Donate
Policy Brief

Juvenile Life Without Parole: An Overview

The United States stands alone as the only nation that sentences people to life without parole for crimes committed before turning 18. This briefing paper reviews the Supreme Court precedents that limit the use of juvenile life without parole (JLWOP) and the challenges that remain to its abolition.

Related to: Youth Justice, Sentencing Reform

The momentum to protect youth rights in the criminal legal system is clear. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia have banned life sentences without the possibility of parole for people under 18; in nine additional states, no one is serving life without parole for offenses committed before age 18.

The Sentencing Project, in its national survey of life and virtual life sentences in the United States found 1,465 people serving JLWOP sentences at the start of 2020. This number reflects a 38% drop in the population of people serving JLWOP since our 2016 count and a 44% drop since the peak count of JLWOP figures in 2012.1 This count continues to decline as more states eliminate JLWOP.

In five decisions – Roper v. Simmons (2005), Graham v. Florida (2010), Miller v. Alabama (2012), Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016), and Jones v. Mississippi (2021) –the Supreme Court of the United States establishes and upholds the fact that “children are constitutionally different from adults in their levels of culpability”2 when it comes to sentencing. Differences in maturity and accountability informs the protections of the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment that limits sentencing a child to die in prison.

Research on adolescent brain development confirms the commonsense understanding that children are different from adults in ways that are critical to identifying age-appropriate criminal sentences. This understanding – Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy called it what “any parent knows”3 – was central to the recent Supreme Court decisions excluding people under 18 from the harshest sentencing practices.

Starting in 2005, Roper struck down the death penalty for people under 18. In 2010, Graham invalidated life without parole sentences for people under 18 convicted of non-homicide crimes. Two years later in Miller, the Court recognized the need to protect nearly all youth from life-without-parole sentences, regardless of the crime of conviction. Life without parole, as a mandatory minimum sentence for anyone under age 18 was found unconstitutional. Montgomery, in 2016, clarified that Miller applied retroactively. Jones reaffirmed both Montgomery and Miller but held that a specific factual finding of “permanent incorrigibility” at the time of sentencing is not required for the imposition of a juvenile life without parole sentence.

Henceforth, few youth will be sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. Moreover, youth sentenced to parole-ineligible life sentences in 28 states where the sentence was mandatory and the federal government are in the process of having their original sentences reviewed or have been granted a new sentence, including hundreds of individuals who have been released from prison.

Supreme Court Rulings

Since 2005, Supreme Court rulings have accepted adolescent brain science and banned the use of capital punishment for juveniles, limited life without parole sentences to homicide offenses, banned the use of mandatory life without parole, and applied the decision retroactively.

Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005)

The Supreme Court ruled that juveniles cannot be sentenced to death, writing that the death penalty is a disproportionate punishment for the young; immaturity diminishes their culpability, as does their susceptibility to outside pressures and influences. Their heightened capacity for reform means that they are entitled to a separate set of punishments. The court also held that the nation’s “evolving standards of decency” showed the death penalty for juveniles to be cruel and unusual: 12 states banned the death penalty in all circumstances, and 18 more banned it for people under 18.4 The Roper ruling affected 72 juveniles on death row in 12 states.5 Between 1976 and the Roper decision, 22 defendants were executed for crimes committed before age 18.6

Graham v. Florida, 130 S.CT. 2011 (2010)

Having banned the use of the death penalty for juveniles in Roper, the Court left the sentence of life without parole as the harshest sentence available for offenses committed by people under 18. In Graham v. Florida, the Court banned the use of life without parole for juveniles not convicted of homicide. The ruling applied to at least 123 prisoners – 77 of whom had been sentenced in Florida, the remainder in 10 other states.7 As in Roper, the Court pointed to the rare imposition of a particular punishment to prove that the punishment is unusual.8

U.S. Supreme Court precedent recognizes that non-homicide offenses do not warrant the most serious punishment available.9 “The concept of proportionality is central to the Eighth Amendment,” wrote Justice Kennedy.10 Thus, having denied the maximum punishment for all people under 18 (life without parole), the Court ruled that the harshest punishment must be limited to the most serious category of crimes (i.e., those involving homicide).

