AG asks state Supreme Court to force judge to impose legal sentence
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[February 12, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed a
petition on Thursday asking the Illinois Supreme Court to intervene in a
controversial sexual assault case that ended with a circuit judge
voiding his original guilty verdict and freeing the defendant early.
Raoul petitioned for a writ of mandamus urging the Illinois Supreme
Court to order Adams County Circuit Judge Robert K. Adrian to impose a
lawful sentence in the sexual assault case – four to 15 years in prison.
Adrian released the defendant after he served five months in a county
jail.
“The mandatory sentencing range set by the Illinois General Assembly for
felony criminal sexual assault is four to 15 years in prison,” Raoul
said in a written release announcing his decision to take the case to
the Supreme Court. “In addition to the insensitivity to the victim in
this case, the judge’s decision to vacate the conviction and call the
148 days Clinton served in county jail ‘plenty of punishment’
demonstrates an abuse of power.”
Adrian presided over the three-day bench criminal sexual assault trial
of Drew S. Clinton, 19, in October. Clinton was accused of raping a
16-year-old girl at a graduation party in Quincy on May 30. Adrian found
Clinton guilty of one count of criminal sexual assault.
But when Clinton returned to court in January, Adrian decided to reverse
his own finding of guilt and vacate the conviction. This allowed Adrian
to avoid sentencing him to the minimum sentence under Illinois law. He
then ordered Clinton to be released from custody.
Clinton’s victim was in court and prepared to read a victim impact
statement when Adrian made his decision to vacate the conviction and
free Clinton.
A transcript showed that Adrian criticized the parents where the party
was held.
“This is what’s happened when parents do not exercise their parental
responsibilities, when we have people, adults, having parties for
teenagers and they allow coeds and female people to swim in their
underwear in their swimming pool,” he said, according to a transcript.
Carrie Ward, the executive director for the Illinois Coalition Against
Sexual Assault, said Adrian’s statements were victim-blaming and further
traumatized the victim.
“This was a turn that no one could have predicted,” Ward said. “And it
underscores the issues survivors of sexual assault face.”
Clinton, who formerly lived in Quincy, turned 18 two weeks before the
crime occurred. He had no previous criminal record. He currently resides
in Michigan.
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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is pictured in
a file photo. He filed a petition on Thursday asking the Illinois
Supreme Court to intervene in a controversial sexual assault case
that ended with a circuit judge voiding his original guilty verdict
and freeing the defendant early. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)
During the hearing, Adrian said, “Mr. Clinton has served almost five
months in the county jail, 148 days. For what happened in this case,
that is plenty of punishment. That would be a just sentence,” according
to a court transcript.
“This is the first time I have seen a situation like this in the 20
years I have been doing this,” said Daniel S. McConkie Jr., who teaches
criminal law at Northern Illinois University School of Law.
McConkie said Adrian avoided appellate review by reversing the
conviction, instead of imposing a sentence that was less than the
mandatory minimum.
Adrian said during the hearing that he knew that his decision would be
overturned if he did that.
That leaves the case to the Supreme Court to force Adrian to impose the
sentence prescribed by Illinois law.
“It’s an extraordinary remedy to an extraordinary situation,” McConkie
said of Raoul’s motion to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court can order public officials, including judges, to
follow the laws put into effect by the Illinois General Assembly.
Adrian’s handling of the case drew national media attention and an
outcry from local and state advocates. The victim appeared on the
nationally syndicated television show “Dr. Phil” to talk about the
assault.
“We are super-glad that the attorney general took this step to try to
get some justice for this victim,” Ward said. “And more than that, for
the message that this sends to all sexual assault survivors.”
Adams County Chief Judge Thomas McCartney reassigned Adrian from the
criminal docket to a civil docket last month.
But Adrian could also face more challenges. A petition is circulating
asking for his recall. On Friday, the petition had more than 102,000
signatures.
Adrian was elected to the bench in 2010 with 56 percent of the vote. He
won retention, which requires an affirmative vote of 60 percent of the
voters, in 2016 with 83 percent of the vote.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |