––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
http://www.legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted February 21, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Juvenile lifers get support from teen students
By Ed White
Associated Press
DETROIT (AP) -- Hundreds of students from a Roman Catholic school are asking the Michigan Supreme Court to give some prisoners a chance at release, saying they "know, live and acknowledge" how teenagers commit impulsive acts.
The court this week accepted a legal brief signed by 450 of 530 students from Father Gabriel Richard High School in Ann Arbor. It comes two weeks before the court hears arguments in cases involving prisoners who are serving mandatory no-parole sentences for murder committed when they were teens.
The court will decide whether more than 300 inmates should get new sentences that could someday lead to their parole. The issue is whether to apply retroactively a landmark ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, which says people under 18 have a right to a hearing that explores their background, education, influences and anything else that may have preceded the crime.
"How is it just to continue a practice in Michigan that has been ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court?" the students said in a brief drafted mostly by junior Matilyn Sarosi and filed by Grand Rapids attorneys Jon Muth and Patrick Jaicomo.
The students said all people have the potential to express sorrow for their sins and be rehabilitated. They quoted prisoner Damion Todd, who said he hadn't lived on "Earth long enough" to understand the impact of his actions.
"We know, live and acknowledge this impulsiveness and rashness in our daily lives, and know it is prevalent amidst our peers. ... It is illogical to give the harshest sentence, a sentence that does not allow redemption, to the ones who may have the greatest capacity for redemption itself," the students said.
Supreme Court spokeswoman Marcia McBrien said it's unusual to get a brief from teenagers.
She said outside voices "can bring a special expertise or perspective that enriches the court's decision-making."
Arguments are scheduled for March 6. Attorney General Bill Schuette is urging the court to deny any retroactive benefit to prisoners. Separately, state lawmakers recently passed new sentencing rules that follow the U.S. Supreme Court decision, but they wouldn't apply to current inmates.
Published: Fri, Feb 21, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Annual Dinner & Meeting
- FORCE Team arrests six in prolific auto theft ring
- Michigan allocates $12 million to support community-based organizations in advancing environmental and climate justice
- Oakland County and SMART launch pilot program providing free transit for veterans and dependents
- Supreme Court sides with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
headlines National
- More lawyers—and clients—want to learn about sustainable development practices
- Top artificial intelligence insurance tips for lawyers
- Lawyer charged with illegally transmitting Michigan data after 2020 election
- Viral video shows former Rikers Island inmate as she learns she passed bar exam on first try
- How Sullivan & Cromwell is scrutinizing potential new hires after campus protests
- No separate hearing required when police seize cars loaned to drivers accused of drug crimes, SCOTUS rules