The Court called life without parole “an especially harsh punishment for a juvenile … A 16-year-old and a 75-year-old each sentenced to life without parole receive the same punishment in name only.”11 Limiting the use of life without parole did not guarantee such individuals would be released; it guaranteed a “meaningful opportunity” for release.

insert photo

Miller v. Alabama and Jackson v. Hobbs, 132 S.Ct. 2455 (2012)

Following Roper’s exclusion of the death penalty for juveniles and Graham’s limitation on the use of life without parole, approximately 2,500 people were serving sentences of life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles, all of whom were convicted of homicide.12

In 2012, deciding Miller and Jackson jointly, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, for people under 18, mandatory life without parole sentences violate the Eighth Amendment. Writing for the majority, Justice Kagan emphasized that judges must be able to consider the characteristics of young defendants in order to issue a fair and individualized sentence. Adolescence is marked by “transient rashness, proclivity for risk, and inability to assess consequences,” all factors that should mitigate the punishment received by juvenile defendants.13

Adolescence is marked by “rashness, proclivity for risk, and inability to assess consequences.”

Montgomery v. Louisiana, 136 S.Ct. 718 (2016)

The Miller ruling affected mandatory sentencing laws in 28 states and the federal government. States inconsistently interpreted Miller’s retroactivity. Supreme Courts in fourteen states ruled that Miller applied retroactively14 while those of seven other states ruled that Miller was not retroactive.15 In addition, California, Delaware, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, and Wyoming passed sentencing legislation for people under 18 that applied retroactively as of 2014.16

The question was settled by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of 68-year old Henry Montgomery17, who had been imprisoned in Louisiana with no chance of parole since 1963 and called a “model member of the prison community.”18 Justice Kennedy, writing for a 6-3 majority, noted that the Court in Roper, Graham, and Miller found that “children are constitutionally different from adults in their level of culpability.”19 Moreover, the severest punishment must be reserved “for the rarest of juvenile offenders, those whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility.”20

States can remedy the unconstitutionality of mandatory juvenile life without parole sentences by permitting parole hearings rather than resentencing the approximately 2,100 people whose life sentences were issued mandatorily.21,22

Jones v. Mississippi 593 U.S. __ (2021)

Brett Jones is among the thousands of people who were eligible to apply for a new sentence following Miller and Montgomery. Despite the progress he had attained while imprisoned,23 the state of Mississippi reissued his life-with-parole sentence in 2015, which Jones challenged because there had been no finding of “permanent incorrigibility.” Writing on behalf of a 6-3 majority, Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh upheld Miller and Montgomery’s requirement that “youth matters in sentencing” (as such, mandatory life without parole sentences remain unconstitutional for youth), but also held that a separate and specific factual finding of “permanent incorrigibility” was not required to sentence a person who was under 18 at the time of their offense to life without parole.24

Legislative Responses to JLWOP

Since 2012, 33 states and the District of Columbia have changed their laws for people under 18 convicted of homicide, mostly by banning life without parole for people under 18, but also eliminating life without parole for felony murder or re-writing penalties that were struck down by Graham. Twenty-seven of the 32 reforms, plus that of the District of Columbia, banned life without parole for people under 18; the other seven states limited its application. All but five of the states that banned life without parole for people under 18 had previously required it in the same circumstances.

These new laws provide mandatory minimums ranging from a chance of parole after 15 years (as in Nevada and West Virginia) to 40 years (as in Nebraska). Twenty-five states still allow life without parole as a sentencing option for juveniles.

In most states, the question of virtual life sentences – a term of years that exceeds life expectancy but not life without parole – has yet to be addressed. There are 1,716 people serving such lengthy terms. One such person was Bobby Bostic of Missouri, hypothetically parole-eligible at age 112 for offenses committed at age 16, but released in 2022 due to a law passed in 2021 25

People Serving Juvenile Life Without Parole Sentences

Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia do not have any prisoners serving life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles, either due to laws prohibiting the sentence or because there are no individuals serving the sentence at this time.

