SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 18–1259
_________________
BRETT JONES, PETITIONER
v.
MISSISSIPPI
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals
of mississippi
[April 22, 2021]
Justice Sotomayor, with whom Justice Breyer
and Justice Kagan join, dissenting.
Today, the Court guts
Miller v.
Alabama,
567 U.S.
460 (2012), and
Montgomery v.
Louisiana, 577 U.S.
190 (2016). Contrary to explicit holdings in both decisions, the
majority claims that the Eighth Amendment permits juvenile
offenders convicted of homicide to be sentenced to life without
parole (LWOP) as long as “the sentence is not mandatory and
the sentencer therefore has discretion to impose a lesser
punishment.”
Ante, at 1. In the Court’s view, a
sentencer never need determine, even implicitly, whether a juvenile
convicted of homicide is one of “those rare children whose
crimes reflect irreparable corruption.”
Montgomery,
577 U. S., at 209. Even if the juvenile’s crime reflects
“ ‘unfortunate yet transient
immaturity,’ ”
Miller, 567 U. S., at
479, he can be sentenced to die in prison.
This conclusion would come as a shock to the
Courts in
Miller and
Montgomery.
Miller’s essential holding is that “a lifetime
in prison is a disproportionate sentence for all but the rarest
children, those whose crimes reflect ‘irreparable
corruption.’ ”
Montgomery, 577 U. S.,
at 195 (quoting
Miller, 567 U. S., at 479–480).
Sentencing discretion is “necessary to separate those
juveniles who may be sentenced to life without parole from those
who may not,”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 210, but
it is far from sufficient. A sentencer must actually “make
th[e] judgment” that the juvenile in question is one of those
rare children for whom LWOP is a constitutionally permissible
sentence.
Miller, 567 U. S., at 480. The Court has thus
expressly rejected the notion that sentencing discretion, alone,
suffices: “Even if a court considers a child’s age
before sentencing him or her to a lifetime in prison, that sentence
still violates the Eighth Amendment for a child whose crime
reflects unfortunate yet transient immaturity.”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 208 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Today, however, the Court reduces
Miller
to a decision requiring “just a discretionary sentencing
procedure where youth [is] considered.”
Ante, at 11.
Such an abrupt break from precedent demands “special
justification.”
Ramos v.
Louisiana, 590
U. S. ___, ___ (2020) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring in part)
(slip op., at 6) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court
offers none. Instead, the Court attempts to circumvent
stare
decisis principles by claiming that “[t]he Court’s
decision today carefully follows both
Miller and
Montgomery.”
Ante, at 19. The Court is fooling
no one. Because I cannot countenance the Court’s abandonment
of
Miller and
Montgomery, I dissent.
I
Time and again, this Court has recognized that
“children are constitutionally different from adults for
purposes of sentencing.”
Miller, 567 U. S., at
471. In
Roper v.
Simmons,
543
U.S. 551 (2005), the Court held that the Eighth Amendment
forbids sentencing children to death because “[c]apital
punishment must be limited to those offenders . . . whose
extreme culpability makes them the most deserving of
execution.”
Id., at 568 (internal quotation marks
omitted). Juvenile offenders “cannot with reliability be
classified among the worst offenders” for several reasons.
Id., at 569. First, “as any parent knows,” and
as scientific and sociological studies have confirmed, juveniles
are less mature and responsible than adults, which “often
result[s] in impetuous and ill-considered actions and
decisions.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Second, juveniles are “more vulnerable or susceptible to
negative influences and outside pressures” and “have
less control . . . over their own environment.”
Ibid. Finally, “the character of a juvenile” is
“more transitory” than that of an adult.
Id., at
570. “[A]s individuals mature, the impetuousness and
recklessness that may dominate in younger years can subside.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). Weighed against
these “signature qualities of youth,” the penological
justifications for the death penalty collapse.
Id., at
570–571 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Next, in
Graham v.
Florida,
560 U.S.
48 (2010), this Court held that “[t]he Constitution
prohibits the imposition of a life without parole sentence on a
juvenile offender who did not commit homicide.”
Id.,
at 82. “To justify life without parole on the assumption that
the juvenile offender forever will be a danger to society requires
the sentencer to make a judgment that the juvenile is
incorrigible.”
Id., at 72. But “incorrigibility
is inconsistent with youth.”
Id., at 73 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Rather, “[m]aturity can lead to
that considered reflection which is the foundation for remorse,
renewal, and rehabilitation.”
Id., at 79.
Graham therefore insisted that sentencers not deprive
juvenile nonhomicide offenders “of the opportunity to achieve
maturity . . . and self-recognition of human worth
and potential” by sentencing them to die in prison.
Ibid.
In
Miller, this Court extended
Graham’s logic to juveniles convicted of homicide.
