In exchange for a promise that he would not be prosecuted, the appellee, Roger Ark-ebauer, gave information to the Macon County State’s Attorney regarding Raymond Ruhl’s plan to murder his wife. Mr. Arkebauer was later indicted in Shelby County for his involvement in the scheme. The Illinois state trial court denied his motion to dismiss the indictment. The district court, however, entered a permanent injunction against the state prosecution on the ground that the doctrine of equitable immunity insulated Mr. Arkebauer from suit.
Arkebauer v. Kiley,
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
The facts, at least to the extent they were developed in the earlier proceedings, are not in dispute, and we rely heavily on the accounts recited in both
Arkebauer v. Kiley,
On January 15, 1988, Jack Ahola, then First Assistant State’s Attorney of Macon County, Illinois, met with Illinois State Police Agents McClearen and Bensyl. The agents had obtained information that Raymond Ruhl was attempting to hire someone to kill his wife. They also had been informed that Roger Arkebauer was a key figure in the plot. The officers questioned Mr. Arkebauer; during the course of the interrogation Ahola told Mr. Arkebauer that, if he cooperated, “we” would not prosecute him, and Mr. Arkebauer agreed to help.
1
Arkebauer,
Following surveillance, the agents engaged Ruhl in a shoot-out while attempting to arrest him. In the course of this encounter, both Ruhl and Agent Bensyl were killed and another police agent was wounded. The agents at first suspected that Mr. Arkebauer had tipped off Ruhl that the police were coming for him, but, following several interrogations and a polygraph test, they became convinced that Mr. Arke-bauer had not done so.
Id.
at 645-46,
On February 3, 1988, Michael Mannix, a special agent with the Illinois State Police in the Division of Internal Investigation, and Agent Erlenbush questioned Mr. Arke-bauer at his home. They advised Mr. Arke-bauer of his Miranda rights, and Agent Mannix testified that Mr. Arkebauer told them that he had immunity in Macon County. Agent Mannix said that they were not engaged in a Macon County investigation and proceeded to question him. They also told Mr. Arkebauer that it was police procedure to advise everyone of their rights prior to questioning.
On February 9, 1988, Agent Mannix interviewed Mr. Arkebauer after advising him of his rights. Agent Erlenbush had told Agent Mannix that he had heard of a promise not to prosecute or a promise of immunity for Mr. Arkebauer in Macon County. Finally, the agents attempted again to question Mr. Arkebauer, but he refused to speak with them because he had learned that his bank records had been subpoenaed.
On March 17, 1988, Mr. Arkebauer first spoke with Guy Casey, an attorney, and told him that he believed he had been given immunity and that all of his conversations with police agents had been covered by this grant. Casey spoke with Ahola on several occasions. Casey remarked that the agreement not to prosecute had been made but had not been formalized. See Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, para. 106-1 (1987). 4 Ahola declined the invitation to formalize it at that point because Ruhl was dead and no case was pending.
Prior to the shoot-out, Agent Bensyl had contacted Michael Kiley, Shelby County State’s Attorney, advising him of the Ruhl plot and discussing possible prosecution of Ruhl in Shelby County. Mr. Kiley memorialized this conversation in a letter to the Illinois State Police dated January 20, 1988. Mr. Kiley maintains that he learned from Agent Bensyl that someone had been promised “immunity” for providing information in relation to the matter, but only later learned that it was Mr. Arkebauer. Mr.
On April 12, 1988, Mr. Arkebauer was indicted in Shelby County on substantially the same charges (solicitation and conspiracy to commit murder) from which he enjoyed freedom from prosecution in Macon County.
B. Earlier Judicial Proceedings
1. State court
Mr. Arkebauer's first line of attack against the charges was to file with the Illinois trial court a motion to suppress the statements he had made to the police and a motion to dismiss the indictment. The trial court determined that the statements to the police had been involuntary and granted the motion to suppress. The court refused, however, to dismiss the Shelby County indictment. With respect to the suppression motion, the trial court ruled that, because Mr. Arkebauer had not been told that his freedom from prosecution was limited to Macon County, “he reasonably believed that he had been promised immunity from prosecution and that the promise could be fulfilled as long as Arkebauer cooperated with the prosecution and the police investigation of Raymond Ruhl.” People v. Arkebauer, No. 88-CF-17, Circuit Court Record Sheet (Dec. 22,1988). The court also found that Mr. Arkebauer had “fulfilled his promise of cooperation until he discovered that he was going to be prosecuted in Shelby County.” Id.
As for the motion to dismiss the charges, the trial court grounded its decision on the fact that Ahola had not sought statutory transactional immunity for Mr. Arkebauer, which would have immunized Mr. Arke-bauer in Shelby as well as Macon County. The court relied on
People v. Staten,
The State appealed the suppression of statements and the Appellate Court of Illinois affirmed.
