Yates v. People , 2019 CO 90 ( 2019 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    November 4, 2019
    
    2019 CO 90
    No. 16SC592, Wells-Yates v. People—Proportionality Review—Per Se Grave or
    Serious Crimes—Habitual Criminal Punishment.
    In this case and two companion cases, the supreme court considers multiple
    issues that lie at the intersection of proportionality review and habitual criminal
    punishment. In the process, the court endeavors to shed light on these areas of the
    law and to correct a few misstatements that appear in the caselaw.
    The court holds that: (1) during an abbreviated proportionality review of a
    habitual criminal sentence, the court must consider each triggering offense and the
    predicate offenses together and determine whether, in combination, they are so
    lacking in gravity or seriousness as to raise an inference that the sentence imposed
    on that triggering offense is grossly disproportionate; (2) in determining the
    gravity or seriousness of the triggering offense and the predicate offenses, the
    court should consider any relevant legislative amendments enacted after the dates
    of those offenses, even if the amendments do not apply retroactively; (3) not all
    narcotic offenses are per se grave or serious; and (4) the narcotic offenses of
    possession and possession with intent are not per se grave or serious. Because the
    court of appeals’ decision is at odds with this opinion, its judgment is reversed.
    Accordingly, the case is remanded with instructions to return it to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2019 CO 90
    Supreme Court Case No. 16SC592
    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 13CA1216
    Petitioner:
    Belinda May Wells-Yates,
    v.
    Respondent:
    The People of the State of Colorado.
    Judgment Reversed
    en banc
    November 4, 2019
    Attorneys for Petitioner:
    Megan A. Ring, Public Defender
    Dayna Vise, Deputy Public Defender
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent:
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
    Michael D. McMaster, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Denver, Colorado
    JUSTICE SAMOUR delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in the judgment.
    CHIEF JUSTICE COATS dissents.
    ¶1    Our General Assembly long ago adopted the Habitual Criminal Act for the
    purpose of punishing more severely “those individuals who show a propensity
    toward repeated criminal conduct.” People v. Dist. Ct., 
    711 P.2d 666
    , 670 (Colo.
    1985). But the legislature’s authority to prescribe harsher punishment for habitual
    criminals is not without constitutional contours. It is limited by the principle of
    proportionality that is embedded in the constitutional prohibition against the
    infliction of cruel and unusual punishment. Very generally, proportionality is a
    foundational “precept of justice that punishment for [a] crime should be graduated
    and proportioned to [the] offense.” Weems v. United States, 
    217 U.S. 349
    , 367 (1910).
    Simply put, the concept of proportionality dictates that the punishment should fit
    the crime.
    ¶2    In this case and the two companion cases we announce today, Melton v.
    People, 
    2019 CO 89
    , ___ P.3d ___, and People v. McRae, 
    2019 CO 91
    , ___ P.3d ___, we
    consider multiple issues that lie at the intersection of proportionality review and
    habitual criminal punishment.        We hold that: (1) during an abbreviated
    proportionality review of a habitual criminal sentence, the court must consider
    each triggering offense and the predicate offenses together and determine
    whether, in combination, they are so lacking in gravity or seriousness as to raise
    an inference that the sentence imposed on that triggering offense is grossly
    2
    disproportionate;1 (2) in determining the gravity or seriousness of the triggering
    offense and the predicate offenses, the court should consider any relevant
    legislative amendments enacted after the dates of those offenses, even if the
    amendments do not apply retroactively; (3) not all narcotic offenses are per se
