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Appellate Court Date: 2017.05.09
13:13:09 -05'00'
People v. Thomas, 2017 IL App (1st) 142557
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
Caption DERRICK THOMAS, Defendant-Appellant.
District & No. First District, First Division
Docket No. 1-14-2557
Filed March 6, 2017
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 12-CR-485; the
Review Hon. Stanley J. Sacks, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Michael J. Pelletier, Patricia Mysza, and Rebecca Cohen, of State
Appeal Appellate Defender’s Office, of Chicago, for appellant.
Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg,
Mary P. Needham, and Jesse B. Guth, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of
counsel), for the People.
Panel JUSTICE HARRIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justice Simon concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Justice Mikva concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Following a jury trial, defendant Derrick Thomas was convicted of first degree murder,
attempted first degree murder, and attempted armed robbery. The jury found that in
committing the first degree murder, defendant used a firearm that proximately caused the
victim’s death and in committing the attempted first degree murder, defendant personally
discharged a firearm that proximately caused great bodily harm. Defendant, who was 18 years
old at the time of these offenses, was sentenced to consecutive terms of 45 years for first degree
murder, 31 years for attempted first degree murder, and 4 years for attempted armed robbery,
for a total sentence of 80 years. On appeal, defendant argues that prison term represents a
de facto life sentence that violates the bar against cruel and unusual punishment in the eighth
amendment to the United States Constitution, as well as the proportionate penalties clause of
the Illinois Constitution, because the trial court lacked the ability to impose a lesser sentence in
light of his age and rehabilitative potential and the attendant circumstances of his youth.
Defendant also contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge his
sentence as unconstitutional on those grounds.
¶2 The following evidence presented at trial is relevant to defendant’s sentencing claim.
Defendant was convicted of first degree murder for the fatal shooting of Arvon Grays and
attempted first degree murder for shooting Terrance Redditt in his side.
¶3 At trial, Redditt testified that in 2011, he worked at a restaurant called Dillinger’s in
Calumet Park. Redditt and defendant exchanged phone numbers after Redditt showed
defendant some jackets and tire rims that Redditt was selling out of the trunk of his car. About
a week later, defendant called Redditt and brought a customer to him who bought $600 worth
of rims.
¶4 On November 15, 2011, defendant called Redditt from a phone number that was different
from the number defendant had previously given. They spoke about the tire rims and discussed
a credit card scam that Redditt would perform. Defendant told Redditt that defendant’s brother
wanted to buy a set of rims from Redditt for $4200.
¶5 After that conversation, Redditt and Grays met defendant at 117th Street and Lowe Avenue
in Chicago. Two teenagers were standing on the porch with defendant when Redditt and Grays
drove up. Redditt asked defendant where the potential buyer was, and according to Redditt,
defendant “got on the phone and made it like he was calling someone.” Redditt walked back
toward his car, where Grays sat, to get a cigarette. While standing with his back to defendant,
Redditt told Grays he did not think defendant was going to buy anything and said defendant
was “probably on some stickup stuff.”
¶6 When Redditt turned back around to face defendant, defendant pointed a gun at Redditt’s
stomach and said, “Give me everything.” Redditt asked defendant if he was “for real.”
Defendant shot Redditt in the stomach. Redditt ran away, and defendant fired two more shots,
striking Redditt in the side. Redditt stated that he and Grays were not armed.
¶7 Defendant fled after Redditt shouted for help and pretended that he saw a police officer.
Redditt made his way to a nearby porch and heard more gunshots. Redditt was taken by
ambulance to Stroger Hospital, where he had surgery. Redditt testified that he continues to
have stomach pains as a result of the shooting. Redditt identified defendant in a photograph
and a police lineup. Grays was shot in the lower back and died from that wound.
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¶8 Robert Williams testified that on the day of the shootings, defendant arrived at the house of
a mutual friend. Diamond Isom was also present. Defendant asked to use Isom’s phone
because “he said he wanted to do a little sting or something like that.” Williams testified that to
“hit a sting” means to rob someone. Defendant showed Williams a gun in his pocket and said
he planned to rob a friend that he had met.
¶9 Williams and Isom went on the porch with defendant. When a car drove up, defendant
approached the car and spoke to the occupants, one of whom remained seated in the car.
Williams later identified the driver of the car as Redditt. Defendant ordered them to not move
and shot Redditt as Redditt fled. Williams did not see anyone else holding a weapon.
¶ 10 Isom testified that defendant paid her $50 to use her phone on the day of the shootings. She
stated that defendant told her he “wanted to rob this man for his money and his car,” and
defendant showed her a gun. Isom and Williams followed defendant to make sure she got her
phone back. Isom described the shootings consistently with the accounts of Williams and
Redditt. After shooting Redditt, defendant shot Grays, who was sitting in the car.
¶ 11 In the defense case, defendant testified that he had met Redditt on November 15, 2011, at a
location other than that described by Redditt. Defendant said Redditt approached him, and they
discussed a credit card scam and exchanged phone numbers. Defendant said he gave Redditt
his mother’s phone number.
¶ 12 Defendant admitted meeting Redditt at 117th Street and Lowe Avenue but denied telling
Williams and Isom that he had a weapon and intended to rob someone. Defendant said that
when Redditt arrived, Williams and Isom were present, and he was holding a gun that belonged
to Williams’s brother.
¶ 13 Defendant admitted that he shot Redditt and Grays but testified that he did so in
self-defense. He stated that he fired shots after Redditt unsuccessfully tried to pull a gun from
his own waistband. After his arrest, defendant initially told police he was not involved in the
shooting. Defendant implicated Williams after Redditt identified defendant in a lineup.
¶ 14 The jury found defendant guilty on all charged counts. The jury further found that in
committing the first degree murder, defendant used a firearm that proximately caused the
victim’s death and in committing the attempted first degree murder, defendant personally
discharged a firearm that proximately caused great bodily harm to the victim.
