Lead Opinion
McKinley Kelly has filed an application pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3), seeking authorization to file a second or successive petition for a writ of habeas corpus under § 2254. Kelly is serving a 110-year sentence (two consecutive terms of 55
Because Kelly stated a possible claim to relief under Miller, we invited the State to respond, which it has done. It argues that Kelly cannot state a claim to relief under Miller because his sentencing judge was afforded significant discretion by the Indiana Code to fashion an appropriate sentence and, in fact, considered Kelly’s age at the time of the offense in mitigation.
In resolving Kelly’s direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Indiana explained that IC § 35-50-2-3 set a presumptive sentence of 55 years for murder and allowed a sentencing. court to increase or decrease the presumptive sentence by no more than ten years for special circumstances. The court also was allowed to decide whether sentences for multiple convictions should run concurrently or consecutively. IC § 35-38-1-7.1. Kelly v. State,
In Kelly’s case, counsel argued his age in mitigation, pressing hard on the fact that “[njobody is the same person when they’re 25 or 35 or 45 or whatever, that they were when they were 16,” and “[y]ou don’t know to what extent their conduct is the product of gross immaturity or whether there is something more missing.” (Sent’g Tr. at 1326-27.) The sentencing judge identified six aggravating circumstances:
(1) Kelly was on probation with the Juvenile Court at the time of the crimes;
(2) Kelly fired the first shot and his shots killed the first of three victims, setting the subsequent murders in motion;
(3) Kelly shot the victims at close range;
(4) the murders evince Kelly’s lack of respect for human life;
(5) there was a risk that Kelly would commit future crimes; and
(6) Kelly killed more than one person.
It then considered two mitigating conditions:
(1) Kelly was sixteen years old at the time of the offense and seventeen years old at the time of sentencing; and
(2) Kelly had no adult or felony convictions.
Kelly,
We agree with the State: Kelly was afforded all he was entitled to under Miller. The sentencing court had considerable leeway in fashioning Kelly’s sentence and in
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
When McKinley Kelly was 16 years old, he shot and killed two people. Tried and convicted in an Indiana state court of the two 'murders, he was sentenced to 110 years in prison. Even if, as the State says, Kelly will be eligible for parole when he is 70, he nevertheless is effectively serving a life sentence. The ACLU of Michigan reports that the average life expectancy of an inmate sentenced to life in prison is 58 years; for African-Americans like Kelly the average life expectancy is 56; and for juveniles sentenced to life the average is 50½ years. See ACLU of Michigan, “Michigan Life Expectancy Data for Youth Serving Natural Life Sentences,” April 2013, http:// fairsentencingofyouth.org/wp-content/ uploads/2010/02/Michigan-Life-Expeetancy-Data-Youth-Serving-Life.pdf (visited March 15, 2017, as were the other websites in this opinion).
Kelly claims that his sentence is unconstitutional and that he therefore is entitled to be resentenced. We should authorize the district court to accept a second petition for a writ of habeas corpus from Kelly, to enable the validity of his claim to be determined.
The Supreme Court, in Miller v. Alabama,
In 2015 the Department of Justice released data from a 7-year longitudinal study of more than 1,300 “serious juvenile offenders” — those who had committed felony-level violent, property, or drug crimes. See Laurence Steinberg et al., “Psychosocial Maturity and Desistance From Crime in a Sample of Serious Juvenile Offenders,” Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, March 2015, www. ojjdp.gov/pubs/248391.pdf; Melissa Sick-mund and Charles Puzzanchera, eds., “Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 2014 National Report,” Ch. 3, National Center for Juvenile Justice, December 2014, www. ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/nr2014/downloads/NR 2014.pdf. The Justice Department study revealed that more than 90 percent of juvenile offenders grow out of such antisocial behavior by young adulthood and do not re-offend after their first contact with a court — and that regardless of the sanction imposed on the child. Even after matching the subjects with the gravity of their offenses — whether they were incarcerated, placed in residential facilities, put on probation, or received community-based services — the vast majority did not re-offend; instead they grew up. Thomas A. Loughran et al, “Studying Deterrence Among High-Risk Adolescents,” August 2015, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, www.ojjdp.gov/pubs/
As a result of these insights, nineteen states now prohibit imposing a life sentence without parole on a juvenile, The Sentencing Project, “State Advances in Criminal Justice Reform, 2016,” p. 4, January 2017, www.sentencingproject.org/ publications/state-advances-criminal-justice-reform-2016; the incarceration of juveniles in both adult and juvenile facilities has fallen, Ashley Nellis & Marc Mauer, “What We Can Learn from the Amazing Drop in Juvenile Incarceration,” January 24, 2017, www.themarshallproject. org/2017/01/24/what-we-can-learn-from-the-amazing-drop-in-juvenile-inearceration#.tWDqrzgtg; and likewise the number of homicides committed by juveniles, “OJJDP Statistical Briefing Book,” Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, May 2016, www. ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/offenders/qa03105.asp? qaDate=2014.
Consistent with these trends, the Supreme Court concluded in Miller that a life sentence is unconstitutional for all but the “rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.” Miller v. Alabama, supra,
We should allow him to pursue his Miller claim in the district court, which should conduct a hearing to determine whether he is or is not incorrigible.
