Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Travis M. Bredhold ( 2020 )


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  •                                                RENDERED: MARCH 26, 2020
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    2017-SC-000436-TG
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                          APPELLANT
    ON TRANSFER FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                     CASE NO. 2017-CA-001327-MR
    FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT NO. 14-CR-00161
    HONORABLE ERNESTO SCORSONE
    TRAVIS M. BREDHOLD                                                  APPELLEE
    AND
    2017-SC-000536-TG
    AND
    2017-SC-000537-TG
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                          APPELLANT
    ON TRANSFER FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.       CASE NOS. 2017-CA-001541-MR AND 2017-CA-001542-MR
    FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT NOS. 15-CR-00584-001-002
    HONORABLE ERNESTO SCORSONE
    EFRAIN DIAZ, JR.                                                  APPELLEES
    JUSTIN SMITH
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES
    VACATING INTERLOCUTORY ORDERS AND REMANDING
    These three consolidated cases present the issue of whether evolving
    standards of decency are such that the Eighth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution prohibits imposition of the death penalty as to a defendant under
    twenty-one (21) years of age at the time of his offense. In Roper v. Simmons,
    
    543 U.S. 551
     (2005), the United States Supreme Court concluded that the
    Eighth Amendment, applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment,
    proscribes the execution of juvenile offenders over fifteen (15) but under
    eighteen (18) years of age. Roper overruled Stanford v. Kentucky, 
    492 U.S. 361
    (1989), a case which had rejected that very age-based argument sixteen years
    earlier. Citing changes in the national consensus with respect to the death
    penalty and then-recent psychological and neurobiological research, the Roper
    Court concluded that the social purposes allegedly served by the death penalty,
    retribution and deterrence, were not justified in the case of offenders under age
    eighteen (18) due to their youth and immaturity. Appellees Travis Bredhold,
    Efrain Diaz, Jr., and Justin Smith successfully persuaded the Fayette Circuit
    Court that the current national consensus and more recent scientific research
    now support raising the age for death-penalty eligibility to twenty-one
    (21). After careful consideration, we conclude that this significant
    constitutional issue was not a “justiciable cause”1 before the circuit court and
    is not properly before this Court. At this stage of the criminal proceedings,
    none of the Appellees has been convicted, much less sentenced, and thus none
    has standing to raise an Eighth Amendment challenge to the death penalty.
    1 Ky. Const. § 113(6).
    2
    Accordingly, we are compelled to vacate the interlocutory orders and remand to
    the trial court for further proceedings.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A Fayette County grand jury indicted Travis M. Bredhold and charged
    him with one count of murder, first-degree robbery, theft by unlawful taking
    over $10,000, trafficking in less than eight ounces of marijuana, possession of
    drug paraphernalia, and carrying a concealed deadly weapon. Bredhold
    allegedly robbed a Marathon gas station and fatally shot Mukeshbhai Patel, an
    employee, on December 17, 2013. Bredhold was eighteen (18) years and five
    (5) months old at the time of the offenses. 2017-SC-000436-TG.
    Efrain Diaz, Jr., and Justin Smith, co-defendants, are charged with the
    robbery and fatal shooting of Jonathan Krueger on April 17, 2015.2 A Fayette
    County grand jury indicted and charged Diaz with one count of murder and
    two counts of first-degree robbery. Diaz was twenty (20) years and seven (7)
    months old at the time he allegedly committed the offenses. The same grand
    jury indicted and charged Smith with one count of murder, two counts of first-
    degree robbery, and one count each of tampering with physical evidence and
    first-degree fleeing or evading police. Smith was eighteen (18) years and five (5)
    months old at the time of the alleged offenses. 2017-SC-000536-TG, 2017-SC-
    000537-TG.
    2 Aaron Gillette, walking with Krueger, was also robbed at gunpoint.
    3
    All three Appellees pled not guilty and in all three cases the
    Commonwealth gave notice of its intent to seek the death penalty. Each
    Appellee moved the trial court to exclude the death penalty as a sentencing
    option at trial, specifically asking the trial court to extend the holding of Roper,
    
    543 U.S. 551
    . As noted, Roper holds that capital punishment is an
    unconstitutional penalty for juvenile offenders less than eighteen (18) years old
    at the time of the offense. Each Appellee requested the trial court to extend the
    death penalty prohibition to include persons under the age of twenty-one (21)
    at the time of the offense.
    Bredhold and Smith supplemented their respective motions to remove
    the death penalty with an affidavit of Dr. Ken Benedict, a clinical psychologist
    and neuropsychologist. Dr. Benedict found Bredhold was about four years
    behind his peer group in multiple capacities, including the capacity to regulate
    his emotions and behavior, and that he suffered from a number of mental
    disorders. As for Smith, Dr. Benedict concluded his executive functions related
    to planning, anticipating the consequences of his actions, and impulse control
    are below those of an adult and he too exhibited a number of mental
    disorders.3
    The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on Diaz’s and Smith’s
    motions, hearing Dr. Laurence Steinberg’s testimony. Dr. Steinberg, a
    3 Diaz had given notice of potential evidence as to mental defect, but it appears
    evaluations were not complete prior to entry of the trial court’s orders declaring
    Kentucky’s death penalty statute unconstitutional.
    4
    nationally recognized expert in adolescent development, explained current
    scientific knowledge regarding brain development and its impact on behavior,
    comparing the maturational differences between individuals less than twenty-
    one (21) years of age and those twenty-one (21) and older. Dr. Steinberg also
    supplemented his testimony with a written report. The Commonwealth did not
    submit any proof. Although the testimony was presented in the Diaz/Smith
    case, the trial court supplemented Bredhold’s record with the Steinberg
    testimony.
