THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Appellee, v. SCOTTY LEE KINKEAD, Appellant.
No. 75236
Supreme Court of Illinois
May 21, 1998
316-335
Reversed.
(No. 75236.-
Opinion filed May 21, 1998.
HARRISON, J., specially concurring.
HEIPLE, J., joined by MILLER and BILANDIC, JJ., dissenting.
James E. Ryan, Attorney General, of Springfield, and Alan D. Tucker, State‘s Attorney, of Havana (Barbara A. Preiner, Solicitor General, and Arleen C. Anderson and Michael A. Hurst, Assistant Attorneys General, of Chicago, of counsel), for the People.
JUSTICE McMORROW delivered the judgment of the court:
In a prior decision of this court we ordered a limited remand of this cause to the circuit court of Mason County, but retained jurisdiction over this direct capital appeal. People v. Kinkead, 168 Ill. 2d 394 (1995) (Kinkead I). The purpose of the remand was to permit a fuller determination of the circumstances surrounding defendant‘s ingestion of psychotropic medication during the time of his guilty plea and sentencing.
In the original proceedings in the circuit court, defendant, Scotty Lee Kinkead, pleaded guilty to first degree murder and other offenses. He had initially accepted a plea offer from the State that would have enabled him to plead guilty to felony murder rather than intentional murder and that would have spared him the death penalty. Subsequently, he changed his mind and, despite the advice of counsel, informed the court that he wished to plead guilty to all charges and face the death penalty. Defendant had a history of suicide attempts and self-mutilation, and his presentencing report revealed that while he was in jail, defendant was being administered Thorazine, an antipsychotic medication. During sentencing, defendant asked the court to impose the death penalty, and the court complied. Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 405.
On remand, the circuit court conducted a hearing and made certain findings. At the close of evidence, the judge announced that he was not ruling upon ultimate issues concerning defendant‘s fitness at the time of his plea and sentencing, or whether the failure of defendant‘s trial attorney to request a fitness hearing constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. The judge stated that he would instead “make findings of facts and the [Illinois Supreme Court] can draw what it wants from the findings.” In his written findings, the judge summarized the procedural history of the matter. Without cit-
Pursuant to this court‘s remand order, the circuit court then ordered the clerk of the circuit court of Mason County to certify a copy of the circuit court‘s memorandum of opinion and findings to this court. We granted both parties leave to file supplemental briefs in this court on the issues raised by the remand hearing.
BACKGROUND
On March 26 and 27, 1996, pursuant to this court‘s remand, the circuit court held an evidentiary hearing on the issues relating to defendant‘s ingestion of psychotropic medication in 1992, while he was incarcerated and awaiting trial and sentencing. Prior to the presentation of witnesses, defense counsel moved for the entry of a directed finding based on the uncontested evidence, found in the jail medication logs and similar documents, that defendant was taking psychotropic medicine during the time he entered his guilty plea and was sentenced. According to this uncontested evidence, defendant was prescribed a dose of 100 milligrams of Thorazine each day from June 20, 1992 through July 17, 1992; from July 20, 1992, through September 26, 1992; from September 28, 1992, through October 31, 1992, and from November 2, 1992, through November 4, 1992. On November 11, 1992, November 13 through 21, 1992, and from November 23 through November 30, 1992, defendant took 50 milligrams of Thorazine daily.
At the time of defendant‘s original trial proceedings, while he was taking daily doses of 100 milligrams of Thorazine, he initially accepted then rejected the State‘s offer under which he would plead guilty in exchange for a sentence other than death. On October 19, 1992, defendant informed his counsel he had changed his mind,
Notwithstanding the above, uncontested evidence, the circuit court denied defendant‘s motion for a directed finding that he should have received a fitness hearing in 1992 pursuant to
On the first day of the remand hearing, defense counsel moved to exclude one of the State‘s experts, Dr. Shillcutt, on the ground that the defense had not received notice that he would testify until 30 minutes before the hearing. The witness had not submitted a report and defense counsel had no notice of the substance of his testimony or expert opinion. The trial court recognized that the lack of adequate notice put the defense at a disadvantage, but provisionally denied the motion to exclude, directing that the defense be given an opportunity to interview Dr. Shillcutt before he testified.
The State‘s first witness, Curtis Eugene Pierce, was the jail administrator for the Fulton County jail, where defendant was incarcerated from March to November 5, 1992. Pierce had known defendant for several years prior to defendant‘s arrest for murder. According to Pierce, defendant exhibited no unusual behaviors or physical problems from March to June 20, 1992. Pierce characterized defendant‘s behavior and demeanor as “normal.” However, after June 1992 (the period which corresponds to defendant‘s receipt of regular doses of Thorazine), Pierce detected a change in defendant‘s behavior in the form of “cockiness,” disrespect, and irritability. Pierce had no involvement in any medical decisions and did not discuss defendant with Dr. Lee, the physician for the Fulton County jail who prescribed the psychotropic medication.
