Petitioner was tried in an Illinois State Court, convicted of
the unlawful possession and sale of marijuana, and sentenced to
imprisonment. Her conviction was sustained by the State Supreme
Court, notwithstanding the admission in evidence at her trial of an
oral confession obtained by threats of police officers that, if she
did not "cooperate," she would be deprived of state financial aid
for her dependent children, and that her children would be taken
from her and she might never see them again.
Held: Petitioner's confession was coerced, its
admission in evidence violated the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, and the judgment affirming her conviction is
reversed. Pp.
372 U. S.
529-538.
1. Petitioner's confession, made in the circumstances shown by
this record, was coerced. Pp.
372 U. S.
529-534.
2. In view of a certification to this Court by the State Supreme
Court that "decision of the federal claim . . . was necessary to
our judgment in this case," it cannot be said that petitioner
failed properly to assert or preserve that claim at her trial and
that, therefore, her conviction rests upon an adequate and
independent state ground. Pp.
372 U. S.
535-536.
3. It cannot be said that petitioner's conviction did not rest
in any part on her confession, because the record affirmatively
shows that her confession was admitted in evidence and considered
by the trial and appellate courts. P.
372 U. S.
536.
4. Admission of petitioner's coerced confession in evidence was
not harmless error, even if the other evidence was sufficient to
support her conviction. Pp.
372 U. S.
536-538.
21 Ill. 2d
63,
171 N.E.2d
17, reversed.
Page 372 U. S. 529
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner was tried in the Criminal Court of Cook County,
Illinois, on an indictment charging her with the unlawful
possession and sale of marijuana. She was convicted and sentenced
to the penitentiary for "not less than ten nor more than eleven
years." The judgment of conviction was affirmed on appeal by the
Illinois Supreme Court.
21 Ill. 2d
63,
171 N.E.2d
17. We granted certiorari 370 U.S. 933. For the reasons stated
in this opinion, we hold that the petitioner's trial did not meet
the demands of due process of law, and we accordingly set aside the
judgment before us.
On January 17, 1959, three Chicago police officers arrested
James Zeno for unlawful possession of narcotics. They took him to a
district police station. There they told him that, if he "would set
somebody up for them, they would go light" on him. He agreed to
"cooperate," and telephoned the petitioner, telling her that he was
coming over to her apartment. The officers and Zeno then went to
the petitioner's apartment house, and Zeno went upstairs to the
third floor while the officers waited below. Some time later,
variously estimated as from five to 20 minutes, Zeno emerged from
the petitioner's third floor apartment with a package containing a
substance later determined to be marijuana. The officers took the
package and told Zeno to return to the petitioner's apartment on
the pretext that he had left his glasses there. When the petitioner
walked out into the hallway in response to Zeno's call, one of the
officers seized her and placed her under arrest. [
Footnote 1] The officers and
Page 372 U. S. 530
Zeno then entered the petitioner's apartment. [
Footnote 2] The petitioner at first denied
she had sold the marijuana to Zeno, insisting that, while he was in
her apartment, Zeno had merely repaid a loan. After further
conversations with the officers, however, she told them that she
had sold the marijuana to Zeno.
The officers testified to this oral confession at the
petitioner's trial, and it is this testimony which, we now hold,
fatally infected the petitioner's conviction. The petitioner
testified at the trial that she had not, in fact, sold any
marijuana to Zeno, that Zeno had merely repaid a longstanding loan.
[
Footnote 3] She also
testified, however, that she
Page 372 U. S. 531
had told the officers on the day of her arrest that she had sold
Zeno marijuana, describing the circumstances under which this
statement was made as follows:
"I told him [Officer Sims] I hadn't sold Zeno; I didn't know
anything about narcotics, and I had no source of supply. He kept
insisting I had a source of supply and had been dealing in
narcotics. I kept telling him I did not, and that I knew nothing
about it. Then he started telling me I could get 10 years and the
children could be taken away, and after I got out they would be
taken away and strangers would have them, and if I could cooperate,
he would see they weren't; and he would recommend leniency, and I
had better do what they told me if I wanted to see my kids again.
