{"id":53158,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/supreme-court-considers-constitutionality-of-juvenile-life-without-parole.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"supreme-court-considers-constitutionality-of-juvenile-life-without-parole","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/supreme-court-considers-constitutionality-of-juvenile-life-without-parole.html","title":{"rendered":"Supreme Court Considers Constitutionality of Juvenile Life Without Parole"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/sherry.colb.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Sherry F. Colb\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>Supreme Court Considers Constitutionality of Juvenile Life Without Parole<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By SHERRY F. COLB <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Wednesday, August 19, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>This coming term, the Supreme Court will consider the  important companion cases of <em>Sullivan v.  Florida<\/em> and <em>Graham v. Florida<\/em>. Together, they raise the question whether a  sentence of life imprisonment without parole for a non-homicide offense  committed by a juvenile offender violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition  against cruel and unusual punishments. <\/p>\n\n  <p>As a policy matter, I am sympathetic with the ultimate  objective of reducing the severity of punishments in the U.S. However, as a legal matter, I will argue in  this column that the Eighth Amendment case against juvenile life without parole  is quite weak \u2013 given the Court&#8217;s precedents as well as the nature of the flaws  inherent in harsh sentencing more generally.<\/p>\n    <!-- 300x250 AD -->\n      <p><strong>The Policy Case  Against Long Prison Sentences<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>To avoid my being misunderstood as a proponent of long  sentences, let me emphasize here that I am not.  In 1998, I interviewed recidivist child-molester Leroy Hendricks at his  civil confinement program for sexually violent predators. One of the things he said that struck me as  very insightful was that once a person has spent ten years inside a prison, he  is extremely unlikely to be able, successfully, to re-integrate himself into  free society. Life, as he put it, will  have already passed that person by, the world having changed too much for him  to catch up. This statement, if true,  provides a pragmatic argument against long sentences for people who will someday  have to rejoin the outside world. And  what about sentences of life-imprisonment?<\/p>\n      <p>If someone will spend the rest of his life behind bars, we  do not need to worry about re-entry difficulties. But we do, then, need to ask ourselves what  the purpose of that confinement is. It  is plainly retributive \u2013 a person who has committed a serious offense will, by  design, suffer greatly by being deprived of both freedom and most contact with  the outside world for the rest of his life.  But is the desire to make the person suffer for his actions a sufficient  basis for removing him from society for his entire life?<\/p>\n      <p>The answer would depend, it seems, on whether we believe  that people change over time. If we  think that a person who commits a murder at Time 1 remains precisely the same  murderer-deserving-of-serious-punishment ten, twenty, and thirty years later,  then it is sensible to have his punishment last for the entirety of his  life. But if, on the other hand, we  believe that people change over time \u2013 into different, perhaps more passive,  reflective, or gentle people \u2013 then ruling out re-entry into society for them  could be a mistake. It could prevent  them from doing what it takes to redeem themselves after the injuries they  previously inflicted and from growing into different sorts of people. It rules out the possibility of  rehabilitation.<\/p>\n      <p>In addition to rejecting the rehabilitative role of  punishment, a sentence of life imprisonment also imposes great costs on society  generally, and on specific communities and families in particular. I still recall from when I lived in Manhattan  that once a week, a few blocks from my apartment building, women and children \u2013  mostly members of minority groups \u2013 would line up for a long bus ride that had  as its destination the penitentiary.  These faithful family members of prisoners never gave up on their loved  ones and though they themselves were innocent, they too suffered along with the  people sentenced to serve time. An  individual is not an island, and it is rarely possible to take one person out  of commission without generating spillover effects on innocent others.<\/p>\n      <p>One answer to these concerns is to note that violent  criminals may require incapacitation.  That is, prison serves not only to punish and (in theory) to rehabilitate  offenders, but also to prevent them from harming others. This objective of imprisonment is an  important one. To the extent that we can  predict future antisocial conduct, one important indicator is past  behavior. A person who commits a violent  crime has thus evidenced that he cannot be trusted with freedom.<\/p>\n      <p>This answer, however, ignores the fact that people do change  over time. A man who is violent at the  age of 25 is likely to slow down by the time he reaches 40. And it is difficult to imagine that, unless  he belongs to the world of organized crime, he will continue to pose a threat  to those around him when he reaches 60 or 65.  One might even note that with the decline in testosterone over the male  lifespan, the odds that such a man will behave violently diminish  substantially, even when he begins in a very bad place. To rest sentences of life imprisonment on an  incapacitation theory is therefore, in most cases, to ignore the realities of  the human life cycle.<\/p>\n      <p><strong>Life Imprisonment for  Youthful Offenders<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>Though I have made clear above that I oppose long sentences  in general and life imprisonment in particular, as a policy matter, I am  nevertheless left strangely unconvinced by the arguments that have been  marshaled to support the claim that <u>juvenile<\/u> life imprisonment violates  the Eighth Amendment.