    grave or serious; and (4) the narcotic offenses of possession and possession with
    intent are not per se grave or serious. Because the court of appeals’ decision is at
    odds with the conclusions we reach today, we reverse its judgment.2 Accordingly,
    we remand with instructions to return the case to the trial court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ¶3    In order to place this appeal in context, we begin with a primer on
    proportionality review and a synopsis of habitual criminal punishment (focusing
    on proportionality review of a habitual criminal sentence). In the process, we
    endeavor to shed light on these areas of the law and to correct a few misstatements
    that appear in our caselaw. After setting forth the pertinent legal principles, we
    discuss the factual and procedural history of this case and identify the controlling
    standard of review. We then proceed to analyze the issues before us.
    1 In this opinion, we refer to the felony convictions for which a defendant was
    sentenced as “triggering offenses,” and to the prior felony convictions on which a
    defendant’s habitual criminal adjudication was based as “predicate offenses.”
    2 In fairness to our learned colleagues on the court of appeals, today we clarify the
    law related to the issues on review.
    3
    I. Proportionality Review
    ¶4    The concept of proportionality is rooted in both the U.S. and Colorado
    Constitutions. Therefore, our discussion is informed by both federal and Colorado
    law. We examine each in turn.
    A. Federal Authority
    ¶5    The Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that “[e]xcessive
    bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
    punishments inflicted.” U.S. Const. amend. VIII. In Solem v. Helm, 
    463 U.S. 277
    ,
    284 (1983), the Supreme Court construed the last clause in this amendment as
    prohibiting “not only barbaric punishments, but also sentences that are
    disproportionate to the crime committed.”         However, the Court has since
    narrowed the guarantee of proportionality: “The Eighth Amendment does not
    require strict proportionality between crime and sentence”; instead, “it forbids
    only extreme sentences that are ‘grossly disproportionate’ to the crime.”
    Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
    , 1001 (1991) (Kennedy, J., concurring) (quoting
    Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 288
    ).3 It is “exceedingly rare” for a sentence to be deemed so
    extreme that it is grossly disproportionate to the crime. 
    Id.
    3 Harmelin was a fractured decision; Colorado has adopted Justice Kennedy’s
    concurring opinion because it resolved the case on the narrowest grounds and
    obtained the support of the largest number of justices. Close v. People, 
    48 P.3d 528
    ,
    535 (Colo. 2002) (noting that Justice Kennedy’s concurring opinion is widely
    viewed as “the rule of Harmelin”). For the sake of convenience, we hereafter refer
    4
    ¶6    Harmelin distilled the following four principles from the Supreme Court’s
    proportionality jurisprudence:
    • “[T]he fixing of prison terms . . . involves a substantive penological
    judgment” that belongs to the legislature and should be given substantial
    deference by reviewing courts.
    • There are a number of legitimate penological schemes based on concerns
    related to “retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation,”
    and the Eighth Amendment does not require the adoption of any
    particular scheme.
    • Significant differences in sentencing philosophies and in the length of
    prescribed prison terms are inevitable; even assuming consistency in
    philosophies, “differing attitudes and perceptions of local conditions”
    may lead to different, though rational, determinations related to
    sentencing.
    • Proportionality review should be guided “by objective factors to the
    maximum possible extent”; the relative absence of objective factors to
    differentiate between sentences has meant that succeeding on a
    proportionality challenge is an infrequent occurrence.
    
