Ira v. Janecka , 2018 NMSC 27 ( 2018 )


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  •                                                      I attest to the accuracy and
    integrity of this document
    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 08:47:49 2018.06.05
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 
    2018-NMSC-027
    Filing Date: March 9, 2018
    Docket No. S-1-SC-35657
    JOEL IRA,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    JAMES JANECKA, Warden,
    Lea County Correctional Facility,
    Hobbs, New Mexico,
    Respondent.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
    Jerry H. Ritter, Jr., District Judge
    Gary C. Mitchell, P.C.
    Gary C. Mitchell
    Ruidoso, NM
    for Petitioner
    Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    Laurie Pollard Blevins, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Respondent
    Rory L. Rank
    Las Cruces, NM
    Juvenile Law Center
    Marsha L. Levick
    Philadelphia, PA
    for Amicus Curiae Juvenile Law Center
    1
    OPINION
    CHÁVEZ, Justice.
    {1}     During the last thirteen years the Supreme Court of the United States, relying on
    neuroscientific evidence of adolescent behavior, issued three opinions declaring that certain
    sentences imposed on juvenile offenders violate the Eighth Amendment prohibition of cruel
    and unusual punishment. Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
     (2005) (prohibiting the
    imposition of the death penalty for a crime committed by a juvenile); Graham v. Florida,
    
    560 U.S. 48
     (2010) (holding that no juvenile could be sentenced to life without the
    possibility of parole for a nonhomicide offense); Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012)
    (striking down a statute that required courts to sentence a juvenile convicted of murder to
    life without parole). These cases created a special category under the Eighth Amendment
    for juvenile offenders whose culpability is mitigated by adolescence and immaturity. The
    cases recognize that a juvenile is more likely to be rehabilitated than an adult and therefore
    should receive a meaningful opportunity to obtain release by demonstrating maturity and
    rehabilitation. In Montgomery v. Louisiana, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    136 S.Ct. 718
    , 736-37
    (2016), the Supreme Court endorsed the principles in Roper, Graham, and Miller and held
    that Miller applies retroactively because it announced a substantive rule of constitutional
    law.
    {2}     Nearly twenty years ago, Petitioner, Joel Ira, was sentenced as a juvenile to 91½
    years in the New Mexico Department of Corrections after he pled no contest to several
    counts of criminal sexual penetration and intimidation of a witness—crimes which he
    committed when he was fourteen and fifteen years old. Under the relevant Earned
    Meritorious Deduction Act (EMDA), NMSA 1978, § 33-2-34(A) (1988, amended 2015),1
    Ira can be eligible for parole when he has served one-half of his sentence—approximately
    46 years—if he maintains good behavior while incarcerated. He will be approximately 62
    years old when he can first be eligible for parole.
    {3}    Ira petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus to make the central argument that his
    sentence is equivalent to a life sentence without parole and therefore constitutes cruel and
    unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution
    and Article II, Section 13 of the New Mexico Constitution. He relies on Roper and its
    progeny for his argument. Whether the rationale of these cases, and in particular Graham,
    should be applied to a term-of-years sentence for the commission of multiple crimes is the
    preliminary question we must answer. If Graham applies, we must next consider whether
    1
    Under the EMDA that applied when Ira was sentenced in 1997, an inmate “confined
    in the penitentiary of New Mexico . . . may be awarded a meritorious deduction of thirty
    days per month upon recommendation of the classification committee and approval of the
    warden . . . .” NMSA 1978, § 33-2-34(A) (1988). This statute effectively provides for a
    fifty percent reduction in an inmate’s sentence if the inmate merits that reduction through
    good behavior while in confinement.
    2
    Ira’s long consecutive sentence effectively deprives him of a meaningful opportunity to
    obtain release by demonstrating his maturity and rehabilitation, thereby violating the
    prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment.
    {4}     Other courts are split on whether to apply Graham when a juvenile receives a a
    multiple term-of-years sentence for the commission of multiple crimes. We conclude that
    Graham applies when a multiple term-of-years sentence will in all likelihood keep a juvenile
    in prison for the rest of his or her life because the juvenile is deprived of a meaningful
    opportunity to obtain release by demonstrating his or her maturity and rehabilitation. In this
    case, Ira can be eligible for a parole hearing when he is 62 years old if he demonstrates good
    behavior under the EMDA. Therefore, based on the record before us, we conclude that Ira
    has a meaningful opportunity to obtain release by demonstrating his maturity and
    rehabilitation before the Parole Board. We find the remaining issues raised in the petition
    to be without merit and therefore deny the petition.
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    {5}     The underlying conduct for which Ira pled no contest is discussed extensively in
    State v. Ira, 
    2002-NMCA-037
    , 
    132 N.M. 8
    , 
    43 P.3d 359
    . Ira pled no contest to ten counts
    of criminal sexual penetration, one count of aggravated battery (great bodily harm), one
    count of aggravated battery against a household member, and one count of intimidation of
    a witness. Id. ¶¶ 2, 4. Ira committed these crimes when he was fourteen and fifteen years
    old. Id. ¶ 2. The victim of Ira’s criminal sexual penetration and intimidation of a witness
    offenses was his stepsister, who was six years younger than Ira. Id.
    {6}     The district court had the discretion to invoke an adult sentence or a juvenile
    disposition. NMSA 1978, § 32A-2-20(A) (1996, amended 2009). The district court invoked
    an adult sentence because the court found that Ira was “not amenable to treatment or
    rehabilitation as a child in available facilities,” and Ira was “not eligible for commitment to
    an institution for the developmentally disabled or mentally disordered.” Section 32A-2-
    20(B)(1)-(2). The district court made these findings persuaded by the seriousness of the
    crimes and the effect on the young victim. The district court also noted that although Ira’s
    lifestyle “was not one to be envied,” the experts testified that Ira was “devoid of conscience
    and devoid of empathy for other human beings.” The district court ultimately sentenced Ira
    to 91½ years in the custody of the New Mexico Department of Corrections.
    {7}      The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that his sentence was not cruel and unusual
    punishment. Ira, 
    2002-NMCA-037
    , ¶ 1. The Court compared the gravity of Ira’s offense
    against the severity of his sentence to determine whether the punishment was grossly
    disproportionate to the offense. Id. ¶ 19. It considered the severity of Ira’s conduct, the toll
    of that conduct on his victim, and his lack of remorse and likelihood of committing similar
    acts in the future. Id. In light of these facts, the Court of Appeals decided his sentence was
    not “grossly disproportionate as to shock the general conscience or violate principles of
    fundamental fairness.” Id. It acknowledged that “the decision to sentence a child as an adult
    3
    is an extreme sanction that cannot be undertaken lightly.” Id. ¶ 20. Yet, it emphasized that
    “the imposition of a lengthy, adult sentence on a juvenile does not, in itself, amount to cruel
    and unusual punishment.” Id.
    {8}     In his special concurrence, Chief Judge Bosson expressed concern over the length
    of Ira’s sentence. Since the earliest Ira can be eligible for a parole hearing is after serving
    45 years of his sentence, Chief Judge Bosson noted, “[f]or one so young, this is effectively
    a life sentence. One who goes into prison a teenager and comes out a man at the age of
    retirement has forfeited most of his life.” Id. ¶ 45 (Bosson, C.J., specially concurring).
    {9}    Chief Judge Bosson also observed the irony of the sentence when compared with the
    underlying offenses for which Ira pled no contest, explaining that
    [i]f [Ira] had eventually killed his victim, perhaps to protect himself from
    prosecution for his other crimes, he could have received a life sentence as an
    adult, but would have become eligible for parole after a “mere” thirty years.
    Thus, although [he] commits crimes which, however gruesome, are less than
    first degree murder, he receives a sentence that is effectively fifty percent
    longer.
    Id. ¶ 46.
    {10} Ira filed a writ of habeas corpus in the district court that sentenced him pursuant to
    Rule 5-802 NMRA. In it he argued that (1) his sentence constitutes cruel and unusual
    punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment and Article II, Section 13 of the New
    Mexico Constitution; (2) the trial court erred in failing to set aside his plea agreement; and
    (3) he was denied effective assistance of counsel. The district court denied his petition. We
    granted certiorari pursuant to Rule 12-501 NMRA.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    A.      The Eighth Amendment Forbids a Term-of-Years Sentence That Deprives a
    Juvenile of a Meaningful Opportunity to Obtain Release
    {11} Ira’s argument that his 91½-year sentence is cruel and unusual punishment in
    violation of the Eighth Amendment and Section II, Article 13 of the New Mexico
    Constitution is a question of constitutional law, which we review de novo. See State v.
    DeGraff, 
    2006-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 6, 
    139 N.M. 211
    , 
    131 P.3d 61
    . We do not address the
    prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment under Section II, Article 13 because we
    conclude that the Eighth Amendment affords the necessary protection in this case. See State
    v. Gomez, 
    1997-NMSC-006
    , ¶ 19, 
    122 N.M. 777
    , 
    932 P.2d 1
     (holding that when an asserted
    right is protected under the United States Constitution, the claim under the New Mexico
    Constitution is not reached).
    4
    {12} The Eighth Amendment provides that “[e]xcessive bail shall not be required, nor
    excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.” The United States
    Supreme Court looks beyond a historical interpretation of cruel and unusual punishment and
    instead looks to “evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing
    society.” Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U.S. 86
    , 101 (1958) (plurality opinion). The Court emphasizes
    that “[e]mbodied in the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishments is the ‘precept
    of justice that punishment for crime should be graduated and proportioned to [the] offense.’”
    Graham, 560 U.S. at 59 (quoting Weems v. United States, 
    217 U.S. 349
    , 367 (1910)). The
    Eighth Amendment “does not require strict proportionality between crime and sentence but
    rather forbids only extreme sentences that are grossly disproportionate to the crime.”
    Graham, 560 U.S. at 59-60 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Some
    punishments are so grossly disproportionate that the Court has imposed “categorical bans
    on sentencing practices based on mismatches between the culpability of a class of offenders
    and the severity of the penalty.” Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 470
    .
    {13} The Supreme Court has imposed several categorical bans on juvenile sentencing. In
    Roper, the Court held that the Eighth Amendment bars the death penalty for an offender who
    committed his or her offense before the age of eighteen. 
    543 U.S. at 568
    . In Graham,2 the
    Court held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits juvenile offenders from being sentenced
    to life without the possibility of parole for a nonhomicide offense. 560 U.S. at 74. In Miller,
    the Court held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits a State from imposing a mandatory
    sentence of life without parole for juvenile offenders. 
    567 U.S. at 470
    .
    {14} The first issue we address is whether the analysis of juvenile sentencing in Roper,
    Graham, and Miller should be applied to multiple term-of-years sentences. Some
    jurisdictions have held that these cases do not reach multiple term-of-years sentences for
    multiple non-homicide crimes. See State v. Kasic, 
    265 P.3d 410
    , 411, 415-16 (Ariz. Ct. App.
    2011) (holding that “Graham does not categorically bar the sentence[] imposed” on a
    juvenile offender 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”);
    State v. Brown, 
    118 So. 3d 332
    , 341 (La. 2013) (observing that Graham did not include any
    “analysis of sentences for multiple convictions and provide[d] no guidance on how to handle
    such sentences”); Vasquez v. Commw., 
    781 S.E.2d 920
    , 925 (Va. 2016) (holding that
    Graham is not implicated for “multiple term-of-years sentences imposed on multiple crimes
    that, by virtue of the accumulation, exceed[] the criminal defendant’s life expectancy”);
    Lucero v. People, 
    2017 CO 49
    , ¶ 19 (“Multiple sentences imposed for multiple offenses do
    not become a sentence of life without parole, even though they may result in a lengthy term
    2
    Graham was arrested and plead guilty to armed burglary with assault or battery and
    attempted armed robbery. 
    Id. at 53-54
    . The court withheld adjudication of guilt as to both
    charges and sentenced Graham to concurrent 3-year terms of probation. 
    Id. at 54
    . While
    still on probation, Graham participated in a successful home invasion and robbery, an
    attempted robbery, and a high speed police chase. 
    Id. at 54-55
    .
    5
    of incarceration.”).
    {15} Other jurisdictions reject the narrow interpretation espoused by these aforementioned
    courts, largely concluding that such a narrow interpretation is inconsistent with Graham’s
    requirement that a juvenile be given a meaningful opportunity for release based on the
    juvenile’s demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation. In Henry v. State, 
    175 So. 3d 675
    , 676
    (Fla. 2015), the Florida Supreme Court considered whether Graham governed a juvenile
    offender’s challenge to his 90-year aggregate sentence for his convictions of sexual battery
    while possessing a weapon, robbery, kidnapping, carjacking, burglary, and possession of
    marijuana. The Henry court applied Graham to the sentence reasoning that “the Graham
    Court had no intention of limiting its new categorical rule to sentences denominated under
    the exclusive term ‘life in prison.’” 
    Id. at 680
    . The Court emphasized that the differences
    noted in Graham between a juvenile and an adult, which called into question the
    constitutionality of a life-without-parole sentence, provide an equally compelling reason to
    question the constitutionality of lengthy term-of-years sentences. 
    Id.
     And just as the
    Graham Court held that life-without-parole sentences are not justified by penological
    theories, 560 U.S. at 71-75, the Henry court held that lengthy term-of-years sentences are
    not justified by the penological theory of rehabilitation, which provides the “only . . . valid
    constitutional basis for sentencing juvenile nonhomicide offenders.” 
    175 So. 3d at 679, 680
    .
    {16} Other jurisdictions applying Graham to term-of-years sentences offer different
    rationales for doing so. See State v. Boston, 
    363 P.3d 453
    , 457 (Nev. 2015) (permitting
    courts to sentence a juvenile non-homicide offender “undermine[s] 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’”) (third alteration in original) (quoting Graham, 560 U.S.
    at 75); State v. Zuber, 
    152 A.3d 197
    , 211 (N.J. 2017) (reasoning that there is no practical
    difference between a juvenile who receives life without parole and a juvenile who receives
    “multiple term-of-years sentences that, in all likelihood, will keep him in jail for the rest of
    his life”); Budder v. Addison, 
    851 F.3d 1047
    , 1053 n.4 (10th Cir. 2017) (interpreting
    Graham to include “any sentence that would deny a juvenile nonhomicide offender a
    realistic opportunity to obtain release, regardless of the label a state places on that
    sentence”).
    {17} Some jurisdictions have applied Graham when the sentence may provide for release
    before the juvenile’s death but forecloses the opportunity for the juvenile to have a
    meaningful life outside of prison. See State v. Moore, 
    2016-Ohio-8288
    , 
    76 N.E.3d 1127
    ,
    cert. denied, Ohio v. Moore, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    138 S. Ct. 62
     (2017) (determining that a
    sentence that allows juvenile offenders to “breathe their last breaths” outside the prison walls
    is not the “meaningful opportunity” envisioned by the Graham Court). The Supreme Court
    of Connecticut articulated the same concern:
    A juvenile offender is typically put behind bars before he has had the
    chance to exercise the rights and responsibilities of adulthood, such as
    establishing a career, marrying, raising a family, or voting. Even assuming
    6
    the juvenile offender does live to be released, after a half century of
    incarceration, he will have irreparably lost the opportunity to engage
    meaningfully in many of these activities and will be left with seriously
    diminished prospects for his quality of life for the few years he has left. A
    juvenile offender’s release when he is in his late sixties comes at an age when
    the law presumes that he no longer has productive employment prospects.
    ***
    The United States Supreme Court viewed the concept of “life” in
    Miller and Graham more broadly than biological survival; it implicitly
    endorsed the notion that an individual is effectively incarcerated for “life” if
    he will have no opportunity to truly reenter society or have any meaningful
    life outside of prison.
    Casiano v. Comm’r of Corr., 
    115 A.3d 1031
    , 1046, 1047 (Conn. 2015).
    {18} Some courts have held that the Eighth Amendment only requires courts to consider
    the constitutionality of each individual sentence as opposed to the cumulative impact of
    consecutive sentences, see e.g. Pearson v. Ramos, 
    237 F.3d 881
    , 886 (7th Cir. 2001). Other
    courts disagree particularly when the consecutive sentences involve juvenile offenders. See
    Moore, 
    2016-Ohio-8288
    , ¶ 73 (“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.”); Budder v. Addison, 
    851 F.3d 1047
    , 1058 (10th Cir. 2017), cert. denied sub nom. Byrd v. Budder, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    138 S. Ct. 475
     (2017) (“Just as [states] may not sentence juvenile nonhomicide offenders to 100
    years instead of ‘life,’ they may not take a single offense and slice it into multiple sub
    offenses in order to avoid Graham’s rule that juvenile offenders who do not commit
    homicide may not be sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.”). The United States
    Supreme Court has not endorsed either view. See State v. Buchhold, 
    2007 SD 15
    , ¶ 30, 
    727 N.W.2d 816
     (2007) (stating that the Supreme Court has not “provided a clear answer to [the]
    question” of whether the Eight Amendment proportionality review should be “confined to
    the sentences imposed for each individual conviction or whether it extends to the
    consecutive sentencing scheme.”). O’Neil v. State of Vermont, 
    144 U.S. 323
    , 331 (1892),
    does not indicate anything about the Supreme Court’s view on the matter. The language
    quoted by the dissent in this case at paragraph 53 from O’Neil is not a holding of the
    Supreme Court but is only a quote from the lower court’s opinion that the Supreme Court
    included for context. O’Neil, 
    144 U.S. at 331
    . We are persuaded by the Supreme Court’s
    rationale in Roper, Graham, and Miller that the cumulative impact of consecutive sentences
    on a juvenile is required by the Eighth Amendment.
    {19} The dissent would also limit the scope of Graham on the grounds that there is a
    significant distinction between life without parole sentences and term-of-years sentences.
    Diss. Op. ¶ 44. The only difference our cases have recognized is that a life sentence, unlike
    7
    a term of years, lacks a discernable maximum and minimum term of imprisonment. State
    v. Juan, 
    2010-NMSC-041
    , ¶ 40, 
    148 N.M. 747
    , 
    242 P.3d 314
    . Although there is a distinction,
    the distinction is immaterial to an Eighth Amendment analysis under Graham. The Graham
    Court explained what makes a life without parole sentence severe enough to warrant the
    imposition of additional safeguards is the fact that the sentence “alters the offender's life by
    a forfeiture that is irrevocable.” Graham, 560 U.S. at 69. Similarly, a term-of-years sentence
    that exceeds the juvenile’s life expectancy “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 juvenile], he will remain in prison for the rest of his days.” Id. at 70
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The Graham Court recognized that in some
    cases “there will be negligible difference between life without parole and other sentences of
    imprisonment,” citing the hypothetical of a 65-year-old who is sentenced to a lengthy term-
    of-years sentence without eligibility for parole as an example of a sentence that would be the
    functional equivalent of life without parole sentence. Id. at 70-71.
    {20} We conclude that the analysis contained within Roper and its progeny should be
    applied to a multiple term-of-years sentence. Taken together, Roper, Graham, and Miller
    reveal the following three themes regarding the constitutionality of juvenile sentencing.
    {21} First, juveniles’ developmental immaturity makes them less culpable than adults
    because juveniles have an “underdeveloped sense of responsibility,” and an inability “to
    appreciate risks and consequences,” meaning juveniles’ violations are likely to be a product
    of “transient rashness” rather than “evidence of irretrievabl[e] deprav[ity].” Miller, 
    567 U.S. at 471, 472, 477
     (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    {22} Second, juveniles have a greater potential to reform than do adult criminals which
    makes it essential that they have a meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on
    demonstrated maturity and reform. Graham, 560 U.S. at 75. Although the Eighth
    Amendment does not require a state to release juveniles during their natural lives, it prohibits
    states from making the judgment at the outset that juveniles will never be fit to reenter
    society. Id. The Miller Court emphasized that “none of what [Graham] said about
    children—about their distinctive (and transitory) mental traits and environmental
    vulnerabilities—is crime-specific.” 
    567 U.S. at 473
    . The Graham Court underscored that
    “[i]t is difficult even for expert psychologists to differentiate between the juvenile offender
    whose crime reflects unfortunate yet transient immaturity, and the rare juvenile offender
    whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.” 560 U.S. at 73 (citing Roper, 
    543 U.S. at 572
    ).
    {23} Third, no penological theory—retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and
    rehabilitation—justifies imposing a sentence of life without parole on a juvenile convicted
    of a non-homicide crime because juveniles are less culpable and more amenable to
    reformation. Graham, 560 U.S. at 71-75.
    {24} With respect to retribution, the Graham Court explained that “[s]ociety is entitled to
    impose severe sanctions on a juvenile nonhomicide offender to express its condemnation of
    8
    the crime and to seek restoration of the moral imbalance caused by the offense.” 550 U.S.
    at 71. “The heart of the retribution rationale,” the Court reassured, focuses on “a criminal
    sentence [that] must be directly related to the personal culpability of the criminal offender.”
    Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). But in the case of juvenile offenders, the
    “case for retribution is not as strong . . . as with an adult,” and “becomes even weaker with
    respect to a juvenile who did not commit homicide.” Id. (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). Thus, retribution is not proportional if the state imposes life without parole
    on the less culpable juvenile nonhomicide offender. Id. at 71-72.
    {25} Deterrence was similarly insufficient to justify a life without parole sentence on a
    juvenile. The Graham Court emphasized that “the same characteristics that render juveniles
    less culpable than adults suggest . . . that juveniles will be less susceptible to deterrence.”
    Id. at 72. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted) (omission in original). A juvenile’s
    “lack of maturity and underdeveloped sense of responsibility . . . often result in impetuous
    and ill-considered actions and decisions.” Id. (quoting Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
    , 367
    (1993) (omission in original)). As a result, juveniles are “less likely to take a possible
    punishment into consideration when making decisions.” Graham, 560 U.S. at 72. Although
    a life without parole sentence may deter some juvenile offenders, “any limited deterrent
    effect provided by life without parole is not enough to justify the sentence.” Id.
    {26} Incapacitation also does not justify a life-without-parole sentence because a
    sentencing court would have to decide that a “juvenile offender forever will be a danger to
    society.” Id. However, a sentencing court is not equipped to make such a judgment because,
    as the Graham Court explained, even expert psychologists encounter difficulty
    distinguishing between a crime that reflects on a juvenile’s transient immaturity and a crime
    that reflects on a juvenile’s irreparable corruption. See id. at 73.
    {27} Rehabilitation does not support a life-without-parole sentence because it “forswears
    altogether the rehabilitative ideal.” Id. at 74. The sentence reflects “an irrevocable judgment
    about [the juvenile offender’s] value and place in society,” a judgment that is inconsistent
    with a juvenile nonhomicide offender’s “capacity for change and limited moral culpability.”
    Id.
    {28} Just as the Graham Court found no penological theory that justified the imposition
    of a life without parole sentence on a juvenile nonhomicide offender, we find no penological
    theory that supports a term-of-years sentence that in all likelihood will keep the juvenile in
    prison for the rest of his or her life without a meaningful opportunity to obtain release.
    {29} What the Graham Court explained in establishing a bright-line rule prohibiting life
    without parole for a nonhomicide juvenile offender is that although “[a s]tate is not required
    to guarantee eventual freedom to a juvenile offender convicted of a nonhomicide crime,” it
    must “give defendants like Graham some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on
    demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Id. at 75. The Court made clear that “[t]he
    Eighth Amendment does not foreclose the possibility that persons convicted of nonhomicide
    9
    crimes committed before adulthood will remain behind bars for life.” Id. At the same time,
    the Eighth Amendment “does prohibit States from making the judgment at the outset that
    those offenders never will be fit to reenter society.” Id.
    {30}   In this case, the district court sentenced Ira to an adult prison, stating:
    Ordinarily, the young age of the defendant would tend to influence
    a judge toward leniency, based upon the inference that the crimes were
    motivated in part by youthful impulsiveness and immaturity, and that
    converting a large amount of incarceration to probation will allow the youth
    to show that the lesson has been learned and he can now benefit rather than
    attack society. That analysis does not apply here, first because of the
    inability to convert first degree felony incarceration to probation . . . and,
    second, because Joel Ira is not the typical young defendant. The evidence
    shows that he is almost certain to be the same threat to society upon his
    release as he is today because humanity has not developed a way to implant
    a conscience once the period for its natural growth has passed.
    ***
    This Court would like to fashion a sentence that will guarantee, or
    even offer hope, that Joel Ira can be released after a period of time as a
    rehabilitated person, able to be a valuable part of, rather than a threat to, his
    community. There is no such sentence.
    This Court would like to fashion a sentence that will assure Joel Ira’s
    victims that he will not be a serious threat to them if released before he
    reaches an advanced age. There is not such sentence.
    This Court must then fall back upon a sentence that will protect
    society from a man without a conscience until such time as his physical
    ability to cause harm is less than the likelihood that he would attempt it. To
    assure that result, in consideration of the crowded conditions of our prisons
    and the ability of the Department of Corrections to grant credit of up to half
    of an adult sentence in order to relieve overcrowding, the Court must impose
    twice what it intends to be the effective term of incarceration.
    {31} The district court relied on “the most experienced and qualified experts in the field
    of juvenile corrections and psychotherapy” at the time. These experts informed the court
    that Ira “is a child devoid of conscience and devoid of empathy for other human beings . .
    . . ” The court further explained that
    [t]he experts say that each human being must develop these tools at a young
    age, for personalities become fixed before the teenage years and it is very
    10
    hard, if not impossible to implant a conscience in a sixteen year old where
    none existed before. These experts looked, in this case, for evidence of
    remorse or empathy that would provide the slightest glimmer of hope that
    Joel Ira could defy the odds and become rehabilitated, and they found none
    . . . . The experts told this Court that New Mexico simply does not have a
    program that offers even a slight hope of protecting the public if Joel Ira were
    released from custody.
    {32} The court’s sentiment that no hope existed for Ira to be rehabilitated because
    personalities become fixed before teenage years is of questionable neuroscientific validity
    since Roper and its progeny. There is no evidence in the record to assist this Court in
    determining whether indeed the experts’ opinions were invalid and unreliable. The Miller
    Court assumed that juveniles as a category are immature, impetuous, and generally have a
    diminished capacity to avoid negative environmental influences and peer pressures. 
    567 U.S. at 471, 476
    . It held that these characteristics weigh in favor of mitigation, making the
    need for life sentences without parole uncommon. 
    Id. at 479
    .
    {33} The Miller Court recognized that some youths, despite their status as adolescents,
    may be different from the norm, and therefore declined to consider whether the Eighth
    Amendment requires a categorical ban on life without parole for juveniles. 
    Id.
     Stated
    differently, the Supreme Court recognizes the need for individualized sentencing. Thus, the
    juvenile’s attorney will introduce mitigating evidence, perhaps through a forensic mental
    health expert, that the juvenile conforms to developmental norms, which should dissuade the
    district court from imposing a sentence that in all likelihood will condemn the juvenile to
    prison for the rest of his or her life without a meaningful opportunity to obtain release. The
    prosecution will introduce evidence that the juvenile is not the norm and therefore the crime
    was not the product of transient developmental influences, but instead the evidence makes
    the juvenile that rare juvenile whose crime reflects irreparable corruption. See 
    id. at 479-80
    .
    B.     Ira’s Term-of-Years Sentence is Constitutional Because it Does Not Deprive
    Him of a Meaningful Opportunity to Obtain Release
    {34} Ira does not contest the evidence introduced against him during his sentencing or
    habeas corpus hearing. Instead he seeks a declaration that his sentence is categorically
    unconstitutional because it is the functional equivalent of a life sentence without the
    possibility of parole. Based on the record before us, we cannot agree with this contention.
    {35} In this case the district court arguably found that Ira is that rare juvenile who is
    irreparably corrupt. Regardless, the sentence imposed on Ira does not deprive him of a
    meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.
    Presuming that he demonstrates his good behavior, he will be parole eligible when he is
    approximately 62 years old. Had Ira been sentenced to 91½ years without the opportunity
    to reduce his sentence with good behavior, our analysis would be different. But, with
    demonstrated good behavior, Ira will have the opportunity to make his case before a parole
    11
    board.
    {36} The New Mexico Legislature enacted the Parole Board Act “to create a professional
    parole board.” NMSA 1978, § 31-21-23 (1999). This Act provides parole board members
    with extensive powers and duties in exercising their authority to grant or deny parole. See
    NMSA 1978, § 31-21-25(B)(1), (2), (3) (2001) (providing that the parole board has the
    power to “conduct . . . investigations, examinations, interviews, hearings, and other
    proceedings . . .;” and to “summon witnesses, books, papers, reports, documents or tangible
    things and administer oaths as may be necessary for the effectual discharge of the duties of
    the board”). With respect to determining an inmate’s eligibility for parole, NMSA 1978,
    Section 31-21-10(A)(2)(2009) requires the parole board to consider all pertinent information
    concerning the inmate, including:
    (a) the circumstances of the offense;
    (b) mitigating and aggravating circumstances;
    (c) whether a deadly weapon was used in the commission of the offense;
    (d) whether the inmate is a habitual offender;
    (e) the [presentence and prerelease] reports filed under [NMSA 1978, Section
    31-21-9 (1972)]; and
    (f) the reports of such physical and mental examinations as have been made
    while in an institution[.]
    Section 31-21-10(A)(2).
    {37} The parole board will be tasked with performing these duties during Ira’s hearing to
    determine whether parole is in the best interest of society and whether Ira is able and willing
    to fulfill the obligations of a law-abiding citizen. See NMSA 1978, § 31-21-10(A)(3), (4)
    (2007). If he is granted parole, he will remain under the supervision of the parole board,
    possibly for the remainder of his life. See § 31-21-10.1(A)(2) (providing that a person
    convicted of first-degree criminal sexual penetration shall serve a period of parole up to the
    person’s natural life).
    {38} Certainly the fact that Ira will serve almost 46 years before he is given an opportunity
    to obtain release is the outer limit of what is constitutionally acceptable. See People v.
    Contreras, 
    2018 WL 1042252
    , at *9-10, ___ P.3d ___ (Cal. 2018) (citing cases holding that
    50-year-long sentences are the functional equivalent of life without parole, and citing
    legislation enacted in the wake of Graham requiring parole as soon as 15 years but no later
    than 40 years after the start of the juvenile’s sentence). The New Mexico Legislature is at
    liberty to enact legislation providing juveniles sentenced to lengthy term-of-years sentences
    with a shorter period of time to become eligible for a parole eligibility hearing. At the time
    of Ira’s sentencing, a defendant sentenced to life imprisonment in a New Mexico institution
    would have been eligible for parole after serving a thirty-year sentence. See § 31-21-10(A)
    (1997). Whether the time frame in Section 31-21-10(A) or a shorter time frame is required
    by the Eighth Amendment to give juveniles a meaningful opportunity to obtain release
    12
    presents an important question that we cannot answer based on the evidentiary record before
    us. Some studies conclude that a juvenile’s brain does not fully develop until early adult
    years. See Brief for the Am. Psychol. Ass’n, Am. Psychiatric Ass’n et al. as Amici Curiae
    Supporting Petitioners, at 27, Graham, 
    560 U.S. 48
     (No. 08-7412) (“[T]he part of the brain
    that is critical for control of impulses and emotions and mature, considered decision-making
    is still developing during adolescence, consistent with the demonstrated behavioral and
    psychosocial immaturity of juveniles.”). Perhaps evaluating the juvenile’s maturity and
    rehabilitation once the juvenile’s brain has presumably developed is the time frame required
    by the Eighth Amendment, but Roper and its progeny are of no assistance to us, nor is the
    record in this case.
    {39} Other jurisdictions, in the wake of Graham, have amended their parole eligibility
    time frames for juveniles. Nevada enacted such a statute in 2015 providing a juvenile
    offender with a parole eligibility hearing after serving fifteen years of incarceration if the
    juvenile was convicted of an offense that did not result in the death of a victim. See Nev.
    A.B. 267 (codified as N.R.S. 213.12135) (2015); Remarks by James Dold, Minutes of Nev.
    Assemb. Comm. on Jud. 7 (Mar. 27, 2015) (“In response to [Roper, Graham, and Miller] and
    the emerging juvenile brain and behavioral developmental science, several states across the
    country have begun to eliminate life without parole sentences for kids and create more age-
    appropriate and fair sentencing standards that are in line with A.B. 267.”). Washington
    requires juvenile offenders to serve twenty years in confinement before petitioning for parole
    eligibility. See 
    Wash. Rev. Code § 9
    .94A.730(1) (2015); see also La. Rev. Stat. §
    15:574.4(D)(1)(A) (2017) (requiring juvenile offenders serving life imprisonment to serve
    at least twenty-five years before parole eligibility). California provides for parole eligibility
    after a juvenile offender serves fifteen years if the juvenile was younger than twenty-five
    years old when the juvenile committed the offense for which the juvenile received the
    longest sentence. See 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3051
    (b)(1) (2018). The California legislature
    enacted this statute after the California Supreme Court interpreted Graham to apply to a
    juvenile nonhomicide offender sentenced to a term of 110 years to life. See People v.
    Caballero, 
    145 Cal. Rptr. 3d 286
    , 288 (2012). Although we consider Ira’s opportunity to
    obtain release when he is 62 years old constitutionally meaningful, albeit the outer limit, we
    do not intend to discourage the legislature from adopting a shorter time period as have many
    other jurisdictions.
    C.      Ira’s Remaining Claims Lack Merit
    {40} Ira alleges a number of procedural errors at the district court. First, he asserts that
    his waiver of a preliminary hearing should not have been honored because preliminary
    hearings for children should not be allowed to be waived. At the time of the proceedings
    against Ira, Rule 10-222 NMRA governed the circumstances under which an alleged
    youthful offender was afforded a preliminary hearing. When Ira entered his plea, Rule
    10-222 was silent about whether a child could waive a preliminary hearing. See Rule 10-222
    NMRA (1995); but see N.M. Const. art. II, § 14 (recognizing that a person being held on a
    criminal information for a “capital, felonious, or infamous crime” may waive the right to a
    13
    preliminary examination). Rule 10-222 was amended while Ira’s case was pending to
    explicitly permit such a waiver, and this right remains available today under Rule 10-213
    NMRA. See Rule 10-222(B) (1999) (“[A] preliminary examination will be conducted unless
    the case is presented to a grand jury or the child waives the right to a preliminary hearing or
    grand jury.”); Rule 10-213(B)(1) (2014). Accordingly, we find this argument to be without
    merit. Second, Ira contends that he did not have a separate amenability hearing. This issue
    is without merit because Ira did have both an amenability hearing and a separate sentencing
    hearing. Third, Ira contends that he did not receive a report from the Children, Youth and
    Families Department (CYFD) prior to the amenability hearing required by NMSA 1978,
    Section 32A-2-17(A)(3) (1995, amended 2009). This issue is without merit because the
    children’s court attorney who prosecuted the case testified that a report was prepared,
    although it may not have been introduced into evidence. In addition, a CYFD juvenile
    probation officer testified during the amenability hearing and strongly urged the children’s
    court judge to impose adult sanctions. Fourth, Ira asserts that once the court decided to
    impose an adult sanction he was entitled to a predisposition report from the adult probation
    and parole division of the Department of Corrections as required by Section 32A-2-
    17(A)(3)(b). The State concedes this point but contends that Ira was not prejudiced because
    expert witnesses testified that no rehabilitation programs in the adult prison system were
    available to treat Ira. We agree with the State that Ira has not shown prejudice. See State
    v. Jose S., 
    2007-NMCA-146
    , ¶ 20, 
    142 N.M. 829
    , 
    171 P.3d 768
     (holding that a child must
    show prejudice from the court’s failure to follow the statutory requirements).
    {41} The fifth issue raised by Ira requires more elaboration. Ira asserts that the district
    court erred in failing to set aside his plea agreement because neither he, his attorney, the
    prosecutor nor the judge understood the sentence that could be imposed on Ira and therefore
    the judge initially imposed an illegal sentence on Ira. Ira argued this issue before the district
    court and on appeal before the Court of Appeals. See Ira, 
    2002-NMCA-037
    , ¶¶ 11, 35, 36.
    In a memorandum opinion, the Court of Appeals reversed his sentence because the district
    court erred in imposing adult sanctions for the five counts of criminal sexual penetration Ira
    committed when he was fourteen years old. See State v. Joel I., No. 18,915, mem. op. at 3,
    5 (N.M. Ct. App. Oct. 1, 1998) (non-precedential). At the time Ira was fourteen years old,
    the New Mexico Children’s Code provided that a child between fifteen and eighteen years
    old is a “youthful offender” subject to adult sanctions when the child is charged with at least
    one of ten enumerated offenses, including aggravated battery and criminal sexual
    penetration. See NMSA 1978, § 32A-2-3(I)(1)(d), (g) (1995, amended 1996). Because Ira
    was only fourteen years old when he committed five counts of criminal sexual penetration,
    the district court could not impose adult sanctions with respect to those five counts. After
    the Court of Appeals reversed Ira’s sentence, the district court resentenced him as an adult
    for the remaining five counts of criminal sexual penetration committed when Ira was fifteen
    years old, which Ira is currently serving. The Court of Appeals also rejected the arguments
    that the district court should have allowed Ira to withdraw his plea because of the sentencing
    error and the alleged ineffective assistance of counsel. Ira has had a full and fair opportunity
    to argue the merits of these issues and we therefore exercise our discretion to give preclusive
    effect to these issues. See Duncan v. Kerby, 
    1993-NMSC-011
    , ¶ 6, 
    115 N.M. 344
    , 
    851 P.2d 14
    466 (concluding that an appellate court may exercise discretion in giving preclusive effect
    to an ineffective assistance of counsel claim rejected on direct appeal and subsequently
    raised in a habeas corpus proceeding).
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {42} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of Ira’s habeas corpus
    petition.
    {43}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    WE CONCUR:
    ___________________________________
    CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice
    ___________________________________
    BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Chief Justice (dissent in part and concur in part)
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice (joining in dissent and concurrence)
    NAKAMURA, Chief Justice (concurring in part, dissenting in part).
