Illinois is among the states that permit indefinite civil commitment of certain sexual offenders. In 1998 Illinois initiated proceedings under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act (“SVPA”), 725 ILCS 207/1 to 207/99, to commit Herbert Varner, a repeat sex offender who refused to participate in treatment programs during his 13-year sentence for the sexual assault of his five-year-old niece.
The SVPA calls for the civil confinement of any person, previously convicted of a sex offense, who is found beyond a reasonable doubt to be a “sexually violent per
Varner argued to the state judiciary that the SVPA violates the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment because it allows a person to be detained without a specific finding that he lacks control over his sexually violent conduct. He relied principally on a decision by the Supreme Court of Kansas. The Supreme Court of Illinois rejected this argument as a matter of both state and federal law, expressly disagreeing with the Kansas decision — as the Supreme Court of the United States later did.
Kansas v. Crane,
The Supreme Court of Kansas had held that civil commitment is permissible only if the evidence establishes that a person is utterly unable to control sexually violent conduct. The Court rejected this “absolutist approach” in favor of requiring only “proof of serious difficulty in controlling behavior.”
Crane,
Varner insists that the state judiciary’s conclusions are “contrary to, or involve an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States”, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), because the Supreme Court of Illinois held that the jury need not return a special verdict on the question framed by
Crane:
whether a potential committee has “serious difficulty in controlling behavior.” The argument that
Crane
requires a specific jury finding that a potential committee cannot control his conduct — that inferences from other findings cannot serve — has been rejected by this court in
Laxton v. Bartow,
Laxton
arose from Wisconsin’s equivalent to the SVPA. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin ruled that serious difficulty in controlling behavior is implied by the findings that its statute requires. We held that this conclusion is not objectively un
The jury found that: (1) Varner has a mental disorder, as a result of which (2) it is likely that he will commit new sexually violent offenses if released. The proposition that the mental disorder causes sexual offenses implies inability to exercise self-control — for, if Varner can control his behavior, then either proposition (1) or (2) must be false.
Crane
held that the Constitution requires findings that separate inability to control from unwillingness to control — that is, to separate the sick person from the vicious and amoral one. The former is a proper subject of civil commitment; the wicked person, by contrast, must be left to the criminal law (with recidivist enhancements).
Crane
recognized that the line is a fuzzy one. It is correspondingly hard to see how a state that tries to draw the same sort of distinction as the Court did, though in a slightly different way, could be said to transgress “clearly established Federal law”; even if the state court is wrong, it is not clearly or unreasonably so, and correction therefore must come on direct review by the Supremé Court of the United States rather than on collateral review by the inferior courts under § 2254. The Supreme Court has told us that civil commitment of persons with both mental defects and dangerous proclivities comport with the Constitution. See, e.g.,
Kansas v. Hendricks,
While stating that the Constitution prohibits commitment “without
any
lack-of-control determination”, the Court rejected the proposition that the Constitution requires a showing of
“total
or
complete
lack of control.”
Crane,
Illinois argues that Varner has proee-durally defaulted the equal-protection theory because it was first raised in a petition for rehearing. He responds that this was the first opportunity to raise it, because it did not arise until Masterson distinguished the SDPA from the SVPA — and as Mas-terson was released the same day as the decision on remand in his case, it was impossible to present the argument any earlier. “Impossible” it is not: Varner could have argued (in the alternative) in his opening briefs that he is entitled to whatever standard emerges from Master-son. But it is unnecessary for us to decide whether Illinois requires such precautionary argumentation, for the equal protection claim fails on its merits.
The equal protection clause requires similar treatment of similarly-situated persons; it “does not require things which are different in fact or opinion to be treated in law as though they were the same.”
Plyler v. Doe,
To the extent that those who are committed as (what Illinois calls) “dangerous” rather than “violent” persons are beneficiaries of a higher burden of persuasion, the rationality of the distinction is evident. Persons committed under the SDPA have not been convicted of any sex offense;
of course
the state requires additional assurance of their danger before they can be confined. The difference between those with a criminal record of sexual offenses and those without is vital. Cf.
Richardson v. Ramirez,
Affirmed.
