People v. Kastman , 2015 IL App (2d) 141245 ( 2015 )


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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
                                      No. 2-14-1245
    Opinion filed September 30, 2015
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE                ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
    OF ILLINOIS,                           ) of Lake County.
    )
    Plaintiff,                      )
    )
    v.                                     ) No. 93-CM-4621
    )
    RICHARD KASTMAN,                       )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee              )
    )
    (Gladyse C. Taylor, Director,          ) Honorable
    Department of Corrections,             ) David P. Brodsky,
    Intervenor-Appellant).                 ) Judge, Presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE HUTCHINSON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Schostok and Justice Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     In 1993, Richard Kastman was charged with a misdemeanor sex offense and the State’s
    Attorney sought his indefinite civil commitment under the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act (the
    SDP Act) (725 ILCS 205/1.01 et seq. (West 2012)). Kastman has six prior convictions, all for
    sex crimes. In 1994, he was found to be a sexually dangerous person and placed under the
    guardianship of the Director of the Illinois Department of Corrections (the Department or DOC),
    who must safely provide care and treatment “designed to effect recovery.” 725 ILCS 205/8
    
    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    (West 2012). Kastman has resided at Big Muddy Correctional Center in Ina, a facility for sex
    offenders, ever since.
    ¶2     During commitment, any person may file a petition “before the committing court”
    alleging that the sexually dangerous person is no longer sexually dangerous, thereupon triggering
    a recovery hearing to prove the point. 725 ILCS 205/9 (West 2012). If the applicant prevails at
    the recovery hearing, the sexually dangerous person may be conditionally released or discharged;
    if not, he or she will be remanded to the Director’s care for further treatment. 
    Id. ¶3 In
    People v. McDougle, 
    303 Ill. App. 3d 509
    (1999), this court held that it was implicit in
    the SDP Act that sexually dangerous persons may “seek judicial review of the adequacy of the
    care and treatment being provided to them by the DOC” in the circuit courts of this state. 
    Id. at 517.
    A separate portion of the opinion concerning the burden of proof in recovery proceedings
    (id. at 519) was abrogated in People v. Trainor, 
    196 Ill. 2d 318
    , 335 (2001), but our holding
    concerning the judicial review of treatment was not affected.
    ¶4     In this case, the trial court certified a question for our review, essentially asking which
    circuit court should conduct McDougle proceedings—the circuit court that committed the
    offender or the circuit court in the county where the offender is committed. As we explain, such
    proceedings should occur in the committing court.
    ¶5                                      I. BACKGROUND
    ¶6     Related to his commitment, Kastman has been diagnosed with pedophilia, antisocial
    personality disorder, exhibitionism, and alcohol dependency. In 2012, after his bid for
    conditional release was denied (which we affirmed in In re Detention of Kastman, 2015 IL App
    (2d) 130314-U), Kastman filed a motion to compel the Director to provide him with treatment
    for alcohol abuse. He alleged that his alcoholism had gone untreated since his commitment in
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    1994, exacerbated his underlying psychosexual disorder, and prevented his recovery. Kastman
    cited our decision in McDougle as authority. The Director intervened and represented to the
    court that DOC did not have a program specifically for the treatment of alcohol abuse, but did
    have a generic program for substance abuse (which Kastman had already completed). After a
    hearing, at which the Director declined to present evidence, the trial court ordered the Director to
    provide Kastman with an individualized assessment and further substance abuse treatment. The
    Director appealed that decision to this court, but then moved to dismiss the appeal, which we
    allowed. In re Detention of Kastman, No. 2-13-1235 (Feb. 5, 2014) (minute order).
    ¶7     Following the partial success of his motion concerning substance abuse treatment,
    Kastman filed a motion asking the court to review his sex offender treatment. According to the
    motion, there had been an “exodus” of Big Muddy’s treatment staff, leaving only three therapists
    to tend to the approximately 175 sexually dangerous persons at the facility. Kastman alleged that
    the Director failed to maintain an appropriate ratio of treatment providers to offenders in sex
    offender group therapy sessions and, further, failed to provide him with treatment designed to
    address arousal control and victim empathy in conformance with the Department’s guidelines.
