OPINION
Alаska Statute 47.12.030(a) provides that when a sixteen-year-old minor commits certain serious felonies, including murder, the minor "shall be charged, held, released on bail, prosecuted, sentenced, and incarcerated in the same manner as an adult." Kira Gray argues that her sentence for first-degree murder violates the constitutional protections against eruel and unusual punishment and the constitutional guarantees of equal protection because she was a minor at the time of her offense. But we conclude that this combination of the automatic waiver statute and the adult sentencing statute is consistent with "evolving standards of decency" and that this scheme bears a fair and substantial relationship to the legitimate purposes of punishment.
Gray also argues that her sentence of sixty-five years to serve is excessivе for a murder and kidnapping she committed when she was sixteen years old. But we conclude that the sentencing judge gave her rehabilitative prospects "careful serutiny and appropriate weight" and that the resulting sentence was not clearly mistaken.
Background
Gray was sixteen years old and dating Mario Page, an Anchorage drug dealer. While Page was out of state, Gray stole nine ounces of cocaine from Page and gave it to her sister's boyfriend, Terrell Houngues. When Page returned and found out about the theft, he became angry.
Gray concocted a plan to pacify Page. She falsely told Houngues that she had had an argument with Page and that she knew where Page hid money and drugs. She suggested to Houngues that they should steal Page's money and drugs. This plan was simply a ruse to kidnap Houngues.
Gray picked up Houngues and drove him to a remote location in the Mat-Su Valley. Page and three other men then arrived in a separate car and foreed Houngues into the trunk. They drove to another spot and removed Houngues from the trunk. Page demanded to know what became of the nine ounces of stolen cocaine. When Houngues denied any knowledge of the drugs, Gray shot him in the knee. Houngues was then screaming in pain, so Page told Gray to "shut him up." Gray and another man, Tommie Patterson, then shot Houngues multiple times, killing him.
Gray was charged and prosecuted as an adult based on the statute that automatically waives juvenile jurisdiction for certain serious crimes.
1
Prior to trial, Gray made a motion for the court to declare the automatic waiver statute unconstitutional, but Superior Court Judge Eric Smith denied the motion.
At the sentencing hearing, Gray presented testimony from two mental health professionals. Drs. Marty Beyer and Ronald Roesch provided opinions on developmental immaturity in general, along with specific opinions about Gray's mental state. Dr. Beyer testified that Gray "showed a variety of kinds of immature thinking ... that led to irrational behavior and poor moral reasoning, especially when she felt coerced." Dr. Beyer also testified that juvenile sentences should be less punitive than adult sentences and should generally provide more and earlier opportunities for parole or release because most juvenile offenders are very immature and have "a huge amount of developing still to do."
Dr. Roesch testified that Gray was "amenable to rehabilitation and that she does have a high potential for change." Like Dr. Beyer, Dr. Roesch emphasized that, in crafting a juvenile sentence, the court must take developmental differences between juveniles and adults into consideration.
At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing, Judge Smith imposed a sentence of ninety-nine years' imprisonment with forty-four years suspended for Gray's murder convietion and a consecutive sentеnce of ten years' imprisonment for kidnapping. Gray now appeals.
Discussion
The automatic waiver statute does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment.
As noted above, when a sixteen-year-old minor commits certain serious felonies, the minor is "prosecuted, sentenced, and incarcerated in the same manner as an adult. 3 Under this statute, a minor convicted of first-degree murder is subject to the same sentence as an adult-generally a sentence of twenty to ninety-nine years' imprisonment. 4 Gray argues that this statutory scheme violates the state and federal prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment 5 because the statutes do not recognize the differences in culpability between juveniles and adults by providing for early eligibility for discretionary parole.
