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Tuesday, February 07, 2017

FEDERAL COURT CLEARS WAY FOR JUVENILE LIFERS' CHALLENGE TO MARYLAND PAROLE SYSTEM


BALTIMORE, MD - In a groundbreaking decision, a federal judge ruled Friday that an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Maryland lawsuit on behalf of individuals serving life sentences for offenses committed as youth must be permitted to move forward, rejecting the State's motion to dismiss the case.

"For years, lifers and their families have tried to get the state to live up to the promise of second chances that a parole-eligible sentence is intended to provide," said ACLU Staff Attorney Sonia Kumar. "This ruling is a real step forward in that struggle."

The ACLU represents the Maryland Restorative Justice Initiative, a prisoners' rights organization that includes juvenile lifers and their families among its members, as well as three individuals subjected to mandatory life sentences for offenses committed decades ago when they were teens. The lawsuit, MRJI v. Hogan, alleges that no juvenile lifer has been paroled in more than two decades as a result of Maryland's unconstitutional system.


"Judge Hollander's decision to allow this lawsuit to move forward on behalf of Marylanders serving life after being sentenced as juveniles is very important," said Walter Lomax, director of the Maryland Restorative Justice Initiative. "We look forward to the chance to present our full case in court, and hope to ultimately remove politics from the process, so that those sentenced as youth have a real chance at release."

Although the ACLU's plaintiffs are serving "life with parole" sentences, the lawsuit argues that, in practice, Maryland never paroles lifers, instead operating a system of executive clemency in which commutation of life sentences is extraordinarily rare, in part because Maryland is one of only three states in the country that gives the Governor exclusive authority and unfettered discretion to reject any lifer's application for parole. In this way, Maryland converts "life with parole" sentences into de facto "life without parole" sentences that constitute cruel and unusual punishment for individuals sentenced as youth under Supreme Court precedent.

At a January 4 hearing, the State urged the Court to dismiss the case, arguing it was without legal merit. Family members of individuals serving parole-eligible sentences filled the courtroom beyond capacity to witness the arguments and support the plaintiffs.

Within just weeks of the hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Ellen Lipton Hollander rejected the State's effort to derail the challenge. In a lengthy opinion tracing the history of Maryland's parole scheme and the plaintiffs' allegations, Judge Hollander observed:

"A parole procedure does little in the way of actually making parole a possibility when the decision of whether to commute a sentence is entirely up to [the governor's] discretion and the political tides of the day. And, a system of executive clemency, which lacks governing standards, does not constitute a meaningful opportunity to obtain release for Juvenile Offenders. ..."
 

In ruling that the case can go forward, the judge held that "[a]t this stage of the proceedings, plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that Maryland's parole system operates as a system of executive clemency, in which opportunities for release are ‘remote,' rather than a true parole scheme in which opportunities for release are ‘meaningful and ‘realistic,' as required by [the Supreme Court.]"

The plaintiffs are represented by pro bono attorney Barry Fleishman of the Washington, D.C. office of Shapiro, Lifschitz & Schram, as well as ACLU of Maryland Legal Director Deborah Jeon and Staff Attorney Sonia Kumar.

3 comments:

  1. Kids make mistakes, mainly because of lack of maturity. The government agrees: they can't drink until 21, can't vote until 18, can't drive til 17. If we are going to treat kids as adults for crimes, change the voting and drinking age to the same as the age that qualifies them for capital offenses. Insurance companies agree, too. Rates are sky high until 25 because young people make poor choices.
    I'm not saying they shouldn't be punished, but my logic is sound. A life sentence does what? Our penal system is seriously f'd up. Very few come out 'reformed'.

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  2. Gee, must have been serious case of jaywalking to draw a life sentence. Let's hear from the victims (probably killed in the process) and their families.

    Do the crime; do the time.

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  3. Sorry but normal kids dont go killing people .. murdering other people.. thats not just an oops moment. teens that kill are dangerous and shouldnt be allowed back out to do do that again, especially when given a life sentence. they gave the sentence of life for a reason.. they are dangerous and already took a life. Let me guess this comes from these prison pen pals or women who marry a man they never knew outside of prison.. if you dont have enough common sense to meet a man outside of prison.. please dont try and change laws.. please and thanks

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