    Id.
     at 998–1001 (internal quotation marks omitted). These principles are what led
    Harmelin to cabin the holding in Solem as barring only extreme sentences that are
    grossly disproportionate. See id. at 1001.
    ¶7    But how does a court ascertain whether a sentence is grossly
    disproportionate and therefore unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment?
    In Solem, the Court adopted an objective, two-step approach for undertaking a
    to Justice Kennedy’s concurrence by the title of the case, Harmelin, or as “the rule
    of Harmelin.”
    5
    proportionality review.4 
    463 U.S. at
    290–91. Step one includes two subparts: The
    trial court should consider (1) the gravity or seriousness of the offense and (2) the
    harshness of the penalty. 
    Id.
     In step two, the trial court may compare the
    challenged sentence to sentences for other crimes in the same jurisdiction and
    sentences for the same crime in other jurisdictions. 
    Id.
     at 291–92. Harmelin clarified
    that this is not a wooden test requiring consideration of step two in every case.
    
    501 U.S. at 1004
    . Instead, step two’s comparative analysis within and between
    jurisdictions is appropriate “only in the rare case in which a threshold comparison
    of the crime committed and the sentence imposed leads to an inference of gross
    disproportionality.” 
    Id. at 1005
    . Viewed through the prism of Harmelin, then, the
    purpose of any comparative analysis of sentences in step two “is to validate an
    initial judgment” in step one “that a sentence is grossly disproportionate to a
    crime.” 
    Id.
    4 Harmelin described the procedure Solem marshaled in as a “three-part test”
    because of the way the Solem Court discussed the relevant considerations: (1) the
    gravity or seriousness of the offense and the harshness of the penalty; (2) a
    comparison of the challenged sentence to sentences for other crimes in the same
    jurisdiction; and (3) a comparison of the challenged sentence to sentences for the
    same crime in other jurisdictions. See Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at
    1004 (citing Solem,
    
    463 U.S. at
    290–91). As we explain in this opinion, however, given the structure
    and sequence of the analysis, we think it is clearer to view it as a two-step process
    (with parts (2) and (3) collapsed into a single step, step two).
    6
    ¶8    Thus, under Solem, as construed in Harmelin, when a defendant makes a
    timely request for a proportionality review, the court must compare the gravity or
    seriousness of the offense to the harshness of the penalty (step one). If that analysis
    gives rise to an inference of gross disproportionality, the court must proceed to
    step two and conduct intrajurisdictional and interjurisdictional comparisons. But
    if the analysis in step one does not give rise to an inference of gross
    disproportionality, the proportionality challenge fails and the sentence must be
    upheld.
    ¶9    A dozen years after Harmelin, the Supreme Court revisited the Eighth
    Amendment’s narrow proportionality principle in Ewing v. California, 
    538 U.S. 11
    (2003).   Unfortunately, the Court remained fractured. 5        But the three-justice
    plurality opinion in Ewing did not alter the analytical framework ushered in by the
    rule of Harmelin.     To the contrary, it expressly acknowledged that “[t]he
    proportionality principles . . . distilled in Justice Kennedy’s concurrence [in
    Harmelin] guide[d] [its] application of the Eighth Amendment” to Ewing’s
    recidivist sentence. 
    Id.
     at 23–24. Thus, in rejecting Ewing’s claim that his three-
    strikes sentence was unconstitutionally disproportionate to his offense of felony
    5Justice O’Connor’s plurality opinion in Ewing, which was joined by Chief Justice
    Rehnquist and Justice Kennedy, is understood as representing the narrowest basis
    for the Court’s decision and is viewed as controlling. See United States v. Farley,
    
    607 F.3d 1294
    , 1340 n.31 (11th Cir. 2010).
    7
    grand theft, the plurality followed Harmelin and “address[ed] the gravity of the
    offense compared to the harshness of the penalty.” Id. at 28.
    B. Colorado Law
    ¶10   Article II, section 20 of the Colorado Constitution is identical to the Eighth
    Amendment. Colo. Const. art. II, § 20. As such, we have generally embraced the
    Supreme Court’s approach to proportionality challenges.          See Close v. People,
    