    The trial court later entered a separate but similar order in each case
    declaring Kentucky’s death penalty statute unconstitutional under the Eighth
    Amendment insofar as it permits capital punishment for offenders under
    twenty-one (21) years of age at the time of their offense. In addition to this
    general legal conclusion, the court made specific findings regarding Bredhold’s
    and Smith’s individual psychological assessments. The trial court concluded
    that those individual findings provided further support for the exclusion of the
    death penalty as to Bredhold and Smith individually.
    The Commonwealth filed interlocutory appeals and this Court granted
    the Commonwealth’s motions to transfer the appeals from the Court of Appeals
    pursuant to Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 74.02, finding that the
    issues raised are of great and immediate public importance and arose during
    capital litigation, an area exclusively within this Court’s appellate jurisdiction.
    Skaggs v. Commonwealth, 
    803 S.W.2d 573
    , 577 (Ky. 1990); Commonwealth v.
    Guernsey, 
    501 S.W.3d 884
    , 887 (Ky. 2016).
    5
    ANALYSIS
    In these consolidated appeals we are asked to review the Fayette Circuit
    Court’s decision finding Kentucky’s death penalty statute unconstitutional as
    to defendants who were between the ages of eighteen (18) and twenty-one (21)
    at the time of their offense. Before reaching this significant inquiry, it is
    incumbent that we consider whether the issue is properly before us.
    “Considerations of propriety, as well as long-established practice,
    demand that we refrain from passing upon the constitutionality of an act of
    [the legislature] unless obliged to do so in the proper performance of our
    judicial function . . . .” Blair v. United States, 
    250 U.S. 273
    , 279 (1919); accord
    Louisville/Jefferson Co. Metro Gov’t v. TDC Group, LLC, 
    283 S.W.3d 657
    , 660
    (Ky. 2009) (recognizing this Court’s “practice of avoiding constitutional
    questions” unless judicially necessary). See also Ashwander v. Tennessee
    Valley Auth., 
    297 U.S. 288
    , 346 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring) (listing rules
    used to avoid constitutional questions). As a threshold matter, Kentucky
    courts do not have constitutional jurisdiction to adjudicate a question raised by
    a litigant who does not have standing to have the issue decided.
    Commonwealth Cabinet for Health & Family Servs., Dep’t for Medicaid Servs. v.
    Sexton by & through Appalachian Reg’l Healthcare, Inc., 
    566 S.W.3d 185
    , 195
    (Ky. 2018). Because the Appellees have yet to be adjudicated guilty and the
    Commonwealth’s power to punish has yet to be invoked, we conclude the
    question whether Kentucky’s death penalty is unconstitutional as to the age-
    based group identified by Appellees is currently not justiciable. For context, we
    6
    discuss briefly the parties’ positions on the constitutional issue raised before
    turning to the mandatory considerations of standing and ripeness.
    Under Kentucky law, a person convicted of a capital offense, may be
    sentenced to death pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 532.030.
    Imposition of the death penally, however, is subject to the Eighth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution which, via the Fourteenth Amendment,
    prohibits states from imposing cruel and unusual punishments.4 Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 560
     (citations omitted). 'While the State has the power to punish, the
    Amendment stands to assure that this power be exercised within the limits of
    civilized standards.” Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U.S. 86
    , 100 (1958). The Eighth
    Amendment’s prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments” “reaffirms the
    duty of the government to respect the dignity of all persons.” Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 560
    . Recognizing that the Eighth Amendment “is not fastened to the
    obsolete but may acquire meaning as public opinion becomes enlightened by a
    humane justice,” Weems v. United States, 
    217 U.S. 349
    , 378 (1910), the United
    States Supreme Court has adopted “evolving standards of decency that mark
    the progress of a maturing society” as a measure to enforce the Constitution’s
    protection of human dignity and to determine which punishments are so
    disproportionate as to be cruel and unusual. Trop, 
    356 U.S. at 100-01
    .
    A trio of United States Supreme Court decisions, Thompson v. Oklahoma,
    
    487 U.S. 815
     (1988), Stanford, 
    492 U.S. 361
    , and Roper, 
    543 U.S. 551
    , have
    4 The Eighth Amendment provides that “[e]xcessive bail shall not be required,
    nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”
    7
    applied society’s evolving standards of decency to address the question of
    whether the Eighth Amendment prohibits imposition of the death penalty on
    juveniles of a certain age. In Thompson, the Supreme Court determined that
    society’s standards of decency do not permit the execution of any offender
    under the age of sixteen (16) at the time of the crime. Soon afterward, in
    Stanford, the Supreme Court declined to extend that age range, holding that
    standards of decency did not prohibit the execution of juvenile offenders who
    were over fifteen (15) but under eighteen (18) years old at the time of their
    offense. In Roper, decided only sixteen years after Stanford, the Supreme Court
    determined that standards of decency had evolved to proscribe execution of
    juvenile offenders under eighteen (18) years of age.
    Appellees contend that contemporary standards of decency are now such
    that the Eighth Amendment prohibits the imposition of Kentucky’s death
    penalty on individuals under the age of twenty-one (21) at the time of their
    offense. The Commonwealth counters that Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 574
    , designates
    age eighteen (18) as the bright line for separating adults from juveniles for
    Eighth Amendment purposes, and thus the trial court erred by declaring
    Kentucky’s death penalty statute unconstitutional when applied to offenders
    between eighteen (18) and twenty-one (21) years of age.
    Presently, by interlocutory appeal, the Commonwealth seeks to vacate
    the Fayette Circuit Court’s orders that declare Kentucky’s death penalty statute
    unconstitutional insofar as it permits capital punishment for a defendant
    under twenty-one (21) years of age at the time of his offense. Although the
    8
    Commonwealth noticed its intent to seek the death penalty as to all three
    Appellees, at the point their motions were heard by the circuit court (and even
    now), the cases remained untried and no jury had recommended the death
    penalty. While death penalty trials are unquestionably more involved than
    typical felony trials, requiring both group and individual voir dire and
    presenting issues and procedures unique to the gravity of the penalty sought,
    the focus of Eighth Amendment analysis is not the trial, but rather the actual
    penalty imposed. Despite no penalty having been imposed and the clear
    possibility that death would not be recommended by the jury in any of these
    cases, the trial court declared prior to trial that Kentucky’s death penalty
    statute is unconstitutional as to these Appellees based on their age. This
    preemptive ruling was legally inappropriate under controlling precedent.
    Constitutional challenges to statutes generally fall within one of two
    categories: a facial challenge or an as-applied challenge. In order to declare a
    statute unconstitutional on its face, a court must find that the law is
    unconstitutional in all its applications. Commonwealth of Kentucky v.
    Claycomb by & through Claycomb, 
    566 S.W.3d 202
    , 210 (Ky. 2018) (citations
    omitted); Sabri v. United. States, 
    541 U.S. 600
    , 609 (2004). “It is a well-
    established principle that ‘[a] facial challenge to a legislative Act is . . . the most
    difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish
    that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.”’
    Harris v. Commonwealth, 
    338 S.W.3d 222
    , 229 (Ky. 2011) (quoting Rust v.
    Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    , 183 (1991)). On the other hand, in order to declare a
    9
    statute unconstitutional as applied, a court must find the law unconstitutional
    as applied to the challenger’s particular circumstances. See United States v.
    Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 745 n.3 (1987).
    No matter the type of constitutional challenge brought, the person (s)
    bringing the challenge must first demonstrate standing in order for the
    challenge to be justiciable. Sexton, 566 S.W.3d at 196. Otherwise, the trial
    court does not have jurisdiction to hear and decide the constitutional
    challenge, whether raised by declaratory judgment action or, as in these cases,
    by motion. See id.; In re Summers, 
    325 U.S. 561
    , 566-67 (1945); Flast v.
    Cohen, 
    392 U.S. 83
    , 101 (1968).5 It follows that an appellate court does not
    have jurisdiction to review on its merits an interlocutory appeal arising from a
    circuit court judgment entered in such circumstances. Sexton, 566 S.W.3d at
    196-97.
    5 As In re Summers, 
    325 U.S. at
    566-67 explains:
    A case arises, within the meaning of the Constitution, when any
    question respecting the Constitution, treatise or laws of the United States
    has assumed ‘such a form that the judicial power is capable of acting on
    it.’ Osborn v. Bank, 
    9 Wheat. 738
    , 819, 
    6 L. Ed. 204
    . The Court was
    then considering the power of the bank to sue in the federal courts. A
    declaration on rights as they stand must be sought, not on rights which
    may arise in the future, Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line Co., 
    211 U.S. 210
    ,
    226, 
    29 S. Ct. 67
    , 69, 
    53 L. Ed. 150
    , and there must be an actual
    controversy over an issue, not a desire for an abstract declaration of the
    law. Muskrat v. United States, 
    219 U.S. 346
    , 361, 
    31 S. Ct. 250
    , 255, 
    55 L. Ed. 246
    ; Fairchild v. Hughes, 
    258 U.S. 126
    , 129, 
    42 S. Ct. 274
    , 275,
    
    66 L. Ed. 499
    . The form of the proceeding is not significant. It is the
    nature and effect which is controlling. Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v.
    Wallace, 
    288 U.S. 249
    , 259, 
    53 S. Ct. 345
    , 346, 
    77 L. Ed. 730
    , 
    87 A.L.R. 1191
    .
    10
    Kentucky’s constitutional standing doctrine, adopted from Lujan v.
    Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992), wherein several
    organizations sought declaratory judgment and an injunction, is outlined in
    Sexton.
    [A]t bottom, for a party to sue in Kentucky, the initiating
    party must have the requisite constitutional standing to do so,
    defined by three requirements: (1) injury, (2) causation, and (3)
    redressability. In other words, “A plaintiff must allege personal
    injury fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct
    and likely to be redressed by the requested relief.”6 “[A] litigant
    must demonstrate that it has suffered a concrete and
    particularized injury that is either actual or imminent. . . .”7 “The
    injury must be . . . ‘distinct and palpable,’ and not ‘abstract’ or
    ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’”8 “The injury must be ‘fairly’
    traceable to the challenged action, and relief from the injury must
    be likely’ to follow from a favorable decision.”9
    566 S.W.3d at 196.
    Sexton dealt with initiation of a civil suit; nevertheless, the “standing”
    principles apply with equal force to this interlocutory motion raised in a
    criminal proceeding. “In essence the question of standing is whether the
    litigant is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or of
    particular issues.” Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 498 (1975). Standing is one
    of the five major justiciability doctrines which assure that the courts do not
    6 Allen v. Wright, 
    468 U.S. 737
    , 751, 
    104 S. Ct. 3315
    , 
    82 L. Ed.2d 556
     (1984),
    overruled on other grounds by Lexmark Intern., Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc.,
    
    572 U.S. 118
     (2014).