    See 20 Ill. Adm. Code 1905.300(e), (g) (2009).
    ¶8     The Director filed a response asking the trial court to strike or deny Kastman’s motion
    concerning sex offender treatment. According to the Director, this court’s decision in McDougle
    was inapplicable to her because her office was not made a party in McDougle. The Director
    further argued that, because she was not “bound” by our decision in McDougle, “venue” was not
    proper in the circuit court of Lake County. Instead, she asserted, Kastman’s only avenue of relief
    in state court was to commence a separate mandamus action or federal civil rights action (42
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    U.S.C. § 1983 (2012)) in the circuit court of the county where he is confined (in this case,
    Jefferson County).
    ¶9     The trial court rejected the Director’s arguments and refused to dismiss Kastman’s
    motion. The court found that it was obliged to follow McDougle as a decision of the appellate
    court and that, pursuant to McDougle, it could review the adequacy of Kastman’s treatment
    under the Director’s guardianship. The Director then presented the following question of law,
    which the trial court certified for our review:
    Per McDougle: “Is the proper method of obtaining [judicial] review to file a
    motion in the commitment proceedings—in which the Director of the IDOC is not a
    named party—or to file a separate action against the Director in the circuit court located
    in the county where the SDP resides?”
    We granted leave to appeal. Ill. S. Ct. R. 308 (eff. Jan. 1, 2015).
    ¶ 10                                       II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 11   Certified questions present issues of law, which we review de novo. De Bouse v. Bayer
    AG, 
    235 Ill. 2d 544
    , 550 (2009). On the certified question, the Director presents the same
    arguments to this court that were considered and rejected by the trial court. Although in this
    appeal we are not directly reviewing the trial court’s ruling on the Director’s motion to dismiss,
    as we explain, the Director’s arguments fare no better here.
    ¶ 12   Our analysis begins with McDougle. There, McDougle, a sexually dangerous person at a
    DOC facility, filed a recovery petition in the committing court. 
    McDougle, 303 Ill. App. 3d at 511
    . The petition sought McDougle’s conditional release or discharge; in the alternative, it
    sought to have McDougle transferred to a facility run by the forebear to the Department of
    Human Services (DHS) (which oversees the treatment of those committed under the Sexually
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    Violent Persons Commitment Act (725 ILCS 207/1 et seq. (West 1996))), which he alleged was
    more conducive to his psychiatric treatment and recovery. 
    McDougle, 303 Ill. App. 3d at 511
    ,
    515. The petition was opposed by the county State’s Attorney. 
    Id. at 511.
    The trial court found
    that it did not have the authority to review McDougle’s treatment or to order the Director of
    DOC to transfer McDougle to a DHS facility. 
    Id. at 514.
    It also found that McDougle had failed
    to establish his recovery. 
    Id. ¶ 13
      On McDougle’s appeal, this court found that the trial court was incorrect concerning the
    scope of its authority. We held the following:
    “In light of the significant liberty interest at stake, we believe that due process
    requires that sexually dangerous persons must be provided the opportunity to seek
    judicial review of the adequacy of the care and treatment being provided to them by the
    DOC. We believe that such review is necessary in order to ensure that the DOC fulfills its
    statutory obligation to provide treatment designed to effect recovery. To hold otherwise
    would deprive the defendant of his only means to challenge the propriety of the treatment
    decisions being made by the DOC.” 
    Id. at 517.
    ¶ 14   We further stated that “without the power of [judicial] review, there is no way to
    guarantee that the defendant will receive any treatment from the DOC.” (Emphasis in original.)
    
    Id. Thus, we
    cautioned, there is a very real danger that SDP Act commitment could become a
    pre-trial “warehousing operation for social misfits.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 518.
