SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
492 U.S. 361
These two consolidated cases
require us to decide whether the imposition of capital punishment
on an individual for a [p365] crime
committed at 16 or 17 years of age constitutes cruel and unusual
punishment under the Eighth Amendment.
"[H]e said, I had to shoot
her, [she] lived next door to me and she would recognize me. . .
. I guess we could have tied her up or something or beat [her
up] . . . and tell her if she tells, we would kill her. . . .
Then after he said that, he started laughing."
734 S.W.2d 781, 788 (Ky.
1987).
After Stanford's arrest, a
Kentucky juvenile court conducted hearings to determine whether he
should be transferred for trial as an adult under Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann.
§208.170 (Michie 1982). That statute provided that juvenile court
jurisdiction could be waived and an offender tried as an adult if
he was either charged with a Class A felony or capital crime, or
was over 16 years of age and charged with a felony. Stressing the
seriousness of petitioner's offenses and the unsuccessful attempts
of the juvenile system to treat him for numerous instances of past
delinquency, the juvenile court found certification for trial as
an adult to be in the best interest of petitioner and the
community. [p366]
age and the possibility
that he might be rehabilitated were mitigating factors
appropriately left to the consideration of the jury that tried
him.
Ibid.
The second case before us
today, No. 87-6026, involves the stabbing death of Nancy Allen, a
26-year-old mother of two who was working behind the sales counter
of the convenience store she and David Allen owned and operated in
Avondale, Missouri. Petitioner Heath Wilkins committed the murder
on July 27, 1985, when he was approximately 16 years and 6 months
of age. The record reflects that Wilkins' plan was to rob the
store and murder "whoever was behind the counter" because "a dead
person can't talk." While Wilkins' accomplice, Patrick Stevens,
held Allen, Wilkins stabbed her, causing her to fall to the floor.
When Stevens had trouble operating the cash register, Allen spoke
up to assist him, leading Wilkins to stab her three more times in
her chest. Two of these wounds penetrated the victim's heart. When
Allen began to beg for her life, Wilkins stabbed her four more
times in the neck, opening her carotid artery. After helping
themselves to liquor, cigarettes, rolling papers, and
approximately $450 in cash and checks, Wilkins and Stevens left
Allen to die on the floor.
Wilkins was charged with first-degree
murder, armed criminal action, and carrying a concealed weapon.
After the court found him competent, petitioner entered guilty
pleas to all charges. A punishment hearing was held, at which both
the State and petitioner himself urged imposition of the death
sentence. Evidence at the hearing revealed that petitioner had
been in and out of juvenile facilities since the age of eight for
various acts of burglary, theft, and arson, had attempted to kill
his mother by putting insecticide into Tylenol capsules, and had
killed several animals in his neighborhood. Although psychiatric
testimony indicated that Wilkins had "personality disorders," the
witnesses agreed that Wilkins was aware of his actions and could
distinguish right from wrong.
Determining that the death
penalty was appropriate, the trial court entered the following
order:
1. The murder in the first
degree was committed while the defendant was engaged in the
perpetration of the felony of robbery, and
2. The murder in the first
degree involved depravity of mind and that, as a result thereof,
it was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman.
App. in No. 876026, p. 77.
[p368] On mandatory review of Wilkins'
death sentence, the Supreme Court of Missouri affirmed, rejecting
the argument that the punishment violated the Eighth Amendment.
736 S.W.2d 409 (1987).
We granted certiorari in these
cases, 488 U.S. 887 (1988) and 487 U.S. 1233 (1988), to decide
whether the Eighth Amendment precludes the death penalty for
individuals who commit crimes at 16 or 17 years of age.
II
The thrust of both Wilkins'
and Stanford's arguments is that imposition of the death penalty
on those who were juveniles when they committed their crimes falls
within the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against "cruel and
unusual punishments." Wilkins would have us define juveniles as
individuals 16 years of age and under; Stanford would draw the
line at 17.
Thus, petitioners are left to
argue that their punishment is contrary to the "evolving standards
of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society," Trop
v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86, 101 (1958) (plurality opinion). They
are correct in asserting that this Court has "not confined the
prohibition embodied in the Eighth Amendment to ‘barbarous'
methods that were generally outlawed in the 18th century," but
instead has interpreted the Amendment "in a flexible and dynamic
manner." Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 171 (1976) (opinion
of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.). In determining what
standards have "evolved," however, we have looked not to our own
conceptions of decency, but to those of modern American society as
a whole.
[n1] As we have said,
Eighth Amendment judgments
should not be, or appear to be, merely the subjective views of
individual Justices; judgment should be informed by objective
factors to the maximum possible extent.
III
Since a majority of the States
that permit capital punishment authorize it for crimes committed
at age 16 or above,
[n3] petitioners' cases are more analogous to
Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137 (1987), than Coker, Enmund,
Ford, and Solem. In Tison, which upheld
Arizona's imposition of the death penalty for major participation
in a felony with reckless indifference to human life, we noted
that only 11 of those jurisdictions [p372]
imposing capital punishment rejected its use in such circumstances.
Id. at 154. As we noted earlier, here the number is 15 for
offenders under 17, and 12 for offenders under 18. We think the
same conclusion as in Tison is required in this case.
