These habeas corpus petitions filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, attack the respective felony convictions of each of the petitioners for criminal offenses under Illinois statutes. 1 At the time of Good’s entry of his plea of guilty in 1965, Watson’s in 1968, and at the time of Robinson’s conviction in 1971, each petitioner was seventeen years of age and was thus prosecuted as an adult pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act, Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 37, § 702-7(1) (1965), or, in Good’s case, pursuant to prior law, 111. Rev.Stat. ch. 23, § 2001 et seq. (1963). The Act provided that:
“Criminal Prosecutions Limited. (1) Except as provided in this Section, no boy who was under 17 years of age or girl who was under 18 years of age at the time of the alleged offense may be prosecuted under the criminal laws of this State . . .”
This age distinction between the sexes was eradicated by the Illinois General Assembly in 1972 when the section was amended to prohibit adult prosecution of any minor “who was under 17 years of age at the time of the alleged offense . . . ” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 37, § 702-7(1) (1973). Campos, the fourth petitioner, entered a guilty plea in 1973 as an adult under the provisions of the amended Act.
Petitioners argue that the original Act, allowing boys over seventeen to be prosecuted as adults while girls could not be so prosecuted until they reached eighteen, violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Reed v. Reed,
As to Campos, who was prosecuted and who entered a guilty plea after the effective date of the 1972 amendment to the Act, the district court made a different analysis. The court found that old law was not applicable and that the legislature had already made “an express legislative preference” for the age of seventeen as to both boys and girls. Thus, in the district court’s view, the over-inclusiveness of the old law was of no consequence in Campos’s conviction.
People v. Ellis,
1. The Jurisdictional and Other Claims of the Respondent, the State of Illinois:
Illinois interposes an objection to the jurisdiction of this Court to hear the appeal, alleging that petitioners are not presently in custody under any violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States. Admittedly, petitioners are at present in the custody of the state of Illinois, and the nature of their incarceration as well as its duration springs directly from the alleged discriminatory scheme which prevented them from being prosecuted as juveniles and which petitioners claim was violative of their 14th Amendment rights under the equal protection clause. This is, we believe, a quite sufficient basis for establishing our jurisdiction. Also, we do not find persuasive the argument that petitioners intelligently waived their rights to juvenile treatment by their pleas to adult offenses..
2. The Claim of Petitioners:
Simply stated, the petitioners assert that the age of criminal responsibility must be the same for all of us, male and female. Present law agrees with this contention.
People v. Ellis,
Nor is Campos entitled to any relief. The statutory revision of the Family Court Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 37, § 702-7(1) (1973), did not alter the treatment given seventeen year-old males. It merely provided that the challenged statute was over-inclusive as to girls over 17 years of age. See
People v. Ellis, supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Willie Watson pled guilty to the charge of murder; Jesse Campos, Jr., pled guilty to armed robbery; Earl Good pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter; Lonnell Robinson was convicted in a jury trial of armed robbery and rape.
. Also important to the district court’s resolution of the petitions was its determination that the constitutionality of the statute was unquestioned prior to the expansion in
Reed
and
Stanley. People v. Pardo,
