Beach v. State
Annotate this CaseAfter a jury trial in 1984, Defendant was convicted of deliberate homicide for a crime committed when Defendant was seventeen. The district court imposed the maximum sentence of one hundred years’ imprisonment without the possibility of parole, a sentence that was within the discretion of the district court and that was not mandated by law. Defendant attempted in numerous filings to attack his conviction and sentence, to no avail. Defendant now petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, challenging the constitutionality of his sentence under Miller v. Alabama. The Supreme Court denied the habeas petition, holding that the Miller sentencing consideration rule requiring a sentencing judge to consider a juvenile offender’s age when sentencing that offender to life without parole is not retroactive to Defendant’s claim on collateral review.
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