    {44} The categorical rule announced in Graham precluding states from imposing a
    sentence of life without parole upon juveniles convicted of a nonhomicide offense does not
    extend to Joel Ira. Ira perpetrated multiple nonhomicide offenses over a lengthy period of
    time and was sentenced to multiple term-of-years sentences to be served consecutively. Ira,
    
    2002-NMCA-037
    , ¶ 14. There is a meaningful distinction between juveniles sentenced to
    life without parole for the commission of a single offense and juveniles sentenced to multiple
    consecutive sentences for a series of offenses committed over a period of time. This is
    amply illustrated by comparing Ira’s case to Commonwealth v. Donovan, 
    662 N.E.2d 692
    (Mass. 1996), a Massachusetts case involving a defendant who was sentenced as a juvenile
    to life without the possibility of parole for a single criminal act and who was paroled in the
    wake of Graham and Miller. Although Donovan was convicted of a homicide offense, the
    comparison is still apt: Donovan committed one offense, Ira committed multiple offenses.
    As will become clear, this critical difference between Donovan’s and Ira’s cases should
    inform our reading of Graham.
    {45}   Joseph Donovan was seventeen years old on the night of September 18, 1992. Joseph
    15
    Donovan, The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety, Parole
    Board Decision (Aug. 7, 2014) at 1-2.3 As Donovan and two companions walked down the
    street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, they encountered two men. Donovan, 662 N.E.2d at
    694. The men were Norwegian citizens studying at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology, id., a fact that assuredly contributed to the significant media attention dedicated
    to the events which unfolded during the chance encounter. One of the two men “bumped
    into” Donovan and Donovan demanded an apology. Id. at 695. No apology was given and
    Donovan punched one of the men in the face, knocking him to the ground. Id. One of
    Donovan’s companions then stabbed and killed the man Donovan had punched. Id.
    Donovan testified that he did not know his companion had a knife, id. at 695 n.3, and did not
    see the stabbing. Id. at 695. Testimony was offered that Donovan stole the stabbed man’s
    wallet and that one of Donovan’s companions stole the other man’s wallet before Donovan
    and his companions fled from the scene. Id. Donovan denied participating in the robbery,
    but was convicted of felony murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.
    Parole Board Decision at 1-2.
    {46} Donovan was one of the first juvenile offenders in Massachusetts considered for
    parole in the wake of the line of cases that include Graham and Miller and which recognize
    that juvenile offenders are constitutionally different from adults for purposes of sentencing.
    See Diatchenko v. Dist. Attorney for Suffolk Dist., 
    1 N.E.3d 270
    , 276–77 (Mass. 2013)
    (discussing Roper, Graham, and Miller and concluding that the Massachusetts statute
    imposing life without the possibility of parole on juvenile offenders who commit first-degree
    murder is unconstitutional and holding that these juvenile offenders must be considered for
    parole eligibility); Parole Board Decision at 3. The parole board determined that Donovan
    “did not commit, intend, encourage, or foresee the stabbing that caused the victim’s death.”
    Parole Board Decision at 7. A forensic psychologist testified at the parole hearing that
    “Donovan was impulsive, immature, and directionless as a young person but that did not
    result in an early onset of violence in childhood or early teenage years.” Parole Board
    Decision at 6. The psychologist was persuaded that Donovan has “no history of major
    conduct problems” and attributed Donovan’s conduct on the night of September 18, 1992
    to a lack of impulse control and a vulnerability to peer pressure. Parole Board Decision at
    6. Donovan’s parole application was granted. Parole Board Decision at 1.
    {47} When Ira was fourteen to fifteen years old, he repeatedly raped his younger
    stepsister. Ira, 
    2002-NMCA-037
    , ¶ 6. The rapes occurred over a two-year period when she
    was eight to nine years old. Id. ¶ 5. In the course of the many rapes, Ira penetrated her
    mouth, vagina, and anus. Id. ¶ 6. These penetrations caused her such pain that she would
    scream into a pillow. Id. After one forcible sodomy where she screamed from the pain, Ira’s
    3
    The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety Parole
    Board’s Decision, Joseph Donovan is available electronically at
    http://www.mass.gov/eopss/docs/pb/lifer-decisions/2014/donovan-joseph-8-7-14-paroled.pdf
    (last visited February 27, 2018).
    16
    penis was covered in blood from an anal tear. At other times, she nearly vomited. Id. Ira
    urinated and ejaculated into her mouth and forced her to swallow. Id. He frequently
    threatened to kill her if she alerted anyone about the rapes and one time choked her to
    unconsciousness. Id. He used subtle hand gestures—drumming or tapping his fingers on
    the arm of his chair—to signal to her that she would soon be raped again. Id.
    {48} Ira was charged with ten counts of first-degree criminal sexual penetration and
    various other counts. Id. ¶ 2. He pleaded no contest to all of the charges except one. Id. ¶
    4. At sentencing, the testimony indicated that Ira did not feel remorseful about his conduct,
    refused to take responsibility for his actions, and believed that “he did not do anything
    wrong.” Id. ¶¶ 8, 10. A mental health expert testified that Ira has “a severe conduct
    disorder, with tendencies towards violent sexual behavior and domination, that would
    require intensive, secured, long-term treatment.” Id. ¶ 10.
    {49} I offer these contrasting cases to highlight the fact that there are meaningful and self-
    evident distinctions between a juvenile offender like Donovan and a juvenile offender like
    Ira. Most critically, Donovan did not engage in repeated, violent attacks against others. He
    committed one violent act, which experts attributed to impulsiveness and immaturity. Ira,
    on the other hand, perpetrated repeated, horrific crimes over two years which experts
    attributed to a significant conduct disorder that manifests as a propensity for sexually violent
    behavior. Our understanding of the rule articulated in Graham should acknowledge that
    there are significant differences between single act and multiple act juvenile offenders.
    There is an abundance of legal support for the conclusion that this difference is legally
    salient.
    {50} First, the text of Graham itself compels the conclusion that the rule articulated in
    Graham does not extend to Ira. In Graham, the Supreme Court made clear that the
    categorical rule announced applies only to “juvenile offenders sentenced to life without
    parole solely for a nonhomicide offense.” 560 U.S. at 63 (emphasis added); id. at 74 (“This
    Court now holds that for a juvenile offender who did not commit homicide the Eighth
    Amendment forbids the sentence of life without parole.” (emphasis added)). The Court
    emphasized that a sentence of “life without parole” is unique. See id. at 69 (“[L]ife without
    parole is the second most severe penalty permitted by law. It is true that a death sentence
    is unique in its severity and irrevocability, yet life without parole sentences share some
    characteristics with death sentences that are shared by no other sentences.” (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted)). Ira was not sentenced to life without parole; he was
    sentenced to five consecutive adult sentences of CSP I and one consecutive adult sentence
    of intimidation of a witness. Ira, 
    2002-NMCA-037
    , ¶ 14. Because Ira was not sentenced
    to life without parole, the categorical rule in Graham is inapplicable to him. This conclusion
    is not based on a constrained or overly formalistic reading of Graham.