    7 Massachusetts v. BPA, 
    549 U.S. 497
    , 517, 
    127 S. Ct. 1438
    , 
    167 L. Ed.2d 248
    (2007) (citing Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 578
    , 
    112 S. Ct. 2130
    ).
    
    8 Allen, 468
     U.S. at 751, 
    104 S. Ct. 3315
    .
    9 
    Id.
    11
    address non-existent issues or provide advisory opinions. Sexton, 566 S.W.3d
    at 192-97.10 In federal constitutional parlance a “case or controversy” is
    required, Art. Ill, § 2, Clause 1, while in Kentucky the circuit courts (and
    consequently the Court of Appeals and this Court exercising appellate
    jurisdiction) are constitutionally required to address “justiciable causes.” Ky.
    Const. §113(6). Upon review of the standing requirements, it is evident that
    Appellees’ motions are not justiciable at this time.
    A litigant must satisfy all prongs of the standing inquiry to invoke a
    court’s jurisdiction in a constitutional challenge. In this case, we need only
    consider whether Appellees meet the first prong, the injury requirement:
    whether the litigant “Tias sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining
    some direct injury’ as the result of the challenged statute or official conduct.”
    O’Shea v. Littleton, 
    414 U.S. 488
    , 494 (1974) (quoting Massachusetts v. Mellon,
    
    262 U.S. 447
    , 488 (1923)). It is well-settled that “(a]llegations of possible
    future injury do not satisfy the requirements of [standing].” Whitmore v.
    Arkansas, 
    495 U.S. 149
    , 158 (1990). “A threatened injury must be ‘certainly
    impending’ to constitute injury in fact.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Babbitt v. United Farm
    Workers Nat’l Union, 
    442 U.S. 289
    , 298 (1979)). These principles regarding the
    injury necessary to establish standing are incorporated in the United States
    Supreme Court’s jurisprudence explaining the context within which an Eighth
    Amendment claim may be properly raised. “Eighth Amendment scrutiny is
    10 The United States Supreme Court has identified the five major justiciability
    doctrines as: “(1) the prohibition against advisory opinions, (2) standing, (3) ripeness,
    (4) mootness, and (5) the political-question doctrines.” 566 S.W.3d at 193.
    12
    appropriate only after the State has complied with the constitutional
    guarantees traditionally associated with criminal prosecutions. . . . [T]he State
    does not acquire the power to punish with which the Eighth Amendment is
    concerned until after it has secured a formal adjudication of guilt in
    accordance with due process of law.” City of Revere v. Massachusetts Gen.
    Hosp., 
    463 U.S. 239
    , 244 (1983) (quoting Ingraham v. Wright, 
    430 U.S. 651
    ,
    671-72, n.40 (1977)).
    In the cases before this Court, if one or more of the Appellees is convicted
    of a capital offense, the sentencing options are numerous. KRS 532.030(1)
    provides:
    When a person is convicted of a capital offense, he shall have his
    punishment fixed at death, or at a term of imprisonment for life
    without benefit of probation or parole, or at a term of
    imprisonment for life without benefit of probation or parole until he
    has served a minimum of twenty-five (25) years of his sentence, or
    to a sentence of life, or to a term of not less than twenty (20) years
    nor more than fifty (50) years.
    Thus, assuming conviction, the sentencing range for the Appellees would
    extend from a twenty (20) year-sentence to death. To reiterate, the Appellees
    have yet to be tried, convicted, or sentenced. “It is just not possible for [the
    Appellees] to prove in advance that the judicial system will lead to any
    particular result in [their] case.” Whitmore, 495 U.S. at 159-60. With the
    Appellees having not yet suffered a concrete and particularized injury by
    13
    having the death sentence imposed, no actual or imminent injury exists.11 At
    this point, imposition of the death sentence can only be viewed as hypothetical.
    Although we approach the justiciability of these cases under the standing
    doctrine, application of the related ripeness doctrine has likewise resulted in
    courts dismissing premature claims and vacating premature decisions in the
    context of an Eighth Amendment challenge.12 For example, in 18 Unnamed
    “John Smith” Prisoners v. Meese, 
    871 F.2d 881
    , 882-83 (9th Cir. 1989), the
    Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a summary judgment in favor of the
    government in a case involving an Eighth Amendment challenge to a proposed
    double bunking plan as cruel and unusual punishment. The Ninth Circuit,
    finding the inmates’ claims were not sufficiently concrete to warrant judicial
    11 Requiring the litigant to prove “actual injury” “tends to assure that the legal
    questions presented to the court will be resolved, not in the rarified atmosphere of a
    debating society, but in a concrete factual context conducive to a realistic appreciation
    of the consequences of judicial action.” Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans
    United for Separation of Church and State, Inc., 
    454 U.S. 464
    , 472 (1982). The gist of
    the question of standing is has the litigant “alleged such a personal stake in the
    outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the
    presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of
    difficult constitutional questions.” Baker v. Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 204 (1962).
    12 The line between standing and ripeness is not readily drawn. The ripeness
    doctrine is “drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from
    prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.” W.B. v. Com., Cabinet for
    Health & Family Servs., 
    388 S.W.3d 108
    , 115 (Ky. 2012) (quoting National Park Hosp.
