate state ground of decision, even if it is an independent one.
See Liegakos v. Cooke,
Kokoraleis tells us that the question decided by the jury in the Cook County prosecution was “whether he should be put to death for torturing and being a serial killer of sixteen to eighteen women.” Phrasing the question in this way makes it possible to say that the two juries decided the same issue. But this is not the question either jury decided. The Cook County jury selected the punishment for the murder of Rose Beck Davis; the DuPage County jury chose the punishment for the murder of Lori Borowski. Each jury was entitled to consider facts about Kokoraleis’ background, including his other criminal acts (which by the time of the prosecution for the Borowski murder included a prior murder conviction), but this does not mean that the punishment in a given case is
for
these other crimes; it is for the crime of which the defendant now stands convicted. Otherwise every recidivist statute would violate the double jeopardy clause by imposing additional punishment for a crime that has already been punished. Yet many cases, of which
Witte v. United States,
*696
What remains is a line of argument that has become the staple of capital litigation: petitioner’s current lawyers contend that their predecessors were incompetent. In retrospect, we know that prior counsel did not craft a winning strategy; Kokoraleis received “ineffective” assistance of counsel in this
ex post
sense. But the right perspective is
ex ante
(at the time of the prosecution) rather than
ex post.
The sixth amendment does not guarantee success or entitle defendants to the best available counsel or the most prudent strategies.
Strickland v. Washington,
Counsel put the state’s case to the test at sentencing. But his options were limited (or so a competent lawyer could have thought) by Kokoraleis’ testimony before the same jury at trial. Kokoraleis took the stand and denied killing Borowski or anyone else. All of the charges against him were false, Kokoraleis insisted, and all four of his confessions had been coerced. Much evidence in addition to the confessions tied Kokoraleis to the crimes, and the jury did not accept his testimony, but at sentencing he again took the stand and denied participating. Trying to make the best of this situation, his lawyer advanced what has come to be called a “residual doubt defense.” Conceding that the jury already had found Kokoraleis guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, counsel argued that this is not enough to put a man to death. Only if it is certain that Kokoraleis committed the murder should the jury consider execution as a penalty, counsel argued. Two religious figures (a chaplain at Cook County jail and a counselor at the DuPage County jail) testified that they found Kokoraleis to be helpful, unthreatening, and a candidate for rehabilitation, setting up an argument that capital punishment was unnecessary to protect society. A character witness also testified for Kokoraleis. Hindsight reveals that these lines of defense did not persuade the jury, but it is impossible to deny that counsel put on a defense informed by a professional assessment of available options.
The legal team now representing Kokora-leis believes that his prior lawyers should have taken a different line of defense. Instead of arguing “residual doubt” and presenting the mitigating testimony, counsel should have contended that Kokoraleis was emotionally disturbed, a pawn under Geeht’s control. In support of this alternative line of defense current counsel tendered an affidavit by a psychiatrist, who wrote that Kokoraleis appears to have “borderline personality disorder”, making him vulnerable to the influence of a criminal cult organizer like Charles Manson. The district court doubted that this affidavit satisfies the standards of
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
The lawyer who represented Kokoraleis at trial and sentencing testified that he had three reasons not to pursue a diminished-mental-capacity or undue-influence defense. One was that neither he nor any of Kokora-leis’ family and acquaintances suspected such a possibility; he appeared normal to them all. Now obviously a serial killer who rapes, tortures, and eats his victims after fetishistic, misogynous ceremonies is not “normal”; but one can be abnormal without being mentally impaired. The jury well knew how deviant the criminal conduct was. Kokoraleis and Spreitzer murdered Borowski without Geeht’s participation, which suggests that Kokoraleis is abnormally wicked rather than abnormally deficient in resistance to the control of others. Let us suppose that this consideration is discounted — although Strickland suggests that any considered tactical or strategic choice is entitled to the strong presumption of competence. Counsel’s other two reasons also represent a thoughtful (if not unimpeachable) exercise of professional judgment. One is that counsel did not think it would help to present a line of defense that would focus the jury’s attention on the repulsive details of the crimes Geeht, Spreitzer, and the two Kokoraleis brothers (in various combinations) committed. The other is that a defense along the lines of “Gecht made me do it” could not be reconciled with the defense on the merits: “I didn’t do it.”
Kokoraleis insisted that he did not commit a crime. What competent lawyer labels his own client a serial murderer and undertakes a defense at war with the defendant’s protestations of innocence? A lawyer is the client’s agent. Lawyers cannot condemn their own clients as murderers who committed perjury to the jurors’ faces. It does not take a vivid imagination to see what argument would now be before us had counsel denounced his client as a liar and argued that the depravity of his crimes demonstrated a mental shortcoming that made capital punishment inappropriate. Why should the jurors accept the position of a man whose own lawyer calls him a liar? How could anything the defense said thereafter have been credible? Logical jurors could have concluded that the defense was desperate, willing to say anything without regard to the facts. Current counsel contend that the defense of innocence was irrelevant at sentencing; the jury didn’t buy it, so why cling to a losing strategy? Yet even after a conviction things can get worse; a jury could think a multiple murderer more blameworthy for being devious and manipulative. Whether the jury would think this, however, is in the end irrelevant. Counsel could believe that jurors would reason this way. A reasoned decision to make the best of a bad situation by pursuing a particular line of defense satisfies the constitutional minimum. Affirmed.
Notes
Spreitzer likewise has been sentenced to death, and earlier this year we held that this sentence could not be upset on collateral attack.
Spreitzer v. Peters,
