Addolfo Davis began his career in crime at 8 years old. By the time he was 10 he’d graduated to armed robbery. And at barely 14 years old–and all of about 5 feet tall and 100 pounds–Davis took part in a crime that the courts viewed as so heinous that he was sentenced to life without the chance of parole.
It was 1990, during the worst days of the crack-era gang wars in Chicago, and Davis joined two older boys in a home invasion and robbery that turned into a double homicide. The war on drugs was on full-throttle, and fear of young “super predators” stoked calls for harsh punishment for violent young offenders.
Davis was the product of a badly broken family. His mother was a drug addict. His grandmother tried to fill that role, but was consumed with work and the responsibilities of a disabled husband and mentally handicapped son. Davis began robbing people to get money for food. He fell in with a gang that gave him more attention than he could find at home. And getting locked up, he said in a 2008 interview, offered him three meals a day and a roof over his head.
“Everything that I did was basically to get money so I can take care myself,” he said.
His last arrest, for the killings, has kept him behind bars for nearly a quarter-century. Davis is now 37 and still sitting in an Illinois prison. But his case has become a key that could unlock prison doors for hundreds of children sentenced to life behind bars.
The Illinois Supreme Court on Wednesday heard oral arguments in Davis’ case, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in 2012 in Miller V. Alabama that ruled mandatory life sentences for juveniles without the chance of parole constitute cruel and unusual punishment.
Across the country there are at least 2,500 current inmates serving life sentences for crimes they committed as children, including 100 in Illinois, according to Human Rights Watch. And as states and lower-level courts continue to determine how to comply with the Supreme Court’s ruling—some states are applying the decision retroactively, others are not—youth advocates and experts believe the Davis case comes at a critical moment in the movement to do away with juvenile life without parole sentences.
“There were 37 states when Miller came down that had these types of laws on the books, and following the decision all of them have taken two paths: a litigation path and a legislation path,” said Jobi Cates, Chicago Director of Human Rights Watch. “We’ve been watching state after state come to terms with this. We are sort of looking for a tipping point as we believe most legislatures and most courts that are looking at this say if something is wrong on Tuesday it’s wrong on Wednesday too. That means they have to apply [the U.S. Supreme Court’s Miller ruling] retroactively.”
“We hope that Illinois will become one of the many states that have taken this very seriously and that the court will do the right thing,” Cates said.
Deborah LaBelle, director of the Juvenile Life Without Parole Initiative, said that most states and state courts are split on how to remedy legislation and case law involving these juvenile life sentences.
“The more states that understand that the court’s decision should be applied retroactively certainly matters for people like Addolfo Davis who are serving life without parole sentences in Illinois, but it also matters in other states,” she said.
Youth advocates say that juvenile offenders sentenced to life often face harsher treatment than adults. Among the states with the highest number of prisoners serving life without parole terms (who were sentenced as juveniles) are Pennsylvania (475), Michigan (358), Florida (355), California (301) and Louisiana (238), according to a recent report by the ACLU’s Juvenile Life Without Parole Initiative.
Those states account for two-thirds of all prisoners younger than 18 currently serving natural life sentences in America.
Many of those states are also among the 13 that have made final decisions on whether or not the Supreme Court’s ruling should be applied retroactively.
California, Delaware, Iowa, Mississippi, North Carolina and Massachusetts have decided to apply the ruling retroactively, according to the Pew Charitable Trust and a report by WBEZ Chicago. Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Texas and Wyoming have decided that the ruling will not apply retroactively in their respective states.
Where retroactivity applies, convicts could get new re-sentencing hearings or be offered parole if they’ve served a certain amount of their sentence.









