Case Information
*1 #27917-a-DG
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v. PAUL DEAN JENSEN, Defendant and Appellant.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT STANLEY COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA * * * *
THE HONORABLE JOHN L. BROWN
Judge
* * * *
MARTY J. JACKLEY
Attorney General
ANN C. MEYER
Assistant Attorney General
Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff
and appellee.
JEFF LARSON
Jeff Larson Law, LLP
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant
and appellant. * * * *
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS MARCH 22, 2017 OPINION FILED 04/19/17 *2 GILBERTSON, Chief Justice
[¶1.]
In 1996, Paul Dean Jensen received concurrent, mandatory life
sentences for the first-degree murder and kidnapping of Michael Hare. Jensen was
14 years old when he committed the offenses. In 2012, the United States Supreme
Court issued Miller v. Alabama, barring mandatory life sentences against juvenile
homicide offenders.
Background
[¶2.] On January 14, 1996, 14-year-old Jensen and 16-year-old Shawn Springer carried out their plan to rob a taxi driver in Pierre, South Dakota. Armed with a gun and fitted with bandanas to cover their faces, Jensen and Springer called for a taxi to pick them up in the back parking lot of a local hotel. The taxi company dispatched driver Michael Hare to the hotel. Hare parked and waited in the front pаrking lot, just outside the hotel’s entrance. Jensen and Springer realized that the taxi was not going to pick them up in the rear parking lot and decided that they could not keep their faces covered with bandanas if they entered the taxi in front of the hotel. Jensen and Springer uncovered their faces, entered the taxi, and directed Hare to drive them to Fort Pierre.
[¶3.] Shortly therеafter, Hare stopped the taxi on a gravel road outside Fort Pierre. Jensen pointed a gun at Hare, and Springer and Jensen demanded that Hare give them all his money. Hare insisted that he only had $30 and gave the money to Jensen and Springer. Jensen got out of the taxi with the gun drawn and ordered Hare to exit the vehicle. Hare begged for his life. Jensen shot Hare three times and wаlked back toward the taxi. Jensen grabbed Hare’s billfold, which had been placed on the hood of the taxi. Jensen got into the passenger’s seat, and Springer, who had already relocated to the driver’s seat, began to drive away. Law enforcement learned of the robbery while Jensen and Springer were leaving the scene and located the taxi being driven by Springer. A high-sрeed chase ensued but ended when Springer drove the taxi into a snowbank. The officers arrested Jensen and Springer.
[¶4.]
In August 1996, Springer pleaded guilty to kidnapping and agreed to
testify against Jensen. The sentencing court sentenced Springer to 261 years in
prison. Jensen, after being transferred to adult court, pleaded not guilty. On
October 4, 1996, a jury found Jensen guilty of first-degree murder, two counts of
first-dеgree felony murder, first-degree robbery, aiding and abetting grand theft,
possession of a stolen motor vehicle, kidnapping, and conspiracy to commit first-
degree robbery. Only his convictions for first-degree murder and kidnapping are
relevant in this appeal. For those convictions, the sentencing court imposed
concurrent sentences of mandatory life in prison. We affirmеd Jensen’s convictions
and sentences in State v. Jensen,
[¶5.]
After the United States Supreme Court issued Miller,
[¶6.] At the conclusion of the resentencing hearing, the court orally sentenced Jensen to 200 years in prison for both first-degree murder and kidnapping and ordered the sentences to run concurrently. Jensen would be eligible for discretionary parole at age 39 and for parole based on good-time credit at age 116.
[¶7.] Jensen appeals, asserting the following issues:
1. Whether concurrent, 200-year sentences constitute cruel and unusual punishmеnt?
2. Whether the sentencing court abused its discretion when it imposed concurrent, 200-year sentences?
Analysis
1. Whether concurrent, 200-year sentences constitute cruel and unusual punishment?
[¶8.]
