delivered the opinion of the court:
By consolidated writs of error, the defendant, Edward Bernatowicz, seeks review of two convictions for crimes of armed robbery, and of the dismissal of his petition for post-conviction relief in respect of such convictions. Constitutional questions give us jurisdiction.
During the early morning hours of March 4, 1963, Grover C. Elmore, Jr., a clerk on duty at the Presidential Inn Motel, 3922 S. Harlem Avenue, Lyons, Illinois, was held up and robbed of $88 of his employer’s money by a bandit armed with a gun. One week later, at approximately 2:00 A.M. on March 11, 1963, a second robbery occurred in which $62.50 in cash, a quantity of stamps and a Victor adding machine were taken. Elmore was again on duty. A man whom he recognized as the perpetrator of the prior robbery alighted from a car in the parking lot and approached the motel. He immediately telephoned the apartment of the motel owner and, just as he completed the call, the robber came up to the desk, drew a gun and demanded money. After Elmore had turned over the contents of the cash register, he was forced to walk to a powder room and was ordered to lie on the floor for ten minutes under threat of being shot. When he thought he heard the robber leave the building, he returned to the lobby and there encountered two Lyons police officers who had come to the premises in response to a call that a robbery was in progress. At about the same time Elmore saw the robber running across the parking lot and pointed him out to the officers, but the robber was able to reach his car and drive away.
The Lyons police immediately pursued in their own vehicle and were soon joined by four other police cars in a prolonged, high speed chase during which numerous shots were fired at the fleeing car. It came to an abrupt halt when the robber’s car crashed into a police car set up as a road block, and the first officers at the scene found the defendant wedged behind the steering wheel and suffering from a bullet wound in the neck. A Victor adding machine was found in the rear seat of the car and, upon searching the defendant’s person, the officers found in his pockets a roll of bills totaling $52, and a loaded .32 calibre automatic pistol. A short time later, at a hospital where defendant had been removed for treatment, 32 one-cent postage stamps and a wallet containing approximately $169 were taken from his person. Elmore, upon being brought to the hospital, identified the defendant, as well as the gun, and subsequently identified the adding machine as the one taken from the motel.
Defendant, who was represented by the Public Defender and accepted the latter’s services without objection, was indicted for both robberies and was first tried by a jury for the crime of March 11, 1963. A verdict of guilty was returned and, after a hearing in aggravation and mitigation, defendant was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of not less than fifteen nor more than thirty years. On the same date he pleaded guilty to the armed robbery of March 4, 1963, and received an identical sentence, to run concurrently with the first.
The substance of the indictments returned against defendant was that he had, “within Cook County, Illinois,” committed armed robbery by taking currency and property from the person and presence of Elmore. Relying principally on People v. Williams,
On the ground that the incompetency of his counsel deprived him of due process of law, defendant charges that his counsel failed to prepare for trial and failed to adequately conduct the defense. We have examined the record carefully and cannot agree with these contentions. To warrant a reversal because of the incompetency of counsel, it must clearly appear not only that counsel performed his trial duties in an incompetent manner, but also that defendant was prejudiced thereby. (People v. Morris,
Within the foregoing point of argument defendant also suggests, as he pleaded in his post-conviction petition, that he was “intimidated” into entering his plea of guilty. The wrongful inducement of such a plea by deception or coercion is a denial of due process. (People v. Thompson,
Defendant, although arrested on March 11, 1963, remained in a hospital for treatment of his bullet wound until March 14, on which date he was lodged in the county jail. He was not taken before a judicial officer until March 23, 1963, and it is now contended that his constitutional rights were infringed: (1) in that the delay “may well have prejudiced” defendant; and (2) in that the nine-day delay “constituted cruel and unusual punishment by informally extending defendant’s sentence.” We find little merit to either contention. Assuming, arguendo, that the detention was unreasonable, the allegation was insufficient to require a hearing, for we have held that mere illegal detention in the absence of other coercive circumstances does not constitute a denial of due process. (People v. Price,
Finally, defendant contends that he was denied due process of law because he was without the assistance of counsel upon the occasion of his preliminary hearing. This point, however, has been decided adversely to defendant’s contention in People v. Morris,
The judgments of the circuit court of Cook County and its order denying the post-conviction petition are affirmed.
Judgments and order affirmed.
