Convicted killers sentenced as teenagers to serve life in prison will now get a second shot at freedom.
In a 6-3 ruling, the Supreme Court on Monday found that its 2012 decision in Miller v. Alabama barring life imprisonment without parole for juveniles must be applied to cases retroactively. This means that hundreds of prisoners who were convicted as teens are now entitled to be re-sentenced or to argue for parole.
The case was brought by Henry Montgomery, who was 17 years old when he was convicted of murdering a deputy sheriff in Louisiana. Montgomery, now 70, was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
That was in 1963. Half a century later, the Supreme Court decided that teens shouldn’t face mandatory life sentences on homicide convictions without the opportunity of parole. And on Monday, the Court decided that prisoners like Montgomery, sentenced decades ago, are now eligible to argue for release.
“Prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the Court’s majority opinion.
The decision is yet another example of a softening approach toward sentencing, including in cases of violent crime, throughout the country as lawmakers and presidential candidates promote criminal justice reform as a new priority. The courts, too, have eased away from excessive punishment while questioning whether even the most deranged of teenage killers should be tried in the same manner as adults.
The Supreme Court last addressed the issue in 2012 when it decided in Miller v. Alabama that juveniles should not be treated with the same degree of culpability as adults. The Court had previously decided that teenagers, no matter how violent or deranged in their crimes, should not face the death penalty. But in Miller, the Court found that sentences without parole were no longer mandatory for juvenile homicide convictions.
RELATED: US Supreme Court rejects plea to revive North Dakota abortion ban
A report released last fall by the nonprofit group Phillips Black found that 2,300 juveniles are carrying out life sentences without the option of parole nationwide. Nine states opted to abandon the practice since the Court’s 2012 ruling. Still, prior to Monday’s decision, some seven other states had decided that the Court’s decision did not apply retroactively.
According to the report, nearly a quarter of all juvenile life sentences have been concentrated in just five counties: Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Orleans, Cook and St. Louis counties. These are notably urban areas where minority communities dominate entire neighborhoods.
The disparities tie into the broader trend that a black teenager arrested for homicide is twice as likely to be sentenced to life in prison without parole than if he were white. According to Phillips Black, all of Texas’ population of juveniles carrying out life sentences without parole are people of color. In Pennsylvania, it’s closer to 80%.









