McCullough v. State , 233 Md. App. 702 ( 2017 )


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  • In the Circuit Court for Baltimore County
    Case No. K-04-CR-001787
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1081
    September Term, 2016
    ______________________________________
    MATTHEW TIMOTHY MCCULLOUGH
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Eyler, Deborah S.,
    Berger,
    Sharer, J. Frederick (Senior Judge,
    Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Eyler, Deborah S., J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: August 30, 2017
    Graeff, Kathryn Grill, J., did not participate in
    the Court’s decision to report this opinion
    pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1.
    This case presents the question whether four consecutive 25-year sentences
    imposed against a juvenile for nonhomicide crimes constitute cruel and unusual
    punishment, categorically. More specifically, it causes us to consider whether the United
    States Supreme Court’s holding in Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
     (2010), that it is a
    categorical violation of the Eighth Amendment for a juvenile nonhomicide offender to be
    sentenced to life without parole (“LWOP”), extends to these multiple-victim, multiple-
    crime term-of-years sentences. We hold that Graham does not extend to the sentences in
    this case and they are not otherwise cruel and unusual.
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    On Tuesday, May 4, 2004, Matthew Timothy McCullough, the appellant, and
    Martise Williams, both students at Randallstown High School, in Baltimore County, got
    into an argument when Williams called the appellant a “bitch.” Over the next several
    days, the controversy escalated. Efforts by school officials to “calm the waters” by
    meeting with the students and their parents proved fruitless.      School officials told
    appellant not to be on school grounds on Friday, May 7, 2004. He came to the school
    that day anyway and during the course of a school basketball game let it be known that he
    and three companions were looking for a fight. School officials ordered them off the
    grounds.
    Later that afternoon, when the basketball game was letting out, the appellant
    returned with his three companions.        The appellant was 17½ years old, but his
    companions were older and were not students. The four walked together “towards the
    school where a group of kids were hanging out on the sidewalk.” McCullough v. State,
    No. 2812, Sept. Term. 2004, slip op. at 2 (filed Nov. 28, 2005). According to a teacher
    who witnessed what happened next, the four approached a group of students, “[a] few
    words were exchanged, a punch was thrown, and there was a fight.” A crowd of 30 or 40
    students formed. When it became clear that the four were not going to prevail, one of
    them, Tyrone “Fat Boy” Brown, retrieved a handgun from his car. “Fat Boy” and the
    appellant shared the handgun, using it to fire a total of 12 shots into the crowd. Four
    students were seriously wounded; one of them was shot in the back of the neck and is
    paralyzed from the chest down.
    On November 23, 2004, a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County
    convicted the appellant of four counts of first degree assault, one for each victim.
    Sentencing took place on January 27, 2005.      Exercising his right to allocution, the
    appellant made the following statement:
    Your Honor, I would like to say what happened on May 7th was a tragedy.
    I’d like to apologize for what happened that day and I’d like to apologize
    for putting the victims and their families through the pain and suffering.
    And I know that a punishment is acceptable, and I’m here to accept the
    punishment. Thank you.
    When asked by his lawyer whether he thought that, “[a]t some point in [his] life,” he
    could “rejoin [the] community and be a productive part of society[,]” the appellant
    responded, “Yes.”
    The court sentenced the appellant to the maximum 25 years for each conviction, to
    be served consecutively, for an aggregate sentence of 100 years. In doing so, the judge
    characterized the crimes as “vicious and heinous,” described the “horror” endured by the
    -2-
    families of the students and the fear the crimes created in the community, and recounted
    the seriousness of the victims’ injuries. He characterized the appellant as a “suburban
    terrorist” and a “coward” and observed that until sentencing he had shown no remorse
    and had bragged about “beat[ing] the attempted murder wrap [sic]” and the use of a
    handgun charge.
    Eleven years later, on March 25, 2016, the appellant filed a motion to correct
    illegal sentence, arguing that his aggregate sentence of 100 years violated the prohibition
    against cruel and unusual punishment in the Eighth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution and in Article 25 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. The circuit court
    denied the motion without a hearing, by order entered on June 27, 2016.
    The appellant noted a timely appeal, asking:
    Does a juvenile nonhomicide offender’s prison sentence of 100 years
    violate the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and/or
    Article 25 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights?
    For the reasons set forth below, we shall affirm the order of the circuit court.
    DISCUSSION
    A.
    The Eighth Amendment to the federal constitution, applicable to the States
    through the Fourteenth Amendment, see Robinson v. California, 
    370 U.S. 660
     (1962),
    provides that “[e]xcessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor
    -3-
    cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”1              Early Supreme Court jurisprudence
    interpreting the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause prohibited barbaric punishments,
    such as torture or methods of execution causing undue suffering. See, e.g., Wilkerson v.
    Utah, 
    99 U.S. 130
    , 135-36 (1878) (noting in dicta that the punishment of torture is
    prohibited); In re Kemmler, 
    136 U.S. 436
    , 447 (1890) (“Punishments are cruel when they
    involve torture or a lingering death . . . .”).
    In Weems v. United States, 
    217 U.S. 349
    , 367 (1910), the Supreme Court
    recognized in the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause the “precept . . . that
    punishment for crime should be graduated and proportioned to [the] offense.” See also
    Coker v. Georgia, 
    433 U.S. 584
    , 592 (1977) (Eighth Amendment “bars not only those
    punishments that are ‘barbaric’ but also those that are ‘excessive’ in relation to the crime
    committed.”). The sentence at issue in Weems was “cadena temporal,” a punishment
    permitted by the law of the Philippines for the crime of making a false entry in a public
    record. Cadena temporal consists of “imprisonment for at least 12 years and one day, in
    chains, at hard and painful labor; the loss of many basic civil rights; and subjection to
    lifetime surveillance.” Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U.S. 153
    , 171 (1976). The Court held that
    that punishment violated the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause not because it was
    barbaric, but because it was excessive and disproportionate to the crime for which it was
    imposed.
    1
    Article 25 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights states: “That excessive bail
    ought not to be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel or unusual punishment
    inflicted, by the Courts of Law.”
    -4-
    After Weems, two types of proportionality analyses emerged. In one type, the
    Court imposed “categorical restrictions on the death penalty.” Graham, 560 U.S. at 59.
    In some of those cases, the Court categorically prohibited the death penalty because it
    was unconstitutionally excessive in relation to the severity of a particular offense. See
    Kennedy v. Louisiana, 
    554 U.S. 407
     (2008) (rape of a child); Coker, 
    433 U.S. at 584
    (rape of an adult); Enmund v. Florida, 
    458 U.S. 782
     (1982) (non-triggerman felony
    murderer). In others, the Court categorically prohibited the death penalty because it was
    unconstitutionally excessive in relation to the diminished culpability of a particular class
    of offenders. See Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    , 306 (2002) (“mentally retarded”
    offenders); Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
     (2005) (juvenile offenders). In determining
    whether to impose a categorical proportionality restriction, the Court has looked to state
    legislative enactments and practices to assess whether a national consensus has emerged
    for or against a particular punishment vis-à-vis a class of offenders, see, e.g., Atkins, 
    536 U.S. at
    313–15; and whether the penological goals of retribution and deterrence are
    served by imposing the punishment. See, e.g., Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 571
    .
    In the other type of proportionality analysis, the Supreme Court reviews “the
    length of term-of-years sentences given all the circumstances in a particular case . . . . to
    determine whether the sentence is unconstitutionally excessive.” Graham, 560 U.S. at
    59. Three “‘objective criteria’” are relevant to this analysis: “the gravity of the offense as
    compared to the harshness of the penalty; the sentences imposed on others in the same
    jurisdiction; and the sentences imposed for the same offense in other jurisdictions.”
    -5-
    United States v. Young, 
    766 F.3d 621
    , 626 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting Solem v. Helm, 
    463 U.S. 277
    , 288, 292 (1983)). Ordinarily, a court will reach the latter two criteria only if its
    consideration of the first factor gives rise to “an initial inference of gross
    disproportionality.” 
    Id.
     In these proportionality review cases, the Supreme Court almost
    always has upheld the sentences. See Rummel v. Estelle, 
    445 U.S. 263
    , 273 (1980)
    (“Outside the context of capital punishment, successful challenges to the proportionality
    of particular sentences have been exceedingly rare.”)        For example, in Harmelin v.
    Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
     (1991), a plurality of the Court upheld a mandatory LWOP
    sentence for the crime of possession of 672 grams of cocaine, stating that the Eighth
    Amendment’s “proportionality principle” is “narrow” and “does not require strict
    proportionality between crime and sentence.”        
    Id. at 997, 1001
    .     “[I]t forbids only
    extreme sentences that are ‘grossly disproportionate’ to the crime.” 
    Id. at 1001
    .2
    The Court’s 2010 decision in Graham, 560 U.S. at 82, altered the landscape of
    proportionality review by imposing, for the first time, a categorical sentencing restriction
    outside the realm of the death penalty. The defendant in Graham was convicted of armed
    2
    See also Ewing v. California, 
    538 U.S. 11
     (2003) (upholding a sentence of 25
    years to life for the theft of golf clubs under California’s three strikes sentencing
    scheme); Rummel, 
    445 U.S. at 263
     (upholding a sentence of life with the possibility of
    parole for a defendant’s third nonviolent felony, the crime of obtaining money by false
    pretenses); Hutto v. Davis, 
    454 U.S. 370
     (1982) (per curiam) (upholding a sentence of 40
    years for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and distribution of marijuana).
    But see Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 288
     (striking down a sentence of life without the possibility of
    parole under a recidivist sentencing scheme against an adult offender who was convicted,
    as his third offense, of uttering a “no account” check for $100).
    -6-
    burglary and another offense, both committed when he was 16. In a plea agreement, he
    was sentenced to probation before judgment.         He committed additional crimes, in
    violation of his probation.    The court found him guilty of the armed robbery and
    sentenced him to LWOP.3 The Supreme Court held that sentencing juvenile offenders to
    LWOP for a nonhomicide crime is cruel and unusual punishment.
    The Graham Court began its analysis by considering “objective indicia of national
    consensus” about LWOP sentences imposed against juvenile nonhomicide offenders. Id.
    at 62. It commented that (at that time) thirteen states prohibited LWOP sentences for
    juvenile nonhomicide offenders.4 Thirty-seven states, and the federal courts, permitted
    LWOP for juvenile nonhomicide offenders, but the sentence very rarely was imposed.
    Relying on a 2009 study and its own independent research, the Court determined
    that across the nation only 123 juvenile offenders were serving LWOP sentences for
    nonhomicide offenses. See P. Annino, D. Rasmussen, & C. Rice, Juvenile Life without
    Parole for Non-Homicide Offenses: Florida Compared to Nation, 14 (Sept. 14, 2009)
    (“Juvenile LWOP Study”).      Florida accounted for 77 of those offenders and another 10
    states accounted for the remaining 46. Thus, while 38 jurisdictions permitted juvenile
    nonhomicide offenders to be sentenced to LWOP, only 11 jurisdictions had imposed that
    sentence and, with the exception of Florida, they did so “quite rarely.”        Id. at 64.
