Norman Brown v. Anne Precythe, No. 19-3019 (8th Cir. 2022)
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A class of inmates who were juvenile offenders sued the state officials responsible for administering the parole process. The inmates alleged that the policies and practices of the parole officials violated their rights to be free from cruel and unusual punishment and to due process of law under the federal and Missouri constitutions. The district court determined that the parole review practices were constitutionally deficient, and ordered the State to implement an elaborate remedial plan.
The State appealed, and the Eighth Circuit concluded that there is no constitutional violation. The court explained that the Supreme Court’s juvenile-specific jurisprudence under the Eighth Amendment does not warrant declaring a constitutional violation and imposing on the State the elaborate set of parole procedures endorsed by the district court. A requirement to allow “some meaningful opportunity” for release, even if applicable to these juvenile homicide offenders, is satisfied here. The juvenile homicide offenders in Missouri received more process than offenders under the regular parole process: they presented more documentary evidence than adult offenders, received longer hearings than the average parole hearing, and were entitled to consideration of statutory factors that apply only to juveniles who were formerly sentenced to life without parole.
Court Description: [Colloton, Author, for the Court En Banc] Prisoner case - Civil rights. The district court erred in determining the State of Missouri's parole review practices concerning juvenile homicide offenders were constitutionally deficient; the parole-review regime for juvenile homicide offenders complies with the Supreme Court's dictates in Miller and Montgomery, and did not violate the plaintiffs' Eighth Amendment rights against cruel and unusual punishment; the parole regime is not a sham, and it provides the offenders, if it is required for offenders in their status, with "some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation; the plaintiffs had no liberty interest in being released from prison before expiration of their sentences and their due process claim must fail. Judge Kelly, dissenting, joined by Chief Judge Smith and Judge Arnold.
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