Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Big News from the Big Court!
Yesterday, the Supreme Court struck down part (but not all) of the Arizona immigration law. That gobbled up a lot of the news cycle.
Buried beneath that story was another dramatic decision. The Supreme Court also issued its opinion in Miller v. Alabama, ruling that it is unconstitutional for a state to use a mandatory sentencing scheme which mandates life without parole sentences where the defendant was a juvenile at the time of the crime. This affects a lot of cases-- 29 states and the federal government have such sentencing schemes.
Unfortunately, initial reports (over the AP wire and elsewhere) said that all JLWOP sentences were struck down, but that is not true. Sentences where the judge or jury had other options available (such as life with parole) seem to survive this decision.
My commentary on this important can be found over at the motherlode of sentencing info, Doug Berman's Sentencing Law and Policy blog.
Buried beneath that story was another dramatic decision. The Supreme Court also issued its opinion in Miller v. Alabama, ruling that it is unconstitutional for a state to use a mandatory sentencing scheme which mandates life without parole sentences where the defendant was a juvenile at the time of the crime. This affects a lot of cases-- 29 states and the federal government have such sentencing schemes.
Unfortunately, initial reports (over the AP wire and elsewhere) said that all JLWOP sentences were struck down, but that is not true. Sentences where the judge or jury had other options available (such as life with parole) seem to survive this decision.
My commentary on this important can be found over at the motherlode of sentencing info, Doug Berman's Sentencing Law and Policy blog.
Comments:
<< Home
Justice grinds slowly ... but grind it does. I'm wrapping up the first volume of the book on the influence of black sacred music on the civil rights movement and it took a couple of hundred years for the courts to do the right thing. Thank God for the SNCC, the SCLC, CORE and all of the other groups, but it was (primarily) the NCAAP who kept grinding away with lawsuits. Not sexy -- but essential.
Bob
Post a Comment
Bob
<< Home