    3
    Graham actually was sentenced to life in prison but before then Florida had
    abolished its parole system, so the sentencing judge knew that the life sentence was
    without an opportunity for parole.
    4
    Six of those states prohibited LWOP sentences for any juvenile offenders.
    -7-
    Although the practice of imposing LWOP sentences against juvenile nonhomicide
    offenders was not as rare as the practices had been in the death penalty cases where the
    Court had adopted categorical bars, see, e.g., Atkins, 
    536 U.S. at 316
     (5 executions of
    “mentally retarded” defendants over 13 years), it was “exceedingly rare” when measured
    against the number of juveniles convicted of nonhomicide crimes each year. Graham,
    560 U.S. at 67. In the Court’s view, it was “‘fair to say that a national consensus [had]
    developed against it.’” Id. (quoting Atkins, 
    536 U.S. at 316
    ).
    The Court then considered whether in this context LWOP sentences are justified
    by the “culpability of the offenders.” 
    Id.
     In doing so, it followed the same rationale
    undergirding its decision in Roper to categorically prohibit the death penalty for juvenile
    offenders. In Roper, the defendant was convicted of murder, burglary, and kidnapping,
    committed when he was 17, and was sentenced to death. Reasoning that the death
    penalty, being the worst punishment, should be reserved for the worst offenders, the
    Supreme Court identified “[t]hree general differences between juveniles under 18 and
    adults [which] demonstrate that juvenile offenders cannot with reliability be classified
    among the worst offenders[.]” Id. at 569. They suffer from “‘[a] lack of maturity and an
    underdeveloped sense of responsibility’” that “‘often result in impetuous and ill-
    considered actions and decisions.’” Id. (quoting Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
    , 367
    (1993)). They “are more vulnerable or susceptible to negative influences and outside
    pressures, including peer pressure.” 
    Id.
     And their characters are “not as well formed as
    that of an adult. The personality traits of juveniles are more transitory, less fixed.” 
    Id.
     at
    -8-
    570. Due to these differences, juveniles have “diminished culpability” and once that “is
    recognized, it is evident that the penological justifications for the death penalty apply to
    them with lesser force than to adults.” Id. at 571. The Roper Court rejected the argument
    that a categorical bar was unnecessary because the criminal justice system already
    provides case-by-case consideration of mitigating factors, including the age of the
    offender. It found that the “differences between juvenile and adult offenders are too
    marked and well understood to risk allowing a youthful person to receive the death
    penalty despite insufficient culpability.” Id. at 572–73.
    Finally, the Court in Graham examined the “penological justifications for the
    sentencing practice” of LWOP, i.e., retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and
    rehabilitation, and found that none of them supported LWOP sentences for juvenile
    nonhomicide offenders. Id. at 71–74. The “‘heart of the retribution rationale is that a
    criminal sentence must be directly related to the personal culpability of the criminal
    offender.’” Id. at 71 (quoting Tison v. Arizona, 
    481 U.S. 137
    , 149 (1987)). Once again
    relying on Roper, the Court reasoned that “‘the case for retribution is not as strong with a
    minor as with an adult,’” and “becomes even weaker with respect to a juvenile who did
    not commit homicide.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 571
    ). Juveniles “‘will be less
    susceptible to deterrence[,]’” 
    id.
     (quoting Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 571
    ), because they lack
    maturity and have an “‘underdeveloped sense of responsibility[.]’” Id. at 72 (quoting
    Johnson, 
    509 U.S. at 367
    ). LWOP sentences have little deterrent effect because they are
    imposed so rarely. 
    Id.
     Incapacitation is not an adequate justification because one cannot
    -9-
    reasonably assume that a juvenile nonhomicide offender “forever will be a danger to
    society[.]” Id. at 72. And the LWOP penalty runs contrary to the goal of rehabilitation
    because it is based on an “irrevocable judgment” that a juvenile nonhomicide offender
    lacks capacity for change and is equally culpable as an adult offender. Id. at 74.
    The Graham Court concluded that the national consensus against LWOP
    sentences for juveniles, the diminished culpability of juveniles, and the absence of
    penological justifications together warranted a departure from the ordinary “case-by-case
    proportionality approach,” id. at 77, for the imposition of “‘the second most severe
    penalty permitted by law’” against a juvenile for a nonhomicide crime. Id. at 69 (quoting
    Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1001
    ). It emphasized that a LWOP sentence “alters the offender’s
    life by a forfeiture that is irrevocable[,]” and “deprives the convict of the most basic
    liberties without giving hope of restoration[.]” 
    Id.
     at 69–70. “[T]his sentence ‘means
    denial of hope; it means that good behavior and character improvement are immaterial; it
    means that whatever the future might hold in store for the mind and spirit of [the
    convict], he will remain in prison for the rest of his days.” 
    Id.
     at 70–71 (quoting
    Naovarath v. State, 
    779 P.2d 944
    , 944 (Nev. 1989)) (second alteration in Graham). For
    the same reasons the Court explained in Roper, juveniles cannot “‘reliab[ly] be classified
    among the worst offenders[,]’” and therefore are undeserving, across the board, of such a
    harsh sentence. Id. at 68 (quoting Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 569
    ). Indeed, LWOP “is an
    especially harsh punishment for a juvenile” because “a juvenile offender will on average
    -10-
    serve more years and a greater percentage of his life in prison than an adult offender.” Id.
    at 70.
    The Court concluded:
    In sum, penological theory is not adequate to justify life without
    parole for juvenile nonhomicide offenders. This determination; the limited
    culpability of juvenile nonhomicide offenders; and the severity of life
    without parole sentences all lead to the conclusion that the sentencing
    practice under consideration is cruel and unusual. This Court now holds
    that for a juvenile offender who did not commit homicide the Eighth
    Amendment forbids the sentence of life without parole.
    Id. at 74 (emphasis added). Further refining its holding, the Court went on to explain:
    A State is not required to guarantee eventual freedom to a juvenile
    offender convicted of a nonhomicide crime. What the State must do,
    however, is give defendants like Graham some meaningful opportunity to
    obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation. It is for
    the State, in the first instance, to explore the means and mechanisms for
    compliance. It bears emphasis, however, that while the Eighth Amendment
    prohibits a State from imposing a life without parole sentence on a juvenile
    nonhomicide offender, it does not require the State to release that offender
    during his natural life. Those who commit truly horrifying crimes as
    juveniles may turn out to be irredeemable, and thus deserving of
    incarceration for the duration of their lives. The Eighth Amendment does
    not foreclose the possibility that persons convicted of nonhomicide crimes
    committed before adulthood will remain behind bars for life. It does
    prohibit States from making the judgment at the outset that those offenders
    never will be fit to reenter society.
    Id. at 75 (emphasis added).
    Two years later, in Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012), the Supreme Court
    held that mandatory LWOP sentences for juvenile homicide offenders violate the Eighth
    Amendment, categorically. The Court reasoned that mandatory LWOP penalty schemes
    “prevent the sentencer from taking account of” the diminished culpability of juveniles:
    -11-
    “By removing youth from the balance—by subjecting a juvenile to the same life-without-
    parole sentence applicable to an adult—these laws prohibit a sentencing authority from
    assessing whether the law’s harshest term of imprisonment proportionately punishes a
    juvenile offender.” 
    Id. at 474
    . In addition, mandatory LWOP sentences prevent the
    sentencer from taking the “‘mitigating qualities of youth’” into account. 
    Id. at 476
    (quoting Johnson, 
    509 U.S. at 367
    ). The Court concluded that
    a judge or jury must have the opportunity to consider mitigating
    circumstances before imposing the harshest possible penalty for juveniles.
    By requiring that all children convicted of homicide receive lifetime
    incarceration without possibility of parole, regardless of their age and age-
    related characteristics and the nature of their crimes, the mandatory-
    sentencing schemes before us violate this principle of proportionality, and
    so the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
    
    Id. at 489
    .5,6
    5
    In Montgomery v. Louisiana,        U.S.  , 
    136 S.Ct. 718
    , 736 (2016), the
    Supreme Court held that Miller “announced a substantive rule of constitutional law,” and
    therefore applies retroactively. It noted, however, that resentencing was not necessary,
    and “[a] State may remedy a Miller violation by permitting juvenile homicide offenders
    to be considered for parole.” 
    Id.
     Addressing the specifics of the defendant’s case, the
    Court stated:
    Henry Montgomery has spent each day of the past 46 years knowing
    he was condemned to die in prison. Perhaps it can be established that, due
    to exceptional circumstances, this fate was a just and proportionate
    punishment for the crime he committed as a 17-year-old boy. In light of
    what this Court has said in Roper, Graham, and Miller about how children
    are constitutionally different from adults in their level of culpability,
    however, prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to
    show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not,
    their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored.
    
    Id.
     at 736–37.
    -12-
    B.
    In the case at bar, the appellant contends his 100-year sentence, comprising four
    consecutive 25-year sentences, is the functional equivalent of a LWOP sentence for
    nonhomicide crimes, and therefore violates the Eighth Amendment under Graham.
    Because he will not be eligible for parole until he has served 50% of each consecutive
    sentence, the earliest he may be released is 2054, when he will be 67 years old. See Md.
    Code (1999, 2008 Repl. Vol.), § 7-301(c)(1)(i) of the Correctional Services Article
    (“CS”).7 He argues that by imposing a sentence with a 50-year non-parole period, the
    (…continued)
    6
    Very recently, during the pendency of the instant appeal, the Supreme Court, in a
    per curiam decision, reversed a divided panel of the Fourth Circuit that had held in
    LeBlanc v. Mathena, 
    841 F.3d 256
     (4th Cir. 2016), that a state court adjudication
    affirming a sentence of LWOP imposed against a juvenile offender for a nonhomicide
    offense (rape) was an “‘unreasonable application of clearly established Federal law.’”
    Virginia v. LeBlanc, __ U.S. __, 
    137 S.Ct. 1726
    , 1727 (2017) (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1)). The Supreme Court of Virginia had held that the sentence did not violate the
    Eighth Amendment because even though the sentence was without parole the defendant
    would be eligible for the state’s geriatric release program, at age 60, and therefore would
    have a “meaningful opportunity” for release. On federal habeas review, a federal district
    court reversed and the Fourth Circuit affirmed that decision, holding that the geriatric
    release program did not “provide a meaningful opportunity for juvenile nonhomicide
    offenders to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Id. at
    1728.
    The Supreme Court granted certiorari and summarily reversed, emphasizing that
    Graham did “not decide that a geriatric release program like Virginia’s failed to satisfy
    the Eighth Amendment because that question was not presented.” Id at 1728-29.