Childhood Experiences

The life experiences of those sentenced to life as juveniles varies, but they are often marked by very difficult upbringings with frequent exposure to violence; they were often victims of abuse themselves. Justice Kagan, in Miller, ruled that Alabama and Arkansas erred because a mandatory sentencing structure does not “tak[e] into account the family and home environment.”26 The petitioners in those cases, Kuntrell Jackson and Evan Miller, both 14 at the time of their crimes, grew up in highly unstable homes. Evan Miller was a troubled child; he attempted suicide four times, starting at age 6.27 Kuntrell Jackson’s family life was “immers[ed] in violence: Both his mother and his grandmother had previously shot other individuals.”26 His mother and a brother were sent to prison. The defendant in Graham, Terrance Graham, had parents who were addicted to crack cocaine.29 Similarly, in Jones, Justice Sotomayor’s dissent noted that “Brett Jones was the victim of violence and neglect that he was too young to escape.”30

In 2012, The Sentencing Project released findings from a survey of people sentenced to life in prison as juveniles and found the defendants in the above cases were not unusual.31

  • 79% witnessed violence in their homes regularly
  • 32% grew up in public housing
  • Fewer than half were attending school at the time of their offense
  • 47% were physically abused
  • 80% of girls reported histories of physical abuse and 77% of girls reported histories of sexual abuse

Racial Disparities

Racial disparities plague the imposition of JLWOP sentences. Sixty-two percent of people serving JLWOP, among those for whom racial data are available, are African American. While 23% of juvenile arrests for murder involve an African American suspected of killing a white person, 42% of JLWOP sentences are for an African American convicted of this crime. White juvenile offenders with African American victims are only about half as likely (3.6%) to receive a JWLOP sentence as their proportion of arrests for killing an African American (6.4%).32

Cost of Life Sentences

Aside from important justice considerations, the financial cost of JLWOP sentences is significant. A life sentence issued to a juvenile is designed to last longer than a life sentence issued to an older defendant.

Housing juveniles for a life sentence requires decades of public expenditures. Nationally, it costs over $33,000 per year to house an average prisoner. This cost roughly doubles when that person is over 50.33 Therefore, a 50-year sentence for a 16-year old will cost upwards of $2.25 million.

What Makes Youth Different?

In amici briefs written on behalf of the defendants in Roper, Graham, Miller, and Montgomery organizations representing health professionals, such as the American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry and the American Psychological Association, explained current research on immature brains. In Miller, Justice Kagan noted that adolescence is marked by “immaturity, impetuosity, and failure to appreciate risks and consequences,” all factors that limit an adolescent’s ability to make sound judgments. Justice Kagan cited Graham and J. D. B. v. North Carolina34 in noting that juvenile defendants are at a substantial disadvantage in criminal proceedings; they are less able than adults to assist in their own defenses (working constructively with counsel) and they are likely to respond poorly to the high pressures of interrogation.

Even before Roper, states routinely recognized differences between juveniles and adults in other contexts. Almost every state prohibits juveniles from voting, buying cigarettes and alcohol, serving on juries, and getting married without parental consent. Teenagers’ drivers licenses are typically restricted through age 18. The Graham decision emphasized the importance of giving juvenile offenders a chance to become rehabilitated. These individuals have a substantial capacity for rehabilitation, but many states deny this opportunity: approximately 62% of people sentenced to life without parole as juveniles reported not participating in prison programs32 in large part due to state prison policies that prohibit their participation or limited program availability. They typically receive fewer rehabilitative services than others in prison.36

Momentum for Reform

Under current Supreme Court precedent, curbs on juvenile life without parole sentences do not guarantee release. Rather, Supreme court holdings and the reforms passed in response to those holdings by state legislatures provide an opportunity for individualized review before a parole board or a judge for a new sentence, taking into consideration the unique circumstances of each defendant.

