Trenton Lynn Hawkins appeals from the federal district court’s order denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The issue before us is whether the prison sentence imposed on Mr. Hawkins is unconstitutionally disproportionate in violation of the Eighth Amendment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
In the early morning hours of August 11, 1983, Trent Hawkins, then thirteen years and 11 months old, broke into his neighbor’s home through a window. The neighbor awoke to find Mr. Hawkins in her bedroom, brandishing one of her kitchen knives. After a brief struggle, he tied her with ropes and blindfolded her, then raped and sodomized her repeatedly. Throughout the two and a half hour episode, Mr. Hawkins threatened the victim with the knife and threatened to kill her children if she told the police. After the sexual assaults, Mr. Hawkins took seven dollars out of the victim’s purse and fled.
A referee certified Mr. Hawkins to stand trial as an adult, and this decision was upheld on appeal by both the Tulsa County District Court and the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals. A jury found Mr. Hawkins guilty of first degree burglary, robbery with a dangerous weapon, forcible sodomy, and second degree rape. The jury sentenced Mr. Hawkins to maximum sentences of twenty years for the burglary, twenty years for forcible sodomy, and fifteen years for rape, and to forty-five years out of a possible life sentence for robbery with a dangerous weapon. The trial judge ordered that these sentences be served consecutively, resulting in a total term of one hundred years. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Mr. Hawkins’ conviction and sentences.
See Hawkins v. State,
In 1991, Mr. Hawkins filed a federal habeas action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 wherein the district court denied relief. On appeal, this court remanded the case and ordered the district court to dismiss the petition without prejudice because Mr. Hawkins had not exhausted all of his claims in state court.
See Hawkins v. Champion,
No. 92-5072,
Mr. Hawkins filed an application for post-conviction relief in state court challenging his sentence as disproportionate in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The court denied relief, and the state court of criminal appeals affirmed. Mr. Hawkins then filed this petition in federal district court, which was referred to a magistrate judge for an evidentiary hearing and proportionality review. The Magistrate’s Report and Recommendation included a detailed proportionality review and recommended denying the petition. The district court affirmed over Mr. Hawkins’ objection, and he now appeals to this court. We review a district court’s denial of a habeas corpus petition de novo.
See Bradshaw v. Story,
II.
At the outset, it is important to make clear what Mr. Hawkins does not argue. He is not disputing the state’s initial decision to certify him to stand trial as an adult. Nor does he contend that the one hundred-year sentence he received would be disproportionate had it been imposed on an adult. Instead, Mr. Hawkins urges us to examine whether the consecutive sentences were constitutionally disproportionate in light of the fact that at the time he committed the crimes he was only thirteen years old.
A. The Eighth Amendment Proportionality Test
In order to decide this issue, we must first determine the correct analytic framework to apply to questions of proportionality. The Eighth Amendment’s guarantee against “cruel and unusual” punishments has been most commonly read to bar unnecessarily painful or barbarous methods of punishment.
See O’Neil v. Vermont,
In
Solem v. Helm,
The Court revisited the proportionality issue in
Harmelin v. Michigan,
Justice Kennedy, joined by Justices O’Connor and Souter, wrote separately to argue for the existence of a narrow proportionality guarantee.
See id.
at 996,
Until now we have found it unnecessary to decide whether
Harmelin
in fact overruled or otherwise altered
Solem,
and what the correct proportionality analysis should be.
See, e.g., United States v. Robertson,
We find this reasoning persuasive and hold that Justice Kennedy’s opinion in Harmelin narrows Solem and sets forth the applicable Eighth Amendment proportionality test. Accordingly, we examine Mr. Hawkins’ sentence in relation to his crimes for “gross disproportionality.” If we do not find it, there is no need to proceed to the comparative analyses.
*1283 B. Application of the Test to Mr. Hawkins
Mr. Hawkins urges us, in conducting our proportionality review, to consider his youth at the time of the crimes as a mitigating factor. The chronological age of a defendant is a factor that can be considered in determining whether a punishment is grossly disproportionate to the crime inasmuch as it relates to his culpability.
Solern
instructed courts to compare the gravity of an offense with the severity of the sentence by looking at “the harm caused or threatened to the victim or society, and the culpability of the offender.”