¶ 15 At sentencing, the State noted that the minimum sentence for which defendant was eligible
was 80 years in prison and the maximum sentence was natural life imprisonment. The
minimum sentence for the murder count was 20 years in prison, to which was added a 25-year
sentence enhancement for using a firearm that proximately caused the victim’s death, making
the sentencing range for that offense 45 years to life imprisonment. The minimum sentence for
attempted murder was 6 years in prison, to which was added a 25-year sentence enhancement
for discharging a firearm, making the sentencing range for that offense 31 years to life
imprisonment. The minimum sentence for attempted armed robbery was 4 years in prison, with
the sentencing range for that offense being 4 to 15 years in prison.
¶ 16 The State presented a victim impact letter from Jeffana Fowlkes, Grays’s sister.
Acknowledging that defendant lacked a lengthy criminal history, the State described the case
as “egregious,” noting that he had tricked the victims into coming to him. The State pointed out
that Grays was shot as he sat in the car and Redditt was shot as he ran away from defendant.
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¶ 17 Defense counsel agreed to the applicable sentencing ranges but objected to the sentencing
scheme, asserting that it “seems unconscionable to me.” Counsel noted that defendant had a
weapons arrest as a juvenile. The court stated it would not consider that offense. Defense
counsel told the court that defendant was completing school while in jail. Counsel also stated
that defendant had no gang affiliation and he may have sustained abuse and neglect as a child.
¶ 18 Before imposing sentence, the trial court noted: “I don’t believe the sentence is
unconscionable. The legislature feels it’s an appropriate sentencing range. They determined
that in their opinion it’s not unconscionable.” The court stated that at the time of the offense,
defendant was a “young guy” at 18 years of age and is “still a young guy” at 21 years of age but
that defendant was responsible for his actions of shooting two people and killing one.
¶ 19 The court stated that defendant’s prison sentence was a result of his actions on the day of
the offense, finding “[t]hat’s what got him there. He’s a young guy but he made his choices that
day” by killing Grays and wounding Redditt. The court noted that defendant was receiving the
minimum sentence possible but remarked it was “practically a life sentence” and that
defendant would not be restored to useful citizenship “unless he lives to be a really old man
possibly which hopefully he does.” The trial court sentenced defendant to consecutive terms of
45 years for first degree murder and 31 years for attempted first degree murder, with each of
those sentences including a 25-year sentence enhancement for defendant’s use of a firearm.
The trial court also sentenced defendant to four years for attempted armed robbery, also to be
served consecutively, for a total term of 80 years.
¶ 20 Defense counsel filed a motion to reconsider defendant’s sentence, asserting the term was
excessive given defendant’s background and the nature of the offense, among other points. The
trial court denied defendant’s motion.
¶ 21 On appeal, defendant contends his 80-year sentence violates the eighth amendment to the
United States Constitution (U.S. Const., amend. VIII) and the proportionate penalties clause of
the Illinois Constitution (Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11). Defendant asserts those protections were
violated because the trial court was bound by the mandatory firearm sentencing enhancements
that applied in his case and the court was not able to consider his age or the mitigating factors
related to his youth to impose a term of less than 80 years. He argues his sentence should be
vacated and his case remanded for a new sentencing hearing.
¶ 22 The eighth amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states via the
fourteenth amendment, bars cruel and unusual punishment, namely punishment that is
“inherently barbaric” or is disproportionate to the offense. Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48, 59
(2010). The proportionate penalties clause requires that sentences should be determined “both
according to the seriousness of the offense and with the objective of restoring the offender to
useful citizenship.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Rizzo, 2016 IL 118599, ¶ 28.
¶ 23 “Constitutional challenges carry the heavy burden of successfully rebutting the strong
judicial presumption that statutes are constitutional.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.
¶ 23 (noting that tenet applies to legislative enactments that determine the penalties to be
imposed for certain conduct). Defendant raises an as-applied constitutional challenge,
asserting the sentencing scheme here was unconstitutional as applied to the facts and
circumstances of his case. See People v. Thompson, 2015 IL 118151, ¶¶ 36-37 (“an as-applied
constitutional challenge is dependent on the particular circumstances and facts of the
individual defendant or petitioner”). Although our discussion of relevant precedent will
encompass both constitutional provisions, we note that the proportionate penalties clause has
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been found to offer greater protection to defendants than the eighth amendment. See People v.
Clemons, 2012 IL 107821, ¶ 40; People v. Wilson, 2016 IL App (1st) 141500, ¶ 38, appeal
allowed, No. 121345 (Ill. Nov. 23, 2016) (consolidated with People v. Hunter, 2016 IL App
(1st) 141904); People v. Pace, 2015 IL App (1st) 110415, ¶ 139.
¶ 24 Defendant’s claim of cruel and unusual punishment is based on three recent United States
Supreme Court cases, the most recent of which is Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460, ___, 132 S.
Ct. 2455, 2469 (2012), which held that mandatory sentences of life in prison without the
possibility of parole for juvenile offenders convicted of homicide violate the eighth
amendment. The Court held that such a mandatory sentence precludes the trial court’s
consideration of mitigating factors, including the juvenile’s age and attendant characteristics
and the nature of the individual crime. Id. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2468. Defendant also relies on
Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005), which found unconstitutional under the eighth
amendment the imposition of capital punishment for a crime committed when the offender was
younger than 18 years of age, and Graham, which found the eighth amendment was violated
by a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for juvenile offenders
convicted of offenses other than homicide. Graham, 560 U.S. at 75.
¶ 25 As defendant concedes, his case differs from Miller, Roper, and Graham in that he was an
adult, and not a juvenile offender, at the time of these crimes. Still, defendant maintains that it
is highly improbable, given the length of his sentence and his age, that he will outlive his term
of incarceration, and he thus asserts his 80-year term represents a de facto life sentence. The
parties agree on appeal that even with good-time sentencing credit, defendant must serve the
majority of his term, namely, at least 73 years of his 80-year sentence.
