Persons charged with sex offenses in Illinois may be diverted before trial to civil confinement, if a mental illness of at least one year’s duration led to the criminal conduct. Those who complete treatment successfully are released and the criminal charges dismissed. The Illinois Sexually Dangerous Persons Act, 725 ILCS 205/1.01 to 12, is described, and sustained against one constitutional challenge, in
Allen v. Illinois,
All of the plaintiffs are confined at Big Muddy River Correctional Center. The three appellants are Donald Snyder, former Director of the Department of Corrections; Michael Holmes, the Warden of Big Muddy; and Mark Carich, its Public Service Administrator and the principal designer of the programs to which plaintiffs object. Snyder assigned plaintiffs to Big Muddy, where they mingle with convicts at meals and on some other occasions. Some detainees are housed two to a cell (though never with a convicted inmate). According to plaintiffs, these arrangements violate the Constitution because civil detainees are entitled to housing at facilities separate from convicts, and in the “least restrictive” environment. Plaintiffs’ principal problem is the lack of any federal authority for these propositions. They contend, to quote their brief:
Plaintiffs have not claimed that it is unconstitutional, per se, for them to be confined to a facility that is labeled a “prison” and that also houses criminally convicted inmates. Their claim is a more general one that the Constitution requires them to be placed “in the least restrictive environment consistent with the purposes of the [Sexually Dangerous Persons Act]” and that they be provided “housing, recreation, education and treatment in facilities segregated from the general prison population as required by the SDPA.”
The argument, in other words, is that the Constitution requires Illinois to fulfill promises that the plaintiffs locate in a state statute. Yet the Constitution does not compel states to follow their own laws. See
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,
Thus detainees may be subjected to conditions that advance goals such as preventing escape and assuring the safety of others, even though they may not be punished. See
Allen,
Plaintiffs do not assert that their situation is worse in any material way than the situation in which ordinary pretrial detainees find themselves. They do not contend, for example, that accused sex offenders suffer injury at the hands of convicted prisoners at Big Muddy more often than at each others’ hands, something that if true might be thought to imply that they have been mixed with convicts because of (rather than in spite of) the special risks of violence in prison. Details such as double celling add nothing to plaintiffs’ contentions.
Wolfish
rejected an argument that this practice equates to punishment.
Youngberg, Allen,
and
Seling
all show that detainees are entitled to some kind of treatment — but plaintiffs don’t like the kind on offer. Illinois has concluded that the best treatment for sex offenders is group therapy in which people admit their crimes (to others as well as to themselves), own up to and confront the urges that drive them to perpetrate heinous acts, and then assist each other in overcoming those urges. Illinois administers polygraph examinations to check whether participants in this program are being candid. Its approach is similar to the one described,
Illinois contends, as Kansas did in
McKune,
that no participant in the treatment program ever has been criminally prosecuted on account of acts to which the participant admitted during the program. Plaintiffs do not offer any contrary evidence. They do say that, because criminal charges are pending against each of them, they are at greater risk than the Kansas inmates of a change in state practice. Nothing in the formal rules would prevent Illinois from using statements made in the program as confessions in the event a detainee’s treatment is deemed unsuccessful, his civil confinement ends, and the pending criminal charges are reactivated. This possibility is not, however, a ground of recovery. A majority of the Justices concluded in
Chavez v. Martinez,
— U.S. -,
Youngberg
holds that, under the due process clause, detainees are entitled to non-punitive programs designed using the exercise of professional judgment. As the Court stated in
McKune,
many specialists think that self-accusatory features are essential to treatment (just as alcoholics must admit that they have a problem). Plaintiffs disagree with this proposition, and they distrust polygraphs, but neither
Youngberg
nor any other decision holds that judges or juries may substitute their judgment for that of the professionals who design such programs. This suit is not
As for plaintiffs’ contention that treatment must be tailored to each individual rather than administered to groups: one court of appeals has said this (without explanation), see
Ohlinger v. Watson,
Reversed.
