delivered the opinion of the court:
The defendant, Derrick King, initiated this action for post-conviction relief in the circuit court of Cook County. The circuit court denied the defendant’s amended petition without an evidentiary hearing. Because the defendant received the death penalty for his underlying murder conviction, the present appeal lies directly to this court. 134 Ill. 2d R. 651(a).
In 1981 the defendant was convicted of murder and armed robbery and was sentenced to death for the murder conviction. The offenses occurred when the defendant shot and killed the cashier at a small store in Chicago during a robbery. On direct appeal, this court affirmed the defendant’s convictions and death sentence. People v. King,
The Post-Conviction Hearing Act (725 ILCS 5/122 — 1 through 122 — 7 (West 1996)) provides a means by which a defendant may challenge his conviction or sentence for violations of federal or state constitutional rights. People v. Tenner,
The defendant raised numerous claims in the post-conviction proceedings below; defense counsel has culled through these matters and has selected five questions for our consideration here. The defendant first argues that the post-conviction judge erred in refusing to allow counsel to file an addendum to the amended post-conviction petition. The defendant’s second set of lawyers had submitted an amended petition, omitting some issues originally raised by the defendant in the pro se petition while adding several other issues. The addendum drafted by the defendant’s new lawyer sought to reintroduce issues that had been contained in the defendant’s original, pro se petition but had been left out of the amended petition.
It was well within the post-conviction court’s discretion to decide whether or not to grant leave to counsel to file the addendum to the amended post-conviction petition. See People v. Sanchez,
The defendant next raises an issue relating to his fitness at the post-conviction proceedings. The defendant argues that the post-conviction court erred in dismissing the amended post-conviction petition without having conducted a hearing on the defendant’s fitness or having found the defendant competent to assist counsel. In an order entered May 14, 1993, the circuit court granted the defendant’s motion for a stay of the proceedings pending a determination of the defendant’s mental status and a psychiatric examination of the defendant. The record does not contain any indication that the court later found the defendant fit in the matter, and the defendant now argues that he was denied both due process and the reasonable assistance of counsel in the post-conviction proceedings because there was no formal judicial determination of his fitness. The defendant further contends that, in the absence of a fitness examination and a judicial determination of fitness, the prejudicial effect of the court’s denial of leave to file the addendum to the amended post-conviction petition was manifest; the defendant asserts that he might not have been able to assist his second set of lawyers in the preparation of the amended petition.
The record, however, shows that the examination ordered by the court was conducted, and that the psychiatrist who examined the defendant found him to be fit. While this case was pending before this court, we allowed a motion by the State to supplement the record with a copy of the report made by a psychiatrist at Pontiac Correctional Center, where the defendant was incarcerated. In the report, dated August 21, 1993, the examining psychiatrist concluded that the defendant was fit and competent. Although there is nothing of record to show whether or in what manner the post-conviction court disposed of this question, we believe that the report provides persuasive evidence of the defendant’s fitness. Too, there was no showing before the post-conviction court, in denying counsel’s motion to file the addendum, that the defendant had been unable to assist counsel in the preparation of the amended petition. Together, these circumstances demonstrate to us that the omission of a fitness order from the record fails to suggest either that the defendant was denied due process or that he was impeded in the assistance he could provide to counsel.
We note, moreover, that the defendant’s current lawyer apparently did not perceive any problem with the defendant’s level of functioning during the period she represented him in the proceedings below; significantly, counsel raised no question on her own regarding the defendant’s competency, and, as she states in her brief, she was not aware of the prior request for a fitness hearing until she reviewed the record while preparing for this appeal. As we explain later in this opinion, the cause must be remanded to the circuit court for further proceeding on other issues; if counsel believes that there then exists a further question regarding the defendant’s fitness, counsel is free to raise the question at that time.
The defendant next argues that the cause must be remanded for an evidentiary hearing on his contention challenging the State’s use of peremptory challenges to exclude blacks during jury selection. The defendant’s trial took place in 1981. This court issued its opinion in the case in January 1986, and rehearing was denied in April 1986. The United States Supreme Court decided Batson v. Kentucky,
In support of this contention, the defendant relies on an affidavit that was prepared by one of his trial lawyers. In the affidavit, dated August 12, 1985, some four years after trial, counsel stated that the defendant’s jury consisted of 11 whites and one black, that the prosecution exercised seven peremptory challenges in the case, and that all seven challenges used by the State were to black jurors. The affidavit does not describe the ethnicity of the alternate jurors or the composition of the jury pool.