    Ass’n v. Dep’t of Interior, 
    538 U.S. 803
    , 807-08, 
    123 S. Ct. 2026
    , 
    155 L. Ed.2d 1017
    (2003) (citations omitted)). The overlap between standing and ripeness concepts has
    led some legal scholars to suggest that the there is little benefit in having a distinct
    ripeness doctrine. See, e.g., Erwin Chemerinsky, A Unified Approach to Justiciability,
    
    22 Conn. L. Rev. 677
    , 682-83 (1990) (“The standing determination demands that the
    plaintiff demonstrate that he or she has been or imminently will be injured. Ripeness
    focuses primarily on whether the matter is premature for review and asks whether the
    plaintiff has suffered or imminently will suffer an injury. In light of this overlap, little
    seems to be gained by having a distinct ripeness doctrine.”).
    14
    intervention, explained that the effects of the proposed double bunking, such
    as overcrowding, deprivation of essential food, and lack of sanitation, were only
    speculative, involving “‘contingent future events that may not occur as
    anticipated, or indeed not occur at all.”’ 
    Id.
     at 883 (citing Thomas v. Union
    Carbide Agric. Prods. Co., 
    473 U.S. 568
    , 581 (1985) (quoting 13A C. Wright, A.
    Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3532 (1984))).
    In Cheffer v. Reno, 
    55 F.3d 1517
    , 1524 (11th Cir. 1995), the Eleventh
    Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the trial court’s dismissal of an Eighth
    Amendment pre-enforcement challenge to a statute that allegedly imposed
    excessive fines. The Eleventh Circuit described the ripeness doctrine as
    “ask[ing] whether there is sufficient injury to meet Article Ill’s requirement of a
    case or controversy and, if so, whether the claim is sufficiently mature, and the
    issues sufficiently defined and concrete, to permit effective decisionmaking by
    the court.” 
    Id. at 1524
     (citation omitted). More particularly, the Cheffer court
    concluded “Eighth Amendment challenges are generally not ripe until the
    imposition, or immediately impending imposition, of a challenged punishment
    or fine.” 
    Id.
     at 1523 (citing Meese; Askins v. District of Columbia, 
    877 F.2d 94
    ,
    97-99 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (challenge to proposed transfer to another prison facility
    not ripe)).
    In Johnson v. Missouri, 
    142 F.3d 1087
     (8th Cir. 1998), a case involving
    the constitutionality of a statute that imposed sanctions on inmates who file
    frivolous claims, the Eighth Circuit recognized likenesses in the standing and
    ripeness doctrines: “Although we realize that standing and ripeness are
    15
    technically different doctrines, they are closely related in that each focuses on
    whether the harm asserted has matured sufficiently to warrant judicial
    intervention. . . . Thus, whether this principle is labeled ‘standing’ or
    ‘ripeness’, [the inmates’] claim [is not justiciable]Id. at 1090, n.4 (internal
    quotations, original alterations, and citations omitted). See also People v.
    Stark, 
    400 P.2d 923
    , 928 (Colo. 1965) (“With reference to the argument that the
    several offenses defined in the statute are punishable by ‘cruel and unusual
    punishments’ we hold that until some person has been convicted of a crime
    and a sentence has been imposed which is then asserted to be ‘cruel and
    unusual’ there is no justiciable question presented.”); Floyd v. Filson, 
    940 F.3d 1082
     (9th Cir. 2019) (challenge to lethal injection protocol not ripe when state
    has no implementable protocol at the time of the challenge; injury speculative
    and may never occur); Club Madonna, Inc. v. City of Miami Beach, 
    924 F.3d 1370
     (11th Cir. 2019) (challenge to ordinance penalty provision not ripe when
    no allegations that fine has been imposed or imposition immediately
    forthcoming).13
    13 We note cases exist which hold an Eighth Amendment challenge is justiciable
    prior to the litigant’s adjudication of guilt. In United States v. Jones, 
    731 F. Supp. 2d 1275
     (M.D. Fla. 2010), the defendant challenged the constitutionality of a statute
    imposing a minimum mandatory prison sentence of five years. The defendant was
    indicted on three counts of distributing crack cocaine, a conviction on any one count
    subjecting him to the minimum mandatory sentence. The Jones court concluded that
    if an injury in fact may be found “where the law has yet to be enforced against the
    party so long as he can show a well-founded fear of enforcement or imminent threat of
    prosecution, then surely an injury in fact shall be found where, as here, the party
    invoking the court’s authority has already been indicted and is facing trial.” 
    Id. at 1280
    . United States v. Sanders, 
    731 F. Supp. 2d 1261
     (M.D. Fla. 2010), contains the
    same question and analysis. These outlier cases relied primarily (and incorrectly in
    our view) on Virginia v. American Booksellers Ass’n, 
    484 U.S. 383
     (1988), a case
    involving a First Amendment pre-enforcement facial challenge (providing “well-founded
    16
    The Commonwealth has not raised the issue of standing directly,14 but
    Sexton is clear that “all Kentucky courts have the constitutional duty to
    ascertain the issue of constitutional standing, acting on their own motion, to
    ensure that only justiciable causes proceed in court, because the issue of
    constitutional standing is not waivable.” Sexton, 566 S.W.3d at 192. Thus,
    while the Appellees have raised a serious question as to whether the death
    penalty is a disproportionate punishment for offenders in the eighteen (18) to
    twenty-one (21) year-old range, it is not currently justiciable whether viewed as
    a lack of standing or a matter of ripeness.