¶ 26 Although the Illinois Supreme Court has not addressed the application of Miller to an adult
defendant, it has stated that the rationale of Miller, Roper, and Graham applies “only in the
context of the most severe of all criminal penalties.” People v. Patterson, 2014 IL 115102,
¶ 110. During the pendency of this appeal, the supreme court held in People v. Reyes, 2016 IL
119271, ¶¶ 9-10, that a mandatory 97-year prison term for a 16-year-old juvenile offender
operates as a de facto life sentence “that is the functional equivalent of life without the
possibility of parole [and] constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth
amendment.” Reyes does not warrant a similar result here, where defendant was not a juvenile
offender. The supreme court in Reyes did not indicate it would extend the protections of Miller
to adult offenders.
¶ 27 In a case involving an adult defendant, this court has rejected attempts to compare a
lengthy prison term to a de facto life sentence without parole. In People v. Gay, 2011 IL App
(4th) 100009, ¶¶ 19-25, this court held that a 97-year term composed of consecutive sentences
for the defendant’s 16 felony convictions did not amount to cruel and unusual punishment,
noting that the eighth amendment “allows the State to punish a criminal for each crime he
commits, regardless of the number of convictions or the duration of sentences he has already
accrued.”
¶ 28 Therefore, this court has held that where an adult defendant receives a sentence that
approaches the span of the defendant’s lifetime, that term does not implicate the eighth
amendment right barring cruel and unusual punishment. Defendant cannot demonstrate
otherwise under Miller, Roper, and Graham, which involve capital punishment or life
sentences without parole for juvenile offenders.
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¶ 29 We next consider defendant’s claims that his sentence should be vacated under the
proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution. A challenge under the proportionate
penalties clause “contends that the penalty in question was not determined according to the
seriousness of the offense.” People v. Sharpe, 216 Ill. 2d 481, 487 (2005). Defendant contends
that the trial court had no choice but to impose a minimum term of 80 years and lacked the
discretion to consider his age, the characteristics of youth, and his capacity for rehabilitation.
As a result, his 80-year prison sentence violates the standard that a punishment must not be
cruel, degrading, or wholly disproportionate to the offense as to shock the moral sense of the
community. See Rizzo, 2016 IL 118599, ¶ 37 (and cases cited therein).
¶ 30 Defendant’s 80-year sentence includes two mandatory firearm enhancements imposed
pursuant to section 5-8-1(a)(1)(d) of the Unified Code of Corrections (the Unified Code) (730
ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(d) (West 2010)). A 25-year enhancement was added to defendant’s
sentence for first degree murder based on the jury’s finding that defendant personally
discharged a firearm that proximately caused Grays’ death. 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(d)(iii)
(West 2010) (requiring that an additional term of between 25 years to natural life
imprisonment be added to a sentence if, during the commission of the offense, the defendant
personally discharged a firearm that proximately caused “great bodily harm, permanent
disability, permanent disfigurement, or death to another person”). Under the same provision,
another 25-year enhancement was added to defendant’s sentence for attempted first degree
murder based on the jury’s finding that defendant discharged a firearm that proximately caused
great bodily harm to Redditt. Because defendant inflicted severe bodily injury and was
convicted of first degree murder, the trial court was required to impose consecutive sentences.
See 730 ILCS 5/5-8-4(d)(1) (West 2012).
¶ 31 The two mandatory enhancements in this case total 50 years and comprise more than half
of defendant’s 80-year sentence. As to the rest of defendant’s sentence, the trial court imposed
the minimum base sentence for each of defendant’s three felony convictions, sentencing
defendant to 20 years for first degree murder, 6 years for attempted murder, and 4 years for
attempted armed robbery. See 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-20(a) (West 2010) (sentencing range for
murder is 20 to 60 years); 720 ILCS 5/8-4(c)(1)(D) (West 2010) (attempted first degree murder
is subject to a Class X felony sentence and a 25-year enhancement when the use of a firearm
proximately causes great bodily harm); 730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-25(a) (West 2010) (Class X felony
sentencing range is 6 to 30 years); 730 ILCS 5/18-2(b) (West 2010); 720 ILCS 5/8-4(c)(2)
(West 2010); 730 ILCS 5.5-4.5-30(a) (West 2010) (armed robbery is a Class X felony, and the
attempt to commit a Class X felony is punishable under the Class 1 felony sentencing range of
4 to 15 years). The trial court could have imposed two terms of natural life imprisonment
against defendant under the mandatory firearm enhancements but elected not to do so.
¶ 32 Our supreme court has upheld the constitutionality of mandatory firearm enhancements
under the proportionate penalties clause, finding that in fixing a penalty for an offense, the
potential for rehabilitation need not be given greater weight or consideration than the
seriousness of the offense. Sharpe, 216 Ill. 2d at 525. Mandatory firearm enhancements are
intended “to promote public health and safety, and to impose severe penalties that will deter
the use of firearms in the commission of felonies.” People v. Butler, 2013 IL App (1st) 120923,
¶ 36. The legislature considered the use of firearms during the commission of felonies a serious
concern, and the enhanced sentences reflect the legislature’s intent in this regard. Sharpe, 216
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Ill. 2d at 525-26. Our supreme court also determined that the legislature took into account
rehabilitative potential when the firearm enhancements are applied. Id. at 526.
¶ 33 Defendant, however, argues that the sentencing scheme applied to him, an 18-year-old
when he committed the offenses, violates the proportionate penalties clause because he was
young and the trial court was precluded from considering the hallmarks of youth (lack of
maturity, underdeveloped sense of responsibility, etc.) before imposing a term of 80 years in
prison. As support, defendant cites People v. Brown, 2015 IL App (1st) 130048, ¶ 46; People v.