The substantive issue has been waived by counsel’s failure to raise an appropriate objection during jury selection, either under the reasoning later adopted in Batson, or under the then-existing law expressed in Swain v. Alabama,
The defendant makes the further argument, however, that trial counsel and appellate counsel were ineffective for failing to preserve the issue for purposes of appeal. To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant must show both a deficiency in counsel’s performance and prejudice resulting from that deficiency. Strickland v. Washington,
The defendant notes, however, that counsel on direct appeal had taken an active role in challenging race-based jury selection processes in a number of cases, and the defendant maintains that counsel therefore should have been particularly sensitive to the preservation of this issue. We do not believe that appellate counsel’s special expertise in this area of the law affords the defendant any help here, for counsel’s familiarity with the issue actually argues against the defendant’s position. Counsel could have simply believed that the present case did not give rise to a valid question regarding the prosecution’s use of peremptory challenges during jury selection, especially in view of trial counsel’s failure to preserve the issue.
The defendant next presents an argument relating to allegations that the defendant was mistreated while undergoing questioning by police in this case. The defendant in this, case was interrogated at Area 2 headquarters by Detective Robert Dwyer, while Sergeant Jon Burge was also present. On direct review, this court upheld the trial court’s determination that the defendant’s confession was given voluntarily and was not the product of physical coercion. People v. King,
This court has addressed a similar issue in People v. Patterson,
In light of the new evidence included in the amended post-conviction petition, most notably the report by the OPS, we believe that an evidentiary hearing should be conducted on this portion of the defendant’s post-conviction petition. After the parties filed their briefs, but before oral argument was held in this case, the defendant submitted a motion seeking a remand to the circuit court for purposes of conducting a new suppression hearing in this case. Given our decision to remand the cause for an evidentiary hearing, we deny the defendant’s motion.
In his final post-conviction challenge, the defendant argues that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present certain mitigating evidence at the capital sentencing hearing conducted in this case.
At the second stage of the defendant’s sentencing hearing, the State presented evidence regarding the defendant’s prior offenses. In mitigation, defense counsel presented only two witnesses, and their testimony spans fewer than 16 pages of the transcript. The first defense witness was one of the defendant’s aunts, Geneva Jackson, who testified in general terms about the defendant’s childhood. Jackson was one of the defendant’s mother’s sisters, and she stated that the defendant, while a youth, lived with her and other relatives for varying periods of time. The witness explained that the defendant was not able to live at home because the defendant’s mother was not stable. The witness said further that the defendant’s mother used drugs and alcohol. The second defense witness was the defendant’s mother, whose testimony was even briefer than her sister’s. She stated that she loved her son, that the defendant’s biological father was dead, that she was divorced from her second husband, and that the defendant had lived with a number of her sisters for extended periods of time. In closing argument, counsel argued that three mitigating circumstances had been established in this case: that the defendant was young when he committed the offense, that he did not have a substantial criminal record, and that he came from a troubled background. Defense counsel also devoted a substantial part of his closing argument to an attack on the death penalty law, questioning its deterrent value and challenging its morality.
The amended post-conviction petition alleges that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present substantial evidence in mitigation that would have supported the defense theory at the sentencing hearing. Accompanying the defendant’s amended post-conviction petition were a number of affidavits describing additional evidence in mitigation that defense counsel could have presented at sentencing. These witnesses included a mitigation specialist, Cynthia Hines, who submitted a report documenting the defendant’s troubled childhood. Other witnesses included a number of family members and other relatives, who further described the defendant’s troubled childhood, his close relationship with his grandmother, who died when the defendant was 13, and his history of drug and alcohol abuse. These witnesses stated in their affidavits that defense counsel did not contact them prior to sentencing or ask them whether they would testify in the defendant’s behalf at the hearing. The defendant’s former stepfather, Clifford Rhymes, stated in his affidavit that he asked defense counsel whether he could testify for the defendant at the hearing, and counsel replied that his testimony would not be necessary. We note that the defendant’s trial concluded on June 12, 1981; the sentencing hearing did not begin until July 28, 1981. Thus, defense counsel still had more than month after trial to complete their preparations for the sentencing hearing.
Our cases have previously recognized that evidence of a difficult childhood is not inherently mitigating. People v. Madej,
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the cause is remanded to that court for further proceedings.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part;
cause remanded.
