Ten years ago, Johnnie Jones invaded a closed diner, terrorized the occupants, and stole $550. He took the gun from a deputy sheriff who happened to be in the diner. Although no one resisted, Jones fired at least four shots from his revolver and the deputy’s magnum. One shot was discharged so close to the deputy's face that it caused powder burns. We do not know whether Jones missed at point blank range or was simply trying to frighten the patrons.
Jones pleaded guilty to eight crimes arising out of this episode: two armed robberies (of the money and the gun), two felony thefts, and four counts of armed violence (assault with deadly weapons). The state dismissed four counts charging attempted murder. The state judge could have imposed consecutive penalties aggregating 190 years for these crimes. The felony theft counts carried máximums of five years each, and the other six counts had máximums of 30 years each. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38 ¶ 1005-8-1. Instead he sentenced Jones to eight concurrent terms (the longest of which is 60 years' imprisonment) under Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38 If 1005-5-3.2(b), then a year old. This statute allows the augmentation of a criminal sentence when the defendant has been convicted of earlier, equally-serious felonies, § 3.2(b)(1), or when “the offense was accompanied by exceptionally brutal or heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty”, § 3.2(b)(2). Jones had been convicted of burglary (twice), assaulting a prison guard, and reckless homicide. The trial judge invoked the statute on account of these convictions and on account of the gunfire, explaining:
The court finds that [Jones’s] conduct constitutes a heinous crime in that the commission of that offense was accompanied by brutal and heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty. The court finds that the discharge of the weapon in close proximity to the face and head of Deputy Tjarks was an extremely brutal act, one which only by the grace of God did not result in homicide, and certainly was not due to any mercy on the part of [Jones] that it did not result in a homicide.
The Appellate Court of Illinois affirmed the sentence,
People v. Jones,
The Supreme Court of Illinois declined to review this decision. Two years later, however, when it first construed the enhancement statute, it adopted a definition very similar to the one the appellate court had rejected in Jones’s case.
People v. La-Pointe,
Jones might have returned to the courts of Illinois, arguing along the lines of
Davis v. United States,
What Jones preserved in state court was the argument that ¶ 1005-5-3.2(b)(2) does not authorize an enhancement for the kind of conduct in which Jones engaged. The district court concluded that the Appellate Court of Illinois had made an error of Illinois law by failing to anticipate the holding of
LaPointe.
An error of state law is not enough to issue a writ of habeas corpus, for 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a) provides that the writ may issue “only on the ground that [the petitioner] is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” “A federal court may not issue the writ on the basis of a perceived error of state law.”
Pulley v. Harris,
This method, however, is simply the vindication of the “correct” state law with surplus intermediate steps. Forbidden by the language of § 2254 to enforce state law directly, the district court traveled a route that turns every violation of state law into a violation of the Constitution. This could not have been what either Congress or the Supreme Court had in mind when providing for collateral attack on the basis of violations of federal law, but not of state law. It has long been understood that a state may violate its own law without violating the Constitution, e.g.,
Gryger v. Burke,
Knowing how this must come out, and seeing how to get there in light of
Jackson,
are two different things. For
Jackson
can be seen as doing what
Pulley, Smith, Garner,
and many other cases said could not be done. Since evidence can be sufficient only in relation to a rule of law, a declaration that evidence is insufficient means either that (a) the tribunal did not understand the law, or (b) the tribunal misapplied the law. In either case, it seems,
Jackson
calls for a court to review state law and, having found a violation, to supply a federal remedy. Since the Court disclaimed any such power in
Jackson
itself, however,
Jackson
assumes that the state has correctly defined its own law. A review of the evidence ensures that states stick to their legal interpretations, while they are in force. Criminal proscriptions must be announced in advance of the conduct (the Ex Post Facto Clause sees to that) and must be adhered to until disavowed in public. A retroactive change by a legislature violates the Ex Post Facto Clause; an equally retroactive substantive change by the courts violates the Due Process Clause. See
Bouie v. City of Columbia,
We can now see one problem with the district court’s approach.