Leland Keith was the chief deputy sheriff for Mason County at the time defendant was transferred from Fulton County to the Mason County jail. Keith testified regarding the medical distribution record which listed the days on which defendant received Thorazine. In Keith‘s opinion, defendant did not display any unusual or bizarre mannerisms and appeared “normal.” However, he admitted he did not know defendant and had nothing against which to compare his behavior. Keith conceded that defendant never was examined by either a medical doctor or a clinical psychologist while at the Mason County jail. Keith stated that he was aware that defendant was a suicide risk based on his past history.
The State‘s next witness, Gale Carper, was one of
According to Carper, in the fall of 1993, she, McMillen, and defendant discussed the plea negotiations and his decision to reject the State‘s offer for life imprisonment rather than the death penalty. Carper testified that defendant appeared to be very sad. He became adamant about requesting the death penalty. Subsequently, according to Carper, the attorney-client relationship between defendant and McMillen “became tense” for awhile. Asked to give a lay opinion as to whether defendant‘s will had become flattened, Carper agreed that his decision to seek death was more than just a change of mind. She said his desire for self-preservation disappeared. Carper also testified that if she had known defendant was taking Thorazine she would have recommended that a fitness hearing be requested.
Alesia McMillen, defendant‘s lead trial attorney, also testified. She described her meetings with defendant and stated that he appeared to understand some of the matters discussed while he had difficulties with others, such as the different stages of a capital case. She did not observe any unusual physical behaviors in her client. McMillen testified that she had requested a report in advance of trial from Dr. Day, a clinical psychologist,
According to McMillen, during the plea negotiations, defendant expressed reservations about a natural life sentence and asked her to explore the possibility of a plea that would include a term of years rather than natural life. She told her client that they could request a sentencing hearing and seek a term of years. He agreed, and McMillen communicated the defense position to the prosecutor. The prosecutor agreed to permit defendant to plead guilty to one count of felony murder and to forgo asking for the death penalty. McMillen further testified that on October 19, 1992, the date on which both sides planned to present their plea agreement to the court, defendant told her he had changed his mind and preferred to plead guilty to all charges and be sentenced to death. She strongly advised against his decision, and stated she would not request the death penalty on his behalf. McMillen did not know that defendant was taking psychotropic medication. If she had known about the Thorazine she would have made further inquiry and requested assistance from a medical doctor.
The State called the following doctors to testify: Phillipp E. Bornstein, M.D., a psychiatrist; John R. Day, a psychologist; and Samuel Shillcutt, a neuropharmacologist. Dr. Bornstein‘s and Dr. Shillcutt‘s testimony was based solely on their review of records. Neither doctor met with or examined defendant. Dr. Day had met with defendant and administered tests in 1992, at the request of defense counsel, but did not perform a fitness evaluation.
Dr. Bornstein expressed agreement with Dr. Day‘s
According to Dr. Bornstein, a psychotic person might receive a dose ranging from 200 to 400 milligrams at the lower end, up to 2,000 milligrams at the high end for an acutely agitated person. In Dr. Bornstein‘s opinion, a 100 milligram dose of Thorazine would not act as a major tranquilizer or an antipsychotic, but would induce drowsiness and reduce anxiety. Dr. Bornstein suggested that a reduction in anxiety would have been beneficial for defendant. However, Dr. Bornstein admitted that anxiety is not necessarily a bad quality when a person faces a difficult decision. He could not state whether a reduction in defendant‘s anxiety might have affected defendant‘s ability to make the life or death decision to seek the death penalty.
Dr. Bornstein stated his belief that in the dosages described in the instant case, Thorazine should not impair the ability of a person of average intelligence to make a logical decision. He further stated that the dos-
Dr. Bornstein admitted that in the hundreds of times that he has testified regarding the fitness of a particular defendant, he has always personally consulted with such defendant. Dr. Bornstein stated that he would take into account many factors in a fitness analysis, including the person‘s intellect, psychiatric history, and memory. He would also seek information from family members, police reports, the defendant‘s counsel, and other materials. In the instant case, however, Dr. Bornstein did not meet or examine defendant, nor did he talk to defendant‘s trial attorneys.
The State‘s next witness was Dr. Shillcutt, a neuropsychopharmacologist who was not disclosed as an expert witness until the day of the remand hearing. He explained that pharmacology is the study of the interac-
Over objection from the defense, Dr. Shillcutt testified that research conducted between 1955 and 1987 suggests that a 100 milligram dose would not have a measurable effect that would inhibit a person from making a reasoned judgment. A very young or old person might be affected more by the dosage than others. However, he acknowledged that all of his research on the effect of psychotropic medications was limited to people who are psychotic, and that such drugs are not ordinarily given to nonpsychotic individuals. Psychotropic medicine is also used to treat neurological or “movement” disorders, such as dystonia, but Dr. Shillcutt stated that “we do not fully understand the psychopathology of psychiatric illnesses as well as movement disorders.” He would not ordinarily recommend treating insomnia with Thorazine, nor would he recommend that drug for treating anxiety reaction or depression.