The Sentencing Project supports a 20-year maximum sentence for nearly all individuals convicted of crimes.37 This recommendation recognizes that the age of mass incarceration in America led to extreme and overly harsh sentences that are often unjust and counterproductive to public safety. It applies to all people in prison, not only those sentenced in their youth. Some recent reforms are beginning to align with this recommendation as states recognize that extreme sentences are outdated, unnecessary and inhumane. For example, both West Virginia 38 and the District of Columbia39 offer opportunities for release after 15 years with a parole hearing or a chance to apply to a court for a new sentence, respectively. Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, and Virginia allow for the possibility of release after 20 years. All incarceration should further the goals of rehabilitation and reintegration.

In Montgomery, the Court ruled that “allowing those offenders to be considered for parole ensures that juveniles whose crimes reflected only transient immaturity – and who have since matured – will not be forced to serve a disproportionate sentence in violation of the 8th Amendment.”21

The District of Columbia41) and Washington State42 have extended Miller’s guidance to people under age 25 and 21, respectively, with the understanding that older and younger adolescents alike should not be sentenced to die in prison. Additional legislation for people under 21 has progressed elsewhere.

In many other countries the period before a mandated sentencing review is 10 to 15 years, and 10 years prior to a second look is recommended by the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code.43 If adequate rehabilitation has not occurred during these years in prison, as decided by experts, the individual may remain in prison and their case should be reviewed again in another few years.

Nor is it appropriate to eliminate life sentences in name only, such as replacing them with excessively lengthy prison terms that can reasonably be expected to last for an offender’s entire life. There is mounting support for such reform in select states. Motivated by the Miller decision, the state of California (previously home to one of the largest populations of JLWOP defendants) now affords prisoners a meaningful chance at parole after 15 to 25 years if their crime occurred when they were a juvenile. Reforms are underway in other states as well. Sentences that close the door on rehabilitation and second chances are cruel and misguided.

1.

Nellis, A. (2021, Feb. 17). No End In Sight: America’s Enduring Reliance on Life Imprisonment. The Sentencing Project. Additional notes available on file.

2.

Montgomery v. Louisiana, 136 S.Ct. 718, 736 (2016).

3.

Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 569 (2005).

4.

Roper at 560.

5.

Death Penalty Information Center. U. S. Supreme Court: Roper v. Simmons, No. 03-633

6.

Death Penalty Information Center. Facts About the Death Penalty.

7.

Graham at 2024.

8.

In Graham and Roper, the Court also pointed to the overwhelming international consensus against the harshest punishments.

9.

Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 407 (2008).

10.

Graham at 2021.

11.

Graham at 2028.

12.

Nellis, A. (2017, May 3). Still life: America’s increasing use of life and long-term sentences. The Sentencing Project. p. 17.

13.

Miller at 2465.

14.

Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, and Wyoming.

15.

Alabama, Colorado, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, and Pennsylvania.

16.
17.

Montgomery v. Louisiana, petition 14-280.

18.

Montgomery at 738.

19.

Montgomery at 733.

20.

Montgomery at 734.

21.

Montgomery at 736.

22.

Gately, G. (2015, March 23). Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Miller Retroactivity Issue. Juvenile Justice Information Exchange, citing the Juvenile Law Center.

23.

See Brief of Petitioner, Jones v. Mississippi, No. 18-1259 (June 5, 2020).

24.

Jones, slip. op. at 6.

25.

Rivas, R. and Bates, C. (Nov. 9, 2022). Bobby Bostic released on parole after being imprisoned in Missouri for 27 years. Missouri Independent.

26.

Miller at 2468.

27.

Miller at 2462.

28.

Miller at 2468.

29.

Graham at 2018.

30.

Jones v. Mississippi, 593 U.S. __, __ (2021) (Sotomoyor,dissenting) (slip op. at 18).

31.

Nellis, A. (2012). The lives of juvenile lifers: Findings from a national survey. The Sentencing Project.

32.

Nellis, A. (2012).