Gray relies mainly on two recent decisions from the United States Supreme Court: Roper v. Simmons 6 and Graham v. Florida. 7 In Roper, the Court concluded that the Eighth Amendment bars the execution of individuals who were juveniles at the time they committed murder 8 In Grokam, the Court concluded that the Eighth Amendment forbids a juvenile from being sentenced to life without parole for a nonhomicide crime. 9
In both cases, the Court applied a test that focuses on the characteristics of the offender, considering whether thеre is a "national consensus" against the imposition of the sentence in question and whether the sentence is categorically unconstitutional. 10 The Court concluded that
juveniles (as a group) are "less deserving of the most severe punishments" because, compared to adults, they exhibit a "lack of maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility," because they are "more vulnerable or susceptible to negative influеnces and ... peer pressure," and because their characters are "not as well formed." 11
The Wisconsin Supreme Court recently considered a similar question in State v. Ninham. 15 Omer Ninham was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for first-degree intentional homicide. 16 On appeal, Ninham argued that sentencing a fourteen-year-old to life imprisоnment violates the Eighth Amendment. 17
The Wisconsin court considered whether sentencing a fourteen-year-old to life without parole is inconsistent with evolving standards of decency. 18 It noted that Grahom only prohibited life without parole for nonhomi-cide offenses and that Roper prohibited capital punishment of juveniles. 19 But neither case directly addressed the constitutionality of a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for an intentional homicide. 20
The Wisconsin court evaluated whether there is a national consensus against sentencing minors to life without parole for intentional homicides. 21 It found that forty-four states allow life imprisonment without parole for homicide offenses for juveniles. 22 Moreover, although few juveniles age fourteen or younger have ever been sentenced to life without a possibility of parole, the court concluded that the statistic did not necessarily show there was a consensus against such a penalty. 23 In summary, the court concluded that there is no national consensus against a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for an intentional homicide committed by a minor. 24
In addition to our review of any national consensus, we also have a responsibility to exercise оur independent judgment regarding whether an adult sentence for a minor convicted of murder serves legitimate penological goals. 25 The research that Gray relies on suggests that some minors may have a greater potential for rehabilitation and that there is a lesser need to isolate them to protect the public. 26 This is consistent with our previous recognition that rehabilitation and individual deterrencе should be accorded "careful serutiny and appropriate weight" in cases involving youthful first offenders convieted of first-degree murder. 27
Several other courts considering the question have distinguished Grakom and held that a life sentence can be imposed on a juvenile convicted of murder without violating the ban on cruel and unusual punishment. 30 'We conclude that sentencing a minor to an adult sentence for first-degree murder is not categorically unconstitutional.
Gray did not receive a life sentence; she received a sentence of only sixty-five years' imprisonment. She will be eligible for discretionary parole after serving twenty-five years of her sentence. 31 But Gray argues that this sentencing scheme involves eruel and unusual punishment because it does not allow for early eligibility for discretionary parole.
As noted above, the combination of the automatic waiver statute and the adult sentencing statutes promotеs various peno-logical goals, especially the goals of general deterrence and affirmation of societal norms. In view of these legitimate legislative considerations, we conclude that the difficulty in applying the goals of rehabilitation and isolation to a juvenile offender does not render this scheme unconstitutionally eruel. The legislature could reasonably determine that, when a minor is convicted of first-degree murder, general sentencing considerations require a substantial delay before the minor becomes eligible for discretionary parole. This aspect of the operation of the automatic waiver statute does not constitute eruel and unusual punishment.
The automatic waiver statute does not violate Gray's right to equal protection.
Gray also argues that the autоmatic waiver statute violates her right to equal protection of the law. 32 We apply a three-part "sliding seale" test to analyze this claim under the Alaska Constitution: we first determine the importance of the individual interest impaired by the statute; we next examine the importance of the state's purposes underlying the statute; and, finally, we evaluate the relationship between the state's purposes аnd the means employed in the statute. 33
Applying step one of this test, Gray has "no constitutional right to be tried in a juvenile court." 34 Her interest in avoiding adult penalties implicates only "the relatively narrow interest of a convicted offender in minimizing the punishment for an offense." 35 This narrow interest requires only "legitimate" state purposes to justify the statute. 36
Within the ambit of this constitutional phraseology are found the objectives of rehabilitation of the offender into a noncriminal member of society, isolation of the offender from society to prevent criminal conduct during the period of confinement, deterrence of the offender himself after his release from confinement or othеr penological treatment, as well as deterrence of other members of the community who might possess tendencies toward criminal conduct similar to that of the offender, and community condemnation of the individual offender, or in other words, reaffirmation of societal norms for the purpose of maintaining respect for the norms themselves. 38
These goals give the State "a strong and direct interest in establishing penalties for criminal offenders and in determining how those penalties should be applied to various classes of convicted felons." 39
To apply the third step of the equal protection test, we must assess the relationship between these legitimate legislative goals and the methods employed in the statute. Because Gray's interest is relatively narrow, the constitution requires only a "substantial relationship" between the legislative goals and the automatic waiver statute." 40 In deciding which minors should receive juvenile delinquency dispositions for criminal acts, the legislature can draw distinctions between different groups so long as those distinctions are not arbitrary or based on a discriminatory classification." 41
The waiver statute makes a distinction between minors who are charged with a class A or an unclassified felоny offense (who are prosecuted as adults) and minors charged with less serious crimes (who are presumptively prosecuted as juveniles) 42 This dis-tinetion is based in turn on the classification system itself-class A felonies "characteristically involve conduct resulting in serious physical injury or a substantial risk of serious physical injury to a person." 43 Other felonies and misdemeanors generally involve less serious misconduct. 44
This classification of penalties, based on the gravity of the offense, bears a substantial relationship to the purposes of punishment that are constitutionally required. "A sentencing system that specifies progressively harsher penalties for progressively more serious classes of offenses is neither novel nor impermissible. This is a form of classification that has traditionally been recognized and upheld as rational." 45
In particular, we have recognized the rationality of the sentencing range for first-degree murder: "Legislatures have traditionally reserved the highest penalties for intentional homicide. Our legislature could reasonably label it an unclassified offense and conclude that a minimum twenty-year sentence was necessary for affirmation of community norms and deterrence of others."