Miller recognized that “none of what [
Graham]
said about children . . . is crime-specific.” 567
U. S., at 473. Thus, taking
Graham as its
“foundation stone,”
Miller reiterated that
“the distinctive attributes of youth diminish the penological
justifications for imposing the harshest sentences on juvenile
offenders, even when they commit terrible crimes.” 567
U. S., at 470–471, n. 4, 472.
Miller
emphasized that LWOP is an “ ‘especially harsh
punishment for a juvenile.’ ”
Id.
,
at 475 (quoting
Graham, 560 U. S., at 70).
“Imprisoning an offender until he dies alters the remainder
of his life ‘by a forfeiture that is
irrevocable.’ ” 567 U. S., at 474–475
(quoting
Graham, 560 U. S., at 69). It is the
“denial of hope” itself.
Id., at 70 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Miller stopped short of prohibiting LWOP
for all juveniles convicted of homicide. Instead, it required
sentencers to distinguish “between the juvenile offender
whose crime reflects unfortunate and transient immaturity, and the
rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable
corruption.” 567 U. S., at 479–480 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Only those rare few in the latter
category are constitutionally eligible for LWOP under
Miller. As such, before imposing a sentence of LWOP, a
sentencer must actually “make that judgment,” and make
it correctly.
Id., at 480; see
Adams v.
Alabama, 578 U.S. 994, 999 (2016) (Sotomayor, J., concurring
in decision to grant, vacate, and remand).
Finally, in
Montgomery, this Court
confirmed the substantive nature of
Miller’s
prohibition on LWOP for most juveniles.
Montgomery held that
Miller applies retroactively in cases on collateral review
because it “rendered life without parole an unconstitutional
penalty for . . . juvenile offenders whose crimes reflect
the transient immaturity of youth.” 577 U. S., at 208.
Under the retroactivity doctrine in
Teague v.
Lane,
489 U.S.
288 (1989), a new constitutional rule is considered
“substantive,” and thus retroactive, if it
“alters the range of conduct or the class of persons that the
law punishes.”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 206
(internal quotation marks omitted); see
Teague, 489
U. S., at 311 (plurality opinion). A procedural rule, on the
other hand, “regulate[s] only the manner of determining the
defendant’s culpability.”
Montgomery, 577
U. S., at 206 (emphasis deleted; internal quotation marks
omitted). Such rules generally have not applied retroactively.
Id., at 198.
Montgomery recognized that
Miller
“has a procedural component,” in that “[a]
hearing where ‘youth and its attendant characteristics’
are considered as sentencing factors is necessary to separate those
juveniles who may be sentenced to life without parole from those
who may not.” 577 U. S., at 209–210 (quoting
Miller, 567 U. S., at 465). The Court made clear,
however, that “[t]he hearing does not replace . . .
Miller’s substantive holding that life without parole
is an excessive sentence for children whose crimes reflect
transient immaturity.” 577 U. S., at 210. Rather, the
hearing “gives effect” to
Miller’s
prohibition on LWOP by “enabl[ing] a prisoner to show that he
falls within the category of persons whom the law may no longer
punish [with LWOP].” 577 U. S., at 210. Thus, under
Miller, juvenile offenders “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.” 577 U. S., at
213.
II
A
Today, the Court distorts
Miller and
Montgomery beyond recognition. According to the majority,
“a State’s discretionary sentencing system is both
constitutionally necessary and constitutionally sufficient”
for a State to sentence a juvenile convicted of homicide to LWOP.
Ante, at 5. “[S]o long as the sentencer has discretion
to ‘consider the mitigating qualities of youth’ and
impose a lesser punishment,” any juvenile convicted of
homicide may be sentenced to LWOP, even if his crime reflects
transient immaturity.
Ante, at 7 (quoting
Miller, 567
U. S., at 476). It does not matter whether the sentencer
meaningfully considers youth: The Court assumes it will, see
ante, at 15, but ultimately, the mere existence of “a
discretionary sentencing procedure suffices,”
ante, at
19.
The Court rests its conclusion on
Montgomery’s modest statement that
“
Miller did not impose a formal factfinding
requirement,” and so “a finding of fact regarding a
child’s incorrigibility . . . is not
required.” 577 U. S., at 211. This statement is the
linchpin of the Court’s opinion. See
ante, at 2, 5, 7,
11–14. As the Court quietly admits in a footnote, however,
Montgomery went on to clarify that the fact “[t]hat
Miller did not impose a formal factfinding requirement does
not leave States free to sentence a child whose crime reflects
transient immaturity to life without parole. To the contrary,
Miller established that this punishment is disproportionate
under the Eighth Amendment.”
Montgomery, 577
U. S., at 211; see
ante, at 7–8, n. 2
(quoting the same).
Montgomery was equally explicit
elsewhere: “
Miller . . . did more than
require a sentencer to consider a juvenile offender’s youth
before imposing life without parole.” 577 U. S., at 208.