In the context of capital cases, the Supreme Court has indicated that the age of a young defendant is relevant, in the Eighth Amendment sense, to his culpability. The plurality in
Thompson v. Oklahoma,
Other cases have dealt with the proportionality issue in the context of youthful defendants given statutorily mandated sentences. In
Harris v. Wright,
Thus, we are still left with the question of whether and how a youthful defendant’s age should factor in to the proportionality analysis when, as here, the punishment was not mandated by the legislature but was set by a judge within a range of sentences the legislature specified. We agree with the North Carolina court’s approach, and hold that age is a relevant factor to consider in a proportionality analysis. This is so because the first prong of the Solem test allows for courts to consider multiple factors relevant to culpability, an option that Harmelin does not foreclose.
This conclusion does not, however, lead to a finding that Mr. Hawkins’ punishment is grossly disproportionate to his crimes. Mr. Hawkins’ crimes were serious, involving a deadly weapon, a home invasion, threats of violence, and repeated sexual attacks. Although his culpability may be diminished somewhat due to his age at the time of the crimes, it is arguably more than counterbalanced by the harm Mr. Hawkins caused to his victim. By way of comparison, the Supreme Court has found that a life sentence without parole is not disproportionate to the crime of possession of 672 grams of cocaine,
see Hcmnelin,
It is also important to the analysis that Mr. Hawkins’ prison sentence, while lengthy, will be shortened considerably by the availability of parole and “good time” credits. His consolidated record card indicates he has already completed his sentences for the rape and sodomy convictions. In fact, Mr. Hawkins is slated to serve a total of thirty-five years for all four convictions combined, and will be eligible for parole in approximately fifteen years.
“[Bjecause parole is ‘an established valuation on imprisonment of convicted criminals,’ ”
Rummel,
Several courts have determined that the availability of parole should foreclose proportionality review altogether, on the reasoning that any sentence less than life without parole can never be “grossly disproportionate.”
See, e.g., United, States v. Organek,
In addition, all of Mr. Hawkins’ sentences were within the permissible stat
*1285
utory range for the offenses he committed. We are reluctant to interfere with the legislative determination of an appropriate sentence range.
See Rummel,
In light of the nature of his crimes, the Supreme Court’s benchmarks, and the legislature’s proper role in setting sentencing ranges, we cannot say that Mr. Hawkins’ one hundred-year sentence with the possibility of parole is grossly disproportionate to the four violent acts he committed. Having so decided, we need not address the other prongs of the Solern analysis.
Nor are we persuaded that the punishment here separately offends the Eighth Amendment’s guarantee against cruel and unusual punishment that is informed by “ ‘evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.’ ”
Thompson,
Other reviewing courts have declined to find that a defendant’s age caused a penalty to offend “evolving standards of decency” when the penalty was a statutorily mandated sentence less than death.
See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Peters,
Moreover, there is apparently no societal consensus that a long sentence imposed on a defendant for serious crimes he committed at age thirteen offends evolving standards of decency. The North Carolina Supreme Court recently found that nineteen states allow adult penalties for thirteen-year-olds convicted of serious crimes.
See Green,
III.
Having carefully considered Mr. Hawkins’ claims, we conclude his sentence does not violate the Eighth Amendment. We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court denying Mr. Hawkins’ petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The Fourth Circuit continues to apply the full
Solem
test on the theory that "a majority of the
Harmelin
Court either declined expressly to overrule
Solem
or explicitly approved of
Solem.” United States v. Kratsas,
. Justice Kennedy's opinion in Hannelin does not overrule, or even address, the holding in Solem that identifies culpability as relevant when determining the gravity of the offense. Because this is the very element of Solem's proportionality review that Justice Kennedy's concurrence adopts as preeminent, it follows that Solem’s elaboration of that element remains applicable following Hannelin.
. Justice O'Connor qualified this statement by adding that it is the legislature, not the courts, that should decide the appropriate age cut-off for the death penalty.
. The court also reasoned that the defendant was morally responsible for the crime, and therefore sufficiently culpable under the proportionality analysis, because he had "sufficient mental capacity to form the intent required to be found guilty of the crime.” Id. at 752. If this very low culpability standard is applied in order to determine whether the sentences of youthful offenders are disproportionate, it appears that few would ever be found to have diminished culpability due to age. Indeed, if a youthful offender lacked the mental capacity to form the necessary intent, it is unlikely that he would be certified to stand trial as an adult.
. Mr. Hawkins seems to argue that his punishment should receive a closer proportionality review because the judge imposed his four sentences consecutively. We are not convinced. The Eighth Amendment analysis focuses on the sentence imposed for each specific crime, not on the cumulative sentence for multiple crimes.
See, e.g., O’Neil v. Vermont,