    Rather recently, in Guernsey, 
    501 S.W.3d 884
    , this Court addressed a
    challenge similar to that raised in this case and decided that prior to trial the
    circuit court could not adjudicate the defendants’ motion to preclude the
    Commonwealth from seeking the death penalty as a constitutionally
    disproportionate penalty. In Guernsey, as here, the Commonwealth sought
    review of a Fayette Circuit Court’s pretrial order granting the defendants’
    fear” language and explaining danger of challenged statute is largely self-censorship),
    and Younger v. Harris, 
    401 U.S. 37
     (1971), a case involving allegations that both the
    existence and the enforcement of a criminal statute impaired the plaintiffs First
    Amendment rights. Unlike an Eighth Amendment claim, a First Amendment claim,
    particularly a facial challenge, is subject to a relaxed ripeness standard because of the
    special need to protect against the chilling of the right of free expression. See
    Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 612 (1973); Dougherty v. Town ofN. Hempstead
    Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 
    282 F.3d 83
    , 90 (2d Cir. 2002).
    14 The Commonwealth cited Commonwealth v. Guernsey, 
    501 S.W.3d 884
     (Ky.
    2016), discussed infra, for the premise that statutorily the trial court was prohibited
    from prematurely (prior to trial) removing the death penalty as a sentencing option.
    The trial court considered Guernsey, but as reflected in its orders, believed it could
    address Appellees’ constitutional argument.
    17
    motion to exclude death as a sentencing option in the event of conviction. The
    case was noticed as a death penalty case because the murder was allegedly
    committed in the course of a first-degree robbery, which occurred in the
    context of drug-trafficking. The circuit court concluded that, based on its
    knowledge of the facts following a pretrial hearing, capital punishment would
    be constitutionally disproportionate in that particular case and perhaps also
    comparatively disproportionate pursuant to KRS 532.075(3). Id. at 887.
    This Court, in a unanimous decision, clarified that the KRS 532.075(3)
    comparative proportionality review is a function assigned to the Supreme
    Court, but that the circuit court may determine whether a death sentence
    would be inherently disproportionate. Id. at 888-90. As this Court explained,
    however, the circuit court may only properly exercise this authority once the
    Commonwealth has had the opportunity to present all of its evidence at trial
    and a death sentence has actually been recommended. Id. at 892.
    We concluded:
    While Guernsey and Jones correctly note that the death
    penalty has fallen into disfavor in recent years, it remains a viable
    penalty in Kentucky authorized by our legislature in specific types
    of cases, including those in which the defendant is charged with
    committing murder in the course of the commission of first-degree
    robbery. The Fayette County Grand Jury indicted the Appellees for
    those very offenses, and the Commonwealth, as is its statutory
    right, subsequently noticed its intent to seek the death penalty.
    Although at the conclusion of trial, should the jury recommend the
    death penalty for either of the Appellees, the circuit court will have
    discretion to determine whether that sentence is constitutionally
    proportionate, there is no authority for exercising that discretion
    pretrial before all relevant evidence is actually heard. Accordingly,
    the Fayette Circuit Court’s Order Excluding the Death Penalty is
    vacated ....
    18
    Id. at 894.15
    Even though Guernsey involved a disproportionality argument that
    focused on the particular facts of a case that had not yet been tried to verdict
    while the cases currently before this Court raise a purely legal issue, judicial
    determination of Appellees’ age-based challenge to the death penalty is still not
    appropriate prior to trial. Regardless of the merits of the circuit court’s Eighth
    Amendment analysis (about which we express no opinion), as in Guernsey the
    lower court erred by treating the Appellees’ pretrial motions as justiciable and
    removing from the jury’s consideration a penalty that is currently viable under
    Kentucky law.
    Consistent with our conclusion regarding the current non-justiciability of
    the Appellees’ constitutional challenge, none of the cases they cite support this
    Court addressing pretrial whether Kentucky’s death penalty is constitutionally
    inappropriate for an offender in the eighteen (18) to twenty-one (21) year old
    range.16 All cases cited involving Eighth Amendment death or other penalty
    15 On remand, the co-defendants in Guernsey reached plea agreements with the
    Commonwealth. Robert Guernsey was sentenced to twenty-three (23) years for
    second-degree manslaughter and first-degree robbery, and Trustin Jones was
    sentenced to forty (40) years for murder and first-degree robbery.
    16 This is also true of other cases not included in Appellees’ list: Melton v.
    Secretary, Florida Dep’t of Corrs., 
    778 F.3d 1234
     (11th Cir. 2015); United States v.
    Mitchell, 
    502 F.3d 931
     (9th Cir. 2007); In re Gamer, 
    612 F.3d 533
     (6th Cir. 2010); In re
    Phillips, No. 17-3729, 
    2017 WL 4541664
     (6th Cir. July 20, 2017); In re Cathey, 
    857 F.3d 221
     (5th Cir. 2017); Tercero v. Stephens, 
    738 F.3d 141
     (5th Cir. 2013); State v.
    Myers, 
    114 N.E.3d 1138
     (Ohio 2018); Foster v. State, 
    258 So. 3d 1248
     (Fla. 2018);
    People v. Powell, 
    425 P.3d 1006
     (Cal. 2018); People v. Gamache, 
    227 P.3d 342
     (Cal.
    2010); Williams v. State, 
    67 S.W.3d 548
     (Ark. 2002); State v. Christeson, 
    50 S.W.3d 251
     (Mo. 2001); Samra v. State, 
    771 So. 2d 1108
     (Ala. Crim. App. 1999), affd 
    771 So. 2d 1122
     (Ala. 2000); Butts v. State, 
    546 S.E.2d 472
     (Ga. 2001); Wilson v. State, 
    525 S.E.2d 339
     (Ga. 1999).