Sentencing discretion and “[a] hearing where ‘youth and
its attendant characteristics’ are considered as sentencing
factors” are necessary to “giv[e] effect to
Miller’s substantive holding that life without parole
is an excessive sentence for children whose crimes reflect
transient immaturity,” but they “d[o] not
replace” it.
Id., at 210. “Even if a court
considers a child’s age before sentencing him or her to a
lifetime in prison, that sentence still violates the Eighth
Amendment for a child whose crime reflects
‘ “unfortunate yet transient
immaturity.” ’ ”
Id., at 208. If
a juvenile offender’s crime “did not reflect
irreparable corruption,” his “hope for some years of
life outside prison walls must be restored.”
Id., at
213. The Court today never addresses
Montgomery’s
clear articulation of
Miller’s essential holding.
The lone statement on which the Court fixates
recognizes only that
Miller does not mandate a particular
procedure for considering a defendant’s youth or explaining
the sentencer’s decision.
Miller certainly does not
require sentencers to invoke any magic words. Using this procedural
flexibility, States have adopted different approaches to
Miller’s inquiry. For instance, in some States, the
prosecution must prove that a juvenile offender is permanently
incorrigible beyond a reasonable doubt; in others, the sentencing
judge must make a formal finding of irreparable corruption on the
record. See Brief for American Bar Association as
Amicus
Curiae 14–15, 19–21. As the Court correctly notes,
Miller does not require any one of “those particular
policy approaches.”
Ante, at 22.
What is necessary, however, is “that a
sentencer decide whether the juvenile offender before it is a child
whose crimes reflect transient immaturity or is one of those rare
children whose crimes reflect irreparable corruption.”
Tatum v.
Arizona, 580 U. S. ___, ___ (2016)
(Sotomayor, J., concurring in decision to grant, vacate, and
remand) (slip op., at 3) (internal quotation marks omitted). That
is all petitioner Brett Jones seeks. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 6
(“On the most fundamental level . . . what we need
is a sentencing judge who understands that permanent
incorrigibility is the dispositive rule and determines whether the
defendant fits within that rule. And there are any number of ways
that it could be done”); Brief for Petitioner 31 (challenging
the “failure to find
in any form whether Brett is
permanently incorrigible”). As Justice Thomas recognizes,
“there must be a determination as to whether Jones falls
within th[e] protected class” of children who are ineligible
for LWOP.
Ante, at 6 (opinion concurring in judgment).
Otherwise, the line between those who may be sentenced to LWOP and
those who may not “is more fanciful than real.”
Ibid.
The Court attempts to paper over its
mischaracterization of
Miller and
Montgomery in
several ways. First, it claims that
Miller barred only
“
mandatory life-without-parole sentences,” not
“
discretionary life-without-parole sentences.”
Ante, at 4.
Miller did prohibit mandatory LWOP
sentences for juveniles. See 567 U. S., at 465. To say that
Miller is limited to mandatory LWOP sentences, however, is
to ignore half of its reasoning.
Miller relied on “the
confluence of . . . two lines of precedent.”
Id., at 470. In one line of cases, the Court had interpreted
the Eighth Amendment to require that sentencers make
individualized, discretionary decisions when imposing the death
penalty. For instance, in
Lockett v.
Ohio,
438 U.S.
586 (1978), a plurality of the Court concluded that “the
sentencer, in all but the rarest kind of capital case, [can]not be
precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a
defendant’s character or record and any of the circumstances
of the offense.”
Id., at 604 (emphasis deleted;
footnote omitted).
Miller explained that mandatory LWOP
sentences violate “individualized sentencing cases”
like
Lockett because they “preclude a sentencer from
taking account of an offender’s age and the wealth of
characteristics and circumstances attendant to it.” 567
U. S., at 476–477.
The Court now pretends that
Miller’s reasoning ended there. It insists that all
Miller required was “a sentencing procedure similar to
the procedure that this Court has required for the individualized
consideration of mitigating circumstances in capital cases such as
Woodson v.
North Carolina,
428
U.S. 280, 303–305 (1976) (plurality opinion),
Lockett v.
Ohio,
438 U.S.
586, 597–609 (1978) (plurality opinion), and
Eddings v.
Oklahoma,
455 U.S.
104, 113–115 (1982).”
Ante, at 9. Reading
that conclusion, one would expect
Miller to have announced
that it rested solely on those cases.
Miller was clear, however, that it drew
primarily from a different line of precedent headed by
Roper
and
Graham, which “adopted categorical bans on
sentencing practices based on mismatches between the culpability of
a class of offenders and the severity of a penalty,”
regardless of the procedures used to impose the sentences.
Miller, 567 U. S., at 470. These cases set forth a
substantive proportionality principle that the
individualized-sentencing cases did not:
“[L]ife-without-parole sentences, like capital punishment,
may violate the Eighth Amendment when imposed on children”
because “the characteristics of youth, and the way they
weaken rationales for punishment, can render a life-without-parole
sentence disproportionate.”