<\/p>\n      <p>A principal argument, and perhaps the most powerful, made in  fascinating detail in an amicus brief filed in the <em>Sullivan <\/em>and <em>Graham<\/em> cases by the AMA (American Medical Association) and the American Academy of  Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, has to do with brain development. As most of us probably suspected all along,  adolescent brains are different from adult brains, and the result is that  adolescents have a more difficult time controlling their impulses and  regulating their own emotional states.  They are also more vulnerable to the temptations of risk-taking  behavior, the rewards of peer approval, and other potential triggers of  anti-social conduct. As a result, the  argument goes, adolescents who commit violent crimes are generally not as  culpable (because they are not as capable of restraining themselves under a  given set of circumstances) as adults who commit serious crimes. They are, moreover, more likely to evolve  into better people later and therefore need not be incapacitated indefinitely.<\/p>\n      <p>One problem with this argument is that it proves too  much. If the adolescent brain is  functionally &#8220;impaired,&#8221; in an important sense, compared with the adult brain,  then the Eighth Amendment should ban far more than life imprisonment for  non-homicide offenses for juveniles: It  should ban that punishment for all offenses committed by juveniles. <\/p>\n      <p>The distinction between homicide and non-homicide offenses  becomes immaterial if the problem with sentencing juveniles to life  imprisonment is their diminished capacity.  A homicidal adolescent is no more able to control his impulses than a  raping adolescent is to control his; the distinction between one crime and the  other will likely have more to do with opportunity and surrounding circumstance  than with capacity and thus culpability.<\/p>\n      <p>Thus, an argument against life imprisonment for juvenile  non-homicide offenders is no less convincing as an argument against life  imprisonment for juvenile murderers.  Accordingly, it is unsurprising that the movement against life  imprisonment of juveniles generally opposes both. <\/p>\n      <p>The specific selection of non-homicide offenses to limit the  argument thus seems more of a marketing tool than a principled decision \u2013 and  if the Eighth Amendment argument prevails in these cases, the next step would  seem almost inevitable: advocates will  claim that the Eighth Amendment necessarily bars life without parole for all  juvenile offenders.<\/p>\n      <p>In addition, if juvenile offenders suffer from a diminished  capacity to control their behavior, then sentences that fall far short of life  imprisonment, too, could qualify as unduly harsh and unconstitutionally  disproportionate under the Eighth Amendment.  For example, any prison sentence for any offense by an adolescent that  approaches the sentence for a parallel adult offender might appear to be  disproportionate, given the likely disparity in relative capacity. Once again, the argument about juvenile  capacity has no obvious stopping point at either non-homicide offenses or at  life imprisonment itself.<\/p>\n      <p>A second problem with the argument about juvenile capacity  is that it fails to capture what we know about adult offenders: Though youth is a corollary of crime, the  adults who <u>do<\/u> commit anti-social acts appear to have much in common with  adolescents. To put the point  differently, though adults in general are different from adolescents, the  adults who commit violent crimes may share far more with violent adolescents  than they do with mature, well-adjusted adults. Violent crime frequently reflects a failure of  impulse control, combined with an overly optimistic assessment of the  likelihood of escaping ill consequences \u2013 traits that define adolescence. The sort of incapacity that plagues many  youthful offenders is, for that reason, not likely to be unique to such  offenders in the prison population.<\/p>\n      <p>To underline this second problem, we learn from a study  published this year in the <em>American  Journal of Public Health<\/em> that a quarter of prison inmates have a history of  chronic mental illness that preceded their arrest. Adults who suffer from chronic mental illness  presumably lack the capacity to exercise the self-control of a healthy and  normal adult. The same may be true for  the mentally retarded, though their prevalence in the prison population is  lower. It is accordingly misleading to  suggest that actual, incarcerated adult offenders could have readily exercised  self-control in a manner unavailable to youthful offenders. Many people convicted of serious crimes could  make a persuasive argument that their capacity to regulate their own behavior  and to assess costs and benefits accurately is impaired. Yet such people routinely receive long and  unforgiving prison sentences.<\/p>\n      <p>A third problem for the argument about minors&#8217; diminished  capacity is evident in noting the nature of the incapacity: According to the amicus brief referenced  above (filed by the AMA and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent  Psychiatry), &#8220;[t]he difference between  adolescent and adult behavior \u2026 is not a function of adolescents&#8217; inability to  distinguish right from wrong \u2026 but rather from psychosocial limitations in  their ability to consistently and reliably <u>control<\/u> their behavior.&#8221; (emphasis added). <\/p>\n      <p>Since Congress passed the Insanity  Defense Reform Act of 1984, however, the prevailing approach to incapacity has  centered on cognition \u2013 the ability to distinguish between right and wrong \u2013  and <u>not<\/u> on control. This is in  part because it is difficult to distinguish in a reliable way between a person  who <u>could not<\/u> control herself and a person who simply <u>did not<\/u> control herself. The diminished capacity  of juveniles, then, is of the sort that has fallen out of favor as a basis for  mitigating and excusing anti-social conduct (at least outside the death penalty  context).<\/p>\n      <p>A fourth problem with the argument might seem, at first  glance, to recommend it. By contrast to  other sorts of offenders, minors who commit crimes may not, since <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/543\/551.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Roper  v. Simmons<\/a><\/em>, be sentenced to death.  This categorical exclusion of minors, like the categorical exclusion of  the mentally retarded in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/536\/304.