The two children are three and four years old. Their father is
dead; they live with me. I love my children very much. I have never
been arrested for anything in my whole life before. I did not know
how much power a policeman had in a recommendation to the State's
Attorney or to the Court. I did not know that a Court and a State's
Attorney are not bound by a police officer's recommendations. I did
not know anything about it. All the officers talked to me about my
children and the time I could get for not cooperating. All three
officers did. After that conversation I believed that if I
cooperated with them and answered the questions the way they wanted
me to answer, I believed that I would not be prosecuted. They had
said I had better say what they wanted me to, or I would lose the
kids. I said I would say anything they wanted me to say. I asked
what I was to say. I was told to
Page 372 U. S. 532
say 'You must admit you gave Zeno the package' so I said, 'Yes,
I gave it to him.'"
"
* * * *"
". . . The only reason I had for admitting it to the police was
the hope of saving myself from going to jail and being taken away
from my children. The statement I made to the police after they
promised that they would intercede for me, the statements admitting
the crime, were false."
"
* * * *"
". . . My statement to the police officers that I sold the
marijuana to Zeno was false. I lied to the police at that time. I
lied because the police told me they were going to send me to jail
for 10 years and take my children, and I would never see them
again; so I agreed to say whatever they wanted me to say."
The police officers did not deny that these were the
circumstances under which the petitioner told them that she had
sold marijuana to Zeno. To the contrary, their testimony largely
corroborated the petitioner's testimony. Officer Sims
testified:
"I told her then that Zeno had been trapped and we asked him to
cooperate; that he had made a phone call to her and subsequently
had purchased the evidence from her. I told her then if she wished
to cooperate, we would be willing to recommend to the State
leniency in her case. At that time, she said, 'Yes, I did sell it
to him.'"
"
* * * *"
". . . While I was talking to her in the bedroom, she told me
that she had children and she had taken the children over to her
mother-in-law, to keep her children. "
Page 372 U. S. 533
"Q. Did you or anybody in your presence indicate or suggest or
say to her that her children would be taken away from her if she
didn't do what you asked her to do?"
"Witness: I believe there was some mention of her children being
taken away from her if she was arrested."
"The Court: By whom? Who made mention of it?"
"The Witness: I believe Officer Bryson made that statement, and
I think I made the statement at some time during the course of our
discussion that her children could be taken from her. We did not
say if she cooperated they wouldn't be taken. I don't know whether
Kobar said that to her or not. I don't recall if Kobar said that to
her or not."
"
* * * *"
"I asked her who the clothing belonged to. She said they were
her children's. I asked how many she had, and she said 2. I asked
her where they were or who took care of them. She said the children
were over at the mother's or mother-in-law. I asked her how did she
take care of herself, and she said she was on ADC. I told her that
if we took her into the station and charged her with the offense,
that the ADC would probably be cut off and also that she would
probably lose custody of her children. That was not before I said
if she cooperated, it would go light on her. It was during the same
conversation."
"
* * * *"
". . . I made the statement to her more than once; but I don't
know how many times, that she had been set up, and, if she
cooperated, we would go light with her. "
Page 372 U. S. 534
Officer Bryson testified:
"Miss Lynumn said she was thinking about her children and she
didn't want to go to jail. I was present and heard something
pertaining to her being promised leniency if she would cooperate. I
don't know exactly who said it. I could have, myself, or Sims."
It is thus abundantly clear that the petitioner's oral
confession was made only after the police had told her that state
financial aid for her infant children would be cut off, and her
children taken from her, if she did not "cooperate." These threats
were made while she was encircled in her apartment by three police
officers and a twice convicted felon who had purportedly "set her
up." There was no friend or adviser to whom she might turn. She had
had no previous experience with the criminal law, and had no reason
not to believe that the police had ample power to carry out their
threats.