Gipson, 2015 IL App (1st) 122451, ¶ 69, appeal allowed, No. 119594 (Ill. Nov. 23, 2016); and
People v. House, 2015 IL App (1st) 110580, ¶ 101. Two cases involved juvenile offenders:
Brown involved a 16-year-old defendant and Gipson involved a 15-year-old defendant, both of
whom were tried as adults. Since defendant was an 18-year-old adult offender when he
committed the offenses, those cases are not applicable here.
¶ 34 House involved a 19-year-old adult offender who was sentenced to natural life
imprisonment for two counts of first degree murder. Id. ¶ 3. That term was imposed pursuant to
an Illinois statute mandating a natural life term for defendants 17 years or older found guilty of
murdering more than one victim. Id. ¶ 82 (citing 730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(c)(ii) (West 1998)).
That statute, known as the multiple-murder provision of the Unified Code, has since been
amended to raise the applicable age to 18 years. Id. ¶ 82 n.2 (citing Pub. Act 99-69, § 10 (eff.
Jan. 1, 2016)). In finding the multiple-murder provision unconstitutional under the
proportionate penalties clause as applied to that defendant, the House court noted that although
the defendant was an adult, he was convicted on an accountability theory and his participation
in the offense was limited to acting as a lookout. Id. ¶ 89 (observing that the defendant received
“the same sentence applicable to the person who pulled the trigger”). However, House does not
support the same outcome here. Unlike House, the defendant here was the active shooter
convicted of first degree murder using a firearm that proximately caused one victim’s death.
Additionally, his attempted murder conviction resulted from shooting at a surviving victim
three times where one bullet entered the victim’s stomach, another in his side. Defendant’s
convictions were based on his own actions as opposed to accountability for the acts of another
found in House.
¶ 35 After House was decided, this court addressed a similar case involving an adult offender
and rejected the defendant’s proportionate penalties claim. In People v. Ybarra, 2016 IL App
(1st) 142407, ¶¶ 1, 22, the defendant, who was 20 years old at the time of the crime, was
convicted of three counts of first degree murder and received a mandatory natural life sentence
under the same statute applicable in House. In sentencing the defendant, the trial court heard
evidence in mitigation of the defendant’s sentence but stated that even if it had discretion to
impose a lower term, it would still sentence the defendant to natural life in prison. Id. ¶ 18.
Affirming that sentence, this court distinguished the facts before it from those in House, noting
the defendant had acted in a premeditated fashion and “pulled the trigger repeatedly[,] ***
kill[ing] three teenagers on the street as they left school one afternoon.” Id. ¶¶ 27-30.
¶ 36 Defendant here contacted Redditt and told Redditt that he knew someone who would
purchase tire rims from him. Defendant told Williams that he planned to rob Redditt, and
defendant paid Isom to use her cell phone to avoid detection. After Redditt and Grays arrived,
defendant shot at Redditt, striking him in the stomach, and then chased him and fired two more
shots at the fleeing Redditt, one of which struck him in his side. Defendant also fatally shot
Grays in the back as he sat in the car. At sentencing, the trial court stated that it did not find the
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sentence imposed unconscionable and that the legislature did not find it unconscionable.
Although at the time of the offense defendant was a “young guy” at 18 years of age, he was
“responsible for his actions of shooting two people and killing one.” The court stated that
defendant’s prison sentence was the result of his actions that day, finding “[t]hat’s what got
him there. He’s a young guy but he made his choices that day” by killing Grays and wounding
Redditt. The facts of this case reveal culpable behavior by defendant comparable to the
intentional acts of the defendant in Ybarra, rather than the conduct resulting in the defendant’s
accountability conviction in House.
¶ 37 We note that while this appeal was pending, another division of the First District decided
People v. Harris, 2016 IL App (1st) 141744. In Harris, the court held, contrary to our
determination here, that the 76-year sentence given to the defendant, who was 18 years old at
the time of the offense, violated the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution
because the trial court was not allowed to consider the defendant’s rehabilitative potential. The
Harris court acknowledged that Miller, Roper, and Graham applied only to juvenile
defendants. However, with one justice dissenting, two justices determined that the “Illinois
Supreme Court has recognized that research on juvenile maturity and brain development might
also apply to young adults.” Id. ¶ 61. As support, the court cited to Thompson, 2015 IL 118151,
and concluded that although Thompson did not explicitly extend Miller to young adults, “it did
open the door for that argument.” Harris, 2016 IL App (1st) 141744.
¶ 38 We respectfully disagree with Harris. As will be shown, the majority opinion in Harris
wrongly claims Thompson as authority to argue extending the juvenile sentencing reasoning in
Miller to include young adults, i.e., those defendants 18 years or older. We decline to follow
the well-meaning but false interpretation of precedent authored by the majority in Harris to
judicially advance greater sentencing discretion to trial judges. This is the province of the
legislature.
¶ 39 In Thompson, the defendant was convicted of two counts of first degree murder for fatally
shooting his father and a woman inside his father’s house. Thompson, 2015 IL 118151, ¶ 4.
The defendant was 19 years old at the time of the shootings. Seventeen years after his
conviction, the defendant sought relief and filed a petition pursuant to section 2-1401 of the
Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2010)). In his petition, the
defendant argued that the trial court violated his right to due process, and he also alleged
various deficiencies on the part of his counsel. Thompson, 2015 IL 118151, ¶ 14. The State
filed a motion to dismiss the petition as untimely, which the trial court granted. Id. ¶ 15. On
appeal, the defendant abandoned all of his contentions in his original petition and argued for
the first time that the sentencing statute was unconstitutional as applied to him because he was
19 years old at the time, had no criminal history, and his actions resulted from years of abuse
by his father. Id. ¶ 17.
