Kien, In re, 49417
Decision Date | 12 December 1977 |
Docket Number | No. 49417,49417 |
Citation | 372 N.E.2d 376,69 Ill.2d 355,14 Ill.Dec. 365 |
Parties | , 14 Ill.Dec. 365 In re Michael Robert KIEN, Attorney, Respondent. |
Court | Illinois Supreme Court |
Harry J. Busch and Sherman C. Magidson, Chicago, for respondent.
John C. O'Malley, Chicago, for the Administrator of the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission.
The Administrator of the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission filed a complaint which charged the respondent, Michael Robert Kien, with conduct which tends to defeat the administration of justice and bring the courts and legal profession into disrepute in that he paid $50 to a testifying police officer while defending a criminal case. Prior to this disciplinary action respondent had been indicted and acquitted of bribery and subornation of perjury for the same act. After a hearing, a hearing panel of the attorney disciplinary system found misconduct and recommended suspension for 30 days. The Administrator filed exceptions to the findings and recommendation of the hearing panel, seeking a substantially greater sanction. The Review Board subsequently set aside the hearing panel's recommendation and recommended disbarment.
The issue presented on review is whether the respondent's act of paying a police officer for allegedly truthful testimony in a criminal case which the respondent was defending constitutes misconduct which justifies disbarment.
The complaint filed by the Administrator specifically alleged that Kien, while defending a client on charges of unlawful possession of a weapon and related offenses, paid $50 to a testifying police officer immediately after a hearing on the motion to suppress the weapon. Respondent's client, Autrey Coleman, had been stopped in his car by police for a traffic offense. During the course of the arrest, Coleman became abusive and Officer Argyrakis opened the passenger door and found a gun inside the car. At the hearing, the key issue was whether Officer Argyrakis had observed the gun in plain view or had only found it pursuant to a search.
On November 15, 1972, Officer Argyrakis went to court to testify for the prosecution against Coleman. When he arrived he was met by an attorney (not Kien) who represented Coleman. Prior to the case being called, Officer Argyrakis and Coleman's attorney had a conversation in the corridor. The attorney for the Disciplinary Commission attempted to have the officer testify as to that conversation in order to show "the reasonableness of what the officer subsequently did and what subsequently occurred." However, the chairman of the hearing panel sustained the objection to this testimony.
Coleman's case was again set for hearing on March 13, 1973. Prior to that date, Argyrakis had met with an assistant State's Attorney and, pursuant to an investigation, was thoroughly searched and fitted with a recording device. At that time neither Argyrakis nor his superiors knew that Kien represented Coleman. Immediately before the hearing, Kien and Officer Argyrakis went out into the corridor outside the courtroom and had a conversation as to where and how the weapon was found. There is a dispute as to the content of this conversation. The respondent's version is as follows:
Officer Argyrakis' version of the conversation differs and is as follows:
"He said, 'Well, I got this guy here, this case here.' He said, 'Can we take care of it today?' And I said, 'Yes.'
He said, 'Well, you got the guy for a traffic violation.' Well, he said, 'You didn't want to talk to my partner.' I said, 'I don't know your partner.' He said, 'You know me, don't you?' And, he asked, 'Can we take care of it today?'
And, he says, 'You got the guy out of the car for a traffic violation, and you searched the car, and found the gun under the seat.' I said, 'Yes, but in open view.' He said, 'Do you have that in your report?' I said, 'No, I have "a search".' He says, 'Good.' And, he said, 'Just to say you conducted a search.' I said, And he said, 'Half a hundred.' I said, '$50?' And he said, I said, 'O.K.' and I went inside."
At the hearing on the motion, Officer Argyrakis testified on direct examination by Kien that he had gone into the car and found the weapon inside. On cross-examination by the assistant State's Attorney, Argyrakis stated that he had found the gun under the seat. The motion to suppress was granted. (At the disciplinary hearing, Officer Argyrakis testified that he had found the gun under the seat but it was in plain view.) Kien then met Argyrakis in the lavatory across the hall and paid him $50, whereupon he was arrested by Sergeant DeLisa, who was also assisting in the investigation.
On cross-examination at the disciplinary hearing Officer Argyrakis stated that when he had met with the assistant State's Attorney prior to his court appearance on March 13 the following conversation took place between him and the assistant State's Attorney:
Respondent contends that his payment of Officer Argyrakis was necessary to ensure that Argyrakis told the truth at the hearing and to protect his client from Argyrakis' "extortion tactics." Respondent admits that his act is not to be condoned. He asserts, however, that his misconduct was not of such a degree as to bring about a miscarriage of justice or strike "at the fabric of our judicial system." He contends that he was only paying the officer to tell the truth. Respondent thus urges that disbarment is too severe a penalty, considering his prior good record, his reputation in the legal community, the single act of misconduct, the absence of personal benefit, and the fact that payment was made for the truth under extortionate circumstances. The respondent asks that we adopt the recommendation of the Hearing Board, and suspend him for 30 days.
The case of In re Howard (1977), 69 Ill.2d 343, 14 Ill.Dec. 360, 372 N.E.2d 371, which we recently decided, resembles the case at bar, the facts and the issues being strikingly similar. In that case, a defense attorney paid the arresting officer $50 on two occasions to testify "to the truth" as listed on his report. He also made several remarks which implied that he was going to improperly influence both the prosecutor and the judge. In that case, we said:
69 Ill.2d 343, 351, 353, 14 Ill.Dec. 360, 363, 364, 372 N.E.2d 371, 374, 375.
We do not find persuasive respondent's argument that payment for "truthful" testimony is less harmful to our judicial system than is payment for false testimony or fabrication of evidence. The Review Board stated in its report in this case: "A lawyer who engages in the compensation of a witness to influence testimony, however rationalized, has undertaken a course of conduct which is inconsistent with the most fundamental principles of the legal profession." (Emphasis in report.) Any payment by a defense lawyer to an arresting policeman must be viewed with suspicion. Since the defendant and the arresting officer are often the only witnesses to the arrest or search, a policeman would be encouraged to change the "truth" if the lawyer is permitted to pay him for what the lawyer believes is the truth. It is realistic to assume that defense lawyers will not pay policemen for "truth" which does not favor their clients. Those policemen who are less resistant to corrupting influences will soon discover how to change the truth to their economic benefit. It is axiomatic, however, that such corruptible police officers could not thrive but for the existence of lawyers willing to corrupt them.
Although we condemned the practice of such payments in In re Howard, for emphasis we reiterate that we will not tolerate payment of any sum of money by an attorney to witnesses for the opposition to secure or influence testimony, whether it be for the purpose of securing truthful testimony or otherwise.
As we said in In re Howard, however, "The discipline to be imposed...
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... ... 360, 372 N.E.2d 371, and In re Kien (1977), 69 Ill.2d 355, 14 Ill.Dec. 365, 372 N.E.2d 376. Both of these cases involved the payment of money by an attorney to a police officer in ... ...
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