Dr. Shillcutt admitted that if a person‘s liver function were impaired, such disfunction would affect that person‘s ability to metabolize a drug like Thorazine,
The State‘s next witness was Dr. Day, the clinical psychologist who had prepared a report for the defense prior to the plea agreement and who had testified at defendant‘s sentencing hearing. On the first date that defendant met with Dr. Day, on June 17, 1992, an associate of Dr. Day gave defendant the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), a psychological test. The MMPI did not register the use of psychotropic drugs because defendant was not yet taking Thorazine. At the time of the second and third interviews, in July and August 1992, respectively, defendant was taking the medicine, but Dr. Day was unaware of that fact. Dr. Day was not requested to perform a fitness examination, but instead was requested to determine whether defendant had any psychological processes that would inhibit the development of a defense and whether such processes would have explained some of his behavior.
Despite the fact that Dr. Day did not perform a fitness evaluation in 1992, at the remand hearing in 1996 he was asked to give his opinion as to defendant‘s competency to assist in his defense at the time of the plea proceedings and sentencing. Over defense objections based on relevance and on the fact that retrospective assessments of fitness are prohibited by due process
Dr. Day acknowledged that patients who express a desire to commit suicide may be suffering from mental illness, extremely poor judgment, or severe depression. Dr. Day stated that he would be quite concerned about the mental competence of a suicidal person. He admitted that if such a person was taking Thorazine, that fact would “certainly” cause increased concerns about the person‘s thought processes. Dr. Day testified that when he learned of defendant‘s decision to reject the lifesaving plea bargain, he viewed it as “a change from all of the hours of previous interaction.” Dr. Day stated that it would be “very important” to explore defendant‘s decision, “particularly in light of the long history of self-mutilation.”
The State presented no additional witnesses. On the second day of the remand hearing, March 27, 1996, the defense called Michael Gelbort, a clinical psychologist with a practice in neuropsychology. His practice includes therapy and evaluations of patients referred by psychiatrists, psychologists, and others. He has studied the drugs which affect cognition, or thought processes, including Thorazine. According to Dr. Gelbort, even in low doses, Thorazine decreases the level of arousal in a person through the alteration of brain chemistry.
In September 1995, pursuant to a request from defendant‘s counsel, Dr. Gelbort conducted a psychologi-
Dr. Gelbort found from his testing that defendant was not psychotic, which, he stated, has “clear-cut implications for the effect of something like Thorazine.” He testified that when antipsychotic drugs are given to persons who are not psychotic, the effect is to relax the person and suppress cognition, including reasoning, judgment, and problem solving. Dr. Gelbort acknowledged that a 100 milligram dose could be used as a sleep aid, but that it would also suppress cognition and cause a person to be less aware of the implications of his or her decisions. He stated that a person taking this dosage level could interact and appear mostly normal, but the drug would have the invisible effect of causing the person to “think more slowly, be less aware of implications, to have more difficulty holding down multiple ideas in mind at the same time, which is essential to reasoning and judgment.” Dr. Gelbort expressed his opinion that a person who is taking 100 milligrams of Thorazine “definitely” should be examined to determine fitness before entering a plea to a capital charge. Al-
Significantly, according to Dr. Gelbort, Thorazine would have a more pronounced effect on an injured brain. In the instant case there was evidence that defendant was brain damaged. Dr. Gelbort found that defendant suffers from impaired judgment and problem solving, learning disabilities, and difficulty in focusing and concentrating. The tests he performed showed that defendant‘s brain disfunction was longstanding.
Dr. Gelbort also testified that the report prepared by Dr. Day was “fairly narrow” in scope because it did not look at a wide range of psychological factors. In contrast, Dr. Gelbort‘s analysis and report included cognition and thinking skills. Dr. Gelbort observed that the testimony of Dr. Bornstein on the effect of Thorazine in general was accurate, but that it was not focused on the specific effects on the defendant in this case. Over objection by the State, Dr. Gelbort stated his opinion to a reasonable degree of psychological certainty that the course of Thorazine given to defendant at the time of the plea offer and rejection “would have had an effect on his thought process.” Such an effect might not be apparent to observers of the defendant, according to Dr. Gelbort, and testing would be necessary. Therefore, Dr. Gelbort concluded, a fitness evaluation of defendant at the time of his plea and sentencing would have been appropriate.
The circuit court entered a “Memorandum of Opinion and Certain Findings of Fact,” which was filed approximately two months after the remand hearing. In the opinion, the court acknowledged that it had “expand[ed] the scope of the hearing, receiving evidence not only on those basic points raised, but also upon the question of the effect of Thorazine upon a given recipient. The Court further received evidence bearing on the physi-
The circuit court stated its belief that the effect of the dosage given to defendant “appeared to be not medically significant.” The court did not explain the precise basis on which it reached this conclusion. However, the court opined that defendant had been suffering from anxiety because of his incarceration for murder and that he needed the medication to assist him in sleeping. The circuit court also made several observations about whether a “gap” in the administration of the Thorazine to a person might result in a decreased tolerance for the medication upon its resumption. The court noted that there was no gap in the administration of the drug to defendant prior to the entry of the guilty plea but that there were gaps in the administration of the drug at the time of the sentencing. The court did not state what, if any, inferences were to be drawn from these “gaps,” but instead stated that “[t]here is no evidence to determine how long the gap in the administration of the medicine must be in order to cause a significant decrease in the tolerance level.” The circuit court summarized the events of the negotiated plea, and defendant‘s rejection of the State‘s offer to forgo the death penalty. According to the trial court, defendant‘s position at the time appeared “to be logical, even though not a position which the majority of persons under similar circumstances might be expected to take.” Without further discussion as to whether such decision might have been influenced by defendant‘s ingestion of antipsychotic medication, in light of the evidence adduced at the remand hearing, the circuit court simply concluded that the Thorazine “appeared not to have a medically significant effect.”
