In January 2016, the Supreme Court ruled that Henry
Montgomery’s life prison sentence was unconstitutional and that he had the
right to seek release from Louisiana’s most notorious prison, Angola, reported Mother Jones. But two
years later, the 71-year-old Montgomery is still there.
A Baton Rouge jury convicted Montgomery of murder and
sentenced him to life in prison for shooting a deputy sheriff, Charles Hurt, in
1963, when he had just turned 17. In 2012, the Supreme Court ruled in Miller
v. Alabama that such mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles
were unconstitutional. Montgomery petitioned the court with the help of a
jailhouse lawyer, asking it to apply the Miller decision retroactively to
people who’d received such sentences before 2012. The court ruled in his favor.
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that “prisoners like
Montgomery 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.”
The decision has prompted many states to actively reduce the
number of people sentenced to life as juveniles through criminal justice reform
legislation and court resentencing hearings. When the court handed down its
decision in 2016, 2,600 people nationally were serving life sentences without
parole that were issued when they were minors. Today, that number has
been cut in half.
Montgomery hasn’t been so lucky. Despite being housed in a
famously brutal prison for half a century, he has been a model prisoner, the
court noted. But the local prosecutor has fought his attempts at release,
arguing that Montgomery should simply be resentenced to life without parole.
Hurt’s children and grandchildren have also opposed Montgomery’s release.
This year, a state judge finally granted Montgomery the
right to a parole hearing, which was scheduled to take place last month. But on
the day of the hearing, the board voted
to postpone it while the board and the state attorney general fight
over how many board members need to be present to hear the case under a new
state law. The board said it hoped to meet again in 60 days, but no hearing has
been scheduled.
As Marsha Levick, the chief counsel for the Juvenile Law
Center who assisted with Montgomery’s Supreme Court case, pointed out to me
this summer, Montgomery “is an old man.” Every day he sits in Angola makes it
more likely that he’s going to die there, as nearly
all Angola inmates do, despite having prevailed at the Supreme Court. “The
idea that there is any value for anyone to be gained by keeping him in prison
is to me completely unfathomable,” Levick said. “It’s just throwing money away
to house him in an environment that he has more than earned the right to be let
out of.”
To read more CLICK HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment