Lead Opinion
Wе granted rehearing en banc in this ha-beas corpus matter to consider whether to overrule Whipple v. Duckworth,
The state argues that regardless of the merits of Eaglin’s case, the granting of any relief to him is barred by Teague v. Lane,
The state did not argue Teague in the district court, however, and ordinarily the failure to present a ground in the trial court forfeits it in the appellate court. But whether this is true when the ground is Teague has been cast into some doubt by the Supreme Court’s very recent decision in Goeke v. Branch, — U.S. -,
There are three ways to take this. The first is that a state is free to argue Teague for the first time in the court of appeals, period. The second is that confronted by a brand new ground at the appellate stage, the state can argue Teague for the first time since, unless gifted with prevision, it could not have done so in the district court. Under the third interpretation the state may do this if but only if it cited Teague in the district court against the grounds actually presented to that court. The second interpretation is at once the most sensible аnd the least controversial. It would be unreasonable (and a burden on the courts) to require a party to
Goeke v. Branch makes clear, at least, that if the state either argues Teague in the district court or had no reasonable opportunity to argue it there, the court of appeals may not invalidate the petitioner’s conviction without considering the bearing of Teague. If as in the present case the state waives the defense, the court of appeals still may consider it if it wants to, Caspari v. Bohlen, — U.S. -, -,
The facts, at least as Eaglin would like us to bеlieve them and as a jury might (if instructed as he had wished) have found them, illuminate the reason for the criticism, culminating in Mathews, of the rule against pleading entrapment without admitting commission of the crime. Joan Scott, the state’s attorney of an Illinois county, had attempted to remove Eaglin’s children from his household because of neglect. In the ensuing custody battles, which ran from 1987 to the early part of 1990, Scott filed perjury charges against Eaglin’s wife and pаrents and had the wife imprisoned, albeit briefly, on a charge of contempt. In June of 1990, when Scott was attempting to end the Eag-lins’ parental rights and put their children up for adoption, a former felon named Joseph Roberts, recently hired by Eaglin to work for Eaglin’s construction company, told the Eag-lins that there was a contract out on the life of Mrs. Eaglin. This (all agree) was a lie. According to Eaglin, Roberts elaborated upon the liе the next day, telling him that the hit man was named Paul Long and that he had been hired by none other than Joan Scott, the prosecutor, who wanted to make Eaglin “worm and squirm.” This bizarre fabrication was — again according to Eaglin— soon followed by another: that Roberts had persuaded Long to kill Scott instead, provided of course that Eaglin would pay Long. Eaglin claims that he told Roberts that he didn’t want anyone killed — he just wanted himself and his family protectеd — but that Roberts had replied that the deal had been made and it was too late to back out: Long would kill Eaglin, his wife, and his children, unless Eaglin honored the contract and paid Long $5,000 through Roberts.
Eaglin’s testimony was in conflict with Roberts’s and for all we know may have been completely false on every point on which there was a conflict — it is none too plausible — in which event a defense of entrapment would fail regardless. Even if Eaglin’s testimony had been believed in its entirety, it is far from plain that he would have had a good defense. Under Illinois as under federal law, private entrapment is not a defense at all, see Ill.Rev.Stat.1989, ch. 38, ¶ 7 — 12; United States v. Hollingsworth,
Thus the challenged rule put Eaglin to a difficult choice. No matter, says the state; there is no federal constitutiоnal right to present affirmative defenses, at least affirmative defenses not based on federal law. And while the defense of entrapment is rooted in a view of the relation of the state to the citizen — that the state should leave objectively harmless people alone, United States v. Hollingsworth, supra,
A state is free within extremely broad limits to decide upon the elements of a erime. But having decided upon them it may not convict without proof beyond a reasonable doubt that every element was present in the particular сase, and therefore without the jury’s being instructed on each element. In re Winship,
We are not persuaded. It is true that at argument the state conceded that the constitutional right to counsel extends to affirmative defenses; a state cannot say to a criminal defendant, you may have a lawyer to contest the state’s case, but you will have to present your affirmative defenses on your own. But the concession is not fatal. To deny a defendant the assistance of counsel is to deny him the assistance of counsel. To refuse to let him present a state-created, not federally required, defense is, as a first approximation anyway, at worst merely to make an error of state law; and if there is one fixed star in the confusing jurisprudence of constitutional criminal procedure, it is that a violation of state law does not violate the Constitution. E.g., Estelle v. McGuire,
A violation of state law, substantive or procedural, could however result in a denial of due process, and hence in a violation of the Constitution, if it created a serious risk of convicting an innocent person. Id. at 72,
Even if all this is wrong, Eaglin must lose. There was no violation of state law. The ruling in Eaglin’s case that he could not plead entrapment followed directly from the decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois in the Gillespie decision authoritatively declaring the law of Illinois regarding the pleading of innocence and entrapment in the alternative. So the issue comes down to whether anything in the Constitution forbids a state to confine the defense of entrapment to defendants who admit the crime, as Illinois has done. The fact that states do not have to recognize a defense of entrapment at all implies considerable, perhaps plenary, freedom for the states in fixing the limits of the defense. Almost half the states still follow the rule that the defense of entrapment is available only to defendants who admit their crimes. Annot., 5 A.L.R.4th § 1128 (1994); “Criminal Law,” 21 Am.Jur.2d § 208 (2d ed. 1995). The opinion of these states on the question is entitled to considerable respect, especially when it is not in conflict with any specific federal right. The reasoning of these states is easy to see, though not compelling. There is a logical inconsistency in claiming both that one did not commit a crime and that one was induced to do so by a government agent. It is like claiming not to have been the killer and to have killed in self-defense. The making of inconsistent defenses is likely to confuse the jury and to bring public opprobrium on the criminal justice system for tolerating such monkeyshines.
But whether the rule in force in Illinois is good or bad really isn’t the issue at all. The Constitution does not require the states to adopt the latest and best thinking on criminal procedure or any other subject. Bell v. Duckworth,
There is no greater merit to the suggestion that forbidding the pleading of the defense in the alternative violates the right against compelled self-incrimination. The government is allowed to reward criminal defendants for their admissions. This is done routinely in sentencing. Merely consider the provision in the federal sentenсing guidelines allowing a sentencing discount for “acceptance of responsibility” by the defendant. U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1. Qualifying for the discount almost always requires pleading guilty and thus surrendering the right not to be compelled to testify against oneself, yet is not deemed to violate the self-incrimination clause. Ebbole v. United States,
Whipple is overruled, the decision of the district court granting the petition for habeas corpus is reversed, and the ease is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Concurrence Opinion
with whom ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge, joins, concurring:
While it is incorrect to condemn Illinois’s view of the entrapment defense as unconstitutional, the majority opinion goes too far in justifying Illinois’s rule. I do not agree that entrapment is necessarily a defense for “criminals.” Instead, the point behind the defense is that but for government inducеment, no criminal motive would have arisen. In Sorrells v. United States,
The defense is available, not in the view that the accused though guilty may go free, but that the Government cannot be permitted to contend that he is guilty of a crime where the government officials are the instigators of his conduct.
The view that in entrapment cases the government is the source of the criminal mоtive has been reaffirmed again and again. See Sherman v. United States,
This aspect of entrapment in fact gives rise to the requirement that a defendant who is predisposed to commit the crime may not avail himself of the defense. See Sorrells,
By the same token, the defense does not allow us to regard a defendant as “criminal” merely because he engaged in a prohibited act. Hollingsworth teaches as much by demanding a showing of predisposition over and above willingness.