The State argues that we should not grant defendant relief based solely on the fact he was taking antipsychotic medication during the time of defendant‘s plea and sentencing. Further, the State contends, the scope of the circuit court‘s hearing was appropriate in light of this court‘s remand order. The State also defends the circuit court‘s findings and argues that the court properly exercised its discretion in permitting Dr. Shillcutt to testify.
ANALYSIS
Initially, we note that the legislature has amended
Subsequent to the filing of the supplemental briefs in the case at bar, this court issued its opinion in People v. Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d 249 (1998). In Cortes, we unanimously concluded that the most recent amendment to
In Nitz, this court considered whether the first amendment to
The State finds a conflict between Nitz and Birdsall because it fails to consider the entirety of the Nitz opinion. In the same paragraph in Nitz in which we determined that the first amendment to
Cortes, Birdsall and Nitz establish that the second amendment to
The ultimate legal issue in this appeal is whether defendant is entitled to a new trial, under the specific circumstances of this case, because he did not receive a fitness hearing before his conviction and death sentence. To answer this question we review the general due process principles which are implicated in a post-trial inquiry into fitness issues, the evolving legal standard developed by recent precedent of this court, the purpose and scope of the remand hearing in the case at bar, and the evidence adduced at that hearing.
In Brandon, this court ordered a new trial where the defendant‘s trial counsel had failed to request a fitness hearing pursuant to
In Gevas, a majority of this court followed the reasoning of the Brandon decision and held that where the
In Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 407, we quoted with approval the statement of the Gevas court that “[t]he legislature has equated the administering of psychotropic medication to a defendant with a bona fide doubt as to fitness to stand trial.” Citing to Brandon, we concluded in Kinkead I that trial counsel‘s failure to request a fitness hearing under the statute did not waive the issue (Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 406), and that because the trial court had notice from the presentencing report that defendant was receiving psychotropic medication, the court had a duty to further investigate defendant‘s fitness for trial. Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 406-07, citing Gevas, 166 Ill. 2d at 469. However, we declined to order a new trial on the record before us. Because the incomplete state of the record did not allow this court to ascertain whether, in fact, defendant‘s use of Thorazine was sufficiently proximate in time to his plea proceedings and sentencing, we ordered the cause remanded for a supplemental hearing. Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 417.
Subsequent decisions of this court followed the rationale of Brandon, Gevas, and Kinkead I. E.g., People v. Birdsall, 172 Ill. 2d 464 (1996); People v. Nitz, 173 Ill. 2d 151 (1996). In Birdsall, we reversed the defendant‘s convictions and death sentence where counsel was ineffective for failing to request a fitness hearing despite counsel‘s awareness that defendant was taking psychotropic medications and had a history of mental problems. In Nitz, a post-conviction appeal, the defendant provided documentation of his claim that during his trial and sentencing he had been administered psychotropic
The Brandon line of cases attempted to effectuate the express intent of the legislature—as reflected by the plain terms of the statute—and to provide a meaningful remedy to defendants who were entitled to, but who did not receive, fitness hearings based on their ingestion of psychotropic medications. In ordering new trials as the appropriate remedy, this court recognized that retrospective fitness determinations are inherently problematic and may implicate due process concerns. See Brandon, 162 Ill. 2d at 459-60, citing, inter alia, Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 386, 15 L. Ed. 2d 815, 822, 86 S. Ct. 836, 842 (1966); Gevas, 166 Ill. 2d at 471.
In recent opinions of this court, an exception to the rule of “automatic” reversal for new trial has been applied. See People v. Burgess, 176 Ill. 2d 289 (1997); People v. Neal, 179 Ill. 2d 541 (1997); Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d 249. In Burgess, the defendant requested a limited remand, similar to that ordered in Kinkead I, before his direct appeal was heard by this court. During the remand hearing, evidence was presented indicating that the defendant, who had been taking psychotropic drugs during the proceedings, was not impaired by those drugs. In Burgess, this court held that it was not required to ignore the supplemental evidence presented at the remand hearing, even if such evidence may have been beyond the scope of the remand order. Although the Burgess majority recognized that it could order an “automatic” new trial based on the Brandon line of cases, the court determined that “there will be some circumstances in which it can be said that the use of psy-
In Neal, this court followed the Burgess rationale and declined to grant the defendant a reversal and remand for new trial where the defendant, in his third post-conviction petition, presented evidence that he had been taking daily doses ranging from 25 to 75 milligrams of Thorazine before his pretrial suppression hearing. The circuit court conducted an evidentiary hearing on defendant‘s post-conviction petition, and found, inter alia, that defendant had ceased taking the medication days before the suppression hearing, which was held approximately two months before the trial itself. The circuit court held that
In affirming the circuit court‘s denial of the defendant‘s petition in Neal, we analyzed our prior precedents involving
The above history of our cases demonstrates the inherent difficulties in attempting to apply a bright-line rule of law to specific factual circumstances involving defendants’ fitness to stand trial. The bright-line or automatic reversal rule of the BrandonBurgess and subsequent cases. We believe that the case-by-case approach comports with due process and does not impose an unduly restrictive burden on the State. In light of our case law, we conclude that defendant cannot prevail in his request for a new trial based solely on the fact that the evidence on remand showed that he had been receiving antipsychotic medication during his trial and sentencing proceedings.