Id., at 473.
Mandatory and discretionary sentencing schemes
alike can produce disproportionate sentences. Regardless of how it
is imposed, a juvenile death sentence is unconstitutional under
Roper, and a juvenile sentence of LWOP for a nonhomicide
offense is unconstitutional under
Graham. See
Roper,
543 U. S., at 575 (holding “that the death penalty
cannot be imposed upon juvenile offenders”);
Graham,
560 U. S., at 74 (drawing a “clear line” against
“life without parole for juvenile nonhomicide
offenders”). So, too, with
Miller: No set of
discretionary sentencing procedures can render a sentence of LWOP
constitutional for a juvenile whose crime reflects
“unfortunate yet transient immaturity.” 567 U. S.,
at 479 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Court claims that
Miller relied on
Roper and
Graham “for a simple proposition:
Youth matters in sentencing.”
Ante, at 10. That is
true, but the Court conflates two ways in which youth matters. When
Miller was decided, the Court’s
individualized-sentencing cases had already firmly established
“that a defendant’s youth is a relevant mitigating
circumstance that must be within the effective reach of a capital
sentencing jury.”
Johnson v.
Texas,
509 U.S.
350, 367 (1993); see also
Eddings v.
Oklahoma,
455 U.S.
104, 116 (1982) (requiring that sentencers consider “the
chronological age of a minor” and “the background and
mental and emotional development of a youthful defendant”).
The
Miller Court thus did not need to cite
Roper and
Graham as a separate “stran[d] of precedent,”
Miller, 567 U. S., at 470, for that long-recognized
proposition. It drew on
Roper and
Graham instead to
set a substantive limit on the imposition of LWOP on juvenile
offenders, even when they commit homicide. The Court today reverses
course and concludes that youth does not matter in this way.
Next, the Court exaggerates the meaning of two
statements from
Miller, arguing that it “mandated
‘only that a sentencer follow a certain
process,’ ” rather than
“ ‘categorically bar[ring] a penalty for a class
of offenders or type of crime[,] as, for example, we did in
Roper or
Graham.’ ”
Ante, at
7, 10 (quoting
Miller, 567 U. S., at 483). Again,
Montgomery already rejected this misinterpretation:
“
Miller, it is true, did not bar a punishment for all
juvenile offenders,” or all juvenile offenders convicted of
certain crimes, “as the Court did in
Roper or
Graham.” 577 U. S., at 209. “
Miller
did bar life without parole, however, for all but the rarest of
juvenile offenders, those whose crimes reflect permanent
incorrigibility.”
Ibid. To “separate those
juveniles who may be sentenced to life without parole from those
who may not,” as
Miller requires, sentencers must
follow a certain process: conducting a “hearing where
‘youth and its attendant characteristics’ are
considered.” 577 U. S., at 210. That process is not an
end in itself. Rather, it “gives effect to
Miller’s substantive holding that life without parole
is an excessive sentence for children whose crimes reflect
transient immaturity.”
Ibid.
Finally, the Court argues that
Miller
offered nothing more than a prediction that “a discretionary
sentencing procedure would help make life-without-parole
sentences relatively rare.”
Ante, at 13.
Miller’s substantive rule was not a prediction.
Rather,
Miller held that juvenile LWOP sentences must be
rare because it is only “the rare juvenile offender whose
crime reflects irreparable corruption.” 567 U. S., at
479–480 (internal quotation marks omitted). Simply put, there
are very few juveniles for whom the “ ‘signature
qualities’ ” of youth do not undermine the
penological justifications for LWOP.
Id., at 476. Youth is
“a time of immaturity, irresponsibility, impetuousness, and
recklessness,” and, almost invariably, those “qualities
are all transient.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks
and brackets omitted).
In any event, the data since
Miller prove
that sentencing discretion alone will not make LWOP a rare sentence
for juvenile offenders. Even after
Montgomery, Mississippi
courts require only that a sentencer consider youth-related factors
“in a non-arbitrary fashion” before imposing a sentence
of LWOP. See,
e.g., Miller v.
State, ___ So. 3d ___,
___, 2020 WL 2892820, *5 (Miss. App., June 2, 2020). Unbound by
Miller’s essential holding, more than a quarter of
Mississippi’s resentencings have resulted in the reimposition
of LWOP. See Brief for Juvenile Law Center et al. as
Amici
Curiae 20.[
1]
Pennsylvania, in contrast, has recognized that
“
Miller requires far more than mere consideration of
an offender’s age,” as “a life-without-parole
sentence imposed on a juvenile is illegal” unless “the
defendant will forever be incorrigible, without any hope for
rehabilitation.”
Commonwealth v.
Batts, 640 Pa.