We think it clear that a confession made under such
circumstances must be deemed not voluntary, but coerced. That is
the teaching of our cases. We have said that the question in each
case is whether the defendant's will was overborne at the time he
confessed.
Chambers v. Florida, 309 U.
S. 227;
Watts v. Indiana, 338 U. S.
49,
338 U. S. 52-53;
Leyra v. Denno, 347 U. S. 556,
347 U. S. 558.
If so, the confession cannot be deemed "the product of a rational
intellect and a free will."
Blackburn v. Alabama,
361 U. S. 199,
361 U. S. 208.
See also Spano v. New York, 360 U.
S. 315;
Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 322 U.
S. 143;
and see particularly Harris v. South
Carolina, 338 U. S. 68,
338 U. S.
70.
In this case, counsel for the State of Illinois has conceded, at
least for purposes of argument, that the totality of the
circumstances disclosed by the record must be deemed to have
combined to produce an impellingly coercive
Page 372 U. S. 535
effect upon the petitioner at the time she told the officers she
had sold marijuana to Zeno. But counsel for the State argues that
we should nonetheless affirm the judgment before us upon either of
two alternative grounds. It is contended first that the petitioner
did not properly assert or preserve her federal constitutional
claim in accord with established rules of Illinois procedure, and
that her conviction therefore rests upon an adequate and
independent foundation of state law. Secondly, it is urged that the
petitioner's conviction "does not rest in whole or in any part upon
petitioner's confession." We find both of these contentions without
validity.
It is true that the record in this case does not show that the
petitioner explicitly asserted her federal constitutional claim in
the trial court. And it is said that, in Illinois, the procedural
rule is settled that, where a constitutional claim which is based
not upon the alleged unconstitutionality of a statute, but upon the
facts of a particular case, is not clearly and appropriately raised
in the trial court, the claim will not be considered on appeal by
the Supreme Court of Illinois. In other words, such a claim of
constitutional right, it is said, must be asserted in the trial
court or it will be deemed upon appellate review to have been
waived.
People v. Touhy, 397 Ill. 19, 72 N.E.2d 827.
If all we had to go on were the record in the Illinois trial and
appellate courts, there would indeed be color to the claim of
counsel for the State, and we would be squarely faced with the
necessity of determining what the Illinois procedural rule actually
is, and whether the rule constituted an adequate independent ground
in support of the judgment affirming the petitioner's conviction.
But that is not necessary in this case. For there is here a short
and complete answer to the respondent's argument. Before acting
upon the petition for certiorari, we entered an order directed to
this very problem. The order
Page 372 U. S. 536
accorded counsel for the petitioner
"opportunity to secure a certificate from the Supreme Court of
Illinois as to whether the judgment herein was intended to rest on
an adequate and independent state ground, or whether decision of
the federal claim . . . was necessary to the judgment
rendered."
368 U.S.
908. The answer of the Supreme Court of Illinois was
unambiguous. On June 8, 1962, that court issued the following
"Response to Request for Certificate":
"In response to a request by counsel for the plaintiff in error,
we hereby certify that decision of the federal claim referred to in
the order of the United States Supreme Court dated November 13,
1961, was necessary to our judgment in this case."
We decline to search behind this certificate of the Supreme
Court of Illinois.
The State's contention that the petitioner's conviction did not
rest in any part upon her confession is quite without merit. The
case was tried by the court without a jury. The record shows that,
twice during the trial, the petitioner's counsel moved to strike
the testimony of the police officers as to the petitioner's oral
statement to them. On the first occasion, the trial judge reserved
a ruling on the motion "until the close of the State's case." When
the motion was renewed, the record states that "[t]he motion to
strike was denied." Thus, the record affirmatively shows that the
evidence of the petitioner's confession was admitted and considered
by the trial court.