    Expressing “no view on the merits,” it held that the Fourth Circuit had not accorded
    sufficient deference to the state court adjudication under the Antiterrorism and Effective
    Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). Id. at 1729 (citation omitted).
    7
    CS section 7-301(c)(1)(i) provides that
    (Continued…)
    -13-
    court denied him a “meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated
    maturity and rehabilitation” while he is of an age to have the chance for reconciliation
    with society and fulfillment outside prison, contrary to the Cruel and Unusual
    Punishments Clause. See Graham, 560 U.S. at 75.8         He maintains further that even if
    the length of the non-parole portion of his sentence does not violate the Eighth
    Amendment, once he becomes parole eligible, the Maryland parole system will not afford
    him a “meaningful opportunity” for release.       He asks this Court to vacate all four
    sentences for first degree assault and remand the case to the circuit court for resentencing
    “in accordance with Graham and its progeny.”
    The State counters that the appellant was not sentenced to LWOP; rather, he was
    given four consecutive term-of-years sentences, all within the maximum allowed by law
    and each for a crime against a different victim. It points out that the Supreme Court has
    never held a term-of-years sentence categorically unconstitutional and maintains there are
    (…continued)
    an inmate who has been sentenced to the Division of Correction after being
    convicted of a violent crime committed on or after October 1, 1994, is not
    eligible for parole until the inmate has served the greater of:
    1. one-half of the inmate’s aggregate sentence for violent
    crimes; or
    2. one-fourth of the inmate’s total aggregate sentence.
    In the case at bar, all four sentences imposed were for violent crimes and the appellant
    must serve one-half of his aggregate sentence, or 50 years.
    8
    He argues that for the same reason his sentence violates Article 25 of the
    Maryland Declaration of Rights.
    -14-
    no “principled bases for substituting the statutory maximum set by the legislature with an
    ad hoc statutory maximum as defined by an appellate court.” Furthermore, the State
    argues, the appellant may not challenge the constitutionality of the Maryland parole
    statutes in a motion to correct an illegal sentence and, in any event, the parole statutes
    require the Parole Commission to consider “demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation” in
    assessing whether to grant parole to a juvenile nonhomicide offender.
    C.
    In the seven years since the Supreme Court decided Graham, courts across the
    country have grappled with what impact, if any, it has on term-of-years sentences for
    juveniles sentenced for nonhomicide crimes, with varying results. See Moore v. Biter,
    
    742 F.3d 917
    , 920 (9th Cir. 2014) (dissent from denial of rehearing en banc) (discussing
    the split in authority and collecting cases). We shall discuss some of these cases below.
    1. Graham does not apply to consecutive term-of-years sentences imposed for
    multiple offenses
    Appellate courts in five states—Arizona, Louisiana, Virginia, Colorado, and
    Missouri—have held that Graham’s categorical prohibition does not apply to multiple
    term-of-years sentences for multiple offenses that, cumulatively, exceed a juvenile
    offender’s natural life expectancy. See State v. Kasic, 
    265 P.3d 410
     (Ariz. Ct. App.
    2011); State v. Brown, 
    118 So.3d 332
     (La. 2013); Vasquez v. Commonwealth of Virginia,
    
    781 S.E.2d 920
     (Va. 2016), cert. denied __ U.S. __, 
    137 S.Ct. 568
     (2016); Lucero v.
    People, 
    394 P.3d 1128
     (Co. 2017); People v. Rainer, 
    394 P.3d 1141
     (Co. 2017);
    Willbanks v. Dep’t of Corrections, __ S.W.3d __, 
    2017 WL 2952445
     (Mo. 2017), pet. for
    -15-
    cert. filed, No. 17-165 (Jul. 28, 2017). Some of these courts have held that Graham never
    applies outside of LWOP sentences. Others have held that even if Graham might apply
    to one term-of-years sentence for a single offense that is so lengthy as to be a de facto
    LWOP sentence, it cannot apply to a lengthy aggregate sentence resulting from a
    multitude of offenses committed by the juvenile offender.
    Arizona (2011): State v. Kasic, 
    265 P.3d 410
    The defendant was convicted of “thirty-two felonies arising from six arsons and
    one attempted arson committed over a one-year period beginning when he was seventeen
    years of age.” 265 P.3d at 411. He received an aggregate sentence of 139.75 years.9 On
    appeal, he argued that “the ‘reasons underlying the Court’s decision in Graham [were]
    applicable to juveniles, such as [him], serving a term-of-years sentence exceeding the
    juvenile’s life expectancy.’” Id. at 414 (second alteration in original).
    The Arizona Court of Appeals disagreed, stating that the opinion in Graham
    “made clear” that the case only applied to juvenile offenders sentenced to life without
    parole; therefore, “Graham does not categorically bar the sentences imposed in this
    case.” Id. at 415. The court “decline[d] to extend [Graham’s] reasoning in the manner
    [the defendant] urge[d].” Id. It proceeded with a conventional proportionality review,
    “considering all of the circumstances of [the defendant’s] case[,]” including the “gravity
    of the offenses and the severity of the combined sentence,” and concluded that the
    9
    Several of the offenses were committed when he was a juvenile; some were
    committed after he turned 18. Of the aggregate sentence of 139.75 years, 80.5 were for
    arsons he committed when he was a juvenile. 265 P.3d at 411 n.1.
    -16-
    “sentences [were] not ‘constitutionally excessive.’” Id. Noting that the defendant did not
    receive any single sentence longer than 15.75 years, and relying upon the “general rule”
    that the court will “not consider the imposition of consecutive sentences in the
    proportionality inquiry,”10 the court found that “different considerations apply to
    consecutive term-of-years sentences based on multiple counts and multiple victims.” Id.
    at 415–16. The “sentences, viewed individually and in the aggregate, further Arizona’s
    penological goals and thus reflect a rational legislative judgment, entitled to deference.”
    Id. at 416 (citation and quotation marks omitted).11
    Louisiana (2013): State v. Brown, 
    118 So.3d at
    332
    The defendant was convicted of one count of aggravated kidnapping, for which he
    was sentenced to life, and four counts of armed robbery, for which he was sentenced to
    four concurrent terms of 10 years. He was 16 when he committed the offenses. The
    court originally had imposed concurrent sentences, without parole, but amended the
    sentences post-Graham. The State took issue with the amendments to the term-of-years
    sentences.     The case came before the Supreme Court of Louisiana on the question
    “whether, and to what extent, the . . . decision in Graham applies in cases in which the
    juvenile offender committed multiple offenses resulting in cumulative sentences
    matching or exceeding his life expectancy without the opportunity of securing early
    10
    We shall discuss this principle infra.
    11
    The opinion in Kasic does not provide any information about whether, and if so
    when, the defendant would become eligible for parole.
    -17-
    release from confinement on parole.” 
    118 So.3d at 335
    . Observing that Graham did not
    include any “analysis of sentences for multiple convictions and provide[d] no guidance
    on how to handle such sentences,” the court concluded that Graham does “not prohibit
    consecutive term of year sentences for multiple offenses committed [by a juvenile], even
    if they might exceed a defendant’s lifetime.” 
    Id. at 341
    . (As we shall discuss, infra, the
    same court later reached a different result in addressing a lengthy term-of-years sentence
    against a juvenile for one offense.)
    Virginia (2016): Vasquez v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 
    781 S.E.2d 920
    When they were 16 years old, the defendants broke into a townhouse, stole
    property, and repeatedly raped and sexually assaulted the female occupant at knifepoint.
    In a joint jury trial, Vasquez was convicted of eighteen felonies and Valentin was
    convicted of twelve felonies. These crimes included forcible vaginal and anal rape,
    breaking and entering while armed with a deadly weapon, forcible fellatio, abduction,
    and robbery. The court sentenced each defendant to multiple term-of-years sentences
    “which, in the aggregate, equaled 283 years for Vasquez, with 150 years suspended, and
    148 years for Valentin, with 80 years suspended.” 781 S.E.2d at 926. As a result,
    Vasquez would serve 133 years of active incarceration and Valentin would serve 68
    years. Pursuant to Virginia law, both would become eligible for parole upon reaching the
    age of 60. Id. at 924 n.3.
    In a consolidated appeal, the Supreme Court of Virginia held that Graham is not
    implicated for “multiple term-of-years sentences imposed on multiple crimes that, by
    -18-
    virtue of the accumulation, exceed the criminal defendant’s life expectancy.” 291 Va. at
    925. The multiple sentences imposed by the trial court were “nothing like Graham,
    which involved a single crime resulting in a single [LWOP] sentence.” Id. at 926.
    In reaching this result, the Vasquez court was persuaded by the reasoning of the
    Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Bunch v. Smith, 
    685 F.3d 546
     (6th Cir. 2012), cert.
    denied sub nom. Bunch v. Bobby, __ U.S. __, 
    133 S.Ct. 1996
     (2013). The defendant in
    Bunch was convicted of robbing, kidnapping, and repeatedly raping a young woman
    when he was 16 and was sentenced by an Ohio state court to “consecutive, fixed terms
    totaling 89 years’ imprisonment.” Id. at 547. After Graham was decided, he petitioned,
    unsuccessfully, for habeas relief in state court. He challenged that ruling in federal court.
    The Sixth Circuit held that the sentence did not “violate clearly established federal law”
    and, therefore, the habeas petition properly had been denied.12 It distinguished Graham,
    noting that Graham “was sentenced to life in prison for committing one nonhomicide
    offense, [whereas] Bunch was sentenced to consecutive, fixed-term sentences—the
    longest of which was 10 years—for committing multiple nonhomicide offenses.” Id. at
    551. The Sixth Circuit recognized that “Bunch’s 89-year aggregate sentence may end up
    being the functional equivalent of life without parole,” making it likely that he would
    12
    Federal habeas review is highly circumscribed. Under the AEDPA, a federal
    court may reverse a state court adjudication as contrary to clearly established federal law
    only if the defendant can show that the “ruling [was] ‘objectively unreasonable, not
    merely wrong; even clear error will not suffice.’” Virginia v. LeBlanc, 
    137 S.Ct. at 1729
    (quoting Woods v. Donald, 575 U.S. ___, ___, 
    135 S.Ct. 1372
    , 1376 (2015) (per
    curiam)).
    -19-
    “not be given the ‘meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated
    maturity and rehabilitation’ called for in Graham.” 
    Id.
     Emphasizing that the Graham
    “Court did not address juvenile offenders, like Bunch, who received consecutive, fixed-
    term sentences for committing multiple nonhomicide offenses,” 
    id.,
     the court concluded
    that the Graham holding is limited to cases in which LWOP has been imposed for a
    single nonhomicide offense.