Similarly, we reject defendant‘s challenge to the scope of the circuit court evidentiary hearing on remand. Because defendant believes that the circuit court‘s admission of evidence greatly exceeded the scope of the remand that was contemplated by this court‘s prior opinion in Kinkead I, he contends that we should disregard certain evidence. Specifically, he argues that evidence which purported to show the effects of Thorazine on his mental functioning, mood, and demeanor should not be considered in determining whether he was entitled to a
With respect to the issue of scope, we note that the circuit court did not limit its inquiry to our request for “the dates on which [defendant] received and ingested [psychotropic] medicine and whether the psychotropic drug treatment is linked closely enough to the time of defendant‘s plea of guilty and sentencing to have entitled him to a competency hearing pursuant to
To answer that question we state the legal standard for reviewing the sui generis remand hearing. In the instant case the circuit court was careful to acknowledge that the hearing on remand was not to be equated with a retroactive fitness hearing, and expressly stated that it was not “conducting a fitness hearing regarding the Defendant‘s fitness to stand trial at the time he entered his plea.” Accordingly, we do not review the circuit court‘s belief that the Thorazine appeared to be “not medically significant” as if such statement constituted a de facto competency adjudication that defendant was able to assist in his defense at the time he pleaded guilty and requested the death penalty. Cf. Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d at 271, 276; Burgess, 176 Ill. 2d at 302-03. In addition, the circuit court did not reach legal conclusions regarding defendant‘s right to a fitness hearing. Instead, as the circuit court expressly observed, the ultimate determination of whether defendant should have received a fitness hearing at the time of his plea and sentencing is for this court to decide upon review of all relevant considerations. Consequently, we must determine whether the defendant has met the threshold criteria of establishing a bona fide doubt as to his fitness at the time of his trial or sentencing proceedings. See, e.g., Drope, 420 U.S. 162.
In the case at bar, we believe that the supplemental evidence adduced at the remand hearing, along with other factors, establishes the existence of a bona fide doubt as to defendant‘s competency at the time he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to death. Accordingly, we reverse defendant‘s conviction and death sentence
The circumstances of the instant case differ significantly from the cases in which this court has declined to order an automatic reversal for new trial. Neal, 179 Ill. 2d 541; Burgess, 176 Ill. 2d 289; Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d 249. In Neal, the defendant‘s use of psychotropic medications ended two months before trial. After an evidentiary hearing on the post-conviction petition, the circuit court held that the requirements of
The facts in Burgess also differ in significant respects from those in the instant case. In Burgess, we specifically cited as persuasive the concession of defendant‘s expert that two of the three psychotropic drugs given to defendant would not have had any effect on him, and that the bedtime doses would have dissipated by morning. (None of the medications were Thorazine.) See also Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d at 276 (affirming trial court‘s finding, made approximately one year after the defendant‘s trial and sentencing, that defendant was fit for trial “because,
Other evidence cited as persuasive by the Burgess court included testimony from defendant‘s trial counsel that defendant discussed all aspects of the defense and did not appear confused or otherwise impaired. In contrast, in the case at bar, the testimony of defendant‘s two trial attorneys, Carper and McMillen, indicates that defendant did not appear to understand certain matters relating to his defense. In addition, at times, defendant did not seem to be aware or focused during his meetings with defense counsel. According to Carper, defendant appeared to have given up any interest in self-preservation at the time he rejected the State‘s offer of life imprisonment. Both of defendant‘s trial attorneys testified that they would have taken additional measures had they had known that jail employees were administering psychotropic medication to defendant.
Another distinction between the testimony in the Burgess remand hearing and in the case at bar involves jail employees’ personal observations of the defendants. In Burgess there was testimony indicating that the defendant was feigning a condition of shaking when jailers passed by his cell, after which he would return to his
Testimony based on the personal observations of defense counsel and jail employees does not of itself indicate that defendant in the case at bar was impaired by the Thorazine. Nonetheless, it permits an inference that defendant might have been adversely affected by the medication, unlike the inference to be drawn from the observation evidence adduced in Burgess.