¶ 40 The issue in Thompson was whether the defendant could raise his as-applied constitutional
challenge for the first time on appeal. The defendant stated he was not asking the supreme
court to look at the merits of his argument that Miller should apply to his mandatory life
sentence. Rather, he merely argued that he should be able to bring the matter to the appellate
court for substantive review of the issue. Id. ¶ 22. Therefore, the question facing our supreme
court in Thompson was “whether defendant’s as-applied constitutional challenge to his
sentence is procedurally barred or forfeited because defendant failed to include that claim in
his section 2-1401 petition.” Id. ¶ 25.
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¶ 41 To resolve the issue, the court in Thompson noted that a section 2-1401 petition must be
filed within two years of final judgment, and an exemption from this procedural bar “is
available only for specific types of claims.” Id. ¶ 31. The court determined that although a
facial constitutional challenge may be raised at any time, the defendant’s as-applied
constitutional challenge to his sentence was “not a type recognized by any of our precedents as
exempt from the typical procedural bars of section 2-1401.” Id. ¶ 34.
¶ 42 Our supreme court reasoned that the resulting injustices are not the same in both cases,
because an as-applied challenge requires a showing of a violation based on the facts and
circumstances of a specific party, whereas a facial constitutional challenge requires a showing
that the statute is unconstitutional under any set of facts. Id. ¶ 36. As illustration, the court
referred to the defendant’s as-applied challenge and his reliance on the evolving science of
juvenile maturity and brain development “that formed the basis of the Miller decision to ban
mandatory natural life sentences for minors.” Id. ¶ 38. The court noted that because the
defendant raised this issue for the first time on appeal, the record “contains nothing about how
that science applies to the circumstances of defendant’s case” or “any factual development on
the issue of whether the rationale of Miller should be extended beyond minors under the age of
18.” Id. It determined that the trial court “is the most appropriate tribunal” to address
defendant’s as-applied challenge. Id.
¶ 43 The supreme court in Thompson did not “open the door” for defendants to argue that the
reasoning in Miller should be extended to young adults over the age of 18. Rather, it
determined that the defendant forfeited his challenge to his sentence under Miller by raising it
for the first time on appeal. Id. ¶ 39. Although the court in Thompson noted that the defendant
“is not necessarily foreclosed from renewing his as-applied challenge in the circuit court,” it
expressed “no opinion on the merits of any future claim raised by defendant in a new
proceeding.” Id. ¶ 44.
¶ 44 Our dissenting colleague would follow Harris to find that defendant’s sentence here
violates the proportionate penalties clause because the protections of the clause go beyond that
of the eighth amendment and require the trial court to consider rehabilitative potential before
imposing a sentence. We agree that the proportionate penalties clause goes beyond the
protections of the eighth amendment in this sense. However, as our supreme court found in
Sharpe, the legislature did consider rehabilitative potential when it created the mandatory
firearm enhancements that constitute 50 years of defendant’s 80-year sentence. Although
defendant argues that, given his age, his rehabilitation potential should receive greater
consideration, our supreme court has determined that the potential for rehabilitation need not
be given greater weight than the seriousness of the offense. Sharpe, 216 Ill. 2d at 525.
¶ 45 The dissent also argues that since defendant was only 18 years old when he committed the
offenses, he is more similar to the juvenile defendants in Roper, Graham, and Miller;
therefore, defendant’s sentence imposed without due consideration of the hallmarks of youth
and rehabilitation potential violates the proportionate penalties clause. Our supreme court has
never defined what constitutes cruel or degrading punishment or what punishment is so
disproportionate to the offense that it shocks the moral sense of the community. People v.
Miller, 202 Ill. 2d 328, 339 (2002) (Leon Miller). It has not supplied a precise definition
“because, as our society evolves, so too do our concepts of elemental decency and fairness
which shape the ‘moral sense’ of the community.” Id.
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¶ 46 In Leon Miller, our supreme court recognized “a marked distinction between persons of
mature age and those who are minors” and that “[t]his distinction may well be taken into
consideration by the legislative power in fixing the punishment for crime, both in determining
the method of inflicting punishment and in limiting its quantity and duration.” (Internal
quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 342. The Illinois General Assembly did subsequently draw the
line between “persons of mature age” and minors for purposes of sentencing. It enacted a new
sentencing provision (730 ILCS 5/5-4.5-105 (West Supp. 2015)), effective January 1, 2016,
providing that “when a person commits an offense and the person is under 18 years of age at
the time of the commission of the offense” the sentencing court shall consider the following
factors in addition to mitigation factors:
“(1) the person’s age, impetuosity, and level of maturity at the time of the offense,
including the ability to consider risks and consequences of behavior, and the presence
of cognitive or developmental disability, or both, if any;
(2) whether the person was subjected to outside pressure, including peer pressure,
familial pressure, or negative influences;
(3) the person’s family, home environment, educational and social background,
including any history of parental neglect, physical abuse, or other childhood trauma;
(4) the person’s potential for rehabilitation or evidence of rehabilitation, or both;
(5) the circumstances of the offense;
(6) the person’s degree of participation and specific role in the offense, including
the level of planning by the defendant before the offense;
(7) whether the person was able to meaningfully participate in his or her defense;
(8) the person’s prior juvenile or criminal history[.]”