401, 440, 444, 163 A.3d 410, 433, 435 (2017). Pennsylvania has
adopted a number of procedures to guide sentencing courts in
applying
Miller’s rule, including a presumption
against juvenile LWOP that the State must rebut through proof
beyond a reasonable doubt. 640 Pa., at 476, 163 A. 3d, at
454–455. Fewer than 2 percent of resentencings in
Pennsylvania have resulted in the reimposition of LWOP. See The
Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth, Tipping Point: A
Majority of States Abandon Life-Without-Parole Sentences for
Children 7 (2018) (Tipping Point).
These States’ experiences show that
juvenile LWOP sentences will not be rare simply by virtue of
sentencing discretion. Sentencers will not “necessarily
. . . consider the defendant’s youth,”
ante, at 15, and they certainly will not necessarily conduct
Miller’s essential inquiry. If sentencing discretion
is all that is required, far too many juvenile offenders will be
sentenced to die in prison.[
2]
B
The Court’s misreading of
Miller
and
Montgomery is egregious enough on its own. The Court
twists precedent even further, however, by distorting
Miller
in a way that cannot be reconciled with
Montgomery’s
holding that
Miller applies retroactively under the
Teague doctrine. See
ante, at 7 (opinion of Thomas,
J.). That doctrine divides new rules of constitutional law into two
categories: substantive and procedural. As noted above,
Montgomery held that
Miller applies retroactively
based solely on “
Teague’s first exception for
substantive rules.” 577 U. S., at 200. For
Montgomery to make any sense, then,
Miller must have
done more than mandate a certain procedure. Rather, it
“eliminated a State’s power to . . . impose a
given punishment.” 577 U. S., at 201.[
3]
Today, however, the Court transforms
Miller into a decision requiring only a “discretionary
sentencing procedure.”
Ante, at 19. At the same time,
the Court insists that it “does not disturb”
Montgomery’s holding “that
Miller applies
retroactively on collateral review.”
Ante, at 19. In
other words, the Court rewrites
Miller into a procedural
rule and, paradoxically, maintains that
Miller was
nevertheless “substantive for retroactivity purposes.”
Ante, at 11.
That explanation undoes
Teague’s
distinction between substantive and procedural rules. If a rule
that requires only a sentencing procedure is substantive for
retroactivity purposes, then this Court has improperly classified
numerous sentencing rules as procedural. To take one example, in
Mills v.
Maryland,
486 U.S.
367 (1988), this Court invalidated a capital sentencing
procedure requiring jurors to disregard mitigating factors that
were not found unanimously. That holding was procedural because it
altered only “the range of permissible methods for
determining whether a defendant’s conduct is punishable by
death.”
Schriro v.
Summerlin,
542 U.S.
348, 353 (2004). Under the Court’s logic today, however,
the rule in
Mills and other rules of sentencing procedure
should have applied retroactively, even though the Court has held
that they do not. See
Beard v.
Banks,
542 U.S.
406, 416–417 (2004) (holding that
Mills announced
a procedural rule);
Schriro, 542 U. S., at 354
(treating as procedural the rule set forth in
Ring v.
Arizona,
536 U.S.
584 (2002), that a jury, rather than a judge, must find
aggravating circumstances necessary for the imposition of the death
penalty). If future litigants make such arguments, it will be
because the Court’s contortion of
Miller and
Montgomery paves the way for them to do so.
C
Rather than read
Miller and
Montgomery fairly, the Court reprises Justice Scalia’s
dissenting view in
Montgomery that
Miller requires
only a “youth-protective procedure.” 577 U. S., at
225 (emphasis deleted). Justice Scalia’s view did not
prevail, however.
Montgomery’s interpretation of
Miller is binding precedent, just as
Miller itself
is.
Any doubts the Court may harbor about the merits
of those decisions do not justify overruling them. See
June
Medical Services L. L. C. v.
Russo, 591 U. S. ___,
___ (2020) (Roberts, C. J., concurring in judgment) (slip op.,
at 3) (“[F]or precedent to mean anything, the doctrine must
give way only to a rationale that goes beyond whether the case was
decided correctly”). As this Court has consistently
reiterated, “a departure from precedent demands special
justification.”
Gamble v.
United States, 587
U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op., at 11) (internal quotation
marks omitted); accord,
Kisor v.
Wilkie, 588
U. S. ___, ___–___ (2019) (slip op., at 25–26);
Kimble v.
Marvel Entertainment, LLC, 576 U.S. 446,
455–456 (2015).
The Court offers no such justification today.