Another distinguishing factor between this case and Burgess is the amount and nature of the medical evidence in the two cases. In Burgess, the psychiatrist who prescribed the psychotropic drugs, Dr. Edwalds, testified that his purpose in giving them to the defendant was to assist him in sleeping. In the case at bar, however, the doctor who prescribed Thorazine to defendant did not testify. The State‘s expert witnesses, Dr. Bornstein and Dr. Shillcutt, never examined or even spoke to defendant. All of the doctors who testified in the instant case agreed that Thorazine is intended for treatment of major mental disorders and that its use as a sleeping aid in prisons does not conform to practice outside of prisons. Moreover, in the instant case the State‘s witnesses offered only generalized opinions as to the likely effect of a “low-end” dose of Thorazine on an average person who is neither very young or very old.
In Burgess, a psychiatrist who testified in the defendant‘s behalf stated her belief that two of the drugs given to defendant at bedtime would not have had any
We further observe that the medical testimony in the Burgess case did not address matters that are of specific importance to the particular defendant in the instant case, such as the effects of liver disfunction or brain damage on an individual‘s absorption of psychotropic medications. In the case at bar, Dr. Shillcutt acknowledged that if a person had an impaired liver functioning, the effect of the same doses of the drug could cause higher concentrations of the drug in the brain and consequently cause a person to be unable to track complex issues or otherwise suffer a disorder in thinking.
In light of the question raised about the significance of liver function in the metabolism of Thorazine, other evidence of record becomes significant, such as defendant‘s long-term abuse of alcohol, which began in childhood. Neither of the State‘s expert witnesses knew what defendant‘s liver functioning was, and therefore they were
We conclude that the remand hearing conducted in the case at bar gives rise to a significantly greater concern than existed in Burgess, Neal or Cortes, that the defendant‘s ingestion of antipsychotic drugs during the plea and sentencing proceedings influenced his decision-making abilities. Therefore, our conclusion that the defendants in those cases were not entitled to a new trial does not compel a similar conclusion in the case at bar. Indeed, in this case, much of the evidence appears to favor defendant‘s argument that the Thorazine he took may have influenced his ability to make a reasoned decision to plead guilty to greater charges and seek a sentence of death. Applying the case-specific approach of Burgess to the case at bar, we hold that the evidence on remand demonstrates a bona fide doubt of defendant‘s fitness to stand trial.
Finally, we note the additional factors which support our conclusion that defendant should have received a fitness hearing in 1992. Defendant requested the trial court to impose the death penalty, after having previously agreed to his counsel‘s negotiation of a life imprisonment sentence. As we noted in the prior opinion in this case, defendant has an IQ that is borderline retarded, he appeared to be learning-disabled, and had a history of self-mutilation as a child, as well as two suicide attempts. Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 416. “rationality” of defendant‘s decision to seek the death penalty instead of life imprisonment, while he took potent antipsychotic medications, should be considered in light of this history. See Kinkead I, 168 Ill. 2d at 416.
For the reasons stated, we hold that defendant in the case at bar should have received a fitness hearing at the time he pleaded guilty and sought the death penalty. In light of the fact that five years have passed since the original proceedings, we further hold that a retrospective fitness hearing is inappropriate. People v. Neal, 179 Ill. 2d 541 (1997). Accordingly, we reverse defendant‘s convictions and remand this cause to the circuit court of Mason County for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
JUSTICE HARRISON, specially concurring:
This court decided People v. Brandon, 162 Ill. 2d 450 (1994), fewer than four years ago and has been running from it ever since. The bright-line rule announced by that case and mandated by law has been replaced by a regime of exceptions and special circumstances. Everything, it seems, has become sui generis. Stare decisis means nothing. People v. Burgess, 176 Ill. 2d 289, 324 (1997) (Harrison, J., dissenting).
In the case before us today, the circuit court did exactly what my colleagues allowed the circuit court in Burgess to get away with. It exceeded the terms of our limited remand and conducted what amounted to a retrospective fitness hearing. Although the trial judge denied that he was “conducting a fitness hearing regarding the Defendant‘s fitness to stand trial at the time he entered his plea,” his characterization is immaterial. What matters is what the judge actually did, not what he said, and what the judge did here was ignore our directions on remand and convene a hearing that was in every meaningful way identical to a retrospective fitness hearing. The majority‘s suggestion that this was some-
In Burgess, 176 Ill. 2d at 302-04, this court abandoned its view that retrospective hearings were always improper. In that case we held that a defendant who has been denied his right to a fitness hearing under
Shortly after Burgess was decided, this court held that the rule announced in that case was subject to an important exception. In People v. Neal, 179 Ill. 2d 541 (1997), we stated that if more than a year has elapsed since the original trial and sentencing, a retrospective fitness determination is not normally adequate to protect the defendant‘s due process rights. Unless exceptional circumstances exist where it can still be shown that the psychotropic medication could not possibly have had any effect on the defendant‘s fitness, a defendant who failed to receive the hearing mandated by
Resolution of the case before us today should involve nothing more than a straightforward application of these principles. Because more than a year has passed since defendant was convicted and sentenced, and because this is not a case where we can say that the medication could not possibly have had any effect on defendant‘s fitness, a retrospective fitness determination could not adequately protect his due process rights. That being so, the initial failure to provide defendant with the statutorily mandated fitness hearing at the time of his trial
For these reasons, and no others, I concur in the majority‘s judgment.