    Colorado (2017): Lucero v. People, 
    394 P.3d 1128
     & People v. Rainer, 
    394 P.3d 1141
    In two cases decided the same day, the Supreme Court of Colorado held that
    Graham does not apply to aggregate sentences of 84 years and 112 years, respectively,
    imposed upon juvenile offenders for nonhomicide crimes. Lucero, 394 P.3d at 1128;
    Rainer, 394 P.3d at 1141. Lucero was convicted of conspiracy to commit first degree
    murder, attempted first degree murder, and two counts of second degree assault. He
    committed these crimes in the course of a drive-by shooting when he was 15. He was
    sentenced “to consecutive term-of-years prison sentences for each count, aggravated as
    crimes of violence, resulting in an aggregate sentence of eighty-four years[.]” 394 P.3d.
    at 1129. He would become parole eligible at age 57. Rainer was 17 years old when he
    broke into an occupied dwelling and “shot one of the home’s inhabitants four times and
    another inhabitant three times, leaving both in critical condition.” 394 P.3d at 1143. He
    was convicted of “two counts of attempted first-degree murder, two counts of first-degree
    assault, one count of first-degree burglary, one count of aggravated robbery, and
    -20-
    sentence-enhancement counts for crimes of violence.” Id. Sentenced to an aggregate
    term of 112 years, he would become parole eligible at age 75.13
    After Graham was decided, the defendants sought post-conviction relief, arguing
    that their sentences were “the functional equivalent of a sentence of life without parole
    and denie[d] [them] a meaningful opportunity for release.” Id. Both cases reached the
    Supreme Court of Colorado, which held that Graham (and Miller) only apply “where a
    juvenile is sentenced to the specific sentence of life without the possibility of parole for
    one offense.” 394 P.3d at 1132 (emphasis added.) “Multiple sentences imposed for
    multiple offenses do not become a sentence of life without parole, even though they may
    result in a lengthy term of incarceration.” Id. at 1133. Because “each sentence is a
    separate punishment for a separate offense,” the “proper question on review is whether a
    sentence is constitutionally disproportionate to the offense for which it was imposed.” Id.
    (citing Close v. People, 
    48 P.3d 528
     (Colo. 2002)).         Otherwise, a defendant could
    “‘generate an Eighth Amendment disproportionality claim simply because [he] had
    engaged in repeated criminal activity.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Close, 48 P.3d at 539). Applying
    those principles, the court held that the defendants’ sentences were not unconstitutionally
    disproportionate relative to each offense.14
    13
    Rainer initially was sentenced to an aggregate term of 224 years, but his
    sentence was reduced on direct appeal.
    14
    A division of the Colorado intermediate appellate court also addressed a
    Graham challenge to multiple term-of-years sentences in People v. Lehmkuhl, 
    369 P.3d 635
     (Colo. App. 2013). In that case, the defendant was serving an aggregate sentence of
    (Continued…)
    -21-
    Missouri (2017): Willbanks v. Department of Corrections,          SW.3d          , 
    2017 WL 2952445
    At age 17, the defendant and two accomplices participated in an armed carjacking,
    shooting the victim four times. The defendant was convicted of first degree assault,
    kidnapping, two counts of first degree robbery, and three counts of armed criminal action.
    The court sentenced him to consecutive terms of life for assault; 15 years for kidnapping;
    20 years for each robbery count; and 100 years for each armed criminal action count.
    State statutes required him to serve 85% of his sentences before he could become parole
    eligible, meaning that he could not be paroled until he was “approximately 85 years old.”
    Id. at *2. After Graham was decided, the defendant filed a declaratory judgment action
    seeking a ruling that these statutes were “unconstitutional as applied to him.” Id.
    On July 11, 2017, the Supreme Court of Missouri, by a majority of judges, held
    that Graham does not govern cases in which juvenile offenders were “convicted of
    multiple nonhomicide offenses and received multiple fixed-term sentences.” Id. at *1. In
    its view, the Graham Court tightly focused its analysis on juvenile offenders serving
    LWOP sentences and did not consider “the thousands” of juveniles serving “multiple
    fixed-term sentences” that, in the aggregate, will exceed their natural life expectancies.
    (…continued)
    76 years to life imposed for five convictions arising from a burglary of an occupied
    dwelling and sexual assault committed when he was 17. The court assumed that
    Graham’s categorical rule would apply to the multiple sentences, but held that the
    sentence satisfied the “meaningful opportunity” requirement given that the defendant
    would be parole eligible at age 67. The Supreme Court of Colorado granted certiorari in
    that case, but the petition later was dismissed. Lehmkuhl v. People, 
    2014 WL 7331019
    .
    -22-
    Id. at *3. The Court was not persuaded that “penological goals [were] not served by
    sentencing juveniles to multiple fixed term sentences.” Id. at *4.15
    Three members of the court dissented. They opined that Graham applies to
    aggregate term-of-years sentences for nonhomicide offenses that are so long that the
    juvenile offender is “likely to die in prison.” Id. at *7. They noted that sentencing courts
    are fully “cognizant of the overall effect” of imposing sentences consecutively, so the
    likelihood that the offender will die in prison is not merely a “collateral result of
    sentencing the juvenile for multiple crimes.” Id. at *8. The dissenters were persuaded by
    many of the cases we shall discuss infra, holding that the principles underlying Graham
    (and Miller) apply equally to aggregate term-of-years sentences.16,17
    2. Graham applies to any sentence imposed against a juvenile offender for a
    nonhomicide offense when the sentence exceeds the juvenile’s natural life
    expectancy
    15
    The defendant was not entitled to relief under a recently enacted Missouri law
    permitting juvenile offenders serving LWOP sentences to apply for parole after serving
    25 years.
    16
    The defendant in Willbanks filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the United
    States Supreme Court on July 28, 2017.
    17
    The Supreme Court of Missouri also decided a second, related case that day:
    State v. Nathan, __ S.W.3d __, 
    2017 WL 2952773
     (Mo. 2017). The defendant was
    convicted of second degree murder and multiple nonhomicide crimes arising from a
    home invasion robbery and murder he committed when he was 16 years old. As
    modified on direct appeal, he was sentenced to four life terms, plus 45 years. He
    challenged those sentences as violative of Graham and Miller. The court rejected his
    argument, reasoning that Graham did not apply because the defendant was convicted of a
    homicide crime and Miller was inapplicable both because the court considered Nathan’s
    age when imposing his sentences and because the sentences imposed were not mandatory
    and were not for LWOP.
    -23-
    Appellate courts in at least five other states—California, Florida, Nevada, Ohio,
    and New Jersey—have reached the opposite result, holding that Graham applies to
    aggregate term-of-years sentences imposed on juvenile offenders for multiple
    nonhomicide crimes when the sentences are the functional equivalent of LWOP. See
    People v. Caballero, 
    55 Cal.4th 262
     (Cal. 2012); Henry v. State, 
    175 So.3d 675
     (Fla.
    2015), cert. denied __ U.S. __, 
    136 S.Ct. 1455
     (2016); Gridine v. State, 
    175 So.3d 672
    (Fla. 2015); Kelsey v. State, 
    206 So.3d 5
     (Fla. 2016); Johnson v. State, 
    215 So.3d 1237
    (Fla. 2017); State v. Boston, 
    363 P.3d 453
     (Nev. 2015); State v. Moore, 
    76 N.E.3d 1127
    (Ohio 2016), petition for cert. filed, No. 16-1167 (Mar. 22, 2017); State v. Zuber, 
    152 A.3d 197
     (N.J. 2017), petition for cert. filed, No 16-1496 (June 12, 2017).18 Two federal
    courts of appeal have reached the same conclusion on habeas review of state court
    18
    Other state courts have held that Miller applies to lengthy term-of-years
    sentences imposed for homicide crimes committed by juvenile offenders that may exceed
    their natural life expectancy, thus entitling them to an individualized sentencing hearing.
    See People v. Reyes, 
    63 N.E.3d 884
    , 888 (Ill. 2016) (“Miller makes clear that a juvenile
    may not be sentenced to a mandatory, unsurvivable prison term without first considering
    in mitigation his youth, immaturity, and potential for rehabilitation.”); Casiano v.
    Comm’r of Corr., 
    115 A.3d 1031
    , 1036 (Conn. 2015) (50-year sentence imposed for a
    homicide required the trial court to “engage in an individualized sentencing process that
    accounts for the mitigating circumstances of youth and its attendant characteristics”);
    Bear Cloud v. State, 
    334 P.3d 132
    , 141–42 (Wyo. 2014) (“Roper/Graham/Miller trilogy
    require sentencing courts to provide an individualized sentencing hearing to weigh the
    factors for determining a juvenile’s ‘diminished culpability and greater prospects for
    reform’ when . . . the aggregate sentences result in the functional equivalent of life
    without parole.”); State v. Null, 
    836 N.W.2d 41
    , 72 (Iowa 2013) (Miller “fully
    applicable” to an aggregate sentence of 75 years imposed for second degree murder and
    first degree robbery convictions).
    -24-
    adjudications.19 See Moore v. Biter, 
    725 F.3d 1184
     (9th Cir. 2013), pet. for rehearing en
    banc denied, 
    742 F.3d 917
     (9th Cir. 2014); Budder v. Addison, 
    851 F.3d 1047
     (10th Cir.
    2017). All of these courts read Graham as a broad mandate that juvenile nonhomicide
    offenders receive a meaningful opportunity for release upon a showing of rehabilitation,
    regardless of whether a LWOP sentence was imposed or aggregate sentences amounting
    to LWOP were imposed. In some of these jurisdictions, that opportunity is realized by
    applying post-Graham statutory relief for LWOP sentences to lengthy term-of-years
    sentences; in others it is accomplished by judicial decree ordering sentence modification.
    California (2012): People v. Caballero, 
    55 Cal.4th 262
    The defendant was 16 years old when he opened fire on three rival gang members,
    shooting one of them in the upper back. He was convicted of three counts of attempted
    murder and was found to qualify for statutory sentence enhancement. He was sentenced
    to 15 years to life, plus 25 years on the first count; and two consecutive terms of 15 years
    to life, plus 20 years on the second and third counts, resulting in an aggregate sentence of
    110 years to life. He would not be parole eligible for over 100 years.        He appealed,
    arguing that his sentence was unconstitutional under Graham.
    The Supreme Court of California agreed. In its view, Graham’s central holding is
    that a juvenile nonhomicide offender must be given an opportunity during his or her
    19
    As discussed, supra, the Sixth Circuit rejected a Graham-based challenge to
    multiple term-of-years sentences resulting in an aggregate sentence that exceeded a
    juvenile offender’s natural life expectancy, holding that an Ohio appellate court’s
    affirmance of those sentences was not “contrary to clearly established federal law.” See
    Bunch, 685 F.3d at 550.