    19
    challenges, inclusive of United States Supreme Court, federal circuit and state
    cases, are appeals by individuals who had already been convicted and
    sentenced:17 Moore v. Texas, 
    137 S. Ct. 1039 (2017)
    ; Hall v. Florida, 
    572 U.S. 701
     (2014); Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012); Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
     (2010); Kennedy v. Louisiana, 
    554 U.S. 407
     (2008); Roper v. Simmons,
    
    543 U.S. 551
     (2005); Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
     (2002); Stanford v.
    Kentucky, 
    492 U.S. 361
     (1989), abrogated by Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    (2005); Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U.S. 302
     (1989), abrogated by Atkins v. Virginia,
    
    536 U.S. 304
     (2002); Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
     (1993); Thompson v.
    Oklahoma, 
    487 U.S. 815
     (1988); Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
     (1982);
    Coker v. Georgia, 
    433 U.S. 584
     (1977); Woodson v. North Carolina, 
    428 U.S. 280
    (1976); Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U.S. 153
     (1976); United States v. Marshall, 
    736 F.3d 492
     (6th Cir. 2013); Branch v. State, 
    236 So. 3d 981
     (Fla. 2018); Otte v.
    State, 
    96 N.E.3d 1288
     (Ohio 8th Dist. App. 2017); Powell v. Delaware, 
    153 A.3d 69
     (Del. 2016); Thompson v. State, 
    153 So. 3d 84
     (Ala. Crim. App. 2012);
    Romero v. State, 
    105 So. 3d 550
     (Fla. 1st Dist. App. 2012); Mitchell v. State, 
    235 P.3d 640
     (Okla. Crim. App. 2010); Morton v. State, 
    995 So. 2d 233
     (Fla. 2008);
    17 Within the cited cases, United States v. Lopez-Cabrera, No. S5 llCr.1032,
    
    2015 WL 3880503
     (S.D.N.Y. June 23, 2015), is one case that does not precisely follow
    this guiding principle. Prior to sentencing, three defendants convicted of murder in
    aid of racketeering sought relief from the statutory mandatory minimum sentence of
    life imprisonment. As Appellees note, Lopez-Cabrera, an unpublished opinion, is not a
    death penalty case.
    20
    Hill v. State, 
    921 So. 2d 579
     (Fla. 2006); Bowling v. Commonwealth, 
    224 S.W.3d 577
     (Ky. 2006).18
    Undoubtedly, the death penalty’s unique “severity and irrevocability,”
    Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U.S. 153
    , 187 (1976) (citations omitted), weighs heavily
    on a defendant who has been notified by the Commonwealth of its intent to
    seek the death penalty. However, when a defendant is tried and convicted of a
    capital crime, the principle that capital punishment must be limited to those
    whose extreme culpability makes them the most deserving of execution is
    implemented through a carefully designed capital sentencing process. Roper,
    
    543 U.S. at 568
     (citation omitted). The sentencing phase allows the defendant
    the opportunity to present mitigating evidence to convince the jury that death
    is not the appropriate punishment. KRS 532.025(l)(b). “(W]here sentencing
    discretion is granted, it generally has been agreed that. . . ‘possession of the
    fullest information possible concerning the defendant’s life and characteristics’
    is ‘[h]ighly relevant- if not essential- [to the] selection of an appropriate sentence
    ....’” Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    , 602-03 (1978) (quoting Williams v. New
    York, 
    337 U.S. 241
    , 247 (1949) (emphasis added in Lockett})', see also Furman
    18 New Jersey ex rel. D.B., No. A-353-84T5 (N.J. Super. App. Div. Feb. 19,
    1985) (unpublished), a juvenile death penalty case, is similar to the case before this
    Court. By interlocutory appeal, the defendant argued that application of the capital
    punishment statute to a juvenile was unconstitutional. The New Jersey appellate
    court refused to decide the issue because the defendant had yet to be convicted and
    the imposition of the death penalty at that point was merely speculation. See also
    State v. Smith, 
    495 A.2d 507
    , 510 (N.J. Super. Law. Div. Apr. 19, 1985) (applying New
    Jersey ex rel. D.B. to a juvenile defendant’s pretrial motion challenging New Jersey’s
    death penalty statute as cruel and unusual punishment as to a juvenile and declining
    to decide the speculative constitutional question).