Arkebauer,
[i]t was eminently reasonable for the defendant to believe that his agreement applied to his subsequent interviews, for there was a continuity of agents conducting the interviews, in that the agents were all with the Illinois State Police; the subject matter of the interviews related to the same ongoing investigation as the one covered by his agreement; and the defendant was never disabused of his belief that he would not be prosecuted by any of the agents at the interviews.
Id.
at 62,
Although the issue was not before it on
We note that while the State is correct that a State’s Attorney of one county cannot bind another State’s Attorney of another county with his promises, that problem does not arise here. The circuit court determined that the defendant could be prosecuted in Shelby County, and we find this a proper determination ....
Id.
2. Federal district court
Mr. Arkebauer next brought an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enjoin the state prosecution because of the immunity he had been promised. The district court issued a preliminary injunction, and the State moved to dismiss. The district court, however, entered a permanent injunction, holding that the doctrine of equitable immunity precluded the prosecution.
Arkebauer v. Kiley,
In beginning its analysis, the district court focused on the State’s challenge to the propriety of federal injunctive relief because of the rule set forth in
Younger v. Harris,
Nevertheless, the district court concluded that injunctive relief was warranted. The district court grounded its decision on the reasoning of the Eleventh Circuit in
Rowe v. Griffin,
In the view of the district court, Mr. Arkebauer was entitled to the same treatment as Rowe. The court prefaced its analysis by noting this court’s statement in
United States v. Palumbo,
In adopting the foregoing analysis, the district court rejected the state’s submission that this case is controlled by the holding in
Staten v. Neal,
C. Submissions of the Parties on Appeal
Because of the novelty of the issue presented, we shall set forth, in more detail than customary, the position of each party in this appeal.
1. The position of the Shelby County State’s Attorney
The State’s Attorney emphasizes the strong policy embodied in the
Younger
doctrine that “the normal thing to do when federal courts are asked to enjoin pending proceedings in state courts is not to issue such injunctions.”
Younger,
The State’s Attorney first argues that this case does not involve a bad faith prosecution. There is no prosecution based on impermissible criteria such as race or religion. Nor is there any indication that the state has failed to provide adequate procedural safeguards. Turning to the district court’s analogy to plea bargains, the State’s Attorney suggests that the situation before us is significantly different. In a plea bargain, continues the State’s Attorney, the defendant relinquishes all the protections concomitant with the right to trial. Here, the only protection implicated is the right against self-incrimination, a right that is coextensive with the protections provided by a direct grant of use immunity. The Illinois courts have already suppressed that testimony and thus protected Mr. Arke-bauer’s right against self-incrimination. Therefore, at the time that Mr. Arkebauer asked the district court to grant injunctive relief, there was no federal right in jeopardy and the federal court could not, under the strictures of Younger, enter an injunction.
Relying on
United States v. Eckhardt,
Finally, the Shelby County State’s Attorney argues that Mr. Arkebauer is in effect arguing for transactional immunity, an im
2. The position of Mr. Arkebauer
As one might expect, Mr. Arkebauer’s position tracks, in large measure, the opinion of the district court. Mr. Arkebauer contends that the pendency of the criminal charge against him, despite the assurances of the Macon County State’s Attorney, constitutes the threat of great and irreparable injury that justifies the use of the federal injunctive power despite the strictures of
Younger.
Having been granted absolute immunity from prosecution, he is entitled, he submits, to be free not only from the possibility of loss of liberty in the case of conviction but also from the “anxiety, fear, frustration and expense of being prosecuted.” Appellee’s Br. at 17. It is, he continues, “the very prosecution that jeopardizes [his] due process rights.”
Id.
He stresses that this court has emphatically stated that any agreement made by the government, including a grant of immunity from prosecution, “must be scrupulously performed and kept.”
United States v. Brimberry,
The prosecution is not only being brought in bad faith, continues Mr. Arke-bauer, but it also constitutes “extraordinary circumstances” as that term is used in
Younger.
Relying on Judge Thornberry’s concurring opinion in
Rowe,
Mr. Arkebauer submits that the injunction is necessary not only to protect what the Illinois Appellate Court deemed to be his objectively reasonable expectations but also to protect his actual subjective expectations. Public policy concerns, he suggests, also support the enforcement of his bargain because promises of immunity are important weapons in the fight against crime.
See Palumbo,
II
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s decision to deny a motion to abstain under
Younger. Gartrell Constr. Inc. v. Aubry,
B. The Younger Doctrine
While it is now well-established that the general prohibitions of the Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283, do not apply to civil rights actions,
6
it is also well-established, under the principles enunciated in
Younger v. Harris,
The Younger doctrine is based on, and its contours established by, two principles of equity jurisprudence. The first is that an injunction is an extraordinary remedy, rarely available as a matter of right and never more extraordinary than when, if granted, it would prevent government officials from proceedings under a statute founded on important state interests against a violator of the statute; such an injunction would offend comity and federalism. The second principle is that an injunction will not be issued when the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, which he does if he can assert the ground on which he seeks an injunction as a defense to the very proceeding that the injunction would put a stop to.