    -25-
    lifetime to “‘demonstrate growth and maturity’ to try to secure [his or her] release[.]” 55
    Cal.4th at 268 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 72-73). Because the aggregate sentences
    did not afford the defendant such an opportunity, they were cruel and unusual
    punishment.     The court remanded for resentencing in light of “all mitigating
    circumstances attendant in the juvenile’s crime and life, including but not limited to [the
    defendant’s] . . . chronological age at the time of the crime, whether [he] was a direct
    perpetrator or an aider and abettor, and his . . . physical and mental development.” Id. at
    268–69. After considering those factors, the court could “impose a time when the
    juvenile offender will be eligible to seek parole from the parole board.” Id. at 269.
    Florida (2015, 2016, & 2017): Henry v. State, 
    175 So.3d 675
    , Gridine v. State,
    
    175 So.3d 672
     , Kelsey v. State, 
    206 So.3d 5
    , & Johnson v. State, 
    215 So.3d 1237
    In Henry, 
    175 So.3d 675
    , the defendant was “convicted for committing [as a
    juvenile] multiple nonhomicide offenses, including three counts of sexual battery while
    possessing a weapon, two counts of robbery, one count of kidnapping, one count of
    carjacking, one count of burglary of a dwelling, and one count of possession of
    marijuana.” 
    Id. at 676
    . He was sentenced to three concurrent terms of 30 years for the
    sexual batteries and additional sentences totaling 60 years to run consecutive for a total
    aggregate sentence of 90 years’ imprisonment. He would become parole eligible at age
    95.
    On appeal, the Supreme Court of Florida resolved a split in authority among the
    Florida intermediate appellate courts on the impact, if any, of Graham on term-of-years
    sentences.    It held that “the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual
    -26-
    punishment under Graham is implicated when a juvenile nonhomicide offender’s
    sentence does not afford any ‘meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on
    demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.’” 
    Id. at 679
     (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 75).
    It reasoned that the Graham Court could not have had any “intention of limiting its new
    categorical rule to sentences denominated under the exclusive term of ‘life in prison’”
    because, given that “juveniles are different,” the penological goals served in sentencing
    adult offenders to lengthy prison terms would not necessarily be served by sentencing
    juvenile offenders to the same lengthy terms. Id. at 680. The court ordered that Henry be
    resentenced “in light of . . . new juvenile sentencing legislation enacted by the Florida
    legislature.” Id.20
    On the same day that the Supreme Court of Florida decided Henry, it also decided
    Gridine v. State, 
    175 So.3d 672
     (Fl. 2015). Employing the same reasoning, it held that an
    aggregate 70-year sentence imposed for crimes committed when the defendant was 14
    years old was cruel and unusual punishment. It remanded the case for the sentencing
    court to “conduct proceedings in accordance with Henry.” 
    175 So.3d at 675
    .
    In Kelsey v. State, 
    206 So.3d 5
     (Fla. 2016), the Court extended Henry to juveniles
    whose LWOP sentences were vacated post-Graham, but who were resentenced prior to
    20
    That legislation provided that, with certain exceptions not relevant here, a
    juvenile sentenced to a lengthy prison term shall “receive[] a review hearing after a
    designated number of years based on the crime for which the juvenile was convicted to
    allow the sentencing court the discretion to modify the sentence if the juvenile offender
    has demonstrated sufficient maturity and reform.” Peterson v. State, 
    193 So.3d 1034
    ,
    1036 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2016).
    -27-
    the enactment of the new juvenile resentencing legislation. Kelsey had been convicted of
    four offenses arising from a home burglary and rape he committed when he was 15 years
    old. His life sentences for two of those offenses were vacated post-Graham and he was
    resentenced to concurrent 45-year terms. He appealed from those sentences and the
    Supreme Court of Florida reversed, clarifying that its holding “that Graham does indeed
    apply to term-of-years sentences” was not limited to “‘de facto life’ sentences.” Id. at 10.
    Rather, any juvenile nonhomicide offender sentenced to a lengthy term of years was
    entitled to the benefit of the judicial review mechanism adopted by the Florida
    legislature.
    Most recently, in Johnson v. State, 
    215 So.3d 1237
    , 1242–43, the Florida Supreme
    Court further refined its holding in Henry, opining:
    [W]e must consider three factors when reviewing a juvenile nonhomicide
    offender’s term-of-years sentence. Post–Henry, we must ensure that a
    juvenile nonhomicide offender does not receive a sentence that provides for
    release only at the end of a sentence (e.g. a 45–year sentence with no
    provision for obtaining early release based on a demonstration of maturity
    and rehabilitation before the expiration of the imposed term, such as in
    Kelsey). Secondly, we must ensure that a juvenile nonhomicide offender
    who is sentenced post-Henry does not receive a sentence which includes
    early release that is not based on a demonstration of rehabilitation and
    maturity (i.e. gain time or other programs designed to relieve prison
    overpopulation). Last, we must ensure that a juvenile nonhomicide
    offender who is sentenced post-Henry does not receive a sentence that
    provides for early release at a time beyond his or her natural life (e.g. a
    1,000–year sentence that provides parole-eligibility after the offender
    serves 100 years). To qualify as a “meaningful opportunity for early
    release,” a juvenile nonhomicide offender’s sentence must meet each of the
    three parameters described in Henry.
    -28-
    Nevada (2015): State v. Boston, 
    363 P.3d 453
    At age 16, the defendant committed a number of crimes, including kidnapping and
    “six counts of sexual assault with the use of a deadly weapon.” 363 P.3d at 454. Upon
    conviction, he was sentenced to “14 consecutive life terms with the possibility of parole,
    plus a consecutive term of 92 years in prison.” Id. He filed a petition for writ of habeas
    corpus, which was granted, and the State appealed.
    The Supreme Court of Nevada addressed “whether the holding in Graham applies
    when an aggregate sentence imposed against a juvenile offender convicted of more than
    one nonhomicide offense is the equivalent of a life-without-parole sentence.” Id. It
    concluded that “the Graham rule applies to aggregate sentences that are the functional
    equivalent of a sentence of life without the possibility of parole.” Id. at 457. Although
    “Graham provides no direction” on this issue, the Graham Court did not “specifically
    limit its holding to offenders who were convicted for a single nonhomicide offense.” Id.
    The court reasoned that permitting courts to impose sentences on juvenile nonhomicide
    offenders that are the functional equivalent of LWOP will “undermine the [Supreme]
    Court’s goal of ‘prohibit[ing] States from making the judgment at the outset that those
    offenders never will be fit to reenter society.’” Id. (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 75).
    Because the defendant’s sentence of almost 100 years was “without a doubt the
    -29-
    functional equivalent of a sentence of life without the possibility of parole[,]” id. at 458,
    the court did not analyze at what point a term-of-years sentence attains that status.21
    Ohio (2016): State v. Moore, 
    76 N.E.3d 1127
    When he was 15 years old, the defendant “embarked on a criminal rampage of
    escalating depravity,” robbing a man and woman at gunpoint before carjacking another
    woman, robbing her, and raping her repeatedly. 22 76 N.E.3d at 1128. He was convicted
    of twelve offenses, including three counts each of aggravated robbery and rape and one
    count of kidnapping. The court sentenced him to the “maximum prison term for each
    count,” resulting in an aggregate sentence of 141 years, which was subsequently reduced
    to 112 years. Id. at 1130. He would be eligible for parole at age 92, after serving 77
    years of that sentence.
    On appeal, the Supreme Court of Ohio held that a minimum sentence for a
    juvenile nonhomicide offender “that extends beyond the life expectancy of the offender,”
    is unconstitutional.      Id. at 1134.   It construed Graham as “protect[ing] juveniles
    21
    The court noted that while the appeal was pending, the Nevada legislature had
    passed a bill providing “juvenile offender[s] parole eligibility after 15 years of
    incarceration ‘for having been convicted of an offense or offenses that did not result in
    the death of a victim.’” State v. Boston, 363 P.3d at 459 (citation omitted; emphasis in
    Boston). The court adhered to its holding “that Graham precludes aggregate sentences
    that constitute the functional equivalent of life without the possibility of parole against
    nonhomicide juvenile offenders.” Id. In light of this new law, it vacated the trial court’s
    grant of habeas corpus relief “because the judiciary [could not] provide him with a better
    solution than that which the Legislature ha[d] already provided.” Id.
    22
    Moore’s accomplice and co-defendant was Chaz Bunch, whose federal habeas
    petition we discussed, supra.
    -30-
    categorically from a final determination while they are still youths that they are
    irreparably corrupt and undeserving of a chance to reenter society.” Id. at 1136. It noted
    that although Graham does not guarantee a juvenile nonhomicide offender release during
    his or her lifetime, it requires that such an offender be given a “‘meaningful opportunity
    to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.’”          Id. at 1137
    (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 75). It found that a sentence that merely allows such
    offenders to “breathe their last breaths as free people” is not the “meaningful
    opportunity” envisioned by the Graham Court. Id. Rather, a juvenile nonhomicide
    offender must be given an opportunity to show that he or she is entitled to be released to
    “live part of [his or her] li[fe] in society.” Id. For that reason, Graham applies equally to
    sentences of LWOP and the functional equivalent of LWOP. As the defendant’s first
    opportunity for release would be at age 92, “well beyond his life expectancy,” his
    sentence was a “punishment that remove[d] [him] from society without a meaningful
    chance to demonstrate rehabilitation and obtain release” and “lacked penological
    justification.” Id. at 1139–40.
    Rejecting the argument that Graham was not meant to apply to “multiple,
    consecutive fixed-term sentences for nonhomicide offenses[,]” the court noted that
    Graham himself had committed multiple offenses, although his LWOP sentence was
    imposed for just one offense. Id. at 1141. It emphasized that even though the sentencing
    court in Graham had taken Graham’s criminal proclivities into account, the Supreme
    Court had reasoned that “‘it [did] not follow that he would be a risk to society for the rest
    -31-
    of his life.’”   Id. at 1141–42 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 73.)         By imposing a
    categorical rule for all juveniles convicted of nonhomicide offenses, the Graham Court
    had rejected a “case-by-case approach” that would permit courts to impose life sentences
    for juveniles who committed “‘particularly heinous crimes.’”        Id. at 1142 (quoting
    Graham, 560 U.S. at 77). “Whether the sentence is the product of a discrete offense or
    multiple offenses, the fact remains that it was a juvenile who committed the one offense
    or several offenses and who has diminished moral culpability.”          Id. (emphasis in
    original). The court vacated the defendant’s sentence and remanded for “resentencing in
    conformity with Graham.” Id. at 1149.23
    New Jersey (2017): State v. Zuber, 
    152 A.3d 197
    In two consolidated appeals, the Supreme Court of New Jersey held that Graham
    applies to “sentences that are the practical equivalent of [LWOP].” 152 A.3d at 201. In
    one case, the defendant participated in two separate gang rapes when he was 17. He was
    convicted of 10 offenses and was sentenced, “in the aggregate, to 150 years in prison
    with a 75-year period of parole ineligibility.” Id. at 202. His sentence later was reduced
    to 110 years, with 55 years of parole ineligibility. He would become parole eligible at
    age 72. In the other case, the defendant was 17 when he participated in four armed
    robberies. He was convicted of “multiple counts related to the robberies, including one
    count of felony murder.” Id. at 203. He was sentenced to an aggregate term of 75 years
    23
    As noted, in Moore the State of Ohio filed a petition for writ of certiorari with
    the Supreme Court. It remains pending, and has been scheduled for discussion at the
    Court’s September 25, 2017 conference.
