Thе present appeal is the most recent chapter in the 13 year pilgrimage of John William Bilyew challenging the validity of his guilty plea in an Illinois state court to the offenses of murder and concealing a homicidal death. Such plea was entered on March 3, 1975 and the petitioner sentenced to consecutive terms of 50 to 100 and 1 to 3 years’ imprisonment. His conviction was ordered set aside by the Illinois Appellate Court,
People v. Bilyew,
Bilyew now seeks review of the decision of the federal district court denying for a second time his request for habeas corpus relief. We affirm.
I.
The petitioner was indicted in Williamson County, Illinois on June 7, 1974 for murder, rape and concealing a homicidal death. The deceased was a female child who re *191 fused the petitioner’s request for sex and who was thereafter choked. The petitioner wrapped her body in a blanket and hid it. Three days later, in response to a “voice” commanding him to turn himself in, he threw a rock through a neighbor’s window to attract attention. At the time the petitioner was charged, an Illinois statute provided that “[t]he burden of proving the defendant is not fit is on the defendant if he raises the question....” Although this statute was later found to be unconstitutional on its face because it imposed the burden of proof on a criminal defendant to establish his unfitness to stand trial, in the petitioner’s case he had raised the issue and it was impossible to determine from the trial judge’s oral evaluation of the evidence whether she followed the statute and imposed the burden of proof on him. Thus, the Illinois Court of Appeals reversed the finding that the petitioner was competent. The Illinois Supreme Court, however, reversed the Court of Appeals, reasoning that there was no indication that the trial judge utilized the infirm statutory provision in reaching her decision. In addition, the Illinois Supreme Court made the following comments concerning the findings of the trial judge concerning the competency issue:
In ruling that defendant was fit, the trial judge analyzed the evidence in detail; her findings clearly indicate what evidence she considered most probative. Noting that fitness involves only the defendant’s ability to function within the context of trial, the judge disregarded the evidence of the defendant’s social immaturity and his hearing of voices, neither of which the experts had testified would make him unfit. The judge found the evidence to indicate that defendant understood what rape and murder were and what the purpose of the proceedings was. The judge noted that all the experts agreed that defendant could communicate with his counsel, though they differed on the degree of communication. The judge further noted Dr. Norris’ reliance on the I.Q. score of 41 and she specifically found that the score of 66, recorded after Dr. Norris’ examination, was more reliable. Finding that defendant understood the nature and purpose of the proceedings and could cooperate with his attorneys in his defense, the trial judge ruled that defendant was fit to stand trial.
People v. Bilyew,
Following his unsuccessful action for ha-beas corpus relief in the district court the petitioner appealed to this Court, which found the competency proceedings in the state courts invalid because of the misallo-cation of the burden of proof and remanded the case to the district court for a determination as to whether it was “still possible to hold a meaningful retrospective hearing to find whether Bilyew was fit to stand trial at the time of the state proceedings in 1974.”
United States ex rel. Bilyew v. Franzen,
Based on the remand order Judge Foreman first concluded that a retrospective competency hearing was possible and then conducted an evidentiary hearing. Based on such hearing he concluded that, utilizing the proper burden of proof, the State had *192 proven that “at the relevant time in 1974 Bilyew had the present ability to consult with his attorney with a reasonable degree of understanding and that he had a rational understanding of the proceedings against him.” In reaching this “retrospective determination” that the petitioner was fit to stand trial in 1974 the district judge considered the state record on the competency issue, the live testimony of one of the original expert witnesses, the live testimony of an additional expert witness and portions of the petitioner’s institutional record relating to his psychiatric condition and treatment following the imposition of sentence. His order denying the petition for writ of habeas corpus carefully analyzes the conflicting testimony and articulates his reasons for giving greater credence to the evidence supporting a finding that the petitioner was fit to stand trial.
In the present appeal Bilyew argues that the district court erred in finding that a meaningful retrospective competency hearing could be held and in then finding him competent at the relevant time in 1974.