JUSTICE HEIPLE, dissenting:
Because the majority opinion seriously misconstrues both the law and the facts in this case in a variety of ways, I respectfully dissent.
At the time of this court‘s first opinion in this case, the statute regarding a criminal defendant‘s use of psychotropic medication provided as follows:
“A defendant who is receiving psychotropic drugs or other medications under medical direction is entitled to a hearing on the issue of his fitness while under medication.”
725 ILCS 5/104-21(a) (West 1994) .
The statute was amended effective December 31, 1996, and now provides:
“A defendant who is receiving psychotropic drugs shall not be presumed to be unfit to stand trial solely by virtue of the receipt of those drugs or medications.”
725 ILCS 5/104-21(a) (West 1996) .
The State contends that the amended statute applies to the instant case. Defendant responds that the statute does not apply to his case because his plea and sentencing occurred before the effective date of the amendment.
The appellate court has issued conflicting rulings on the retroactivity of the psychotropic drug statute (
In light of these settled retroactivity principles, it is obvious that the current version of the psychotropic drug statute applies to the instant case.
In People v. Nitz, 173 Ill. 2d 151 (1996), this court stated that an amendment to
The majority attempts to reconcile Nitz and Birdsall by noting that Nitz held that the General Assembly may not pass legislation retroactively changing the judicial construction of a statute. 182 Ill. 2d at 334-35. The majority contends that Nitz therefore precludes application of the current statute to the instant case. Reading “the entirety of the Nitz opinion” as the majority urges (182 Ill. 2d at 334), however, compels precisely the opposite conclusion. Because Nitz was a post-conviction case, applying the amended statute therein would have amounted to a legislative alteration of a final judicial decision, thereby violating the separation of powers doctrine. Conversely, Nitz dictates that cases which are instead pending on direct review are immediately subject to legislative changes in judicial procedure. The majority provides absolutely no explanation for its rejection of this well-settled legal principle other than reliance on the erroneous Birdsall precedent. The opinion in People v. Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d 249 (1998), also invoked by the majority, contains no substantive holding whatsoever on the issue of retroactivity, but instead merely cites to the unsupported footnote in Birdsall. Cortes, 181 Ill. 2d at 275 n.2. Clearly, Nitz was right, Birdsall was wrong, and the current statute applies to cases pending on direct review.
Defendant further argues, however, that retroactive application of the psychotropic drug statute would violate
“No new law shall be construed to repeal a former law, whether such former law is expressly repealed or not, as to any offense committed against the former law, or as to any act done, any penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred, or any right accrued, or claim arising under the former law, or in any way whatever to affect any such offense or act so committed or done, or any penalty, forfeiture or punishment so incurred, or any right accrued, or claim arising before the new law takes effect, save only that the proceedings thereafter shall conform, so far as practicable, to the laws in force at the time of such proceeding.”
5 ILCS 70/4 (West 1996) .
Defendant‘s argument that retroactive application of the statute would violate this section fails to account for a crucial provision therein. When a statute has been amended, section 4 indeed prohibits courts from construing the new law to affect any right or claim existing under a former law. Section 4 then adds, however, this significant caveat: “save only that the proceedings thereafter shall conform, so far as practicable, to the laws in force at the time of such proceeding.” (Emphasis added.)
I also strongly disagree with the majority‘s creation of a new standard of review to be employed by this court following remand for further fact-finding such as in the instant case. The majority cites no authority for its new “sui generis” standard (182 Ill. 2d at 341-42), and such a standard cannot be justified under established legal principles. The circuit court is required to order a fit-
Application of the traditional abuse-of-discretion standard of review to the facts of the instant case compels the conclusion that defendant was not entitled to a fitness hearing. On remand, medication logs for 1992 were introduced which established that defendant received a daily dose of 100 milligrams of the psychotropic medication Thorazine from June 20 through July 17, July 20 through September 26, September 28 through October 31, and November 2 through 4. Thereafter, a dose of 50 milligrams of Thorazine was given on November 11, November 13 through 21, and November 23 through 30. All doses were given at night as a sleeping aid. Defendant entered his plea on October 21, 1992. His sentencing hearing was held on November 23 and 24, 1992.
At the hearing on remand, Curtis Eugene Pierce, Fulton County jail administrator, testified that defendant was incarcerated at the jail from March 12 to November 5, 1992. Pierce testified that defendant was occasionally irritable and disrespectful towards jail staff both before and after June 20, 1992. Pierce also testified that defendant was transferred out of the jail on November 5, 1992, because he injured another inmate with a sharpened object.
Leland F. Keith, chief deputy sheriff of Mason County, testified that defendant was transferred to the
Gayle Carper, co-counsel for defendant at the time of his plea and sentencing, testified that while defendant sometimes exhibited an inability to follow conversations and make eye contact, his behavior was not noticeably different from that of other jail inmates she had interviewed. Carper stated that during her conversations with defendant regarding his guilty plea, he appeared to be thinking logically, although he also appeared depressed.