    -32-
    in prison, with 68 years and 3 months of parole ineligibility. He would become parole
    eligible at age 85.
    In the aftermath of Graham, both defendants filed motions to correct illegal
    sentences. The cases reached the Supreme Court of New Jersey, which consolidated
    them for decision. The court found that it makes no practical difference whether a
    juvenile offender receives a “formal” sentence of LWOP or receives “multiple term-of-
    years sentences that, in all likelihood, will keep him in jail for the rest of his life[.]” Id. at
    211. The constitutionality of the sentence should not turn on its “label.” Id. at 212. The
    court determined that each defendant’s aggregate sentence was sufficiently lengthy to
    “trigger the protections of Miller under the Federal and [New Jersey] Constitutions.”24
    Id. at 213. Because the “focus at a juvenile’s sentencing hearing belongs on the real time
    consequences of the aggregate sentence,” the sentencing court must consider the “Miller
    factors” whether it is sentencing the juvenile to a lengthy term-of-years sentence for a
    single offense or is sentencing the juvenile to multiple term-of-years sentences for
    multiple offenses resulting in a lengthy period of parole ineligibility. Id. at 212. The
    court directed “judges to exercise a heightened level of care before imposing multiple
    consecutive sentences on juveniles.” Id. at 214. It also urged the New Jersey legislature
    24
    As discussed, in Miller the Supreme Court held that a juvenile homicide
    offender cannot be sentenced to a mandatory LWOP and that a sentencing court must
    take into account the juvenile’s age and maturity in fashioning a sentence. Because one
    of the defendants was convicted of felony murder, the Zuber court frequently discussed
    Miller rather than Graham.
    -33-
    to “enact[] a scheme that provides for later review of juvenile sentences with lengthy
    periods of parole ineligibility[.]” Id. at 215.
    Ninth Circuit (2014): Moore v. Biter, 
    725 F.3d 1184
    At age 16, the defendant “sexually victimize[d] four separate women on four
    occasions during a five-week period.” Id. at 1186. He was convicted by a California
    state court of
    twenty-four counts: nine counts of forcible rape, seven counts of forcible
    oral copulation, two counts of attempted second degree robbery, two counts
    of second degree robbery, forcible sodomy, kidnaping with the specific
    intent to commit a felony sex offense, genital penetration by a foreign
    object, and the unlawful driving or taking of a vehicle. The jury found that
    [the defendant] also used a firearm while committing his crimes.
    Id. The court imposed 24 consecutive sentences totaling 254 years and 4 months. He
    would have to live to the age of 144 to be parole eligible.
    After Graham was decided, the defendant filed a state habeas petition challenging
    the constitutionality of his sentence. The trial court denied his petition, the intermediate
    appellate court affirmed, and the Supreme Court of California summarily denied
    review.25 He then filed his federal habeas petition, which reached the Ninth Circuit.
    The court held that the California court’s failure to apply Graham to the
    defendant’s sentences was contrary to clearly established federal law. It concluded that
    the sentences were “materially indistinguishable from the sentence in Graham” because
    the defendant would remain in prison for the rest of his life without a “meaningful
    25
    Caballero, supra, had not yet been decided.
    -34-
    opportunity” to demonstrate any entitlement to release. Id. at 1191. It reasoned that the
    nonhomicide crimes he committed could not be distinguished in any principled way from
    those at issue in Graham, because the Graham Court “drew only one line that was crime-
    specific: it distinguished between homicide and nonhomicide crimes.” Id. at 1192. The
    trial court’s sentence was the equivalent of LWOP and was imposed for nonhomicide
    crimes against a juvenile offender. It therefore was unconstitutional.
    The State filed a petition for rehearing and a petition for rehearing en banc. The
    en banc petition was considered by the entire court and was denied. In a published
    opinion dissenting from the denial, Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain, joined by six judges,
    criticized the majority for “failing to distinguish one ‘life without parole’ sentence from
    multiple ‘term-of-years’ sentences.” 742 F.3d at 917. The defendant had committed four
    separate rapes over five weeks and had been convicted of 24 separate crimes; and no
    single sentence exceeded eight years. In the view of the dissenting judges, it was plain
    that the Graham Court’s analysis only concerned actual LWOP sentences. That was the
    “‘sentencing practice’” the Graham Court determined was “‘exceedingly rare.’” Id. at
    919 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 67). The Graham Court did not even “consider the
    prevalence of sentences like [the defendant’s]—lengthy term-of-years sentences adding
    up to de facto life imprisonment.” Id. Given that the Graham Court did not include such
    sentences in its analysis, the dissenters concluded that it did not intend to include them
    within its categorical bar.
    -35-
    Tenth Circuit (2017): Budder v. Addison, 
    851 F.3d 1047
    The defendant was 16 when he stabbed a 17-year-old girl multiple times, raped her
    repeatedly, and forced her to fellate him. He was convicted by an Oklahoma state court
    of two counts of first degree rape; one count of assault and battery with a deadly weapon;
    and one count of forcible oral sodomy. He was sentenced to LWOP for each rape
    conviction, life with parole for assault and battery, and 20 years for forcible oral sodomy,
    all to run consecutively. Less than two weeks later, Graham was decided. On direct
    appeal, the defendant’s LWOP sentences were modified to life with parole.               The
    sentences still were to run consecutively. The defendant challenged his sentences again,
    arguing that because he would have to serve 131.75 years in prison to be eligible for
    parole, they still violated Graham. The state court held that the defendant’s multiple,
    consecutive term-of-years sentences did not violate Graham.
    On consideration of the defendant’s federal habeas petition premised on the same
    argument, the Tenth Circuit reversed. In its view, the Graham Court’s decision to
    impose a categorical bar rested on “(1) the ‘sentencing practice’; (2) ‘the nature of the
    offense’; and (3) ‘the characteristics of the offender.’” Id. at 1055 (quoting Graham, 560
    U.S. at 60-61)). The court understood the “sentencing practice” at issue in Graham to
    “include[] any sentence that would deny the offender a realistic opportunity for release in
    the offender’s lifetime.” Id. It pointed out that Graham himself had been sentenced to
    life in prison, and it was only because the State of Florida had abolished its parole system
    that his sentence was treated as LWOP. It opined that the protections afforded by the
    -36-
    Eighth Amendment cannot depend upon the label applied to a sentence. The “nature of
    the offense” is any “nonhomicide” crime committed by a juvenile, regardless of the
    “number or severity of nonhomicide crimes committed.” Id. at 1057. Graham did not
    “draw any distinction[]” in that regard and, in fact, “specifically referred to offenders
    with multiple crimes and multiple charges, including Budder [the defendant] himself.”
    Id.26 In the court’s view, the Graham Court intended to put an end to the “case specific
    approach” to sentencing that allows a court to impose a sentence equivalent to LWOP by
    aggregating multiple, consecutive term-of-years sentences for crimes it considers
    “‘particularly heinous.’” Id. at 1058 (quoting Graham, 560 U.S. at 77)). Finally, “the
    characteristics of the offender” encompasses any offender who was a juvenile when he or
    she committed the nonhomicide offense(s) because Graham recognized that those
    offenders are less culpable and the penological goals ordinarily served by LWOP
    sentences are not served for them.
    26
    This comment is not entirely accurate. In the section of Graham discussing the
    Juvenile LWOP Study, the Court referenced a May 4, 2010 article in Tulsa World stating
    that “since the study was completed, a defendant in Oklahoma has apparently been
    sentenced to [LWOP] for a rape and stabbing he committed at the age of 16.” 560 U.S. at
    64. This was the reference to Budder. Thus, Budder was included in the Graham
    Court’s analysis because he was, in fact, serving a sentence (actually two) of LWOP at
    that time. As discussed, Budder’s LWOP sentences were modified after Graham was
    decided. So, when Budder’s appeal was before the Tenth Circuit, he no longer was in the
    category of juvenile offenders sentenced to LWOP that he had been in when Graham was
    decided. The Graham Court did not include Budder in its analysis because he was
    serving multiple term-of-years sentences that could exceed his life expectancy but
    because, at that time, he was serving an actual LWOP sentence.
    -37-
    The Tenth Circuit concluded that because the defendant “committed his crimes as
    a juvenile . . . did not commit homicide[, and] . . . received a life sentence . . . [that] does
    not provide him a realistic opportunity for release,” his sentence violated “the categorical
    rule clearly established in Graham” and the Oklahoma appellate court erred by holding
    otherwise.    Id. at 1059.    It reversed and remanded with “instructions to grant [the
    defendant’s] petition for writ of habeas corpus, . . . vacate [his] sentence, and to direct the
    State of Oklahoma to resentence [him].” Id. at 1060.
    3. Cases holding that Graham may apply to a lengthy term-of-years sentence for
    one offense (but not multiple offenses)
    Finally, some state courts have addressed whether Graham applies to a lengthy
    term-of-years sentence for a single nonhomicide offense, reaching different results
    depending upon the length of the sentence imposed. In State v. Smith, 
    892 N.W.2d 52
    (Neb. 2017), petition for cert. filed, No. 16-9416 (May 30, 2017),27 the defendant was 16
    years old when he and an accomplice robbed a doughnut shop, kidnapped a female
    employee, sexually assaulted her, and killed her. He plead guilty to kidnapping and
    burglary, and ultimately was sentenced to 90 years to life. He filed a habeas petition,
    arguing that his sentence for kidnapping violated Graham.             The Supreme Court of
    Nebraska upheld the sentence. It found that because the defendant would be eligible for
    parole at age 62, the sentence “satisf[ied] the ‘meaningful opportunity’ requirement” of
    Graham.      
    Id. at 65
    .   Moreover, the sentencing court had considered the relevant
    27
    The petition for certiorari has been scheduled for discussion at the September
    25, 2017 Supreme Court conference, along with the petition in Moore, supra.
    -38-
    mitigating factors and the sentence was not otherwise unconstitutionally excessive
    relative to the crime of kidnapping.
    In State ex rel. Morgan v. State, 
    217 So.3d 266
     (La. 2016), the defendant was
    convicted of an armed robbery he committed at age 17, and was sentenced to 99 years
    imprisonment without parole.      He filed a motion to correct illegal sentence, under
    Graham, which was denied. On appeal, he argued that his sentence was the functional
    equivalent of LWOP. The State countered that the court’s precedent in Brown, 
    supra,
    was dispositive.