33.

Mai, C. and Subramanian, R. (2017). The price of prisons: Examining state spending trends, 2010-2015. Vera Institute of Justice.

34.

J. D. B. v. North Carolina, 131 S.Ct. 2394 (2011).

35.

Nellis, A. (2012).

36.

Boone, B. (2015). Treating adults like children: Resentencing adult juvenile lifers after Miller v. Alabama. Minnesota Law Review, 99(3), 1159-1194.

37.

See Nellis, A. (2021), p. 5-6.

38.

West Virginia, HB 4210 (2014).

39.

District of Columnia, B22-255, later amended to include youth under the age of 25.

40.

Montgomery at 736.

41.

District of Columbia (2021). “Omnibus Public Safety and Justice Amendment Act of 2020.” (Previously B23-127.

42.

In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of Kuris William Monschke. (2021, March 11). Washington State.

43.

American Law Institute (2017). Model penal code: Sentencing: Final Draft. § 6.11A

Nellis, A. (2021, Feb. 17). No End In Sight: America’s Enduring Reliance on Life Imprisonment. The Sentencing Project. Additional notes available on file.
Montgomery v. Louisiana, 136 S.Ct. 718, 736 (2016).
Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 569 (2005).
Roper at 560.
Death Penalty Information Center. U. S. Supreme Court: Roper v. Simmons, No. 03-633
Death Penalty Information Center. Facts About the Death Penalty.
Graham at 2024.
In Graham and Roper, the Court also pointed to the overwhelming international consensus against the harshest punishments.
Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 407 (2008).
Graham at 2021.
Graham at 2028.
Nellis, A. (2017, May 3). Still life: America’s increasing use of life and long-term sentences. The Sentencing Project. p. 17.
Miller at 2465.
Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, and Wyoming.
Alabama, Colorado, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, and Pennsylvania.
Montgomery v. Louisiana, petition 14-280.
Montgomery at 738.
Montgomery at 733.
Montgomery at 734.
Montgomery at 736.
Gately, G. (2015, March 23). Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Miller Retroactivity Issue. Juvenile Justice Information Exchange, citing the Juvenile Law Center.
See Brief of Petitioner, Jones v. Mississippi, No. 18-1259 (June 5, 2020).
Jones, slip. op. at 6.
Rivas, R. and Bates, C. (Nov. 9, 2022). Bobby Bostic released on parole after being imprisoned in Missouri for 27 years. Missouri Independent.
Miller at 2468.
Miller at 2462.
Miller at 2468.
Graham at 2018.
Jones v. Mississippi, 593 U.S. __, __ (2021) (Sotomoyor,dissenting) (slip op. at 18).
Nellis, A. (2012). The lives of juvenile lifers: Findings from a national survey. The Sentencing Project.
Nellis, A. (2012).
Mai, C. and Subramanian, R. (2017). The price of prisons: Examining state spending trends, 2010-2015. Vera Institute of Justice.
J. D. B. v. North Carolina, 131 S.Ct. 2394 (2011).
Nellis, A. (2012).
Boone, B. (2015). Treating adults like children: Resentencing adult juvenile lifers after Miller v. Alabama. Minnesota Law Review, 99(3), 1159-1194.
See Nellis, A. (2021), p. 5-6.
West Virginia, HB 4210 (2014).
District of Columnia, B22-255, later amended to include youth under the age of 25.
Montgomery at 736.
District of Columbia (2021). “Omnibus Public Safety and Justice Amendment Act of 2020.” (Previously B23-127.
In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of Kuris William Monschke. (2021, March 11). Washington State.
American Law Institute (2017). Model penal code: Sentencing: Final Draft. § 6.11A

About the Author

  • Joshua Rovner

    Director of Youth Justice

    Joshua Rovner manages a portfolio of juvenile justice issues for The Sentencing Project, including juveniles sentenced to life without parole, the transfer of juveniles into the adult criminal justice system, and racial and ethnic disparities in juvenile justice.

    Read more about Joshua

Related Resources

View all resources