    21
    v. Georgia, 
    408 U.S. 238
    , 245-46 (1972) (Douglas, J., concurring); id. at 297-98
    (Brennan, J., concurring); id. at 339 (Marshall, J., concurring); id. at 402-03
    (Burger, C. J., dissenting); id. at 413 (Blackmun, J., dissenting). Thus, as
    reflected in KRS 532.025(2) which allows the jury to consider any mitigating
    circumstances otherwise authorized by law and in KRS 532.025(2)(b)’s
    delineated mitigating circumstances, which includes the youth of the defendant
    at the time of the crime, wide latitude is given to capital defendants to raise as
    a mitigating factor “any aspect of [his or her] character or record and any of the
    circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for a
    sentence less than death.” Lockett, 
    438 U.S. at 604
    .19
    As to this case, if the Appellees go to trial and are convicted, the jury
    would presumably hear the age-based arguments made before this Court,
    along with each Appellee’s individual circumstances when determining the
    19 The death penalty remains relatively rare in the Commonwealth. Currently,
    twenty-seven individuals are on death row in Kentucky. Kentucky Department of
    Corrections, Death Row Inmates, https://corrections.ky.gov/Facilities/AI/Pages/
    deathrowinmates.aspx. The sentencing dates for these individuals range between
    March 1980 and October 2014. Id.', Death Penalty Information Center, Sentencing
    Data, https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/facts-and-research/sentencing-data/death-
    sentences-in-the-united-states-from-1977-by-state-and-by-year. Between 1976 and
    2019, Kentucky executed three individuals (in 1997, 1999, and 2008) with two of
    those waiving further challenges to their sentence. Death Penalty Information Center,
    Executions, https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/executions/execution-
    database?filters%5Bstate%5D=Kentucky. Of those currently on death row, three are
    sentenced to death for crimes committed when they were over eighteen (18) but under
    twenty-one (21) years of age: Ronnie Lee Bowling, date of birth 12/05/1968, date of
    first of two murders 01/20/1989; Kara Gene White, date of birth 11/18/1958, date of
    three murders 02/12/1979; William (Bill) Harry Meece, date of birth 10/18/1972,
    date of three murders 02/26/1993. Kentucky Department of Corrections, supra;
    Meece v. Commonwealth, 
    348 S.W.3d 627
     (Ky. 2011) (Meece committed the murders
    Feb. 26, 1993, but was not indicted until Feb. 2003). (Websites last viewed Feb. 8,
    2020. )
    22
    Appellee’s sentence. If the jury recommends the death penalty for any of the
    three Appellees, the Appellee will have review of the appropriateness of that
    sentence by both the trial judge, KRS 532.070, and this Court, KRS
    532.075(3), through direct appeal and post-conviction review. We reiterate that
    KRS 418.075 requires notice to the Attorney General in order to preserve for
    our review a constitutional challenge to a statute. Craft v. Commonwealth, 
    483 S.W.3d 837
    , 840 (Ky. 2016); Benet v. Commonwealth, 
    253 S.W.3d 528
    , 532 (Ky.
    2008) (compliance with the notification provisions of KRS 418.075 is
    mandatory even in criminal cases). Thus, in the event a jury recommends
    death, a defendant challenging that sentence on constitutional grounds must
    give notice to the Attorney General so he or she can participate at the trial
    court level as provided by KRS 418.075.
    In summary, only when, if ever, one or more of these Appellees is
    convicted and a jury recommends the death penalty will the circuit court be
    confronted with an Eighth Amendment issue presented by an individual with
    standing to raise it. Should that occur, this Court anticipates that the
    evidentiary record regarding the psychological and neurobiological
    characteristics of offenders under twenty-one (21) years old generally, as well
    as of the Appellee specifically, will be fully developed by all parties and both the
    23
    trial court and this Court will have the scientific evidence necessary to address
    a truly justiciable constitutional issue.20
    CONCLUSION
    Because none of the Appellees has standing to present the issue of
    whether Kentucky’s death penalty constitutes “cruel and unusual” punishment
    under the Eighth Amendment as to defendants ages eighteen (18) to twenty-
    one (21) at the time of their offense, neither the circuit court nor this Court is
    presented with a justiciable cause. Accordingly, the Fayette Circuit Court’s
    orders declaring Kentucky’s death penalty statute unconstitutional as applied
    to these Appellees are vacated and these cases are remanded to the circuit
    court for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
    All sitting. All concur.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Daniel Jay Cameron
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Matthew Robert Krygiel
    Jason Bradley Moore
    Assistant Attorneys General
    Office of the Attorney General
    20 Additionally, Appellees will have the opportunity to present this evidence to
    the jury in the penalty phase for their consideration as they debate the propriety of the
    death penalty for a particular offender under age twenty-one (21).
    24
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    TRAVIS M. BREDHOLD
    Timothy G. Arnold
    Emily Holt Rhorer
    Brandon Neil Jewell
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    EFRAIN DIAZ, JR.:
    Timothy G. Arnold
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    JUSTIN SMITH:
    Brandon Neil Jewell
    Kim Angela Green
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE:
    THE COLORADO JUVENILE DEFENSE CENTER
    AND THE COLORADO CRIMINAL DEFENSE BAR
    Rebecca Ballard Diloreto
    The Institute for Compassion in Justice
    COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE:
    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR PUBLIC DEFENSE
    AND KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION OF CRIMINAL
    DEFENSE LAWYERS
    David Michael Ward
    Kentucky Association of Criminal Defense
    Lawyers
    Amy Elizabeth Halbrook
    Salmon P. Chase College of Law
    25
    COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE:
    ATLANTIC CENTER FOR CAPITAL
    REPRESENTATION; CAMPAIGN FOR FAIR
    SENTENCING OF YOUTH; CAMPAIGN FOR
    YOUTH JUSTICE; CENTER FOR LAW, BRAIN
    AND BEHAVIOR; CENTER ON WRONGFUL
    CONVICTIONS OF YOUTH; CHILDREN &
    FAMILY JUSTICE CENTER; FAIR PUNISHMENT
    PROJECT; FLORIDA CENTER FOR CAPITAL
    REPRESENTATION; JUSTICE LAB AT COLUMBIA
    UNIVERSITY; PHILLIPS BLACK INC.; RODERICK AND
    SOLANGE MACARTHUR JUSTICE CENTER;
    SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER; YOUTH FIRST;
    YOUTH SENTENCING 8b REENTRY PROJECT
    Acena Johnson Beck
    Children’s Law Center, Inc.
    COUNSEL FOR AMICUS CURIAE:
    JUVENILE LAW CENTER AND CHILDREN’S LAW
    CENTER, INC.
    Acena Johnson Beck
    Children’s Law Center, Inc.
    Marsha L. Levick
    Juvenile Law Center
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2017-SC-0436

Filed Date: 3/26/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024