    {51} Justice Alito made clear in his dissenting opinion in Graham that “[n]othing in the
    Court’s opinion affects the imposition of a sentence to a term of years without the possibility
    of parole.” 560 U.S. at 124 (Alito, J., dissenting). Justice Thomas pointed out, in his
    17
    dissenting opinion in Graham, that the majority did not count juveniles “sentenced to
    lengthy term-of-years sentences (e.g., 70 or 80 years’ imprisonment)[,]” when surveying the
    number of juvenile offenders serving life without parole sentences in the United States—that
    survey revealed that there were 123 juvenile offenders serving life without parole
    nationwide. Id. at 113 n.11 (Thomas, J., dissenting). The number of juveniles with multiple,
    lengthy, term-of-years sentences would likely number in the thousands, and Justice
    Thomas’s observation that these offenders were not considered by the majority in their
    survey strongly suggests that the majority did not intend to bring this class of juvenile
    offenders within the ambit of the categorical rule articulated in Graham.
    {52} Second, a lengthy, aggregate, consecutive, term-of-years sentence for multiple
    offenses is not the functional equivalent of life imprisonment for a single crime. An
    aggregate, consecutive, term-of-years sentence for multiple offenses is just that: it is an
    aggregate punishment for multiple offenses. Our case law already acknowledges this
    important distinction. See State v. Juan, 
    2010-NMSC-041
    , ¶ 40, 
    148 N.M. 747
    , 
    242 P.3d 314
     (“Life sentences have always been understood to be different from a sentence for a term
    of years.” (alteration, internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    {53} Third, “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.” Pearson v. Ramos, 
    237 F.3d 881
    , 886 (7th Cir. 2001).
    Moreover, and as the Supreme Court recognized long ago, “[i]t 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.” O’Neil v. Vermont, 
    144 U.S. 323
    , 331
    (1892). The preceding quoted passage from O’Neil is dictum, but the validity of the logic
    underpinning the quote is persuasive and this logic has indeed persuaded courts to reject
    “Eighth Amendment challenge[s] to consecutive sentences.” State v. Ali, 
    895 N.W.2d 237
    ,
    245 (Minn. 2017).
    {54} Fourth, “if the sentence for a particular offense is not disproportionately long, it does
    not become so merely because it is consecutive to another sentence for a separate offense or
    because the consecutive sentences are lengthy in aggregate.” State v. Berger, 
    134 P.3d 378
    ,
    384 (Ariz. 2006) (en banc). “This proposition holds true even if a defendant faces a total
    sentence exceeding a normal life expectancy as a result of consecutive sentences.” 
    Id.
     “[A]
    separate [Eighth Amendment] proportionality review must be completed for each sentence
    imposed consecutively, rather than considering the cumulative total of such consecutive
    sentences. [This is b]ecause each sentence is a separate punishment for a separate
    offense[.]” Lucero, 
    2017 CO 49
    , ¶ 23 (second alteration in original); accord Hawkins v.
    Hargett, 
    200 F.3d 1279
    , 1285 n.5 (10th Cir. 1999) (“The Eighth Amendment analysis
    focuses on the sentence imposed for each specific crime, not on the cumulative sentence for
    multiple crimes.”).
    {55}    Fifth, “it is constitutionally permissible to punish a person who commits two, three,
    18
    four or even more crimes (including murder) more severely than a person who commits a
    single crime.” Ali, 895 N.W.2d at 243. Under New Mexico law, “[a] sentencing judge has
    discretion in determining whether sentences are to run consecutively or concurrently.” State
    v. Deats, 
    1971-NMCA-089
    , ¶ 24, 
    82 N.M. 711
    , 
    487 P.2d 139
    . The sentencing judge’s
    “discretion in this area will not be interfered with unless he has violated one of the
    sentencing statutes.” 
    Id.
     This Court has observed that “the imposition of separate sentences
    to run consecutively is lawful and violates no federally protected right.” State v. Padilla,
    
    1973-NMSC-049
    , ¶ 14, 
    85 N.M. 140
    , 
    509 P.2d 1335
    . Moreover, this Court has recognized
    that “imposition of multiple valid sentences to run consecutively does not, as such, constitute
    cruel and unusual punishment as contemplated by the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution
    of the United States.” Id. ¶ 15.
    {56} Sixth and finally, there are strong penological rationales to justify application of
    consecutive sentencing upon juveniles who commit multiple nonhomicide offenses. Contra
    Graham, 560 U.S. at 71 (“With respect to life without parole for juvenile nonhomicide
    offenders, none of the goals of penal sanctions that have been recognized as legitimate . . .
    provides an adequate justification.” (emphasis added) (citation omitted)). “The offender who
    commits two armed robberies should, all other things being equal, serve more time than the
    offender who commits one robbery. Concurrent sentences frustrate this objective, and
    consecutive sentences thus should be the rule in a just deserts model.” Harvey S. Perlman
    and Carol G. Stebbins, Implementing an Equitable Sentencing System: The Uniform Law
    Commissioners’ Model Sentencing and Corrections Act, 
    65 Va. L. Rev. 1175
    , 1220 (1979).
    As to deterrence, commentators have observed that “consecutive sentences are appropriate
    where a defendant has committed a series of heinous crimes so as not to provide a multiple
    offense discount which would not reflect the seriousness of a defendant’s conduct.”
    Baldwin’s Oh. Prac. Crim. L. § 118:16 Consecutive sentences (3d ed.) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    {57} Graham is the law; juveniles convicted of a nonhomicide offense cannot be
    sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. 575 U.S. at 74. But this proposition does not
    answer the issue here: whether Graham extends to defendants like Ira who have committed
    many crimes over a period of time and who have been sentenced to multiple, consecutive,
    lengthy, term-of-years sentences. Policy concerns that are all but self-evident from
    comparison of Donovan’s and Ira’s cases as well as abundant, established law convinces me
    that the categorical rule articulated in Graham does not extend to Ira. Because the majority
    reaches the opposite conclusion, Maj. op. ¶ 4, I dissent. I concur, however, with the
    majority’s conclusion that Ira has a meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on
    demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation as he will be eligible for a parole hearing at age
    sixty-two. Maj. op. ¶ 35. I also concur with the majority’s ultimate conclusion that Ira’s
    petition for habeas corpus should be denied. Maj. op. ¶ 42.
    ____________________________________
    JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Chief Justice
    19
    I CONCUR:
    ___________________________________
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
    20