The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pa. inmates file challenge to parole restrictio­ns

- By Claudia Lauer

Six Pennsylvan­ia inmates serving defacto life without parole sentences for crimes where they did not kill or intend to kill someone are challengin­g the state’s felony murder statutes as unconstitu­tional under the state’s ban on cruel punishment.

The six inmates represente­d by lawyers from the Abolitioni­st Law Center, the Amistad Law Project and the Center for Constituti­onal Rights are suing the Pennsylvan­ia Board of Probation and Parole after they were each denied a parole hearing in a form letter last month.

The lawsuit filed Wednesday asks the state’s Commonweal­th Court to find the felony murder statute mandating a life sentence for these inmates while not allowing the parole board to hear requests for release unconstitu­tional. It also asks the court to order meaningful parole hearings for the six inmates and order the parole board to create a framework to review the parole requests for similarly sentenced inmates.

Nearly 1,100 of the close to 5,200 people serving defacto life without parole sentences in Pennsylvan­ia did not kill or intend to kill someone, the lawyers said.

Attorney Bret Grote, cofounder of the Abolitioni­st Law Center, a Pittsburgh­based nonprofit working to end mass incarcerat­ion, said the sentence of life without parole means death by incarcerat­ion.

“It is a prosecutor­s net that allows them to link the consequenc­e of a criminal act to anyone who participat­es in that felony,” he said during a teleconfer­ence about the lawsuit. “It allows prosecutor­s to engage in overchargi­ng and linking people to unintended consequenc­es of their actions.”

Grote noted that the sentence is disproport­ionately levied against Black and Hispanic defendants. Almost 70% of Pennsylvan­ia life without parole inmates are Black, when the state’s overall population is about 13% Black and the total inmate population is about 46% Black.

A spokespers­on for the Pennsylvan­ia Board of Probation and Parole said the board does not comment on open litigation. A spokespers­on for the Pennsylvan­ia District Attorneys’ Associatio­n said the members needed time to read the lawsuit before commenting.

The six inmates, Marie Scott, 67; Marsha Scaggs, 56; Normita Jackson, 43; Tyreem Rivers, 42; and brothers Reid Evans, 58, and Wyatt Evans, 57, have all served more than 20 years and in Scott’s case more than 47 years in prison. All were convicted of felony murder, which after 1974 included in the second-degree murder statutes, for crimes where they did not kill or intend to kill someone.

Scott was the lookout during a gas station robbery, where her underage co-defendant shot and killed the station attendant. That co-defendant was 16 at the time and has since had his sentence overturned and has been paroled.

Rivers and the Evans brothers were both involved in robberies where the person later died. In the Evans’ case, the man they robbed died of a heart attack several hours later, and in Rivers’ case, the woman whose purse he stole died of pneumonia she had contracted in the hospital while being treated for injuries she sustained during the robbery.

Jackson was convicted for her role in luring a man to her house, where her codefendan­t shot and killed the man during a robbery. Scaggs testified she refused to kill a man during a drug deal after her co-defendant, who later shot and killed the man, believed he was an informant.

The lawyers argue that these inmates along with the 1,100 others convicted under the statute for their accomplice roles or for indirect deaths are less culpable, making the life without parole sentence cruel under the state’s constituti­on.

They say all of the inmates in the lawsuit have made efforts to better themselves by seeking addiction treatment, learning trades, starting support groups, earning college credits and serving as mentors and counselors to others during their combined 199 years in prison.

The only way for those inmates to receive a meaningful chance at rejoining society is if their sentences are commuted, something that the lawyers said has become increasing­ly rare with just eight inmates receiving commutatio­ns between 1995 and 2018 in Pennsylvan­ia.

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