Nor could it. The traditional
stare decisis factors include
the quality of the precedent’s reasoning, its consistency
with other decisions, legal and factual developments since the
precedent was decided, and its workability. See
Ramos, 590
U. S., at ___ (opinion of Kavanaugh, J.) (slip op., at 7).
None supports overturning
Miller or
Montgomery. As
explained above, those decisions are firmly rooted in two lines of
precedent and fundamental principles of proportionality.[
4] Subsequent legal and factual
developments have reinforced their reasoning. Fifteen state courts
of last resort, for instance, have recognized that
Miller
announced a substantive rule barring LWOP for any juvenile whose
crime does not reflect permanent incorrigibility. See Reply Brief
18, n. 6. Twenty States and the District of Columbia have
changed their policies to prohibit LWOP sentences for all juvenile
offenders, including a number of States that “had
discretionary sentencing schemes or a mixture of both mandatory and
discretionary sentences.” Brief for Former West Virginia
Delegate John Ellem et al. as
Amici Curiae in
Mathena
v.
Malvo, O. T. 2019, No. 18–217, pp. 34–35; S.
256, 133d Gen. Assembly (Ohio 2020); Va. Code Ann.
§53.1–165.1 (2020). Finally,
Miller and
Montgomery have not proved unworkable: To the contrary, they
have spurred reforms across the country while “avoid[ing]
intruding more than necessary upon the States’ sovereign
administration of their criminal justice systems.”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 211. Requiring sentencers to
make an explicit or implicit determination of permanent
incorrigibility before sentencing a juvenile offender to LWOP
imposes no costs that justify overturning precedent.
Instead of addressing these factors, the Court
simply rewrites
Miller and
Montgomery to say what the
Court now wishes they had said, and then denies that it has done
any such thing. See
ante, at 19. The Court knows what it is
doing. It admits as much. Rather than try to harmonize its decision
today with
Montgomery’s retroactivity holding, it
confesses in a footnote that its rewriting of precedent is
inconsistent with
Montgomery and basic retroactivity
principles. See
ante, at 11–12, n. 4. The
Court’s solution? It urges lower courts to simply ignore
Montgomery going forward.
Ante, at 11–12,
n. 4 (“[T]he Court’s retroactivity precedents that
both pre-date and post-date
Montgomery . . . and
not
Montgomery . . . must guide the determination
of whether rules other than
Miller are
substantive”).[
5] Instead
of “disturb[ing]”
Montgomery’s
retroactivity holding,
ante, at 12, n. 4, the Court
attempts to bury it.
How low this Court’s respect for
stare
decisis has sunk. Not long ago, that doctrine was recognized as
a pillar of the “ ‘rule of
law,’ ” critical to “keep the scale of
justice even and steady, and not liable to waver with every new
judge’s opinion.”
Ramos, 590 U. S., at
___–___ (opinion of Kavanaugh, J.) (slip op., at 1–2)
(internal quotation marks omitted). Given these weighty interests,
the Court “usually require[d] that a party ask for
overruling, or at least obtain[ed] briefing on the overruling
question,” and then “carefully evaluate[d] the
traditional
stare decisis factors.”
Barr v.
American Assn.
of Political Consultants, Inc., 591
U. S. ___, ___, n. 5 (2020) (slip op., at 9, n. 5). Now,
it seems, the Court is willing to overrule precedent without even
acknowledging it is doing so, much less providing any special
justification. It is hard to see how that approach is
“founded in the law rather than in the proclivities of
individuals.”
Ramos, 590 U. S., at ___ (opinion
of Kavanaugh, J.) (slip op., at 2) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
For present purposes, sentencers should hold
this Court to its word:
Miller and
Montgomery are
still good law.[
6] See
ante, at 19 (“Today’s decision does not overrule
Miller or
Montgomery”). Sentencers are thus
bound to continue applying those decisions faithfully. Thankfully,
many States have already implemented robust procedures to give
effect to
Miller and
Montgomery. In other States, the
responsibility falls squarely on individual sentencers to use their
discretion to “separate those juveniles who may be sentenced
to life without parole from those who may not.”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 210. Failing to do so
violates the Eighth Amendment.
III
Brett Jones, like all juvenile offenders
facing a sentence of LWOP, deserves an answer to
Miller’s essential question: whether his crime
demonstrates that he is permanently incorrigible. Ordinarily, an
appellate court should not pass on that question in the first
instance. But the Court today guarantees that the state sentencing
court will never have to give Jones an answer. It thus bears
acknowledging that, based on the evidence presented below, it is
hard to see how Jones is one of the rare juvenile offenders
“whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.”
Miller, 567 U. S., at 479–480 (internal quotation
marks omitted). In fact, many aspects of Jones’ crime seem to
epitomize “unfortunate yet transient immaturity.”
Id., at 479 (internal quotation marks omitted); see 2018 WL
10700848, *11 (Miss., Nov. 27, 2018) (Kitchens, P. J., dissenting)
(“Jones’s actions reflect [the hallmark] features [of
youth] at every turn”).[
7]
Jones killed his grandfather just 23 days after
Jones’ 15th birthday. App. 71. In his short life before the
murder, Jones was the victim of violence and neglect that he was
too young to escape. Jones’ biological father was an
alcoholic who physically abused Jones’ mother, knocking out
her teeth and breaking her nose on several occasions.