    ¶ 15   Following our conclusion concerning judicial review, we noted that the State conceded at
    oral argument that it was implicit in the recovery-hearing process in section 9 of the SDP Act
    (725 ILCS 207/9 (West 2012)) that a sexually dangerous person had the right to petition the
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    circuit court to review the adequacy of his or her treatment. 
    McDougle, 303 Ill. App. 3d at 517
    .
    In the concluding paragraph of this section, we emphasized that at any review “the sexually
    dangerous person bears the burden of demonstrating that he is not being afforded treatment
    designed to effect his recovery as required under [the SDP] Act.” 
    Id. at 518.
    (We also affirmed
    the trial court’s decision to deny McDougle’s recovery petition (id. at 519), though, as noted
    earlier, that decision was made under the recovery-hearing framework that was abrogated in
    Trainor.)
    ¶ 16   The Director concedes that McDougle “correctly” holds that sexually dangerous persons
    have the right to seek judicial review. But she argues that she is not “bound” by “that part of
    McDougle holding that the proper route to seek such review is by means of a motion filed within
    the commitment proceedings.” The Director makes several points in support of her position, but
    we need not consider them.
    ¶ 17   The problem with the Director’s argument is that our decision in McDougle did not
    address what “route” a sexually dangerous person should take to seek judicial review, or where
    “venue” is most appropriate to conduct a McDougle proceeding. That is, in McDougle, we held
    that “the circuit courts of this state have the power to review the care and treatment administered
    by the DOC” (id. at 516), but we did not directly state where that review should occur. We
    granted leave to appeal in this case to clarify that a McDougle proceeding should take place in
    the circuit court that committed the offender.
    ¶ 18   Under the SDP Act, which has not been materially amended since our decision in
    McDougle, both commitment and recovery proceedings take place in the committing court. 725
    ILCS 205/5, 8 (West 2012); see also 725 ILCS 205/9 (West 2012) (stating that a recovery
    petition must be filed “before the committing court”). Although not cited in McDougle, we find
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    instructive our supreme court’s decision in People v. Cooper, 
    132 Ill. 2d 347
    (1989). There the
    court held that the expiration of a sexually dangerous person’s conditional release order did not
    terminate his commitment. 
    Id. at 354.
    Rather, the supreme court said, “a sexually dangerous
    person remains under the jurisdiction of the court which initially committed him until that court
    expressly finds that he is not sexually dangerous.” 
    Id. at 355.
    Given that, under the SDP Act,
    commitment and recovery proceedings occur in the committing court, and that, under Cooper, a
    sexually dangerous person remains under the jurisdiction of the committing court until
    recovered, we believe that the committing court is in the best position to review the adequacy of
    the Director’s treatment of a sexually dangerous person.
    ¶ 19    It is also significant that, as in this case, recovery proceedings may go on for years at a
    time. The committing court is, therefore, apt to be familiar with the parties and the issues in ways
    that no other court would be. Accordingly, given that every significant legal event in the
    commitment, recovery, and discharge of a sexually dangerous person occurs in the committing
    court, we believe that it would be a tremendous waste of judicial resources to conduct a
    McDougle proceeding anywhere else. See De 
    Bouse, 235 Ill. 2d at 558
    (when answering a
    certified question, courts should consider “judicial economy and the need to reach an equitable
    result”).
    ¶ 20    Furthermore, we note that the legal relationship between the Director and a sexually
    dangerous person is created in the committing court’s initial commitment order. See 725 ILCS
    205/8 (West 2012). Thus, while the Director may be a sexually dangerous person’s guardian, a
    sexually dangerous person remains, until recovered 
    (Cooper, 132 Ill. 2d at 355
    ), a ward of the
    committing court. It is axiomatic that the committing court may enter any order necessary to
    enforce its commitment order. See In re Baker, 
    71 Ill. 2d 480
    , 484 (1978) (courts are vested with
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    the inherent power to enforce orders through contempt proceedings). Courts also have an
    independent duty “not limited to express statutory terms” to supervise appointed guardians and
    “to judicially interfere and protect the ward if the guardian is about to do anything that would
    cause harm.” In re Mark W., 
    228 Ill. 2d 365
    , 375 (2008). If, as Kastman alleged, his treatment
    was not adequately designed to effect his recovery, then the harm to him is manifest. See Allen v.