Before we examine this issue, we address the State’s claim that Jensen
waived his right to challenge the length of his sentence under the Eighth
Amendment. The State claims that Jensen waived this right because he did not
objеct when the court sentenced him or file a motion to have the court reconsider its
sentence. Although we ordinarily decline to review an error not raised before the
circuit court, Jensen challenges the legality of the sentencing court’s decision to
impose concurrent, 200-year sentences under the Eighth Amendment, not the
court’s procedural or evidentiary decisions related to its sentencing. Whether the
court imposed an illegal sentence in violation of the Eighth Amendment is
preserved for our review. See SDCL 23A-31-1 (Rule 35) (“A court may correct an
illegal sentence at any time[.]”); State v. Springer,
[¶9.]
We review de novo whether a defendant’s sentence is cruel and
unusual in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Springer,
United States Supreme Court termed the ‘mitigating qualities of youth.’” Id. ¶ 14,
(1) the chronological age of the juvenile, (2) the juvenile’s immaturity, impetuosity, irresponsibility, and recklessness, (3) *7 family and home environment, (4) incompetency in dealing with law enforcement and the adult criminal justice system, (5) the circumstances of the crime, and, most importantly, (6) the possibility for rehabilitation.
Springer,
not stray from its duty to weigh and consider the Miller factors. The court specifically took into account Jensеn’s youth at the time of the offenses. The court identified that both Springer and Jensen “were young men of an age that the courts have said now that we need to look at that age of minority and take that into account as mitigation in terms of sentencing the individuals.” The court found that Jensen matured—he was not the same person he was when he was convicted. From the evidence рresented, the court concluded that multiple factors weighed in favor of Jensen’s potential for rehabilitation and that the 20 years served by Jensen amounted to sufficient retribution. But the court concluded that Jensen “has a great deal yet that he needs to accomplish and to prove that he can function in society as a positive member of society” and imposed a sentence to a lengthy term of years with a possibility of release at age 39. Nevertheless, Jensen claims that his sentence is unconstitutional
under the Eighth Amendment because it is the functional equivalent of life without
parole. He recognizes that he is eligible for discretionary release at age 39, but
argues that discretionary release under South Dakota’s old рarole system does not
comport with Miller. He distinguishes his case from State v. Diaz, in which we
remarked that Diaz did not receive a life sentence because she had the opportunity
*8
for parole at age 55.
robbery. Id. at 1043. He was 16 years old when he committed the offenses. On the murder conviction, the statute in effect mandated a sentence of life without the possibility of parole for 25 years. Id. Following Miller, Atwell petitioned for pоst- conviction relief, arguing that his mandatory sentence violated the Eighth Amendment. Id. at 1044. The Florida district court denied relief because it held that Atwell’s possibility of parole after serving 25 years removed his mandatorily- imposed sentence from the purview of Miller. On appeal, the Florida Supreme Court reversed. It found significant
that when the court sentenced Atwell in 1992, the court was nоt able to consider
how juveniles “are different and how those differences counsel against irrevocably
sentencing them to a lifetime in prison.” Id. at 1050 (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at
___,
required by Miller when the sentencing court hеld a resentencing hearing in 2016. Also, although South Dakota’s discretionary parole system, like Florida’s, does not require the consideration of the mitigating qualities of youth, the Atwell court examined Florida’s discretionary parole system to determine whether Atwell’s opportunity for parole could remove his mandatorily-imposed sentence from the purview of Miller and Montgomеry. Jensen did not receive a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole. And Jensen directs us to no case in which this Court or the United States Supreme Court has held that—when a juvenile receives individualized sentencing mandated by Miller and has an opportunity for release— the Eighth Amendment also requires that a parole board consider the juvenile homicide offender’s youth-related characteristics. *10 In response, Jensen cites to legislation from other states requiring
parole boards to apply the Miller factors at parole hearings for juvenile offenders. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 54-125a(f)(4); Cal. Penal Code § 4801(c); W. Va. Code § 62- 12-13b(a), (b). He then claims that because South Dakota has no similar provisions, the sentencing court unconstitutionаlly vested full authority to the parole board to decide whether Jensen in fact receives a life sentence without parole. Jensen recognizes that Miller does not preclude a life sentence without the possibility of parole. But in his view, the harshest penalties must be reserved for the most severe criminals, and, here, the sentencing court did not consider him to be thе “worst of the worst.” Although many states have reformed their laws in response to Miller
and Montgomery, it is not this Court’s role to judicially legislate the parole process.