Id.,
at 71–72. The two separated when Jones was two years old.
Id., at 71. Jones’ mother then married Jones’
stepfather, who was also abusive, especially toward Jones. He beat
Jones with belts, switches, and a paddle labeled “The
Punisher.”
Id., at 39–40, 78, 81. He rarely
called Jones or his brother by their names, preferring cruel
epithets.
Id., at 77, 81, 101 (“[H]is favorite thing
to call them was little motherf***ers”). According to
Jones’ mother, Jones’ stepfather “hated Brett
more because Brett reminded him of [Jones’ biological
father].”
Id., at 78. According to Jones’
grandmother, he was simply “easier to hurt and beat.”
Id., at 39.
In 2004, after Jones came home late one day,
Jones’ stepfather flew into a rage and grabbed Jones by the
neck, preparing to beat him with a belt.
Id., at
128–129. This time, however, Jones fought back and told his
stepfather, “No, you’re not going to hit me ever
again.”
Id., at 80. Jones took a swing at his
stepfather and split open his ear.
Ibid. The police were
called, and Jones was arrested.[
8]
Ibid. Jones’ stepfather then threatened to
kick out Jones’ mother and brother if Jones did not move out.
Id., at 81. As a result, Jones’ grandparents picked
him up less than two months before the murder and brought him to
Mississippi.
Id., at 47.
When he moved, Jones lost access to medications
that he had been taking for mental health issues.
Id., at
38–39.[
9] When he was 11
or 12 years old, Jones began cutting himself so that he
“would not feel the panic and the hurt that was inside of
[his] head.”
Id., at 75. He later experienced
hallucinations and was prescribed antidepressant medications.
Id., at 92, 124. These medications were supposed to be
tapered off gradually.
Id., at 38–39. When Jones left
for Mississippi, however, they were abruptly cut off.
The murder was precipitated by a dispute over
Jones’ girlfriend. After Jones moved, his girlfriend ran away
from her home in Florida to stay at Jones’
grandparents’ home in secret. 938 So. 2d 312, 313 (Miss. App.
2006). On the day of the murder, Jones’ grandfather, Bertis
Jones, discovered that Jones’ girlfriend had been staying in
their home.
Ibid. He ordered her out.
Ibid. Later
that day, Jones was making a sandwich in the kitchen using a steak
knife.
Id., at 314. Jones said something disrespectful to
his grandfather, who started yelling.
Ibid. The two began
pushing each other, and Jones’ grandfather tried to hit him.
Ibid. Jones stabbed his grandfather with the steak knife.
Ibid. Jones’ grandfather came at Jones again, and the
fight continued.
Ibid. Jones ultimately stabbed his
grandfather eight times, grabbing a second knife when the first one
broke. 2018 WL 10700848, *7 (Kitchens, P. J., dissenting).
No one disputes that this was a terrible crime.
Miller, however, held that “the distinctive attributes
of youth diminish the penological justifications for imposing the
harshest sentences on juvenile offenders, even when they commit
terrible crimes.” 567 U. S., at 472. Jones’ crime
reflects these distinctive attributes: “That a teenager in
trouble for having been caught concealing his girlfriend at his
grandparents’ home would attempt to solve the problem by
resorting to violence dramatically epitomizes immaturity,
impetuosity, and failure to appreciate risks or
consequences.” 2018 WL 10700848, *11 (Kitchens, P. J.,
dissenting).
Jones then attempted to save his grandfather by
administering CPR. 938 So. 2d, at 314
. When that failed, he
clumsily tried to hide what he had done. 2018 WL 10700848, *11
(Kitchens, P. J., dissenting). He was spotted walking around in
plain sight, covered in blood, trembling and muttering to himself.
Ibid. When a neighbor questioned him, Jones told a feeble
lie, claiming that his grandfather had left and that the blood on
his clothes was “ ‘a joke.’ ” 938
So. 2d, at 314. Jones then met up with his girlfriend and attempted
to hitchhike, but not to make a getaway. Instead, he was trying to
go see his grandmother to tell her what had happened.
Id.,
at 315. The police stopped Jones, found that he was carrying a
pocket knife, and asked if it was the knife he
“ ‘did it with.’ ”
Ibid.
Jones replied, “ ‘No, I already got rid of
it.’ ”
Ibid. He then agreed to be
interviewed by three police detectives, “without invoking his
right to silence or his right to counsel and without a parent or
guardian present.” 2018 WL 10700848, *11 (Kitchens, P. J.,
dissenting). Thus, “Jones’s behavior in the immediate
aftermath of his tragic actions also demonstrated his fundamental
immaturity.”
Ibid.