A federal injunction can halt the progress of a pending state criminal proceeding only on a “showing of bad faith, harassment, or any other unusual circumstances that call for equitable relief.”
Younger,
[the plaintiff] must allege specific facts to support an inference of bad faith. ‘The Younger rule, as applied in Hicks [v. Miranda,422 U.S. 332 ,95 S.Ct. 2281 ,45 L.Ed.2d 223 (1975) ], requires more than a mere allegation and more than a “conclusory” finding to bring a case within the harassment exception.’ Grandco Corp. v. Rockford,536 F.2d 197 , 203 (7th Cir.1976). This specific evidence must show that state prosecution ‘was brought in bad faith for the purpose of retaliating for or deterring the exercise of constitutionally protected rights.’ Wilson,593 F.2d at 1383 .
Collins,
The more generalized formulation of “extraordinary circumstances” has also given little hope to those who might prefer a relaxation of the Younger rule:
The very nature of “extraordinary circumstances,” of course, makes it impossible to anticipate and define every situation that might create a sufficient threat of such great, immediate, and irreparable injury as to warrant intervention in state criminal proceedings. But whatever else is required, such circumstances must be “extraordinary” in the sense of creating an extraordinarily pressing need for immediate federal equitable relief, not merely in the sense of presenting a highly unusual factual situation.
Kugler,
C. Application to the Case
We turn now to the facts of the case before us. Our task is a narrow one; we must determine whether either of these narrow exceptions to the
Younger
rule applies.
10
As we have noted previously, the district court was of the view that this case ought to be governed by the holding of the Eleventh Circuit in
Rowe v. Griffin,
In addition, the Shelby County State’s Attorney has demonstrated that, in making the decision to prosecute, he acted within the strictures of state law. State law provides that transactional immunity can be granted only in a judicial proceeding. Indeed, in the earlier proceedings in this case, the state trial court had asserted and the state appellate court confirmed, albeit in dicta, that the Shelby County State’s Attorney is not precluded from initiating this prosecution.
We also note that the Shelby County State’s Attorney’s action and the rulings of the Illinois state courts are in harmony with the earlier holdings of this court with respect to the limits of an Illinois state’s attorney’s authority and with respect to the obligation of such an official to advise a defendant about the legal consequences of his decisions. In
Staten,
Mr. Arkebauer’s responsibility in this regard is not dissimilar from the responsibility we placed on the defendant in
United States v. Jordan,
Because we cannot accept the argument that this case is governed by the “bad faith” exception to the
Younger
doctrine, we now examine whether the other established exception — “extraordinary circumstances” — affords the defendant relief. This exception is a nebulous one. However, it is clear that, in order to invoke it, a court “must find that an extraordinarily pressing need for immediate federal equitable relief exists, and that if relief is not granted, irreparable injury to the plaintiff will result.”
Rowe,
The only concrete example mentioned by the Younger Court of “other extraordinary circumstances” that would be so pressing as to merit federal court intervention is the threat created when
a statute might be flagrantly and patently violative of express constitutional prohibitions in every clause, sentence and paragraph and in whatever manner and against whomever an effort might be made to apply it.
Younger,
Finally, we emphasize that we decide here only the narrow issue of whether, on this record, federal injunctive relief may be granted during the pendency of an ongoing state criminal proceeding. We express no view as to how the state courts might deal with this matter in further review. Nor, of course, does our declining to intervene through the federal injunctive power indi
Conclusion
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. Mr. Arkebauer testified that before he and the officers arrived at Ahola's office, the state police officers had said that they were authorized to offer him immunity for his cooperation. The officers told him that the State’s Attorney would elaborate on this offer.
Arkebauer,
. During the judicial proceedings on these matters, no mention was made of an immunity grant.
See Arkebauer,
. At least one investigative officer, Agent McClearen, disagreed on the extent of Mr. Arke-bauer’s cooperation and believed that the defendant’s participation in the scheme was far more extensive.
Arkebauer,
.This section provides as follows:
In any investigation before a Grand Jury, or trial in any court, the court on motion of the State may order that any material witness be released from all liability to be prosecuted or punished on account of any testimony or other evidence he may be required to produce.
. The record contains no indication that Mr. Arkebauer cross-appealed the denial of the motion to dismiss the indictment.
.
See Mitchum v. Foster,
. In
Samuels v. Mackell,
. 17A Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, and Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4255 (1988).
. In
Dombrowski v. Pfister,
. No argument has been made to us (except in reply to our question at oral argument), and no argument was made to the district court, that the state judicial system affords an adequate opportunity to raise the federal due process issue.
See Moore v. Sims,
. In
United States v. Eckhardt,
. The state police who investigated the original plot to kill Ruhl's wife as well as the later murder of the police officer during the shootout are no doubt “agents of the state."
People v. Schmitt,
.
Accord United States v. Brimberry,