    The Louisiana Supreme Court distinguished Brown. In that case, the defendant
    had been “convicted of five offenses resulting in five consecutive sentences which, when
    aggregated, resulted in a term pursuant to which he would have no opportunity for
    release.” 
    Id.
     at 271–72. By contrast, “the defendant [in the case before it] was convicted
    of a single offense and sentenced to a single term which affords him no opportunity for
    release.” Id. at 272. The court found there to be no difference between a 99-year
    sentence without parole for one crime and a LWOP sentence for one crime; therefore, the
    sentence at issue was “the functional equivalent of life without parole.” Id. at 277. It
    noted that even if the 99-year sentence was changed to be with parole, the defendant
    would not be eligible for release until age 101. The court remedied the situation by
    determining that the defendant qualified for relief under a post-Graham Louisiana statute
    -39-
    making all juvenile offenders serving life sentences for nonhomicide offenses eligible for
    parole after serving 30 years of their sentences.28
    D.
    In Maryland, a court may “correct an illegal sentence at any time.” Md. Rule 4-
    345(a). An illegal sentence is “one in which the illegality ‘inheres in the sentence itself;
    i.e., there either has been no conviction warranting any sentence for the particular offense
    or the sentence is not a permitted one for the conviction upon which it was imposed and,
    for either reason, is intrinsically and substantively unlawful.’” Colvin v. State, 
    450 Md. 718
    , 725 (2016) (quoting Chaney v. State, 
    397 Md. 460
    , 466 (2007)). We review the
    denial of a motion to correct an illegal sentence de novo. See Carlini v. State, 
    215 Md. App. 415
    , 443 (2013) (whether a sentence “is or is not inherently illegal” is
    “quintessentially a question of law calling for de novo appellate review”).
    The appellant does not argue that any of the sentences imposed—25 years for each
    first degree assault conviction—standing alone, is illegal. He concedes that all are within
    the statutory range permitted by law. See Md. Code (2002, 2004 Supp.), § 3-202(b) of
    the Criminal Law Article. Nor does he argue that any one sentence is grossly excessive.
    He maintains, however, that the aggregate term of 100 years resulting from the sentences
    being imposed consecutively is a functional LWOP sentence imposed against a juvenile
    28
    On June 29, 2017, the Supreme Court of Louisiana decided that Graham
    likewise applies to invalidate a LWOP sentence imposed against a recidivist juvenile
    offender for a nonhomicide crime under the state’s “Habitual Offender Law.” State v.
    Green, __ So.3d __, 
    2017 WL 2836173
     (La. 2017).
    -40-
    nonhomicide offender, which is unconstitutional under Graham; and an unconstitutional
    sentence is an illegal sentence. See Walker v. State, 
    53 Md. App. 171
    , 187 (1982)
    (sentencing court had broad discretion to impose any legal sentence for common law
    crime, meaning any sentence that was not “unconstitutional”). Having considered the
    Graham decision itself and the cases, discussed above, addressing the implications of
    Graham for term-of-years sentences for juveniles convicted of nonhomicide crimes, we
    conclude that Graham does not apply. The appellant’s aggregate sentence of 100 years is
    not unconstitutional and therefore is not illegal.
    The Supreme Court’s decision in Graham to impose a categorical bar against
    LWOP sentences for juvenile nonhomicide offenders was a singular departure from its
    established Eighth Amendment sentencing jurisprudence, which until then only had
    adopted categorical restrictions against imposition of the death penalty. LWOP for
    juvenile nonhomicide offenders was the only sentencing practice explored and evaluated
    by the Graham Court.29 Its analysis was bound up in that particular sentencing practice.
    The Court “conducted no analysis of sentences for multiple convictions” and the analysis
    it did conduct “provides no guidance on how to handle such sentences.” Brown, 
    118 So.3d at 341
    .
    29
    We disagree with those courts that have stated that because Graham was
    convicted of crimes in addition to armed robbery, the Supreme Court was addressing
    multiple conviction sentences. The only sentence that was under consideration in
    Graham was the sentence of life imprisonment for armed robbery; and the sentence
    clearly was for LWOP because, as we have stated, the sentencing court knew there was
    no parole system in place when the sentence was imposed.
    -41-
    At the outset of its constitutional inquiry, the Court examined whether there were
    “objective criteria” of an evolving national consensus against sentencing juvenile
    offenders to LWOP for nonhomicide crimes. Graham, 560 U.S. at 61. As discussed, in
    finding that there was, the Court relied upon the Juvenile LWOP Study and its own
    research, which showed that in the entire country only 123 juvenile offenders were
    serving LWOP sentences for nonhomicide crimes. The Court did not take into account
    any aggregate term-of-years sentences, including those for a cumulative number of years
    exceeding the juvenile’s life expectancy, which could be considered the functional
    equivalent of LWOP. (And of course, having not considered that, the Court did not
    consider age at the time of parole eligibility.)30
    Indeed, the Court rejected the State of Florida’s argument that it should include in
    its analysis juvenile offenders sentenced to LWOP for nonhomicide and homicide crimes.
    In the Court’s eyes, those cases did not accurately reflect the national consensus on the
    specific sentencing practice under consideration because those defendants likely were
    being “punished in part for the homicide when the judge [made] the sentencing
    determination [about the nonhomicide crime].” Id. at 63. The Court narrowly tailored its
    30
    Table A of the Juvenile LWOP Study lists the number of juveniles serving
    LWOP sentences for nonhomicide crimes in each State for which data was available in
    2009. The number of juveniles serving such a sentence in Maryland was zero. At that
    time, the appellant was in prison serving the sentences in question here, so his multiple-
    conviction multiple term-of-years sentence obviously was not considered. Neither were
    the sentences in Lucero and Rainer, as the list gives the number of juvenile lifers in
    Colorado as zero. And it lists no such juveniles in New Jersey (Zuber) or Missouri
    (Willbanks).
    -42-
    analysis to the particular sentencing category at issue: LWOP imposed against a juvenile
    offender for one nonhomicide crime. The emerging national consensus the Court found
    to exist was against sentencing juveniles to LWOP for a single nonhomicide crime. It
    made no finding of such a consensus against the practice of sentencing juveniles to
    multiple term-of-years sentences for multiple nonhomicide crimes when the sentences, in
    the aggregate, exceed the defendant’s life expectancy.
    In addition, nothing in the Graham Court’s analysis touched upon whether such
    sentences serve penological justifications that are not served when the defendant is
    convicted and sentenced for a single crime. We think it plain that they do. The “‘heart of
    the retribution rationale is that a criminal sentence must be directly related to the personal
    culpability of the criminal offender.’” Id. at 71 (quoting Tison, 
    481 U.S. at 137
    ). To be
    sure, as the Court already had held in Roper and reaffirmed in Graham, as a general class
    of offenders juveniles are less culpable than adults.        Within the world of juvenile
    offenders, however, one who commits multiple nonhomicide crimes against multiple
    victims, causing injury to each victim, is more culpable than one who commits the same
    injury-producing crime against one victim. In Brown v. State, 
    311 Md. 426
    , 435 (1988),
    the Court of Appeals stated the common sense proposition that “[p]unishment for
    criminal conduct should be commensurate with responsibility and a defendant who
    terrorizes multiple persons with a handgun is more culpable than a defendant who
    terrorizes only one.” (Emphasis added.) That proposition is no less applicable among
    juvenile nonhomicide offenders and does not become inapplicable merely because
    -43-
    juvenile offenders as a group are less culpable than adult offenders. We agree with the
    courts in Kasic and Willbanks that “different considerations apply to consecutive term-of-
    years sentences based on multiple counts and multiple victims[,]” Kasic, 265 P.3d at
    415–16; and that Graham did not hold that “penological goals [were] not served by
    sentencing juveniles to multiple fixed-term sentences.” Willbanks, 
    2017 WL 2952445
     at
    *4.
    The Graham Court emphasized that the rarity of LWOP sentences for juvenile
    nonhomicide offenders in jurisdictions permitting such sentences lessened the deterrent
    effect of those sentences. Graham, 560 U.S. at 72 (remarking that juveniles are less
    easily deterred by the threat of punishment and that this is “particularly so when that
    punishment is rarely imposed”). By contrast, the practice of imposing consecutive term-
    of-years sentences that cumulatively produce a lengthy aggregate sentence is not rare.
    See Willbanks, 
    2017 WL 2952445
     at *3 (Graham Court’s analysis did not touch upon
    “the thousands” of juveniles serving “multiple fixed-term sentences”). Thus the deterrent
    effect of those sentences has not been diminished in the same way.
    Nor does the practice of imposing cumulative term-of-years sentences for multiple
    offenses reflect an “irrevocable judgment” that a juvenile nonhomicide offender has no
    capacity for change. Graham, 560 U.S. at 74. Rather, it reflects a series of judgments
    that for each offense a particular term-of-years sentence within the statutory limit serves
    the goals of “punishment, deterrence, and rehabilitation.” See Jennings v. State, 
    339 Md. 675
    , 682 (1995); Lucero, 394 P.3d at 1133 (“each sentence is a separate punishment for a
    -44-
    separate offense”). Viewing the sentences this way adheres to the established case law
    holding that Eighth Amendment proportionality review must address each individual
    sentence imposed, not the aggregate sentence that results. In O’Neil v. Vermont, 
    144 U.S. 323
     (1892), where the sentencing court imposed 307 consecutive sentences for liquor law
    violations, the Supreme Court quoted, in dicta, from the sentencing court’s remarks:
    “It would scarcely be competent for a person to assail the
    constitutionality of the statute prescribing a punishment for burglary, on the
    ground that he had committed so many burglaries that, if punishment for
    each were inflicted on him, he might be kept in prison for life. The mere
    fact that cumulative punishments may be imposed for distinct offences in
    the same prosecution is not material upon this question. If the penalty were
    unreasonably severe for a single offence, the constitutional question might
    be urged; but here the unreasonableness is only in the number of offences
    which the respondent has committed.”
    
    Id. at 331
    .
    As the Supreme Court of Minnesota recently observed in State v. Ali, 
    895 N.W.2d 237
     (Minn. 2017), the O’Neil Court’s dicta has been widely followed by state and federal
    courts in assessing proportionality challenges under the Eighth Amendment.31            See
    Hawkins v. Hargett, 
    200 F.3d 1279
    , 1285 n.5 (10th Cir. 1999) (“The Eighth Amendment
    31
    Ali involved a Miller challenge to three consecutive life sentences imposed
    against a juvenile offender for one count of first degree premeditated murder and two
    counts of felony murder. The life sentence for premeditated murder was a mandatory
    LWOP. The Supreme Court of Minnesota vacated that sentence, State v. Ali, 
    855 N.W.2d 235
     (Minn. 2014), and remanded for a “Miller hearing.” The trial court did not
    hold a Miller hearing because the State stipulated to all three life sentences being with
    parole. When the case returned to the Supreme Court of Minnesota, it held that Miller
    did not apply to multiple consecutive sentences that, in the aggregate, are the functional
    equivalent of a LWOP sentence.
