WASHINGTON
-
Joe
Sullivan
was
sent
away
for
life
for
raping
an
elderly
woman
and
judged
incorrigible
though
he
was
only
13
at
the
time
of
the
attack.
Terrance
Graham,
implicated
in
armed
robberies
when
he
was
16
and
17,
was
given
a
life
sentence
by
a
judge
who
told
the
teenager
he
threw
his
life
away.
They
didn't
kill
anyone,
but
they
effectively
were
sentenced
to
die
in
prison.
Life
sentences
with
no
chance
of
parole
are
rare
and
harsh
for
juveniles
tried
as
adults
and
convicted
of
crimes
less
serious
than
killing.
Just
over
100
prison
inmates
in
the
United
States
are
serving
those
terms,
according
to
data
compiled
by
opponents
of
the
sentences.
Now
the
Supreme
Court
is
being
asked
to
say
that
locking
up
juveniles
and
throwing
away
the
key
is
cruel
and
unusual
-
and
thus,
unconstitutional.
Other
than
in
death
penalty
cases,
the
justices
never
before
have
found
that
a
penalty
crossed
the
cruel
and
unusual
line.
They
will
hear
arguments
Monday.
Graham,
now
22,
and
Sullivan,
now
33,
are
in
Florida
prisons,
which
hold
more
than
70
per
cent
of
juvenile
defendants
locked
up
for
life
for
non-homicide
crimes.
Although
their
lawyers
deny
their
clients
are
guilty,
the
court
will
consider
only
whether
the
sentences
are
permitted
by
the
constitution.
The
Supreme
Court's
latest
look
at
how
to
punish
young
criminals
flows
directly
from
its
four-year-old
decision
to
rule
out
the
death
penalty
for
anyone
younger
than
18.
In
that
2005
case
decided
by
a
5-4
vote,
Justice
Anthony
Kennedy's
majority
opinion
talked
about
"the
lesser
culpability
of
the
juvenile
offender."
"From
a
moral
standpoint
it
would
be
misguided
to
equate
the
failings
of
a
minor
with
those
of
an
adult,
for
a
greater
possibility
exists
that
a
minor's
character
deficiencies
will
be
reformed,"
Kennedy
said.
Yet
Kennedy
also
acknowledged
the
possibility
that
for
the
worst
crimes
and
the
worst
offenders,
"the
punishment
of
life
imprisonment
without
the
possibility
of
parole
is
itself
a
severe
sanction,
in
particular
for
a
young
person."
Both
sides
point
to
the
same
basic
facts
-
the
rare
imposition
of
draconian
prison
terms
on
people
so
young
-
to
make
their
point.
The
state
of
Florida,
backed
by
19
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