Philipp E. Bornstein, a clinical psychiatrist, then testified that Thorazine is a nonaddictive, psychotropic medication which is commonly used in the treatment of major mental disorders such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. He stated that an average dose for such treatment is 400 to 600 milligrams. Dr. Bornstein further testified that Thorazine is sometimes given in smaller doses as a sleeping aid to persons who, because of prior substance abuse, are at risk of becoming addicted to traditional sleeping pills. He testified that ingestion of a 100-milligram dosage of Thorazine for this purpose would have no antipsychotic effects at all. Rather, the only noticeable effect would be diminished anxiety and increased ability to sleep. Dr. Bornstein concluded, after reviewing the medication logs and the trial court records in the instant case, that the Thorazine administered to defendant did not hinder his ability to understand the charges against him and make rational decisions about pleading and sentencing options. If anything, Dr. Bornstein suggested, the medication may have improved defendant‘s ability to think clearly by lessening his anxiety and allowing him to rest well.
Alesia McMillen, defendant‘s lead trial counsel, then testified that defendant was cooperative and responsive in preparing his defense. McMillen stated that she became upset when defendant chose to reject the plea agreement she had brokered and to seek the death penalty instead. She told defendant that she thought she should withdraw as his attorney because she could not support his decision to seek a death sentence. McMillen testified that defendant asked her not to withdraw, told her that he thought she had done a good job representing him, and tried to comfort her. She said that defendant nevertheless continually maintained that seeking the death penalty was the right decision for him. She said that while she did not agree with this decision, she nevertheless felt that defendant was competent to make it, and that the decision was not irrational.
John R. Day, a clinical psychologist, then testified that he examined defendant in a series of three visits in June, July and August of 1992. At the time of the latter two visits, defendant was taking Thorazine as a sleeping aid, although Dr. Day was not then aware of this fact. Dr. Day testified that he had worked with many patients being administered Thorazine and that a 100-milligram dose of the medication has no effect on a person‘s ability to make reasoned judgments. He further testified that he had never seen any negative side ef-
Michael Gelbort, a clinical psychologist trained in neuropsychology, then testified that he examined defendant on September 22, 1995, in order to evaluate defendant‘s psychological condition as well as his likely personality functioning and understanding at the time of his plea and sentencing hearing three years earlier. Dr. Gelbort testified that defendant showed signs of cognitive dysfunction associated with possible substance abuse and physical abuse. He further testified that while Thorazine can improve a person‘s thought processes by reducing anxiety, it can also impair judgment by making one less aware and adaptive. Dr. Gelbort testified that a 100-milligram dose of Thorazine was at the lower end of prescribed usage, and so would not generally be employed for antipsychotic effect. He also testified that Thorazine‘s major side effect, motor dysfunction, typically occurs at higher dosage levels. Nevertheless, he stated that diminished cognitive capacity could result from a 100-milligram dose of Thorazine. Finally, Dr. Gelbort stated that he believed that defendant‘s ability to make a reasoned decision at the time he rejected his plea offer and sought the death penalty was affected by his use of Thorazine.
The court then filed a memorandum opinion in which it found that defendant took the psychotropic medication Thorazine as a sleeping aid on the dates and in the amounts indicated in the logs. The court found that Thorazine is typically prescribed in a dosage range from 50 to 2,000 milligrams, and that defendant‘s use of 50 to 100 milligrams was therefore in the low end of the dos-
The court also noted that defendant had stated that he rejected the negotiated plea and instead sought the death penalty because he was young, had previously been incarcerated, and did not wish to spend the rest of his life in prison. The court found this decision to be logical, although not one a majority of persons under similar circumstances might be expected to make. The court found that at the time defendant entered his plea, he expressed both an ability to work with his legal counsel and a faith in counsel‘s efforts. The court also found that, at the time of his plea, defendant had recently been examined by a psychologist, and his trial counsel believed him to be fit to enter the plea. Accordingly, the court concluded that the Thorazine defendant was taking at the time of his plea and sentencing did not appear to have a medically significant effect.
The evidence adduced on remand fully comports with the trial court‘s conclusion that defendant‘s use of Thorazine as a sleeping aid was not medically significant with regard to his fitness to stand trial. Substantial medical testimony supported the court‘s finding that the 50- to 100-milligram doses of Thorazine administered to defendant did not create a bona fide doubt as to his fitness. All of the individuals who negotiated, counseled, and worked with defendant at the time of his plea and sentencing, including a practicing psychologist, testified that defendant actively participated in his defense and fully appreciated the consequences of his decisions. The only expert who testified that defendant was affected by the medication, Dr. Gelbort, did not examine, or even meet, defendant until more than three years after the sentencing hearing, and even he admitted that the dos-
For all of these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
JUSTICES MILLER and BILANDIC join in this dissent.
(No. 82817.—
THEODORE ZEKMAN, Appellee, v. DIRECT AMERICAN MARKETERS, INC. (American Telephone and Telegraph Company et al., Appellants).
Opinion filed May 21, 1998.