    -45-
    analysis focuses on the sentence imposed for each specific crime, not on the cumulative
    sentence for multiple crimes.”);32 United States v. Aiello, 
    864 F.2d 257
    , 265 (2d. Cir.
    1988) (same); State v. Berger, 
    134 P.3d 378
    , 384 (Ariz. 2006) (affirming the imposition
    of 20 consecutive 10-year sentences for separate convictions for possession of child
    pornography and remarking that, “as a general rule, this court ‘will not consider the
    imposition of consecutive sentences in a proportionality inquiry . . . .’”) (quoting State v.
    Davis, 
    79 P.3d 64
    , 74 (Ariz. 2003)); see also Pearson v. Ramos, 
    237 F.3d 881
    , 886 (7th
    Cir. 2001) (affirming the imposition of cumulative disciplinary sanctions against a
    prisoner, opining that “it is wrong to treat stacked sanctions as a single sanction. To do
    so produces the ridiculous consequence of enabling a prisoner, simply by recidivating, to
    generate a colorable Eighth Amendment claim”).
    An appellate court’s holding necessarily incorporates the factual and procedural
    context for the issue before it. In our view, the courts that read Graham to “hold” that all
    juvenile nonhomicide offenders must be given an opportunity to seek release at some
    time, regardless of the individual circumstances (and for some courts, early enough that
    they can build a life for themselves) are interpreting the case well beyond its actual
    holding. The holding of Graham is that a juvenile convicted of one nonhomicide crime
    32
    Hawkins involved a pre-Graham Eighth Amendment challenge to a juvenile
    offender’s 100 year aggregate sentence for four crimes. The Tenth Circuit ruled that the
    sentence was not cruel and unusual despite the defendant’s age at the time of the
    commission of the crimes (13), reasoning, in part, that the length of the sentence would
    be reduced significantly by good time credits resulting in an active sentence of just over
    35 years.
    -46-
    may not be given a LWOP sentence that from the outset affords him no opportunity to
    obtain release based on growth and maturity. Given the very different considerations that
    are in play when a juvenile commits multiple nonhomicide crimes against multiple
    victims and receives multiple term-of-years cumulative sentences, each of which
    individually is not grossly disproportionate, we cannot say that the Supreme Court’s
    holding in Graham is implicated. This is not a “same sentence different label” situation.
    Moreover, the rarity of the Supreme Court’s decision in Graham to impose a categorical
    restriction outside the context of the death penalty militates in favor of a narrow
    construction of its categorical bar.
    We hold that Graham’s categorical bar on the imposition of LWOP sentences
    against juvenile nonhomicide offenders does not apply to a sentence such as the
    appellant’s sentence that comprises multiple sentences imposed for multiple crimes
    against multiple victims, where no sentence individually is lengthy enough to trigger a
    Graham-based challenge. Sentences of this sort were not addressed by the Graham
    Court and are dissimilar from a LWOP sentence (or even a lengthy term-of-years
    sentence) imposed for a single offense in terms of the penological goals being served.
    The appropriate Eighth Amendment analysis when there are multiple nonhomicide
    crimes committed by a juvenile against multiple victims, with no single sentence for
    LWOP, is whether, upon consideration of all the relevant circumstances (including the
    age of the offender), each individual sentence is grossly disproportionate to the crime for
    which it was imposed.
    -47-
    Even if we were to adopt the appellant’s position that Graham applies to multiple
    term-of-years sentences, we nevertheless would hold that the sentences imposed here are
    not cruel and unusual. The appellant may seek release on parole when he is 67 years old.
    Most of the cases holding that Graham applies to cumulative term-of-years sentences
    dealt with much longer periods of parole ineligibility that plainly exceeded the
    defendant’s life expectancy. See Caballero (age 116); Boston (age 116); Morgan (age
    101); Henry (age 95); and Moore (age 92). As the appellant tacitly acknowledges, age 67
    is less than his average life expectancy. Therefore, his sentences only would amount to a
    de facto LWOP sentence if we were to adopt the reasoning of those courts that have held
    that Graham mandates not only that a juvenile nonhomicide offender be afforded an
    opportunity for release within his or her lifetime but also an “‘opportunity to truly reenter
    society or have a[] meaningful life outside of prison.’” Moore, 76 N.E.3d at 1146
    (quoting Casiano v. Comm’r of Corrections, 
    115 A.3d 1031
     (Conn. 2015)).33
    In discussing the harshness of a sentence of LWOP, the Graham Court
    emphasized that that sentence means the juvenile offender will “‘remain in prison for the
    rest of his days,’” 560 U.S. at 70 (quoting Naovarath, 
    779 P.2d at 944
    ). The sentence is
    33
    The appellant includes in his brief a long passage from the Supreme Court of
    Connecticut’s decision in Casiano, 
    115 A.3d 1044
    , discussing the fact that while, at the
    time, the average life expectancy for a male in the United States in 2015 was 76, people
    living in prison have a reduced life expectancy. The Casiano court reasoned that a
    lengthy term-of-years sentence that does not exceed a juvenile offender’s life expectancy
    but results in the loss of opportunities to integrate into society is infirm under Graham
    and Miller. In the case at bar, no evidence bearing on the appellant’s life expectancy was
    included with his motion to correct illegal sentence, however.
    -48-
    an “irrevocable” “forfeiture” of a juvenile offender’s “most basic liberties without giving
    hope of restoration.” 
    Id.
     at 69–70. The Graham Court clarified that while a state is not
    required to “guarantee eventual freedom to a juvenile offender convicted of a
    nonhomicide crime,” it must grant him or her a “meaningful opportunity to obtain release
    based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” 
    Id. at 75
    . The Court did not specify
    when that opportunity must be conferred, instead giving deference to the states to fashion
    sentencing schemes that provide some opportunity for release. See Virginia v. LeBlanc,
    __ U.S. __, 
    137 S.Ct. 1726
    , 1727–29 (2017) (holding that the Supreme Court of
    Virginia’s determination that its geriatric release program provided a “meaningful
    opportunity” for release was not “‘contrary to . . . clearly established federal law’”)
    (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1)). Each 25-year sentence imposed against the appellant
    includes the benefit of parole when he has served half of his sentence.         While the
    appellant might not be released during his lifetime, he will have the opportunity to apply
    for parole when he is 67, which we cannot say is inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s
    “meaningful opportunity” language in Graham. See Smith, 892 N.W.2d at 52 (sentence
    affording juvenile offender parole eligibility at age 62 satisfies Graham); Lehmkuhl, 
    369 P.3d at 635
     (parole eligibility at age 67 satisfies Graham).
    We now turn to the appellant’s argument, premised largely upon the Fourth
    Circuit’s since reversed decision in LeBlanc, that under no circumstance will he ever be
    afforded a “meaningful opportunity” for release under Maryland’s parole system because
    that system does not treat maturity and rehabilitation as the dispositive factors for
    -49-
    granting parole for juvenile offenders. We disagree with the State that this argument is
    not cognizable on a motion to correct an illegal sentence, but agree that it lacks merit.
    CS section 7-305 lists ten factors that the Parole Commission shall consider in
    deciding whether to grant parole. They include:
    (2) the physical, mental, and moral qualifications of the inmate;
    (3) the progress of the inmate during confinement . . .;
    ***
    (5) whether there is reasonable probability that the inmate, if released on
    parole, will remain at liberty without violating the law;
    (6) whether release of the inmate on parole is compatible with the welfare
    of society;
    The COMAR regulations implementing CS section 7-305 go even further, requiring the
    Parole Commission to consider additional factors when a prisoner applying for parole
    “committed [his or her] crime[s] as a juvenile.” Those additional factors include:
    (a) Age at the time the crime was committed;
    (b) The individual’s level of maturity and sense of responsibility at the time
    the crime was committed;
    (c) Whether influence or pressure from other individuals contributed to the
    commission of the crime;
    (d) Whether the prisoner’s character developed since the time of the crime
    in a manner that indicates the prisoner will comply with the conditions of
    release;
    (e) The home environment and family relationships at the time the crime
    was committed;
    (f) The individual’s educational background and achievement at the time
    the crime was committed; and
    -50-
    (g) Other factors or circumstances unique to prisoners who committed
    crimes at the time the individual was a juvenile that the Commissioner
    determines to be relevant.
    COMAR 12.08.01.18A(3). These factors necessarily encompass the maturity and
    rehabilitation considerations discussed in Graham. There is nothing in Graham that
    suggests that they must be the only factors considered by a parole authority in deciding
    whether a juvenile offender will be released. See Graham, 560 U.S. at 75 (remarking that
    those who “commit truly horrifying crimes as juveniles may turn out to be irredeemable,
    and thus deserving of incarceration for the duration of their lives”).
    Finally, we note that the appellant’s sentences are not excessively disproportionate
    to the crimes he committed, under traditional proportionality review.        “[C]hallenges
    based on proportionality will be seriously entertained only where the punishment is truly
    egregious.” Thomas v. State, 
    333 Md. 84
    , 97 (1993). Here, the appellant and his
    accomplice shot a gun twelve times into a crowd of teenagers outside a high school,
    seriously injuring four victims, one of whom was left permanently paralyzed. He was
    convicted of four counts of first degree assault, one against each victim, and was
    sentenced to a 25-year term for each conviction. The sentencing court found that these
    sentences—the maximum permitted by statute—were warranted by the particularly
    heinous nature of the crimes. It noted that the gravity of the offenses was severe and the
    potential for much greater harm was high. The crime instilled fear in the community at
    large and had long-lasting repercussions for the victims and their families and friends.
    -51-
    The sentences imposed were not egregious and do not give rise to an inference of gross
    disproportionality.
    Because the appellant’s 100-year aggregate sentence does not fall within the
    categorical bar imposed by Graham and because the sentences are not otherwise
    unconstitutionally excessive relative to the crimes committed, they are not illegal as cruel
    and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment or Article 25 of the Maryland
    Declaration of Rights.34 The circuit court did not err by denying the appellant’s motion
    to correct illegal sentence.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE
    APPELLANT.
    34
    The “cruel or unusual punishments” clause of Article 25 of the Maryland
    Declaration of Rights has long been construed to have the same meaning as the Cruel and
    Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment. See, e.g., Thomas, 
    333 Md. at
    103 n.5 (“[W]e perceive no difference between the protection afforded by [the Eighth
    Amendment] and by the 25th Article of our Declaration of Rights”); Walker v. State, 
    53 Md. App. 171
    , 183 (1982) (Eighth Amendment and Article 25 are construed to have the
    same meaning because “both of them were taken virtually verbatim from the English Bill
    of Rights of 1689”). Accordingly, there is no basis for the appellant’s argument that he is
    afforded greater protections by Article 25 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights than by
    the Eighth Amendment.
    -52-