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Monday, November 09, 2009
High court looks at life sentences for juveniles
By MARK SHERMAN
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A seemingly divided Supreme Court wrestled Monday with whether teenagers can be locked away forever for their crimes. The question arose in two cases involving Florida men who are serving life prison terms with no chance of parole for crimes they committed as teenagers. Their lawyers argue that the sentences for people so young are cruel and unusual, in violation of the Constitution, because young people have greater capacity to change.

Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the Supreme Court opinion four years ago that ruled out the death penalty for people under 18, judging them less responsible than adults. So most eyes were on him Monday as the court considered whether to extend that rationale to life without parole sentences.

But Kennedy offered little hint of his position, at one point suggesting it might be difficult to distinguish between juveniles and adults in cases that do not involve the death penalty.

"Why does a juvenile have a constitutional right to hope, but an adult does not?" he asked.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg provided a possible answer, wondering whether teenagers can be accurately evaluated at the time they are sentenced. It may be possible that only after some years have passed that the state can determine, "Has this person overcome those youthful disabilities?" she said.

On the other side of the issue, Justice Samuel Alito questioned whether every last juvenile offender had to be given a second chance. "Some of the actual cases in which this sentence has been imposed in Florida involve factual situations that are so horrible that I couldn't have imagined them if I hadn't actually seen them," Alito said, recounting two that involved the rape of children.

In the two cases before the court, Joe Sullivan was sent away for life for raping an elderly woman when he was 13 and Terrance Graham was implicated in armed robberies when he was 16 and 17.

Graham, now 22, and Sullivan, now 34, are in Florida prisons, which hold more than 70 percent of juvenile defendants locked up for life for crimes other than homicide. Continued...

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Away For Life Over Rape?
Something is drastically wrong with our already sick society when a 13 year old kid is sentenced to life for this crime. As bad as it is, adults who committ the same crime get less time in prison then this boy did. Something is wrong here.

This kid was obviously mentally unbalanced when he raped the woman. What sort of psychiatric attention did he get? What are the details of this crime? Yes, he is responsible for this crime even at 13. However, is a life sentence going to protect us from any more crimes he would committ, if he became eligible for parole?

The Supreme Court needs to come up with a better solution than life imprisonment for this guy. Give me a break?

Better question, what kind of attention
did the elderly woman get who had her life ruined in her last years by some teen punk?

If you don't like life imprisonment, and rehab is just sh*t, we can always offer the good old firing squad.

Bork the Sen. over Obamacare. 202-224/225-3121.
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