    Illinois, 
    478 U.S. 364
    , 370 (1986) (rejecting constitutional challenge to the SDP Act, based in
    part on the State’s assertion that sexually dangerous persons would be “released after the briefest
    time [possible] in confinement”). We therefore hold that, under McDougle, “the proper method
    of obtaining judicial review [is] to file a motion in the commitment proceedings” in the
    committing court.
    ¶ 21   Before concluding, we briefly note and reject some of the Director’s assertions. The
    Director states that filing a separate action in the circuit court in the county of confinement
    would: (1) likely be more time- and cost-effective for transporting sexually dangerous persons
    and treatment staff as witnesses; (2) “reduce[ ] the chances of an SDP escaping en route or upon
    his return”; and (3) ensure that the Director would receive notice as a “named party,” making the
    case more consistent with the way such cases are often captioned in the circuit court (e.g.,
    Kastman v. Taylor, as opposed to People v. Kastman). Our task, however, is not to determine
    what is most convenient for the Director; it is to answer the trial court’s certified question
    consistent with the law.
    ¶ 22   It suffices to say that the trial court (here, the committing court) is in the best position to
    determine whether and how the presence of witnesses should be secured in a McDougle
    proceeding. See 735 ILCS 5/10-135 (West 2012); People v. Collins, 
    249 Ill. App. 3d 924
    , 927
    (1993). We are also ill-suited to address the Director’s concerns regarding transportation costs.
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    See, e.g., 
    Trainor, 196 Ill. 2d at 342
    (“Although we recognize the impact of the [SDP] Act on the
    State’s resources, this is a legislative matter that we must leave for the General Assembly to
    address.”). Nothing, however, precludes the appropriate use of alternative methods of receiving
    evidence to minimize transportation time and costs, such as the use of affidavits in place of live
    testimony, or the use of video conferencing.
    ¶ 23       As to security in the event of transportation, we note that the Director’s last annual report to
    the General Assembly states that during fiscal year 2014 the Department securely transported
    43,289 offenders and 3,877 officers, or an average of 832 offenders and 75 officers each week.
    Illinois     Department     of Corrections,     Fiscal    Year   2014    Annual    Report,    17   (2014),
    https://www.illinois.gov/idoc/reportsandstatistics/Documents/FY2014%20Annual%20Report.pdf.
    Meanwhile, during that same year, sexually dangerous persons accounted for only 180 prisoners,
    or less than 0.4% of the DOC’s 48,921 total prisoners. 
    Id. at 64.
    We further note that in the trial
    court the Director offered no evidence that sexually dangerous persons in general, or Kastman in
    particular, present a heightened risk of escape.
    ¶ 24       Finally, the Director’s concerns regarding notice and the case caption are overstated.
    From what we can tell from the limited record before us, the Director was able to successfully
    intervene in the alcohol-treatment portion of this case despite not having initially been a “named
    party,” and has remained involved ever since. Neither party, however, has addressed whether the
    Director was a necessary party below, nor whether the State’s Attorney, who may prosecute a
    sexually dangerous person’s commitment and defend against his or her release, is in privity with
    the Director in an action to review the adequacy of the Director’s treatment. This is an issue on
    which reasonable minds could differ (see, e.g., People v. Keys, 
    324 Ill. App. 3d 630
    , 638 (2001);
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    2015 IL App (2d) 141245
    id. at 638-39 
    (Steigmann, P.J., dissenting)) and on which, in the absence of developed
    arguments, we express no opinion.
    ¶ 25                                   III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 26   In light of the foregoing, we determine that, under McDougle, the judicial review of the
    adequacy of a sexually dangerous person’s treatment should occur in the committing court. This
    cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ¶ 27   Certified question answered; cause remanded.
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