At his resentencing hearing, Jones provided
evidence that not only is he capable of rehabilitation, but he had
in fact already matured significantly since his crime. In more than
five years in prison, Jones committed only two disciplinary
infractions. App. 134–135. While incarcerated, Jones earned
his GED and sought out work, becoming a “very good
employee.”
Id., at 106, 109, 153. Jones and his prison
unit manager often discussed the Bible, and in time, his unit
manager came to think of Jones “almost like [a] son.”
Id., at 107. Jones confided in him that Jones
“regretted” what he had done.
Id., at 112.
Jones’ grandmother (Bertis Jones’
widow) testified at Jones’ resentencing hearing and submitted
an
amicus brief to this Court. She remains “steadfast
in her belief that Brett is not and never was irreparably
corrupt.” Brief for Madge Jones et al. as
Amici
Curiae 4. She speaks with Jones weekly, encouraging him as he
takes college courses and serves in the prison ministry.
Ibid. Jones’ younger brother, Marty, and his other
family members have also stayed by his side.
This significant body of evidence does not
excuse Jones’ crime. It does mean, however, that under
Miller and
Montgomery, there is a strong likelihood
that Jones is constitutionally ineligible for LWOP. His crime,
while terrible, appears to have been the product of
“unfortunate yet transient immaturity.”
Miller,
567 U. S., at 479 (internal quotation marks omitted). Notably,
the State called no witnesses and offered no evidence at the
resentencing hearing to rebut Jones’ proof that his crime
reflected the “recklessness” and
“impulsivity” characteristic of juveniles.
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 207 (internal quotation marks
omitted); see App. 23, 136.
In resentencing Jones to LWOP, the sentencing
court failed to apply
Miller properly. Instead, it followed
the instructions of the Mississippi Supreme Court, which held that
“
Miller rendered [Mississippi’s] sentencing
scheme unconstitutional if, and only if, the sentencing authority
fails to take into account characteristics and circumstances unique
to juveniles.” 122 So. 3d 698, 702 (2013). Thus, the
sentencing court simply considered the “
Miller
factors” as part of the “mitigating and the aggravating
circumstances.” App. 149. It never addressed
Miller’s central inquiry: whether Jones is one of the
rare juveniles whose crimes reflect irreparable corruption. 567
U. S., at 479–480. Because the sentencing court failed
to ask and answer this critical question, Jones’ sentence
should not stand.
IV
It is important not to lose sight of what is
at stake in this case. “The Eighth Amendment’s
prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment guarantees individuals
the right not to be subjected to excessive sanctions.”
Miller, 567 U. S., at 469 (internal quotation marks
omitted). In
Roper,
Graham,
Miller, and
Montgomery, the Court recognized that this guarantee has
special significance for children. The Eighth Amendment does not
excuse children’s crimes, nor does it shield them from all
punishment. It does, however, demand that most children be spared
from punishments that “giv[e] no chance for fulfillment
outside prison walls, no chance for reconciliation with society, no
hope.”
Graham, 560 U. S., at 79.
Jones and other juvenile offenders like him seek
only the possibility of parole. Not the certainty of release, but
the opportunity, at some point in their lives, to show a parole
board all they have done to rehabilitate themselves and to ask for
a second chance. Jones recognizes that the parole board may
ultimately decide he must spend his entire life behind bars. He
simply requests that the State not “mak[e] the judgment at
the outset that [he] never will be fit to reenter society.”
Id., at 75. The Eighth Amendment requires that most juvenile
offenders be given this small “hope for some years of life
outside prison walls.”
Montgomery, 577 U. S., at
213.[
10]
At his resentencing hearing, Jones told the
court, “I’m not the same person I was when I was 15.
. . . I’ve become a pretty decent person in life.
And I’ve pretty much taken every avenue that I could possibly
take in prison to rehabilitate myself.” App. 152.
“Minors do have the ability to change,” he reflected.
Ibid. He noted in closing, “If you decide to send me
back without the possibility of parole, I will still do exactly
what I’ve been doing for ten years. But all I can do is ask
you . . . please give me just one chance to show the
world, man, like, I can be somebody. I’ve done everything I
could over the past ten years to be somebody. . . .
I can’t change what was already done. I can just try to show
. . . I’ve become a grown man.”
Id.,
at 153. Today, Jones is 31. His time spent in prison has now
eclipsed the childhood he had outside of it.
Jones should know that, despite the
Court’s decision today, what he does in life matters. So,
too, do the efforts of the almost 1,500 other juvenile offenders
like Jones who are serving LWOP sentences. Of course, nothing can
repair the damage their crimes caused. But that is not the
question. The question is whether the State, at some point, must
consider whether a juvenile offender has demonstrated maturity and
rehabilitation sufficient to merit a chance at life beyond the
prison in which he has grown up. See
Graham, 560 U. S.,
at 79. For most, the answer is yes.