¶ 47 The legislature, pursuant to its authority, has determined that the youth-related
considerations above are relevant in sentencing only for defendants who were under the age of
18 when they committed their offenses. Therefore, for defendants 18 years of age or older
when they committed their offenses, the legislature has deemed that failure to take those
factors into account does not render a sentence cruel or degrading or so disproportionate to the
offense that it shocks the moral sense of the community. Although one can make a case that the
18-year-old defendant here is not much different from a 17-year-old in terms of youthful
characteristics, a line must be drawn at some point. House’s citation to scholarly authority,
pointing out the fact that Germany and the Netherlands extend juvenile justice considerations
to young adults ages 18 to 21, and Sweden does the same for young adults up to the age of 25,
illustrates this problem. See House, 2015 IL App (1st) 110580, ¶ 96. Where should the line be
drawn? At this time, our legislature has determined that at the age of 18, a person is an adult for
sentencing purposes. This determination is not without support. As the Supreme Court
acknowledged in Roper, although “[t]he qualities that distinguish juveniles from adults do not
disappear when an individual turns 18,” that age “is the point where society draws the line for
many purposes between childhood and adulthood.” Roper, 543 U.S. at 574. We agree with the
dissent in Harris that “it is for the legislature, and not the courts, to revisit the sentencing
scheme and afford greater discretion to trial judges” for defendants 18 years of age or older.
Harris, 2016 IL App (1st) 141744, ¶ 80 (Mason, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
For these reasons, we decline to follow Harris.
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¶ 48 In conclusion, as an adult offender, defendant cannot obtain relief under the holdings of
Miller, Roper, and Graham. Moreover, defendant’s sentence did not violate the proportionate
penalties clause because mandatory firearm enhancements are intended to account for the
serious nature of weapons offenses as well as defendant’s rehabilitative potential. The record
also establishes that, in its discretion, the trial court considered defendant’s age and
background in imposing the shortest possible sentence in this case. Therefore, defendant has
not demonstrated a violation of his constitutional rights under either the eighth amendment or
the proportionate penalties clause.
¶ 49 Defendant’s remaining contention on appeal is that his trial counsel was ineffective for
failing to raise these constitutional arguments at his sentencing hearing. He asserts his counsel
should have argued to the trial court that it could impose a sentence lower than the statutory
minimum if it found the mandatory minimum sentence unconstitutional as applied to
defendant.
¶ 50 In essence, defendant contends the trial court would have sentenced him to a term of less
than 80 years had the court been made aware of the precedent that defendant now presents
here. He argues the trial court was in the best position to consider whether the holdings of
Miller and the other cases discussed above should extend to defendants between the ages of 18
and 21.
¶ 51 To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must satisfy the test in
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694 (1984), namely that (1) counsel’s performance
was objectively unreasonable compared with prevailing professional standards and (2) there is
a reasonable probability that but for those errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different. This court can resolve such a claim by considering only whether defendant has met
the prejudice prong, which “necessitates a showing of actual prejudice, not simply speculation
that defendant may have been prejudiced.” Patterson, 2014 IL 115102, ¶ 81.
¶ 52 Defendant’s argument on this point relies on speculation that, had his counsel explained
the Miller decision in detail at sentencing, the trial court would have ventured below the
statutory minimum sentence. Defendant contends that the trial court failed to “highlight the
science underlying Roper, Graham and Miller, which makes [defendant] less culpable.”
Despite defendant’s repeated assertions to the contrary, those cases do not address the
culpability of an adult defendant. Here, the trial court clearly indicated that defendant was an
18-year-old offender who was responsible for his acts of shooting two people, one fatally.
¶ 53 The additional authority cited by defendant on this point is not persuasive. Defendant
directs us to Leon Miller, in which the trial court imposed a 50-year sentence for a 15-year-old
offender who was charged with two counts of first degree murder based on an accountability
theory, despite the statutorily mandated sentence of natural life imprisonment required by the
multiple-murder provision of the Unified Code (730 ILCS 5/5-8-1(a)(1)(c)(ii) (West 1996)).
The supreme court affirmed the imposition of a 50-year term for that defendant, finding the
sentencing scheme involved the automatic transfer of 15- and 16-year-olds charged with
murder to adult court and the requirement that the defendant be held equally responsible as the
principal in the offense, as well as the application of the multiple-murder statute. Leon Miller,
202 Ill. 2d at 340-41. Finding the required sentence of natural life imprisonment was
“particularly harsh and unconstitutionally disproportionate” and “does not accurately represent
defendant’s personal culpability,” the supreme court noted in Leon Miller that “defendant was
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tried as if he were the adult shooter in the crime.” Id. We do not find the facts of Leon Miller
require a similar result here, where defendant was an adult and was the gunman.
¶ 54 For all of the reasons set forth above, defendant’s 80-year sentence was constitutional
under the eighth amendment and the proportionate penalties clause. In addition, defendant did
not receive ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing.
¶ 55 Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
¶ 56 Affirmed.
¶ 57 JUSTICE MIKVA, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
¶ 58 I join in that part of the court’s decision rejecting Derrick Thomas’s claim that his trial
counsel was ineffective. However, I believe that he has demonstrated a violation of his
constitutional rights under the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution and
that we should follow the recent decision by another panel in this district in People v. Harris,
2016 IL App (1st) 141744.
¶ 59 The court’s opinion in this case does not dispute that the constitutional claim raised by
Derrick Thomas here is identical to the one that the court recognized in Harris. Like Darien
Harris, Derrick Thomas was 18 years old at the time of his crimes; Derrick Thomas received a
sentence of 80 years, which, even more clearly than Darien Harris’s 76-year sentence, is a
de facto life sentence; Derrick Thomas, like Darien Harris, had no previous adult criminal
record, and most significantly, the sentence Derrick Thomas received was, like that received
by Darien Harris, the minimum sentence available for the trial court to impose after taking into
consideration statutorily required minimum sentences, sentencing enhancements, and required
consecutive sentences. See id. ¶¶ 15, 32. As in Harris, the trial court here was prevented from
exercising any discretion to impose a lesser sentence. Id. ¶ 71.