The intersection of the parole process and imprisoned juvenile offenders in South
Dakota is an issue best left to be examined by the Legislature. The issue is
significant indeed. But here, the absence of legislation mаndating that our parole
board consider the Miller factors does not render Jensen’s concurrent, 200-year
sentences unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment. Jensen received a
discretionary sentence to a lengthy term of years following an individualized
sentencing that considered the mitigating qualities of youth and Jensen’s prospects
for rehabilitation as required by Miller. See Chаrles,
2. Whether the sentencing court abused its discretion when it imposed concurrent, 200-year sentences?
[¶19.] Jensen asserts that the sentencing court abused its disсretion because it abdicated its sentencing discretion to the parole board. He directs this Court to the sentencing court’s statement that it was not as equipped as the parole board to decide when to release Jensen. He also highlights that the court’s concurrent, 200- year sentences and Jensen’s good-time release (presumptive release) at age 116 prove that the sentencing court left the decision whether Jensen actually serves a life sentence up to the parole board. The State responds that Jensen waived the issue because Jensen did
not object at sentencing, arguing that the court abdicated its duties to the parole
board when the court imposed its sentence. During the resentencing heаring, the
court heard evidence and testimony concerning the difference between the old and
new parole systems. At the conclusion of the hearing, Jensen specifically requested
that the court consider the difference between the old and new parole systems and
not compare Jensen’s sentence to that of juveniles sentenced under the new system.
Jensen argued that unlike the more-recently sentenced juveniles, he “will always
have to do that next step of justifying it [his release] to the parole board.” From our
review, Jensen did not waive his right to have this Court review his claim.
A sentencing court has broad discretion when fashioning an
appropriate sentence. The court must “acquire a thorough acquaintance with the
charаcter and history of the [person] before it.” State v. Lemley,
sentencing duties to the parole board. Yes, the court referred to the parole process during its oral sentence. The court said:
Looking at this, this is somewhat unique. I was thinking there’s not very many people that are sentenced to the penitentiary for any period of time that have an opportunity to come back before thе [c]ourt after a period of, a significant period of time beyond the two years that’s available and really have a full-blown resentencing hearing.
As I said, I thought that was unique and then I got to thinking a little more about that. Actually, that’s what our parole system is. Maybe this [c]ourt doesn’t sit as a parole board. The [c]ourt probably isn’t well equipped to perform that function.
But the court did nоt leave for the parole board to decide Jensen’s sentence. The
court imposed concurrent, 200-year sentences against Jensen for murder and
kidnapping after weighing and considering all the evidence presented, the
mitigating qualities of youth, the circumstances of Jensen’s crime, and Jensen’s
prospects for rehabilitation. The evidence presentеd includes extensive testimony
about Jensen’s childhood, multiple expert opinions on Jensen’s mental health as a
*13
juvenile and as an adult, evidence and testimony about Jensen’s maturity and
behavior while incarcerated, and testimony concerning what factors the parole
board would typically consider when deciding to exercise discretionary release.
Because the sentencing court acquired a thorough acquaintance with Jensen’s
character and history, considered the mitigating qualities of youth, and considered
Jensen’s prospects for rehabilitation, it did not abdicate its sentencing
responsibilities. See Lemley,
[¶23.] Affirmed.
[¶24.] SEVERSON, and WILBUR, Justices, and BROWN, Matthew, and SOGN, Circuit Court Judges, concur. BROWN, Matthew, Circuit Court Judge, sitting for ZINTER, Justice,
disqualified. SOGN, Circuit Court Judge, sitting for KERN, Justice, disqualified.
