State v. Anderson (Slip Opinion)
2017 Ohio 5656
Ohio2017Background
- In April 2012, then-16-year-old Rickym Anderson and codefendant Dylan Boyd participated in armed robberies and a kidnapping; Anderson was arrested with a victim’s cell phone and a firearm was recovered nearby.
- Juvenile court transferred Anderson to adult common pleas; grand jury indicted both for multiple aggravated robberies, kidnapping, and felonious assault with firearm specifications.
- Boyd pleaded guilty to several counts, agreed to testify, and received a recommended nine-year sentence; Anderson went to trial, was convicted of three aggravated robberies and one kidnapping (with firearm specs), and was originally sentenced to 28 years; resentenced to an aggregate 19 years.
- Anderson appealed, arguing (1) his longer sentence compared to Boyd’s reflected an unconstitutional "trial tax" for exercising his right to trial, and (2) Ohio’s mandatory-minimum sentencing scheme (including a 3-year firearm specification) is unconstitutional as applied to juveniles because it prevents individualized juvenile sentencing and violates the Eighth and Due Process Clauses.
- The Second District affirmed resentencing; the Ohio Supreme Court granted review on (1) trial-tax inference from sentencing disparity and (2) whether mandatory R.C. 2929 sentencing is unconstitutional as applied to juveniles.
- The Supreme Court of Ohio affirmed: (a) no impermissible trial tax where the court expressly said it did not punish Anderson for going to trial and factual differences (plea+cooperation vs. conviction at trial) justified disparity; (b) mandatory three-year minimums for first-degree felonies and firearm specifications imposed on juveniles tried as adults do not violate the Eighth Amendment; the due-process challenge was forfeited for not being raised below.
Issues
| Issue | Anderson's Argument | State's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether a longer sentence for a defendant who went to trial (vs. a codefendant who pled) creates an inference of an unconstitutional "trial tax" | The disparity—two defendants equally culpable—raises a presumption of punishment for exercising the right to trial absent other justification | Sentencing disparities are not per se proof of a trial penalty; plea agreements legitimately yield lesser sentences and the trial court expressly stated it did not penalize Anderson for going to trial | No trial tax: court may rely on legitimate distinctions (plea/cooperation, convictions) and the judge’s explicit statement dispelled the inference; sentence was within statutory range |
| Whether mandatory minimum sentencing (including a 3-year firearm specification) applied to juveniles tried as adults violates the Eighth Amendment or requires individualized juvenile consideration | Mandatory schemes treat juveniles as adults and foreclose individualized sentencing tied to youth characteristics; thus they are unconstitutional as applied to children | Ohio statutes still allow sentencing within a broad statutory range and serve legitimate penological goals; no national consensus bars mandatory minimums for juveniles tried as adults | No Eighth Amendment violation: (1) no national consensus against such mandatory minimums for juveniles; (2) the penalties at issue are materially less than the harshest juvenile punishments (death, LWOP); (3) firearm specification and 3-year minimum are proportionate and legitimate; due-process challenge forfeited |
Key Cases Cited
- Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012) (mandatory life without parole for juveniles convicted of homicide violates the Eighth Amendment and requires individualized sentencing consideration)
- Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010) (Eighth Amendment prohibits life without parole for nonhomicide juvenile offenders; courts must consider youth-related mitigating factors)
- Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005) (death penalty unconstitutional for offenders under 18)
- Corbitt v. New Jersey, 439 U.S. 212 (1978) (States may encourage guilty pleas by offering substantial benefits; plea-versus-trial disparity is not per se unconstitutional)
- State v. White, 142 Ohio St.3d 277 (2015) (Ohio recognizes that firearm specifications enhance punishment to deter firearm use during crimes)