II.
A defendant has the due process right not to be tried while incompetent. “The due process test is ‘whether he hаs sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding — and whether he has a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.’”
United States ex rel. Mireles v. Greer,
Once made, the competency determinatiоn of the district court can be set aside only on a showing that the determination is clearly erroneous.
United States v. Johns,
III.
Concerning the petitioner’s first issue, the distriсt court properly examined the record to determine whether an accurate assessment could be made of Bilyew’s condition at the time of the original state proceeding. That record consisted of the testimony and medical and psychological reports of the four expert witnesses who had examined Bilyew in 1974. Based on *193 such examination the district court concluded in an Order issued on May 8, 1985 that “there is sufficient evidence in the record derived from knowledge contemporaneous to trial to have a meaningful retrospective hearing on the issue.” In the same order it notified the parties that the matter would be set for an evidentiary hearing and that they could submit additional evidence relevant to the issue.
In Bilyew’s first appeal to this Court wе recognized that “the mere passage of time may not make [a retrospective competency hearing] meaningless. ‘The passage of even a considerable amount of time may not be an insurmountable obstacle if there is sufficient evidence in the record derived from knowledge contemporaneous to trial.’ ”
United States ex rel. Bilyew v. Franzen,
In his written order finding the petitioner competent to stand trial in 1974, the district court acknowledged and discussed the evidence and opinions of the expert witnesses relied оn by Bilyew as well as by the State of Illinois. He noted that Dr. Norris, a psychiatrist, had opined that Bilyew was unfit to stand trial based on a low I.Q. rating and a corresponding mental age of 6 and based on Bilyew’s apparent inability to comprehend the serious nature of the charges. Dr. Rubin, a psychologist, testified at the initial state competency hearing and again before the district court in the habeas proceeding. Dr. Rubin felt that Bilyew was unable to distinguish fact from fantasy and on that basis concluded that he was not fit to stand trial. Dr. Radar, a clinical psychologist, was also one of the petitioner’s expert witnesses, although based upon a lengthy interview of 4¥2 hours he concluded that Bilyew was “able to understand situations realistically and without gross distortions.”
The only witness for the State at thе original competency hearing was Dr. Hoerker, a psychiatrist who had performed vast numbers of competency examinations. Dr. Hoerker concluded, based on his personal interview with Bilyew, that Bilyew did not suffer from an ongoing psychotic procеss, that he understood the nature of the charges against him and that he was able to recollect events in his life well and distinguish fact from fantasy. At the hearing before the district court the State also called a forensic psychiatrist, Dr. Tuteur, whose testimony was basеd upon an examination of Bilyew’s records and the opinions of the other experts. Dr. Tuteur testified that he was in agreement with Dr. Hoerker’s conclusion that Bilyew was competent to stand trial and that even his post-commitment behavior was consistent with a person who had earlier been competent to stand trial.
After reciting the opinions of the various expert witnesses and setting forth at some length the basis for them and difference among them, the district court concluded that the assessments of Doctors Hоerker and Tuteur more accurately stated Bilyew’s condition and that, “[although there can be little doubt that Bilyew suffers from slight mental retardation, the State has convinced the Court that this condition did not impair his ability in 1974 to consult with his attorney with a reasonable degrеe of understanding or to rationally and factually understand the nature of the proceedings against him.” This finding is not “clearly erroneous” and thus must withstand the petitioner’s challenge. 2
*194 The denial of the petitioner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is therefоre
Affirmed.
Notes
. In its previous decision in this case the Court stated that ‘‘[t]here is little question that the Fourteenth Amendment requires the State or Federal prosecution to shoulder the burden of proving that the defendant is fit to stand trial once the issue of unfitness has been properly raised."
United States ex rel. Bilyew v. Franzen,
. Although the previous decision in this case set the evidentiary hearing by the district court in motion, reliance on the intervening decision in
Maggio v. Fulford,
