Petitioner, Efrain Garcia, was charged in November, 1974 with murdering Donald Taylor, and in August, 1977, following a jury trial in Cook County Circuit Court, was convicted of murder and sentenced to 30 to 90 years’ imprisonment. Petitioner appealed his conviction to the Illinois Appellate Court, which affirmed.
People v. Garcia,
Petitioner and an alleged eye witness, Genaro, were the principal witnesses at the trial. Genaro had given the police a statement shortly after the murder in which he denied having any knowledge of the crime. At trial, he testified that he saw petitioner shoot Taylor, explaining his prior inconsistent statement on the basis of fear, viz., that he knew that petitioner and his brother were members of the Latin Kings and he feared gang retaliation if he cooperated with the police. The trial court admitted this testimony because it was relevant to Genaro’s credibility and it explained his pri- or inconsistent statement.
The district court held that the prosecutor’s remarks went beyond an attempt to explain Genaro’s prior inconsistent statement. In its memorandum opinion, the district court stated that, “In closing argument, the prosecutors repeatedly argued Garcia’s gang membership to inflame the jury and in connection with issues other than Genaro’s credibility.” According to the district court, the prosecutor’s statements were designed to improperly preju *902 dice the petitioner and mislead the jury, in violation of petitioner’s Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair trial. We disagree with the district court’s holding that the prosecutor’s remarks in his closing argument were so egregious as to deny petitioner a fair trial, and accordingly reverse.
In determining whether statements by a prosecutor rise to the level of a constitutional infraction, we apply the standard endorsed by us in
United States ex rel. Clark v. Fike,
Genaro testified that he felt there were bad feelings between the petitioner and Taylor stemming from the fact that the petitioner had dated Taylor’s wife, Michelle, before her marriage to Taylor; that about a week before Taylor was murdered, he had heard the petitioner express his love for Michelle and his desire to marry her; that on the night of the murder he and the petitioner overheard Taylor in Genaro’s parents’ home proclaiming his love for Michelle, whereupon the petitioner threatened to “get” Taylor; that when Taylor left the house, the petitioner followed with Genaro; that when they caught up with him, Taylor took off his shirt and jacket, calling out that he was not afraid of the petitioner; and that the petitioner took a handgun out of his waistband and fired a shot at Taylor’s head from 6-12 inches behind it.
The petitioner’s testimony presented a different version of the events that night. He testified that he did not overhear Taylor speaking in the house; that his brother Miguel arrived at the house and, at 11:30, went downstairs with him to Miguel’s apartment; that he had not expressed a desire to marry Michelle; that he never threatened to “get” Taylor; and that he did not shoot him. Miguel did not testify at the trial.
Genaro’s testimony that he knew the petitioner and Miguel to be members of the Latin Kings was properly admitted to explain the prior inconsistent statement made by him to the police and brought out at trial by the petitioner’s attorney. As a result, the prosecutor was free to comment in closing argument on the petitioner’s membership in the gang, as a means of establishing Genaro’s credibility.
See United States v. Spain,
The whole issue in this case is who you want to believe. It’s one against one. It’s this man, the Latin King, [indicating] versus Anthony Genaro.
Other parts use the credibility issue as a springboard for more general comments about the Latin Kings:
I ask you to find [Garcia] guilty, and, in so doing, to tell the rest of the Latin Kings and the other gangs in Chicago that they will not be allowed to commit murder and then have their brothers speak to witnesses and thereby get away with murder.
Anthony Genaro left the city and he left his family because he didn’t want to get involved, because he’s afraid of the gang. And that worked for him at the preliminary hearing. If it works today because of his conduct and the conduct of other Latin Kings, you will validate the hunting license of every gang member on the South Side, West Side, every side of our city. They will know they can get away, do their crimes and get away with it,' because their friends, their relatives are going to intimidate witnesses. *903 If you believe him, let him go. [Indicating] You put him back on the street and you put him back with the Kings and you put the gun back in his hand.
While we do not agree with the state’s contention that the prosecutor merely intended through such statements to focus the jury’s attention on the credibility issue, none of the statements cited by the district court support a holding that the petitioner’s right to a fair trial was violated.
As we noted in
Bergenthal v. Cady,
Comparison of the comments challenged here to those underlying other claims of prosecutorial misconduct, though not dis-positive, is nevertheless of some probative value. Decisions finding a constitutional violation that justifies the granting of a new trial have involved misconduct of a far more egregious nature.
E.g., United States v. Phillips,
The other comments by the prosecutor to which the petitioner objects do not merit discussion. As the Supreme Court recently reiterated, the function of a habeas court is not to correct all errors made by a state prosecutor, only those “of constitutional dimension.”
Smith v. Phillips,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is denied.
