Defendant pled guilty to second-degree murder, MCL 750.317; MSA 28.549, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b; MSA 28.424(2), and habitual offender, second conviction, MCL 769.10; MSA 28.1082. The court sentenced defendant to fifty to eighty years, plus two years for felony-firearm. Defendant was thirty-nine years old at the time of his sentencing.
Defendant argues that he must be resentenced because his fifty-year minimum sentence effectively sentences him to life in prison without parole. We agree.
A sentence imposed for a term of years must be an indeterminate sentence less than life which is reasonably possible for the defendant to actually serve.
People v Moore,
Currently there is a dispute in this Court regarding the length of a minimum sentence which a defendant would have a reasonable prospect of actually serving. In
People v Holland,
We reject the approaches of
Rushlow
and
Holland
as unrealistic.
1
Although it is possible for a man (or woman) to live well into the eighties and nineties, it is not likely that he will.
2
A convicted defendant in his late thirties does not logically have a reasonable prospect of surviving a prison sentence into his late eighties or early nineties. Nor is it permissible to consider the effect of disciplinary credits when determining the proper length of a minimum sentence.
People v Fleming,
Remanded for resentencing in accordance with People v Moore, supra.