¶ 60 I agree with the majority in this case (supra ¶ 44) that the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision
in People v. Thompson, 2015 IL 118151, expressed “no opinion” on whether the prohibition on
mandatory life sentences for defendants who were under the age of 18 at the time of their
crimes should be extended to an 18-year-old defendant, as in this case and in Harris, or to a
19-year-old defendant, as in Thompson. However, I think that both Harris and the precedent it
cites, People v. House, 2015 IL App (1st) 110580, offer compelling reasons for holding that, in
this case, the imposition of a mandatory de facto life sentence violates the proportionate
penalties clause of the Illinois Constitution, which provides that “[a]ll penalties shall be
determined both according to the seriousness of the offense and with the objective of restoring
the offender to useful citizenship.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11.
¶ 61 As our court recognized in Harris:
“In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has held that the eighth
amendment protects juvenile offenders from capital punishment or mandatory life
imprisonment without parole. Roper, 543 U.S. at 578-79; Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S.
48, 82 (2010); Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. [460], ___, 132 S. Ct. 2455, 2475 (2012).
These holdings were grounded in the Court’s concern, based on scientific research
about adolescent brain development, that juveniles lack maturity, are more vulnerable
to bad influences, and are more amenable to rehabilitation. Roper, 543 U.S. at 570.”
Harris, 2016 IL App (1st) 141744, ¶ 56.
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¶ 62 This trio of United States Supreme Court cases held that both capital punishment and
mandatory life imprisonment without parole are unconstitutional penalties for defendants who
were under the age of 18 at the time of their crimes. These cases rested on extensive research
which the Court summarized as follows in Miller:
“Because juveniles have diminished culpability and greater prospects for reform, we
explained, they are less deserving of the most severe punishments. [Citation.] Those
cases relied on three significant gaps between juveniles and adults. First, children have
a lack of maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility, leading to
recklessness, impulsivity, and heedless risk-taking. [Citation.] Second, children are
more vulnerable ... to negative influences and outside pressures, including from their
family and peers; they have limited contro[l] over their own environment and lack the
ability to extricate themselves from horrific, crime-producing settings. [Citation.] And
third, a child’s character is not as well formed as an adult’s; his traits are less fixed and
his actions less likely to be evidence of irretrievabl[e] deprav[ity].” (Internal quotation
marks omitted.) Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2464.
¶ 63 Our supreme court, in People v. Reyes, 2016 IL 119271, extended this trio of United States
Supreme Court cases to hold that it was also unconstitutional to impose a mandatory
term-of-years sentence that was so lengthy that it was a de facto sentence of life without parole
on a defendant who was under the age of 18 at the time of the crime. Although the State does
not formally admit that the sentence Derrick Thomas received is a de facto sentence of life
without parole, it acknowledges that the shortest sentence that he could actually serve would be
73 years and 4 months, which would make him 92 years old when he is released. This is a
de facto life sentence.
¶ 64 Although neither Reyes nor the United States Supreme Court cases discuss this explicitly,
it is worth noting that only a young adult has any chance of serving a significant portion of such
a lengthy sentence. Someone sentenced to jail at the age of 40 or 50 will in fact spend far less
time in prison than a younger person, even if he or she is given the exact same sentence. Thus,
instead of being given shorter sentences because of their youth, these younger defendants are
actually punished far more harshly than their older counterparts.
¶ 65 Our state constitution specifically mandates that penalties in Illinois have “the objective of
restoring the offender to useful citizenship.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11; Harris, 2016 IL App
(1st) 141744, ¶ 58. Any consideration of this objective of rehabilitative potential necessitates
that a trial court has the ability to consider the defendant’s youth, together with the extensive
research on juvenile maturity and brain research that led to the holdings by the United States
Supreme Court in the trio of cases culminating in Miller. I also agree with the court in Harris
that the proportionate penalties clause of the Illinois constitution “ ‘went beyond the framers’
understanding of the eighth amendment and is not synonymous with that provision.’ ” 2016 IL
App (1st) 141744, ¶ 36 (quoting People v. Clemons, 2012 IL 107821, ¶ 40). Our constitution
makes the very specific commandment, not present in the eighth amendment, that in
sentencing we must consider rehabilitative potential. Thus, while the United States Supreme
Court cases drew the line, for eighth amendment purposes, at defendants who were younger
than the age of 18 when they committed their crimes, that limitation need not and should not
apply to the proportionate penalties clause of our constitution. As the United States Supreme
Court recognized itself in Roper, “[t]he qualities that distinguish juveniles from adults do not
disappear when an individual turns 18.” 543 U.S. at 574.
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¶ 66 Moreover, when the United States Supreme Court drew the line in Roper at defendants
who were under the age of 18 when their crimes were committed, it was in the context of
holding that the death penalty could never be imposed. As the Supreme Court recognized, for
such a categorical rule, “a line must be drawn.” However, the holding in Harris was not that
the de facto life sentence could never be imposed. Rather, that such a sentence should not be
imposed—as it was in that case and as it was for Derrick Thomas—without the trial court
being given an opportunity to consider the defendant’s potential for rehabilitation.
¶ 67 Our court in House, in deciding that youth remained a relevant factor for a defendant who
was convicted of two murders that occurred when he was 20 years old, cited several scholarly
articles recognizing that several European countries have extended juvenile justice
considerations to include, in Germany and in the Netherlands for example, all young adults
from ages 18 to 21 and, in Sweden, young adults up to the age of 25. 2015 IL App (1st)
110580, ¶ 96.
¶ 68 The result in this case is particularly at odds with the theme of judicial discretion
underlying this state’s statutory sentencing scheme, a theme that has been repeatedly
underscored by both our supreme court and by our colleagues in the appellate court:
“The trial court has broad discretionary powers in imposing a sentence, and its
sentencing decisions are entitled to great deference. [Citation.] A reviewing court gives
great deference to the trial court’s judgment regarding sentencing because the trial
judge, having observed the defendant and the proceedings, has a far better opportunity
to consider these factors than the reviewing court, which must rely on the ‘cold’ record.
