SHAWN PATRICK LYNCH v. ARIZONA
No. 15-8366
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided May 31, 2016
578 U. S. ____ (2016)
Per Curiam; JUSTICE THOMAS, with whom JUSTICE ALITO joins, dissenting.
PER CURIAM.
Under Simmons v. South Carolina, 512 U. S. 154 (1994), and its progeny, “where a capital defendant‘s future dangerousness is at issue, and the only sentencing alternative to death available to the jury is life imprisonment without possibility of parole,” the Due Process Clause “entitles the defendant ‘to inform the jury of [his] parole ineligibility, either by a jury instruction or in arguments by counsel.‘” Shafer v. South Carolina, 532 U. S. 36, 39 (2001) (quoting Ramdass v. Angelone, 530 U. S. 156, 165 (2000) (plurality opinion)). In the decision below, the Arizona Supreme Court found that the State had put petitioner Shawn Patrick Lynch‘s future dangerousness at issue during his capital sentencing proceeding and acknowledged that Lynch‘s only alternative sentence to death was life imprisonment without parole. 238 Ariz. 84, 103, 357 P. 3d 119, 138 (2015). But the court nonetheless concluded that Lynch had no right to inform the jury of his parole ineligibility. Ibid. The judgment is reversed.
A jury convicted Lynch of first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed robbery, and burglary for the 2001 killing of James Panzarella. The State sought the death penalty. Before Lynch‘s penalty phase trial began, Arizona moved to prevent his counsel from informing the jury that the only alternative sentence to death was life without the possibility of parole. App. K to Pet. for Cert. The court granted the motion.
Lynch‘s first penalty phase jury failed to reach a unanimous verdict. A second jury was convened and sentenced
The Arizona Supreme Court affirmed, this time considering and rejecting Lynch‘s Simmons claim. The court agreed that, during the third penalty phase, “[t]he State suggested . . . that Lynch could be dangerous.” 238 Ariz., at 103, 357 P. 3d, at 138. The court also recognized that Lynch was parole ineligible: Under Arizona law, “parole is available only to individuals who committed a felony before January 1, 1994,” and Lynch committed his crimes in 2001. Ibid. (citing
That conclusion conflicts with this Court‘s precedents. In Simmons, as here, a capital defendant was ineligible for parole under state law. 512 U. S., at 156 (plurality opinion). During the penalty phase, the State argued that the jurors should consider the defendant‘s future dangerousness when determining the proper punishment. Id., at 157. But the trial court refused to permit defense counsel to tell the jury that the only alternative sentence to death was life without parole. Id., at 157, 160. The Court reversed, reasoning that due process entitled the defendant to rebut the prosecution‘s argument that he posed a future danger by informing his sentencing jury that he is parole ineligible. Id., at 161–162; id., at 178 (O‘Connor, J., concurring in judgment). The Court‘s opinions reiterated that holding in Ramdass, Shafer, and Kelly v. South Carolina, 534 U. S. 246 (2002).
The Arizona Supreme Court thought Arizona‘s sentenc-
The State responds that Simmons “‘applies only to instances where, as a legal matter, there is no possibility of parole.‘” Brief in Opposition 11 (quoting Ramdass, 530 U. S., at 169 (plurality opinion)). Notwithstanding the fact that Arizona law currently prevents all felons who committed their offenses after 1993 from obtaining parole, 238 Ariz., at 103, 357 P. 3d, at 138, Arizona reasons that “nothing prevents the legislature from creating a parole system in the future for which [Lynch] would have been eligible had the court sentenced him to life with the possibility of release after 25 years.” Brief in Opposition 12.
The petition for writ of certiorari and the motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis are granted. The judgment of the Arizona Supreme Court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Petitioner Shawn Patrick Lynch and his co-conspirator, Michael Sehwani, met their victim, James Panzarella, at a Scottsdale bar on March 24, 2001. The three went back to Panzarella‘s house early the next morning. Around 5 a.m., Sehwani called an escort service. The escort and her bodyguard arrived soon after. Sehwani paid her $300 with two checks from Panzarella‘s checkbook after spending an hour with her in the bedroom. Lynch and Sehwani then left the house with Panzarella‘s credit and debit cards and embarked on a spending spree.
The afternoon of March 25, someone found Panzarella‘s body bound to a metal chair in his kitchen. His throat was slit. Blood surrounded him on the tile floor. The house was in disarray. Police discovered a hunting knife in the bedroom. A knife was also missing from the kitchen‘s knifeblock. And there were some receipts from Lynch and Sehwani‘s spending spree.
Police found Lynch and Sehwani at a motel two days after the killing. They had spent the days with Panzarella‘s credit and debit cards buying cigarettes, matches, gas, clothing, and Everlast shoes, renting movies at one of the motels where they spent an afternoon, and making cash withdrawals. When police found the pair, Sehwani wore the Everlast shoes, and Lynch‘s shoes were stained with Panzarella‘s blood. A sweater, also stained with his blood, was in the back seat of their truck, as were Panzarella‘s car keys.
Today‘s summary reversal perpetuates the Court‘s error in Simmons. See Kelly v. South Carolina, 534 U. S. 246, 262 (2002) (THOMAS, J., dissenting); Shafer v. South Carolina, 532 U. S. 36, 58 (2001) (THOMAS, J., dissenting). As in Simmons, it is the “sheer depravity of [the defendant‘s] crimes, rather than any specific fear for the future, which induced the . . . jury to conclude that the death penalty was justice.” 512 U. S., at 181 (Scalia, J., dissenting). In Simmons, for example, the defendant beat and raped three elderly women—one of them his own grandmother—before brutally killing a fourth. See ibid. The notion that a jury‘s decision to impose a death sentence “would have been altered by information on the current state of the law concerning parole (which could of course be amended) is . . . farfetched,” to say the least. Id., at 184.
“If your verdict is that the Defendant should be sentenced to death, he will be sentenced to death. If your verdict is that the Defendant should be sentenced to life, he will not be sentenced to death, and the court will sentence him to either life without the possibility of release until at least 25 calendar years in prison are served, or ‘natural life,’ which means the Defendant would never be released from prison.” App. S to Pet. for Cert. 18.
That instruction parallels the Arizona statute governing Lynch‘s sentencing proceedings. That statute prescribed that defendants not sentenced to death could receive either a life sentence with the possibility of early release or a “natural life” sentence: “If the court does not sentence the defendant to natural life, the defendant shall not be released on any basis until the completion of the service of twenty-five calendar years,” but a defendant sentenced to “natural life” will “not be released on any basis for the remainder of the defendant‘s natural life.”
Even though the trial court‘s instruction was a correct recitation of Arizona law, the Court holds that Simmons requires more. The Court laments that (at least for now) Arizona‘s only form of early release in Arizona is executive clemency. Ante, at 3. So the Court demands that the Arizona instruction specify that “the possibility of release” does not (at least for now) include parole. Due process, the Court holds, requires the court to tell the jury that if a
Today‘s decision—issued without full briefing and argument and based on Simmons, a fractured decision of this Court that did not produce a majority opinion—is a remarkably aggressive use of our power to review the States’ highest courts. The trial court accurately told the jury that Lynch could receive a life sentence with or without the possibility of early release, and that should suffice.
I respectfully dissent.
