Plaintiff-appellant Gary Staten appeals the district judge’s denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. He argues that he pleaded guilty to a robbery charge in Iowa, relying on a state’s attorney’s promise in Illinois that he would not be prosecuted for the separate charge of escape in Illinois. Contrary to what was promised, Staten was prosecuted and convicted of the escape charge in Illinois. The State admits that a state’s attorney had agreed not to prosecute Staten but claims that the state’s attorney did not have authority to make this promise for the state’s attorney of another county. Staten now argues that the prosecution for escape was fundamentally unfair and violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We must reject Staten’s contention and affirm the district court’s decision.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The facts are not in dispute and we summarize them from the Illinois Appellate Court’s opinion.
See People v. Staten,
Staten remained at large until August 26, 1982 when he was arrested in Indianapolis, Indiana pursuant to an Iowa warrant charging Staten with robbery. The Indianapolis police notified Illinois authorities of Staten’s arrest but returned Staten to Iowa. Prior to trial, the Iowa prosecutor contacted the Illinois Department of Corrections (DOC) to determine if Illinois would waive prosecution on the escape charge. DOC told the Iowa prosecutor that the prosecutor would have to ask the responsible state’s attorney. DOC then checked its records and determined that, before the escape, Staten had been imprisoned in the Vandalia Correctional Center in Fayette County, Illinois. DOC’s records did not show that Staten had been transferred out of Fayette County and DOC told the Iowa prosecutor to contact the Fayette County State’s Attorney. The Iowa prosecutor contacted the Fayette County State’s Attorney and asked him if he would waive prosecution of the escape charge. The Fayette County State’s Attorney checked his records. Like the DOC records, his records indicated that Staten had been imprisoned only in Fayette County. The Fay-ette County State’s Attorney then waived prosecution of the Illinois escape charge. After receiving this assurance from the Fayette County State’s Attorney, Staten pleaded guilty to second degree robbery in Iowa. The Iowa judge sentenced Staten for a maximum term of ten years.
See Staten,
On May 27, 1986 Iowa authorities released Staten and returned him to Illinois. The Champaign County State’s Attorney, who had not been consulted by either the Fayette County State’s Attorney or the Iowa prosecutor, proceeded to prosecute Staten for escape upon his return from Iowa. Staten was convicted in a bench trial and sentenced to three years imprisonment. The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed Staten’s Illinois conviction, holding that a state’s attorney in one county could not bind a state’s attorney in another county under Illinois law. The Illinois Supreme Court denied review.
Staten then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He charged that the prosecution was fundamentally unfair and violated the Due Process Clause. The district judge denied the writ of habeas corpus and Staten appeals. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253.
II. ANALYSIS
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires the government to treat a criminal defendant with fundamental fairness.
See
U.S. Const, amend. XIV. As a general rule, fundamental fairness means that the courts will enforce promises made during the plea bargaining process that induce a criminal defendant to waive his constitutional rights and plead guilty.
See Santobello v. New York,
The Iowa prosecutor in good faith promised Staten that he would not be prosecuted in Illinois if he pleaded guilty in Iowa. This promise was not kept in Illinois. Normally, Staten would challenge his Iowa conviction and the courts would determine whether the conviction should be vacated.
See Santobello,
The State does not dispute that the Fay-ette County State’s Attorney agreed that he would not prosecute Staten for Staten’s Illinois escape if Staten pleaded guilty in Iowa. Nor does the State challenge Staten’s assertion that this promise induced *964 him to plead guilty in Iowa. Despite these admissions, the State maintains that the Champaign County State’s Attorney validly prosecuted Staten because the Fayette County State’s Attorney did not have authority to waive prosecution of an offense that occurred in Champaign County.
The issue then, described as succinctly as possible, is whether the Due Process Clause prohibits a state’s attorney in Illinois, whose jurisdiction includes the county in which the crime was committed, from prosecuting a defendant when a state’s attorney from another Illinois county promised the defendant that he would not be prosecuted. Both parties seem to agree that the resolution of this issue hinges upon a question of Illinois law: whether the Fayette County State’s Attorney (the state’s attorney who made the promise) had authority to bind in a plea agreement the Champaign County State’s Attorney (the state’s attorney who nevertheless prosecuted Staten).
The Illinois Supreme Court has not determined whether a state’s attorney in one county can waive prosecution for a crime committed in another county. The Illinois Supreme Court has, however, ruled that a state’s attorney in one county binds state’s attorneys in other counties when he grants transactional immunity under Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, 11106-1 (1985).
See People ex rel. Cruz v. Fitzgerald,
When the state’s highest court has not ruled on an issue of state law, the federal courts must determine the matter after giving “proper regard” to rulings by the state’s lower courts.
See Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch,
Relying on the Illinois Constitution,
see
Ill. Const. art. VI, § 19, and an Illinois statute,
see
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 14, ¶¶ 4, 5 (1985), the Illinois Appellate Court determined that the Fayette County State’s Attorney could not waive prosecution for an offense occurring outside of Fayette County.
Staten,
Staten counters that
People v. Schmitt,
a recent decision by the Illinois Appellate Court for the First District, supports the opposite conclusion.
See People v. Schmitt,
The court in
Schmitt
gave short shrift to the issue of whether Department of Law Enforcement agents had authority to offer leniency to Schmitt in return for his cooperation and summarily held that the agents were agents of the state.
See Schmitt,
Staten argues that, regardless of whether the Fayette County State’s Attorney had actual authority to enter the plea agreement, the Fayette County State’s Attorney acted with inherent authority, and therefore, his promise should be enforced. He notes that courts often adopt contract principles when examining the fairness of plea bargaining.
See Cooper v. United States,
Although contract and agency principles may provide some guidance in addressing plea bargaining issues, they are not controlling.
Cooper,
Similarly the Fayette County State’s Attorney acted without apparent authority. In order for there to be apparent authority, a party must have, through its words and actions, indicated to a third party that another party was empowered to act as its agent. See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 8. The State of Illinois did not represent that the Fayette County State’s Attorney was its agent in counties outside the county in which he was elected. See Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 14 ¶¶ 4, 5 (1985). We presume that a resident of Illinois knows the content of its laws and therefore is bound by them. We would presume therefore that Staten, as a former resident of Illinois, was aware of the law at the time of his escape. Furthermore, Staten knew that he escaped in Champaign County, not Fayette County. The law as created by the State of Illinois did not imply that a state’s attorney could bind the State in another state’s attorney’s jurisdiction when negotiating a plea agreement.
United States v. Long,
Similarly we do not find the cases cited by Staten involving promises made by United States Attorneys to be persuasive.
See United States v. Partida-Parra,
This is an unfortunate case for which the defendant is less to blame than the Fayette County State’s Attorney. The law does not, however, require or even permit reversal of Staten’s conviction. Although the United States Constitution may not compel one state’s attorney to honor a promise made in good faith but without authority by another state’s attorney, it would seem, except in an unusual case, that fairness would dictate adherence to it. This situation, although hopefully rare, may suggest some consideration by the Illinois legisla *967 ture to avoid repetition, That however offers Staten no relief. We AFFIRM.
Notes
. Counsel for the State advised us at oral argument that he had reviewed the briefs submitted to the Illinois Supreme Court in People v. Schmitt and that the briefs indicate that the Illinois Supreme Court will not address whether the Department of Law Enforcement agents are agents of the state.