[Citation.] The trial judge has the opportunity to weigh such factors as the defendant’s
credibility, demeanor, general moral character, mentality, social environment, habits,
and age. [Citations.] Consequently, the reviewing court must not substitute its
judgment for that of the trial court merely because it would have weighed these factors
differently.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Alexander, 239 Ill. 2d 205,
212-13 (2010).
See also People v. Decatur, 2015 IL App (1st) 130231, ¶ 12 (“the trial court, having observed
the defendant and the proceedings, is better suited to consider sentencing factors than the
reviewing court, which relies on the ‘cold’ record”).
¶ 69 When it sentenced Derrick Thomas, the trial court in this case had no opportunity to
consider any factors, including his age or, as our constitution expressly mandates, “the
objective of restoring the offender to useful citizenship.” Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 11. The trial
court specifically remarked that, because of the mandatory minimum consecutive sentencing
statutes, it was “unable to consider” whether Derrick Thomas “could be restored to useful
citizenship.” The trial court also acknowledged that the events that ended with Derrick Thomas
killing one man and badly wounding another began as a “nonsensical plan.” The court
summarized the “problem” as follows: “18 years old, has a gun available to him and he uses it
in this case to shoot two people.” It is certainly possible that, if allowed to consider it, the trial
court would have viewed this tragic incident as an effect of “recklessness, impulsivity and
heedless risk-taking.” Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2464; see Roper, 543 U.S. at 569. It
is also possible that the trial court would have believed that Derrick Thomas, like the
defendants who were under the age of 18 at the time of their crimes in Roper, Graham, and
Miller, suffered from a “lack of maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility,
leading to recklessness, impulsivity, and heedless risk-taking,” that he was young enough to be
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unduly subject “to negative influences and outside pressures,” that his traits were “less fixed”
than those of an adult, and that “his actions [were] less likely to be evidence of irretrievabl[e]
deprav[ity].” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2464. If
we followed Harris and House, we could remand this case and allow the trial court to consider
the facts bearing on this particular defendant’s potential for rehabilitation.
¶ 70 The majority distinguishes House, in which the court also found that a mandatory life
sentence for a young offender—in that case a 20-year-old—was unconstitutional. Supra
¶¶ 36-38. House was previously distinguished in People v. Ybarra, 2016 IL App (1st) 142407,
¶ 27, and the majority here concludes that Derrick Thomas’s case is more like Ybarra than like
House, because the facts of this case reveal culpable behavior by defendant that is more
comparable to the intentional acts of the defendant in Ybarra than the accountability
conviction of the defendant in House. See supra ¶ 36. Respectfully, this is not our decision to
make, particularly in the first instance. It is the trial court judge, who saw Derrick Thomas and
observed his demeanor and general moral character, as well as his age, who should have the
opportunity to determine whether he had a potential for rehabilitation such that something
short of a de facto life sentence was appropriate. Indeed, in Ybarra, the culpability of the
defendant was particularly egregious and the trial judge stated on the record that he would have
imposed a life sentence even if he had been afforded the discretion to impose a lighter
sentence. 2016 IL App (1st) 142407, ¶ 32. In contrast, the trial judge in this case said that he
had no discretion and was “unable” to consider rehabilitative potential. It is the fact that we
have no idea what the trial court would have done if given discretion and an ability to consider
rehabilitative potential for a young adult that makes this case like House and different from
Ybarra.
¶ 71 The majority here makes no attempt to distinguish Harris but chooses not to follow it.
Other than its disagreement with the court in Harris that our supreme court opened the door to
this holding in Thompson, the majority supports this choice with the suggestion that we should
wait for the legislature to revisit the sentencing scheme that left the trial judge in this case with
no sentencing option less than the de facto life sentence it imposed on Derrick Thomas. Supra
¶ 44. We may be waiting for some time. Although our supreme court held in 2002 that the
imposition of a mandatory minimum sentence of natural life violated the proportionate
penalties clause on a 15-year-old defendant (People v. Miller, 202 Ill. 2d 328, 336 (2002)
(Leon Miller)), it was not until 2016, and after the court’s holding in that case was joined by
numerous others in cases before this court, the United States Supreme Court, and courts in
other jurisdictions, that the legislature returned some discretion to trial court judges in the
sentencing of juveniles. See Pub. Act 99-69, § 10 (eff. Jan. 1, 2016) (adding 730 ILCS
5/5-4.5-105(c) (eliminating mandatory firearm enhancements and mandatory life sentences for
juveniles)).
¶ 72 We certainly could sit back and wait for the legislature to return some degree of discretion
in the sentencing of very young adults to the courts. But of course it is the role of the judiciary,
and not the legislature, to step in wherever the application of a statute violates the rights
afforded by our constitution. See, e.g., Leon Miller, 202 Ill. 2d at 336 (noting that the
legislature’s power to impose a sentence “is not without limitation; the penalty must satisfy
constitutional constrictions”). To do so now would not be premature. There is a clear trend,
informed by ever-accumulating scientific evidence, in the jurisprudence of this country and
this state toward more leniency and sentencing discretion in cases involving young offenders.
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It is precisely to accommodate trends like this, which reflect the changing values and concerns
of our society, that our supreme court has refused to precisely delimit the bounds of what
punishments are cruel, degrading, or unconstitutionally disproportionate. See id. at 339
(explaining that, “as our society evolves, so too do our concepts of elemental decency and
fairness which shape the moral sense of the community”). Although Derrick Thomas
committed very serious crimes, under our constitution he is entitled to a sentence based not just
on the seriousness of those crimes but one that is arrived at with the objective of restoring him
to useful citizenship. A sentence imposed without consideration for his youth or the scientific
evidence demonstrating a connection between youth and the potential for rehabilitation cannot
meet this standard.
¶ 73 I respectfully dissent.
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