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Illinois, which has power
independently to assess the evidence of guilt in a criminal case,
People v. Ware, 23 Ill. 2d
59,
177 N.E.2d
362, included in its summary of the prosecution's evidence in
this case the statement that "[t]he police officers also testified
to certain admissions of guilt made to them by
Page 372 U. S. 537
defendant on January 17, 1959." 21 Ill. 2d at 67, 171 N.E.2d at
19. Later in its opinion, the court stated:
"A review of the record does indicate, however, that strong
suggestions of leniency were made to defendant subsequent to her
arrest and prior to her admissions. Even in the absence of
defendant's statements, there is clear proof by Zeno and the police
officers that defendant gave Zeno a package containing marijuana.
Upon a review of the entire record, we are convinced that the
evidence fully supports the judgment of the trial court. . . ."
21 Ill. 2d at 68, 171 N.E.2d at 20.
While this statement is not free from ambiguity, we take it to
express the view that, even if the testimony as to the petitioner's
confession was erroneously admitted, the error was a harmless one
in the light of other evidence of the petitioner's guilt. [
Footnote 4] That is an impermissible
doctrine. As was said in
Payne v. Arkansas,
"this Court has uniformly held that, even though there may have
been sufficient evidence, apart from the coerced confession, to
support a judgment of conviction, the admission in evidence, over
objection, of the coerced confession vitiates the judgment because
it violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment."
356 U. S. 356 U.S.
560 at
356 U. S.
568.
Page 372 U. S. 538
See Spano v. New York, 360 U.
S. 315,
360 U. S. 324;
Watts v. Indiana, 338 U. S. 49,
338 U. S. 50, n.
2;
Haley v. Ohio, 332 U. S. 596,
332 U. S.
599.
The judgment is set aside, and the case is remanded to the
Supreme Court of Illinois for further proceedings not inconsistent
with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Officer Sims testified as follows:
"He called Beatrice and said he had left his glasses in the
apartment; she opened the door and, as she came out into the hall,
I was standing in the common hall, in the vestibule part with the
door partly closed. As she walked down the hallway toward Zeno, I
opened the door and stepped into the hallway. I told her she was
under arrest and I grabbed her by her hands, both hands. At this
point, I told her that she had been set up, that she had just made
a sale, and I showed her the package."
[
Footnote 2]
Officer Sims testified:
"I had complete physical possession of her two hands. I had
turned her hands loose when we went into the apartment. I went in
ahead of her. The door was still open. The apartment door was still
ajar, and I walked into the apartment and she followed me in. We
were together, but I was beside her. I believe Bryson and Zeno were
behind her. She was between two police officers. We proceeded in
that fashion to enter her apartment."
[
Footnote 3]
Her testimony on this subject was as follows:
"On January 17th, Zeno called me. He owed me money, $23.00. I
had loaned him this money about three months previously. He said he
was being evicted, and had money en route from his sister, and if I
could lend him the money, he could pay his rent; and I haven't seen
him since. That was three months previously. On this day, he told
me on the phone he was sorry he had not been around to pay the
money, but he had been in pretty bad shape. But now he had come
into some money, and would come and pay me."
"
* * * *"
". . . On that day, I did not give to Zeno, nor did Mr. Zeno ask
me in the telephone conversation in which he said he was going to
pay me the money he owed me, he did not say anything about having a
can ready for him or anything like that."
"He said here is the money I owe you. He owed me $23.00. When he
gave me the money, he gave me $28.00. I asked him what the $5.00
was for and he said it was because I had it so long. I did not say
to Mr. Zeno let's go into the kitchen. Nothing like that. I did not
have any transaction with him in the kitchen -- nothing even like
that."
[
Footnote 4]
It is difficult, however, to perceive how the admission of
evidence of the confession could be considered harmless. The only
other evidence of substance against the petitioner was that given
by Zeno, a twice-convicted felon who testified that he was eager in
his own self-interest to cooperate with the police by "setting up"
someone. While it was undisputed that Zeno was in possession of the
package of marijuana when he emerged from the petitioner's
apartment, it was far from clear that Zeno obtained the marijuana
from the petitioner. Zeno was out of the police officers' sight for
a period of from five to 20 minutes, and there were other
apartments in the building where Zeno might have obtained the
package.