Supreme Court Rules Ban on Life Sentences for Juveniles Retroactive
Date:  01-26-2016

Obama also issued a ban on solitary confinement for juveniles incarcerated in the federal prison system
Two major back-to-back developments regarding juveniles in the criminal justice took place on January 25. SCOTUS ruled that the ban on life sentences for juveniles was retroactive, giving over 2,000 people sentenced as juveniles to life in prison the possibility of parole. On the same day, President Obama banned solitary confinement for juveniles in the federal prison system, calling the practice “devastating” and claiming it could lead to “lasting psychological consequences.”

Read more, including the ruling by SCOTUS below.

Via NPR

Supreme Court: Ban On Automatic Life Sentences For Juveniles Is Retroactive

January 25, 2016

Eyder Peralta

The Supreme Court has ruled that a previous decision that put an end to automatic life sentences without parole for juveniles should be retroactive. The 6-3 ruling means that some 2,100 juvenile murders will now have the possibility of parole.

As NPR's Nina Totenberg reported , this case was a "procedural spiderweb." But the implications of it were easy to understand: At issue was whether a previous ruling by the high court applied to Henry Montgomery, who killed a police officer in 1963 when he was 17-years-old. Montgomery was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

But back in 2012, the Supreme Court decided that sentencing youth to life without parole amounted to cruel and usual punishment. That rule obviously applied to all future cases, but what about past cases?

The Supreme Court resolved today that it did indeed have jurisdiction to review this case and that its previous ruling was substantial enough that it should apply retroactively.

Here's how Justice Anthony Kennedy concluded the majority opinion:

"Henry Montgomery has spent each day of the past 46 years knowing he was condemned to die in prison. Per¬haps it can be established that, due to exceptional circumstances, this fate was a just and proportionate punishment for the crime he committed as a 17-year-old boy. In light of what this Court has said in Roper, Graham, and Miller about how children are constitutionally different from adults in their level of culpability, however, prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored."

In related juvenile justice news, President Obama banned solitary confinement for juveniles in the federal prison system. Read the New York Times article on this announcement here.