¶ 1 Roger Helm Jr. seeks review of the trial court's order denying his petition for post-conviction relief filed pursuant to Rule 32, Ariz. R. Crim. P., in which he argued his "de facto life without parole sentence[s]" are improper under Miller v. Alabama ,
¶ 2 In 1984, at the age of fourteen, Helm murdered his father, his mother, and his sister. He subsequently pled guilty to first-degree murder, and two counts of second-degree murder, as well as a related armed robbery. The trial court sentenced him to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after twenty-five years for the first-degree murder, twenty-one-year prison terms for each count of second-degree murder, and a twenty-one-year term for armed robbery. The three sentences for murder were to be served consecutively to each other but concurrently with the sentence for armed robbery.
¶ 3 On appeal to the Arizona Supreme Court, Helm asserted, as his only issue, that the three sentences for murder should not have been consecutive. The court affirmed his convictions and sentences. State v. Helm , No. CR-86-0050-AP, 2 (Ariz. Jun. 2, 1987) (mem. decision) ("[I]t was not error in this *1215case for the judge to impose consecutive sentences.").
¶ 4 In June 2013, Helm filed a pro se notice of post-conviction relief in which he argued Miller was a significant change in the law applicable to his sentences. The trial court summarily dismissed the notice, concluding Miller did not apply because Helm's life sentence provided for the possibility of parole. Helm did not seek review of that ruling. In July 2015, Helm sent a letter to the court asserting his sentences were "the functional equivalent of life without parole." In response, the court noted that, although it had already denied relief, "there may be new information or further developments in the law" relevant to his claim. Thus, the court appointed counsel "for the sole purpose of conferring with [Helm] and assessing whether there are any viable Rule 32 claims or whether the court should reconsider its prior denial of Rule 32 Relief."
¶ 5 Through counsel, Helm filed a petition for post-conviction relief asserting Miller was a significant change in the law rendering his aggregate sentences improper. He identified decisions from other jurisdictions supporting his assertion that the rule announced in Miller applies to aggregate prison terms. The trial court summarily denied relief, and this petition for review followed.
¶ 6 On review, Helm summarizes his claim based on Miller . He again lists several cases from other jurisdictions that have concluded that a sentence imposed on a juvenile that is functionally a life sentence because it exceeds the defendant's "expected mortality rate[ ]" is a life sentence without the possibility of release, in violation of Miller .
¶ 7 Helm is entitled to relief under Miller if it constitutes "a significant change in the law that, if applied to [his] case, would probably overturn [his] conviction or sentence." Ariz. R. Crim. P. 32.1(g). As interpreted by the Supreme Court in Montgomery , the Court in Miller held that "sentencing a child to life without parole is excessive for all but 'the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.' " Montgomery v. Louisiana , --- U.S. ----,
¶ 8 But Miller did not address consecutive sentences. This court has previously ruled that Graham v. Florida ,
¶ 9 Our dissenting colleague posits that Kasic has been abrogated by Miller , because the Supreme Court clarified that the Eighth Amendment prohibits life-without-parole sentences for juveniles who did not commit homicide, thus extending the reasoning of Graham . Kasic , however, was not grounded solely in Graham , but also in Arizona Supreme Court precedent holding that we do not consider the aggregate sentence when conducting a proportionality analysis under the Eighth Amendment. See Kasic ,
¶ 10 Nor do we agree that, when the Court in Miller stated " Graham 's reasoning implicates any life-without-parole sentence imposed on a juvenile,"
¶ 11 Finally, Helm asserts the trial court should have stayed his Rule 32 proceeding "pending a decision by the United States Supreme Court" whether to accept review of our supreme court's ruling in Valencia . Even had Helm made such a request in the trial court, the issue is moot. The United States Supreme Court has declined the petition for writ of certiorari of Valencia . Valencia v. Arizona , --- U.S. ----,
¶ 12 We grant review but deny relief.
¶ 13 In the absence of a focused consideration of the "offender's youth and attendant characteristics," the Eighth Amendment forbids imprisoning a child without hope of release. Miller,
¶ 14 Here, Helm, who has already served thirty-four years in prison, plausibly maintains that his sentence functionally requires him to be imprisoned without hope for release. That sentence arose from consecutive terms for three homicides that he committed on the same occasion at age fourteen.
¶ 15 My colleagues cite the United States Supreme Court case Graham and our own decision in Kasic to conclude that Helm's claim has already been resolved. In Kasic , the defendant argued that the underlying rationale of Graham -that a life sentence without the possibility of parole was a categorically disproportionate sentence for a juvenile offender for a non-homicide offense-should apply to his composite sentence of 139.75 years.
¶ 16 But that reading of Graham has been overtaken by subsequent controlling jurisprudence. The United States Supreme Court has since clarified that the Eighth Amendment principle first articulated in Graham is not limited by the nature of the underlying offense. Rather, it has determined that the Graham restriction on juvenile sentencing should be applied in light of the Court's underlying rationale for treating juveniles differently. In Miller , the Court specifically held that the restriction on sentencing children to life imprisonment must apply to homicide offenses as well as non-homicide offenses-by definition, all offenses.
¶ 17 Notably, both of the children who received relief in Miller committed multiple offenses during their respective criminal incidents: Miller plainly committed theft, armed robbery, aggravated assault, and arson, while Jackson at minimum committed attempted armed robbery in addition to first-degree murder.
¶ 18 In pertinent part, that holding reads as follows: " Graham, Roper, and our individualized sentencing decisions make clear that a judge or jury must have the opportunity to consider mitigating circumstances before imposing the harshest possible penalty for juveniles." Id . at 489,
¶ 19 In categorically foreclosing Miller relief to any juvenile who receives life imprisonment arising from consecutive sentences, my colleagues embrace an Eighth Amendment regime wherein juveniles who commit a lone first-degree murder are entitled to a Miller hearing, but those who commit a sequence of crimes-where no person is killed-are not. See, e.g. , Kasic ,
¶ 20 The majority correctly observes that the Eighth Amendment provides no relief for adult offenders who receive lengthy cumulative sentences for multiple offenses. Berger ,
¶ 21 In light of Miller 's reasoning-which triggers Eighth Amendment protection for juveniles based on the length of sentence rather than the severity of the crime-why should the mechanism by which Helm received life imprisonment matter? As the Tenth Circuit explained in providing relief to a juvenile sentenced to consecutive terms totaling 155 years, "we cannot read the Court's categorical rule [stated in Graham ] as excluding juvenile offenders ... merely because the state does not label this punishment as 'life without parole.' The Constitution's protections do not depend upon a legislature's semantic classifications." Budder v. Addison ,
¶ 22 In sum, the Eighth Amendment imposes a categorical rule that a child cannot be sentenced to an irrevocable life of imprisonment without special consideration of their juvenile status. See Montgomery ,
Notes
Before 1992, a defendant could directly appeal from a sentence imposed following the entry of a guilty plea. See A.R.S. § 13-4033(B) ; 1992 Ariz. Sess. Laws, chs. 184, § 1, 358, §§ 1 through 9; see also 171 Ariz. XLVIII-L (1992) (former versions of Ariz. R. Crim. P. 17.1(e), 17.2(e), 27.8(e) ).
The state asserted that he would be eligible for parole on each of his two second-degree murder sentences after fourteen years, potentially giving him a hope of release within his lifetime. These facts, however, are not within our record. Further factual development on this point would be necessary on remand.
To date, the majority of jurisdictions reaching the question we address have held that juveniles who receive life imprisonment arising from consecutive sentences are entitled to potential relief under Graham and Miller . Compare McKinley v. Butler ,
