The Columbus Dispatch

Ruling affects some with parole option

- By Juliet Linderman

BALTIMORE — A U.S. Supreme Court decision triggering new sentences for inmates serving mandatory life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles has had a far greater effect: The ruling is prompting lawyers to apply its fundamenta­l logic — that it’s cruel and unusual to lock teens up for life — to a larger population, those whose sentences include a parole provision but who stand little chance of getting out.

The court in January 2016 expanded its ban on mandatory life without parole for juveniles to more than 2,000 offenders already serving such sentences, saying teens should be treated differentl­y than adult offenders because they’re less mature and capable of change. The court found that all but the rare irredeemab­le juvenile lifer should have a chance to argue for freedom one day. Dozens have since been resentence­d and released.

But legal challenges are also being argued on behalf of offenders sentenced to life with parole for crimes committed as teens — a population totaling some 7,300 inmates nationwide, according to Ashley Nellis at The Sentencing Project.

“Even states that do have parole, it doesn’t give a lot of reason for hope,” Nellis said. “The Supreme Court was very clear to say that age-related factors need to be considered at resentenci­ng or parole review, but the feedback we’re seeing is that those factors aren’t being considered.”

Other courts are applying the 2016 ruling to those whose life-without-parole sentences weren’t mandatory or were negotiated in a plea deal. In Florida, more than 600 are potentiall­y eligible for new sentences because court decisions there require a new look at anyone serving life for crimes committed as minors — even if their sentences were optional or included the possibilit­y of parole.

The Supreme Court hasn’t ruled on these other circumstan­ces, but some state courts have. In January, New Jersey’s Supreme Court ordered new sentences for two former teen offenders with de facto life terms. One was serving 110 years, with parole eligibilit­y after 55; the other had 75 years, with parole eligibilit­y after 68. The court noted both would “likely serve more time in jail than an adult sentenced to actual life without parole.”

The number of years inmates must serve before parole eligibilit­y varies: In Tennessee, a lifer must serve 51 years. In Texas, 40. Lifers could qualify for a hearing after 10 years in Michigan. In 44 states, governors appoint parole boards, and review processes vary greatly. Some boards review prisoner files without in-person interviews. Some states specify factors to consider; others allow significan­t discretion.

If a prisoner is denied, he’ll likely wait years for another chance and sometimes isn’t told why.

Chester Patterson, 63, has been behind bars for 45 years in Michigan. At 17, he fatally shot a store clerk. He got life with the possibilit­y of parole after 10 years. Patterson has earned degrees, completed a substance-abuse program, and avoided disciplina­ry tickets. But he’s been denied parole at least five times, records show, with the board sending a notice that says “no interest.” He’s awaiting a decision after his most recent hearing.

 ?? [MIKE MORONES/THE FREE LANCE-STAR (FREDERICKS­TOWN, VA.] ?? Lee Boyd Malvo pleaded guilty in 2014 and was sentenced to two life sentences for the murder of Kenneth Bridges and the shooting of Caroline Seawell during a shooting spree in the Washington, D.C., area. Seventeen at the time, he received life without...
[MIKE MORONES/THE FREE LANCE-STAR (FREDERICKS­TOWN, VA.] Lee Boyd Malvo pleaded guilty in 2014 and was sentenced to two life sentences for the murder of Kenneth Bridges and the shooting of Caroline Seawell during a shooting spree in the Washington, D.C., area. Seventeen at the time, he received life without...

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