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Atkins v. Virginia<\/a><\/em>,  represents an acceptance of the idea that there are categories of people who  simply cannot be sufficiently culpable to deserve the ultimate penalty of  death. The Court&#8217;s embrace of this idea  might appear to open the way for similar arguments about life imprisonment.<\/p>\n      <p>What makes this appearance deceptive, however, is that the  Court&#8217;s ruling in <em>Atkins<\/em> rests firmly  on the &#8220;death is different&#8221; idea, which treats life imprisonment as not simply  distinct in degree from execution, but different in kind. Therefore, if youths and mentally retarded  people fall short \u2013 even to a minor degree \u2013 of the capacities that adults of  normal intelligence have, this is reason enough to rule out execution, in  particular, for them. But one of the  things that has allowed the Court to rule out execution for such people is the  very availability of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. <\/p>\n      <p>That is, to the extent that execution is meant to serve the  function of incapacitating irredeemably violent people forever, the  availability of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole provides a  roughly equivalent substitute for that.  Without this substitute, the inability to execute youthful offenders \u2013  in at least some cases \u2013 might appear far more threatening.<\/p>\n      <p><strong>Death is Different<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>One possible response to the last point is that execution  has long been unavailable for non-homicide crimes (with the possible exception  of treason), and this helps account for why this case focuses on life for  non-homicides (where one cannot claim the need for a functional substitute for  execution). <\/p>\n      <p>Or, to make this argument more affirmatively, one could  argue that because the most severe penalty available for offenses committed by  a juvenile is life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, this penalty  should be reserved for homicide, just as \u2013 in the case of adults \u2013 the death  penalty is reserved for homicide.<\/p>\n      <p>The main problem with this argument has less to do with  logic than with Court precedent. In  carving out special rules for the death penalty, including the rule  establishing its unconstitutionality with respect to crimes less serious than  murder, the Court has consistently relied on the idea that death is  qualitatively different from any term of imprisonment. When litigants have attempted to move the  Eighth Amendment proportionality principle from the death penalty context to  that of incarceration, the Court has generally rejected the move in  application.<\/p>\n      <p>In <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/445\/263.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Rummel v. Estelle<\/a><\/em>,  for example, the Court in 1980 upheld a life sentence in a recidivist statute  for a defendant convicted of three nonviolent property crimes (netting less  than $300 total). The Court did strike  down a life-without-parole sentence (for a recidivist offender convicted of  writing a bad check) in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/463\/277.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Solem v. Helm<\/a><\/em> a few years later, giving some hope that the Eighth Amendment could become a  vehicle for invalidating long sentences.  However, in 1991, in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/501\/957.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Harmelin v. Michigan<\/a><\/em>,  the Court upheld a mandatory sentence of life without parole for the possession  of over 650 grams of cocaine, even as three Justices in the majority agreed  with the dissent that <u>some<\/u> sentences might be so long relative to the  seriousness of a crime that they would violate the Eighth Amendment. Finally, in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/538\/11.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Ewing v. California<\/a><\/em>.,  the Court upheld the California &#8220;three strikes&#8221; law under which the petitioner  was sentenced to 25-years-to-life for stealing three golf clubs worth $399  each.<\/p>\n      <p>None of these cases rules out the possibility that life  imprisonment for a juvenile offender&#8217;s non-homicide crime violates the Eighth  Amendment. Nonetheless, it seems  counterintuitive for the Court to maintain that life imprisonment is  constitutionally excessive punishment for a juvenile rapist, but  constitutionally unobjectionable for an adult nonviolent property or drug  possession offender. On the other hand,  of course, the Supreme Court did grant certiorari in two cases of juvenile  life-without-parole sentences in which the government won below, so it may \u2013  not for the first time \u2013 decide to take a counterintuitive approach in this  instance.<\/p>\n      <p><strong>My Hope<\/strong><\/p>\n      <p>Despite what I have said here, I hope that the Supreme Court  says that life imprisonment without the possibility of parole is  unconstitutional for non-homicide offenses committed by juvenile  offenders. The reason for my hope is  several-fold. First, it is high time  that the Court actively embraced the principle that a prison sentence can be  disproportionately lengthy, whether the measure of disproportion is capacity or  whether it is the seriousness of an offense. <\/p>\n  <p>Second, life imprisonment without the possibility for  parole is almost always a mistake, given the fact that people \u2013 both children  and adults \u2013 change over time; the impact of such sentences on society,  communities, and families; and the possibility of redemption. If the Court does strike down the sentences  of the two offenders who brought their appeals, moreover, I predict that the  Court will soon be willing to reconsider harsh sentences across the board. This is precisely because the arguments for  distinguishing juvenile non-homicides as a special case are, indeed, as  unpersuasive as I have argued that they are in this column.<\/p>\n  <hr size=\"1\">\n  <p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\"><\/a>Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is Professor  of Law and Charles Evans Hughes Scholar at Cornell Law   School. Her book, <i>When Sex Counts:  Making Babies and Making Law<\/i>, is available on Amazon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" clip-path=\"url(#clip0_604_3418)\">\n           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