Louisiana reluctantly wrestles with cases of juvenile lifers
It took Lue Sullivan just a few minutes to run home for the shotgun he used to kill a man — leaving him with more than 43 years in prison to regret it.
“I was too big for my britches,” says Sullivan, who was 17 when he followed his 14-year-old common-law wife to the Jefferson Parish home of a rival and shot him through the door. “I’d been drinking and … he told me that he’d been coming to my house every morning when I got to work and seeing my woman.”
Sullivan, now 61, was released from prison in December after his life-without-parole sentence was commuted by Gov. John Bel Edwards. But as Louisiana officials deal with a mandate to resentence some 300 inmates who, like Sullivan, got life without parole for murders committed as minors, it’s uncertain how many others will be granted that freedom and, if so, how soon.
Decisions last year by the U.S. and Louisiana supreme courts resulted in an order that these inmates be resentenced. In June, state lawmakers approved legislation that would make juvenile lifers eligible for parole after 25 years in prison, unless a prosecutor intervenes.
Over the last year, at least 67 juvenile lifers have been resentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole, according to advocacy group the Louisiana Center for Children’s Rights. A small number has received new no-parole terms, and four, including Sullivan, have been released.
State officials initially rebuffed efforts to address these cases, saying a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ban on mandatory no-parole terms for juvenile homicide offenders didn’t apply to those already in prison.
That argument fell apart when the nation’s top court took up the case of Henry Montgomery, in prison since 1963 for fatally shooting an East Baton Rouge sheriff’s deputy. The court said its ban was retroactive for the more than 2,000 offenders serving such sentences nationwide. Life without parole is still allowed in rare cases, but the offender’s age and potential to change must be considered.
Montgomery, now 71, was resentenced in June to life with the possibility of parole and is among several dozen juvenile lifers in the state eligible for hearings before the Board of Pardons and Parole. Reviews are likely to move slowly, to ensure inmates have completed requirements that include obtaining a GED certificate and to give officials time to study the cases, said Keith Nordyke, an attorney who’s been representing lifers before the board.
“This is not going to be a process where there will be a floodgate of people coming out. It’s going to be drip, drip, drip,” he said. “It’s going to be a carefully studied release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.”
Louisiana has 303 people who were sentenced to mandatory life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles, according to the Department of Public Safety and Corrections. All were convicted of first- or second-degree murder.
Many prosecutors and judges moved tentatively to deal with resentencings while questions hung over how they should be handled and whether the law would change. Lawmakers failed in 2016 to pass a measure that would have made juvenile lifers eligible for parole after 30 years. The state’s district attorneys have opposed efforts to eliminate life without parole for juvenile offenders.
“Let’s find out who is the worst of the worst and meet with our victims’ families and make a decision of whether for public safety purposes, this former juvenile offender should be able to have that benefit” of parole, said Hillar Moore III, district attorney for East Baton Rouge Parish.
Some youth advocates say the new state law, effective Aug. 1, doesn’t do enough to curtail no-parole sentences for juveniles, because it gives district attorneys the option of petitioning judges for the sentence.
“This legislation enables the state to stay on its misguided course, which in all likelihood will lead to further litigation and a directive to once again revisit our legislation,” Aaron Clark-Rizzio of the Louisiana Center for Children’s Rights said in a statement.
His group says that by its count, 18 of 23 juvenile offenders tried in the state for murder since the Supreme Court’s ruling five years ago have been sentenced to life without parole.
State Sen. Dan Claitor, who sponsored the new state measure, said time will show whether prosecutors are sparing in seeking life without parole. “The numbers tell a tale, and we’ll find out,” he said.
Under the new law, juvenile offenders convicted of murder since the Supreme Court’s 2012 ruling will not get a second hearing. But if they were sentenced to prison with the possibility of parole originally, they will now be eligible for release after 25 years. Under the law, only juvenile offenders newly convicted of first-degree murder can be sentenced to life without parole. All those newly convicted of second-degree murder will be eligible for eventual release.
When Montgomery appeared in court this year, Becky Wilson, the daughter of the deputy he killed, told the judge her father’s death had upended her childhood and her family’s life for decades.
“Your honor, I’m sorry. I’m sorry,” Montgomery said. “I’m just sorry for this whole situation.”
Prosecutors noted arguments for and against his release. He had killed a law enforcement officer, but his prison record was clean. He’d started a boxing club for inmates and had a long work record.
“This is not an easy thing for me to do . because one man is dead and the family is still living through the consequences,” Judge Richard Anderson said in resentencing Montgomery. “But the law is the law.”
In this February 1964 photo, Henry Montgomery, flanked by two deputies, awaits the verdict in his trial for the murder of Deputy Sheriff Charles H. Hurt in Louisiana. Montgomery, a 71-year-old prisoner who was 17 when he killed a sheriff’s deputy, learned Wednesday, June 21, 2017, that he will get a chance at parole, 54 years after the killing and a year after winning his appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court. (John Boss/The Advocate via AP)