People v. Jones
did not suddenly change state law. It was the first published interpretation of ¶ 1005-5-3.2(b)(2). No one could have relied on a different view until after
La-Pointe
in 1981. Words such as “wanton” do not have a single, natural meaning creating reliance interests on their own. And the district court is not authorized to say that
People v. Jones
was wrong even when
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announced in 1979. Jones and the State of Illinois litigated the meaning of § 3.2(b)(2), and the state won. The state court issued a reasoned opinion. (Contrast
Cole v. Young,
Collateral attack in criminal cases is distinctive because liberty is at stake, but Congress always has limited the federal courts’ power to revisit decisions to those based on federal law. Jones could argue that under 28 U.S.C. § 1738 the federal court owes no greater respect to
People v. Jones
than a state court would afford that decision, so that if a state court would reexamine a question of state law on collateral attack, so too may (and must) a federal court. But Jones does not contend that Illinois reopens state-law issues on collateral attack; so far as we can tell, it does not. See
Clark, Berlin,
and
People v. Cowherd,
Even if the district court could have reviewed the state-law question settled in
People v. Jones,
this would not have carried the day without the aid of
Jackson.
That case rested principally on the reasonable-doubt standard, which
In re Winship,
This rationale of
Jackson
does not apply to sentencing. A state need not prove beyond a reasonable doubt the facts that a judge deems salient to sentencing. Quite the contrary, the Court has tolerated the imposition of sentences on hunch, hearsay, anything other than “misinformation of constitutional magnitude”,
United States v. Tucker,
Although this court has reserved questions concerning the proper treatment of a sentence based on false information,
Johnson v. United States,
We recognize that
Williams v. Duckworth,
The Due Process Clause could in principle require proof beyond a reasonable doubt in sentencing. A state may define crime directly (through substantive elements of the offense) or indirectly (through criteria labeled “sentencing” standards but substantive in operation). A state may define murder as deliberate killing and manslaughter as careless killing, with greatly different sentencing ranges. If a state should define as “murder” all killings, no matter the mental state, and then treat intent as a sentencing consideration, we assume that the state would have to prove intent beyond a reasonable doubt despite its effort to remove this element from the definition of the “crime”. See
Greider v. Duckworth,
Illinois did not smuggle an element of the offense into a sentencing statute. Brutality in the course of committing a crime is traditionally considered as part of sentencing. The brutality of conduct not only influences the selection of a sentence within a range but also may play the dominant role when the judge decides whether to make sentences run concurrently or consecutively. The trial judge in this case could have employed Jones’s efforts to terrorize the diner's patrons as a reason to give consecutive sentences adding up to 190 years, without any reference to the enhancement provisions of § 3.2(b)(2). Since he could have done this without anything like “proof beyond a reasonable doubt”, he may do the same thing under § 3.2(b)(2).
McMillan,
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Before the Court decided
Winship,
it sometimes reviewed criminal convictions to see whether any evidence was behind them. E.g.,
Thompson v. Louisville,
We need not choose among these possibilities, because they all lead to the same result. By our prior discussion, the definition of the legal elements of § 3.2(b)(2) given in People v. Jones is the law of Illinois, at least for these litigants. If no evidentiary inquiry at all is permissible, the constitutional question answers itself. If the Thompson standard applies, again there is no serious problem; there is “some” evidence that could lead a reasonable judge to believe that Jones acted in a wanton and cruel manner. If the x-ray vision approach applies, still there is no problem. The 60-year sentence was within the range allowed in the absence of enhancement and is consistent with the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause (the latter conclusion being inevitable in light of Jones’s forfeiture of that argument).
The same conduct engaged in today in Illinois probably would not be handled under § 3.2(b)(2). Jones may be a victim of circumstance, of being the first to be prosecuted under that statute, and so has experienced an unhappy but not unique fate: judges often modify rules of law, leaving the subjects of the initial cases with different treatment. Unequal treatment is not on that account unconstitutional. The evolution of legal rules is a feature of any legal system. The remedies lie in state law and in an appeal to the pardoning power.
Reversed.