46
Thus, we conclude that the sentenc
Likewise, there is a reasonably close fit between the purposes of punishment and the automatic waiver statute. The legislature could reasonably conclude that the more lenient provisions of the juvenile system should not be available for those who commit the most serious crimes: "This indication of dangerousness is reasonably related to the criteria for deciding whether a minor should be dealt with under the juvenile system or the adult system." 47 'We thus conclude that the automatic waiver statute bears a substantial relationship to the legitimate purposes of punishment, consistent with the equal rights clause of the Alaska Constitution.
The test for equal protection elaims under the federal Constitution is less stringent than the three-part test for claims undеr the Alaska Constitution. Since the automatic waiver statute complies with the equal protection clause of the Alaska Constitution, it also complies with the Equal Protection Clause of the federal Constitution. 48
Gray's sixty-five year sentence is not excessive.
Gray also argues that her composite sentence of sixty-five years' imprisonment is excessive. When imposing this sentence, the judge was required to consider the same sentencing objectives we rеferenced in the previous section. 49 The weight and priority of these criteria are up to the discretion of the sentencing judge. 50 We will reverse the sentence after an independent review of the record, only if the judge's sentencing decision was clearly mistaken. 51 In making this determination, we examine the facts of this case "in light of the total range of sentences authorized by the legislature." 52
In this case, the sеntencing judge made extensive findings concerning the sentencing goals and their application. He found that Gray had used her close relationship with Houngues to trick him into getting into her car, and then executed him at Page's request. The judge concluded that this "particularly heinous crime" would have justified a composite sentence of 109 years to serve for a typical adult offender.
The judge found that Gray was well aware that her boyfriend was involved with a lifestyle involving drugs and violence. She actively participated because of her immaturity-she thought this lifestyle was romantic and exciting. The judge found that Gray was probably not as passive as she seemed to the mental health experts; he noted that she lied to the troopers and to her sister to cast her behavior in a favorable light. Her participation in Houngues's execution was particularly serious because she shot him repeatedly until her gun was empty.
On the other hand, the judge found that Gray was actually seared that Page would retaliate if she did not rectify her theft of his cocaine. She participated in rehabilitative programs while she was held in jail pending trial and sentencing. And although she did not make a formal apology, she did express genuine remorse to the mental health evaluators. The judge decided that her immaturity and her rehabilitative potential required him to substantially reduce the 109-year sentence that would otherwise be warranted by her conduct. He suspended forty-four years of the sentence, leaving Gray with sixty-five years to serve.
This sentence is less serious than many sentences we have approved for juvenile offenders convicted of first-degree murder. In Perotti v. Stаte, we affirmed a ninety-nine-year sentence for a sixteen-year-old defendant who committed an execution-style murder."
53
In Hightower v. State, we af
Gray argues that the testimony of her mental health evaluators and the recent reseаrch on brain development require a more lenient sentence. But we conclude that Judge Smith gave Gray's prospects for rehabilitation "careful scrutiny and appropriate weight," as we have previously required. 57 " An execution-style murder is a particularly serious offense, and the sentencing goals of general deterrence and affirmation of societal norms are especially important for this offense. 58 Based on our independent review of the record, we conclude that the sentencing decision was not clearly mistaken.
Conclusion
We AFFIRM the superior court's judgment and sentence.
Notes
. See AS 47.12.030(a).
. See Patterson v. State, Mem. Op. & J. No. 5713,
. AS 47.12.030(a).
. See AS 12.55.125(a).
. U.S. Const. amend. VIII; Alaska Const. art. I, § 12.
.
. - U.S. --,
.
.
. Id. at 2022 (quoting Kennedy v. Louisiana,
. Smith v. State,
. See, e.g., Green v. State,
. Abraham v. State,
. See generally Hosier v. State,
.
. Id. at 460.
. Id. at 462.
. Id. at 466.
. Id. at 467.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 468.
. Id.
. Id. at 468-69.
. Graham,
. Id. at 2029.
. Riley v. State,
. See Martin v. State,
. See Riley,
. See, e.g., Loggins v. Thomas,
. See AS 12.55.125(a)-(b); AS 33.16.090(b)(7)(A).
. U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1; Alaska Const. art. I, § 1.
. See Williams v. State,
. W.M.F. v. State,
. State v. Ladd,
. See Williams,
. Alaska Const. art. I, § 12.
. State v. Chaney,
. Anderson v. State,
. See Williams,
. Ladd,
. AS 47.12.030(a)(1)-(2), (4). Some juveniles convicted of class B felonies are also subject to automatic waiver based on their prior convictions. AS 47.12.030(a)(3).
. AS 11.81.250(a)(1).
. AS 11.81.250(a)(2)-(6).
. Brown v. State,
. Martin v. State,
. Ladd,
. See Stanek v. Kenai Peninsula Borough,
. AS 12.55.005; see Chaney,
. State v. Wentz,
. McClain v. State,
. Wentz,
.
.
.
.
. Riley,
. See Perotti,