IV
A
V
We also reject petitioners'
argument that we should invalidate capital punishment of 16- and
17-year-old offenders on the ground that it fails to serve the
legitimate goals of penology. According to petitioners, it fails
to deter because juveniles, possessing less developed cognitive
skills than adults, are less likely to fear death; and it fails to
exact just retribution because juveniles, being less mature and
responsible, are also less morally blameworthy. In support of
these claims, petitioners and their supporting amici
marshall an array of [p378]
socioscientific evidence concerning the psychological and
emotional development of 16- and 17-year-olds.
We reject the dissent's
contention that our approach, by "largely return[ing] the task of
defining the contours of Eighth Amendment protection to political
majorities," leaves "‘[c]onstitutional doctrine [to] be formulated
by the acts of those institutions which the Constitution is
supposed to limit,'" post at 391, 392 (citation omitted).
When this Court [p379] cast loose from
the historical moorings consisting of the original application of
the Eighth Amendment, it did not embark rudderless upon a wide-open
sea. Rather, it limited the Amendment's extension to those
practices contrary to the "evolving standards of decency
that mark the progress of a maturing society." Trop v.
Dulles, 356 U.S. at 101 (plurality opinion) (emphasis added).
It has never been thought that this was a shorthand reference to
the preferences of a majority of this Court. By reaching a
decision supported neither by constitutional text nor by the
demonstrable current standards of our citizens, the dissent
displays a failure to appreciate that "those institutions which
the Constitution is supposed to limit" include the Court itself.
To say, as the dissent says, that "‘it is for us ultimately
to judge whether the Eighth Amendment permits imposition of the
death penalty,'" post at 391 (emphasis added), quoting
Enmund v. Florida, 458 U.S. at 797 -- and to mean that as the
dissent means it, i.e., that it is for us to judge,
not on the basis of what we perceive the Eighth Amendment
originally prohibited, or on the basis of what we perceive the
society through its democratic processes now overwhelmingly
disapproves, but on the basis of what we think "proportionate" and
"measurably contributory to acceptable goals of punishment" -- to
say and mean that, is to replace judges of the law with a
committee of philosopher-kings.
* * * *
We discern neither a
historical nor a modern societal consensus forbidding the
imposition of capital punishment on any person who murders at 16
or 17 years of age. Accordingly, we conclude that such punishment
does not offend the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel
and unusual punishment.
The judgments of the Supreme
Court of Kentucky and the Supreme Court of Missouri are therefore
Affirmed.
[t]he practices of other
nations, particularly other democracies, can be relevant to
determining whether a practice uniform among our people is not
merely an historical accident, but rather so "implicit in the
concept of ordered liberty" that it occupies a place not merely
in our mores, but, text permitting, in our Constitution as well,
Thompson v. Oklahoma,
487 U.S. 815, 868-869, n. 4 (1988) (SCALIA, J., dissenting),
quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo,
J.), they cannot serve to establish the first Eighth Amendment
prerequisite, that the practice is accepted among our people.
(3) If the court
determines that probable cause exists [to believe that a person
16 years old or older committed a felony or that a person under
16 years of age committed a Class A felony or a capital offense],
it shall then determine if it is in the best interest of the
child and the community to order such a transfer based upon the
seriousness of the alleged offense; whether the offense was
against person or property, with greater weight being given to
offenses against persons; the maturity of the child as
determined by his environment; the child's prior record; and the
prospects for adequate protection of the public and the
likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation of the child by the use
of procedures, services, and facilities currently available to
the juvenile justice system.
Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 208.170 (Michie
1982) (repealed effective July 15, 1984).
The Missouri statute under
which Wilkins was certified provides that, in determining whether
to transfer a juvenile the court must consider:
(1) The seriousness of the
offense alleged and whether the protection of the community
requires transfer to the court of general jurisdiction;
(2) Whether the offense
alleged involved viciousness, force and violence;
(3) Whether the offense
alleged was against persons or property with greater weight
being given to the offense against persons, especially if
personal injury resulted;
(4) Whether the offense
alleged is a part of a repetitive pattern of offenses which
indicates that the child may be beyond rehabilitation under the
juvenile code;
(5) The record and history
of the child, including experience with the juvenile justice
system, other courts, supervision, commitments to juvenile
institutions and other placements;
(6) The sophistication and
maturity of the child as determined by consideration of his home
and environmental situation, emotional condition and pattern of
living;
(7) The program and
facilities available to the juvenile court in considering
disposition; and
(8) Whether or not the
child can benefit from the treatment or rehabilitative programs
available to the juvenile court.
Mo.Rev.Stat. §211.071 (6)
(1986).
the Eighth Amendment
requires that a person who lacks that full degree of
responsibility for his or her actions associated with adulthood
not be sentenced to death,
and this absolute cannot be
assured if
a juvenile offender's level
of responsibility [is] taken into account only along with a host
of other factors that the court or jury may decide outweigh that
want of responsibility.
Post at 397. But it is equally true that
individualized consideration will not absolutely assure immunity
from the death penalty to the nonjuvenile who happens to be
immature. If individualized consideration is constitutionally
inadequate, then the only logical conclusion is that everyone is
exempt from the death penalty.
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