    48 P.3d 528
    , 538 (Colo. 2002). However, our analysis does not mirror the Supreme
    Court’s.   We explore the differences next, starting with step one, which in
    Colorado legal parlance has become known as an “abbreviated proportionality
    review,” followed by step two, which in Colorado legal parlance has become
    known as an “extended proportionality review.”
    1. Abbreviated Proportionality Review (Step One)
    ¶11   In line with Supreme Court precedent, at step one, Colorado courts consider
    the gravity or seriousness of the offense and the harshness of the penalty. But our
    precedent has carved out two additional principles with respect to this initial step.
    One of them pertains to the gravity or seriousness of the offense (the first subpart
    of step one), while the other relates to the harshness of the penalty (the second
    subpart of step one). We discuss each before moving on to step two.
    8
    a. Gravity or Seriousness of the Offense
    ¶12    We acknowledged in People v. Gaskins, 
    825 P.2d 30
    , 36 (Colo. 1992), that the
    determination regarding the gravity or seriousness of the offense is “somewhat
    imprecise,” notwithstanding the guidance provided in Solem. The Court in Solem
    explained that trial courts should consider “the harm caused or threatened to the
    victim or society,” as well as “the culpability of the offender.” 
    463 U.S. at 292
    . It
    then listed factors that are pertinent to the inquiry. In terms of the harm to the
    victim or society, it instructed courts to focus on: “[t]he absolute magnitude of the
    crime” (theft of a large amount will usually be more serious than theft of a small
    amount when all other circumstances are equal); whether the crime is a lesser-
    included offense or the greater-inclusive offense; whether the crime involves a
    completed act or an attempt to commit an act; and whether the defendant was a
    principal or an accessory after the fact in the criminal episode. 
    Id. at 293
    . As it
    relates to the defendant’s culpability, it observed that motive is relevant, as is
    whether the defendant’s acts were negligent, reckless, knowing, intentional, or
    malicious. 
    Id.
     at 293–94. Of course, the Court cautioned that these are not
    exhaustive lists; they merely illustrate “that there are generally accepted criteria
    for comparing the severity of different crimes on a broad scale, despite the
    difficulties courts face in attempting to draw distinctions between similar crimes.”
    
    Id. at 294
    .
    9
    ¶13   While we have generally adhered to Solem’s teachings in discerning whether
    a crime is grave or serious, we mentioned in Close, 48 P.3d at 538, and People v.
    Deroulet, 
    48 P.3d 520
    , 524 (Colo. 2002), that Gaskins allows a shortcut in some
    situations that bypasses Solem’s analysis.         In both cases, we read Gaskins as
    establishing that the following crimes had already been declared inherently (or per
    se) grave or serious for proportionality purposes in Colorado: aggravated robbery,
    robbery, burglary, accessory to first degree murder, and narcotics-related crimes.
    Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 524; see also Close, 48 P.3d at 538 (adding three offenses to
    Deroulet’s list of inherently dangerous crimes: felony menacing, attempted
    burglary, and conspiracy to commit burglary).6 For these crimes, we explained, a
    trial court may skip the first subpart of step one—the determination regarding the
    gravity or seriousness of the crimes—and “proceed directly to the second sub-
    part” of that step—the assessment related to the harshness of the penalty. Close,
    48 P.3d at 538; accord Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 524.
    6Our court has never used the term “per se grave or serious,” but it is clear that
    we meant just that in Close and Deroulet. Cf. Rutter v. People, 
    2015 CO 71
    , ¶ 37,
    
    363 P.3d 183
    , 191–92 (Gabriel, J., dissenting) (citing Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 524, and
    referring to certain “per se grave or serious” crimes). And that is how the divisions
    of the court of appeals have uniformly understood our jurisprudence. See, e.g.,
    People v. McCulloch, 
    198 P.3d 1264
    , 1268 (Colo. App. 2008).
    10
    b. Harshness of the Penalty
    ¶14     Our treatment of the harshness of the penalty (the second subpart of step
    one) is somewhat unique in that we explicitly consider parole eligibility. People v.
    Drake, 
    785 P.2d 1257
    , 1275 (Colo. 1990), abrogated on other grounds as recognized by
    People v. Chavez-Barragan, 
    2016 CO 66
    , ¶¶ 33–34, 
    379 P.3d 330
    , 338; see also People v.
    Hernandez, 
    686 P.2d 1325
    , 1330 n.4 (Colo. 1984) (inferring that the decision in Solem
    must have been driven in part by the fact that “the provision in the South Dakota
    statute” at issue there “denie[d] habitual criminals the possibility of parole”). We
    have expressly concluded that whether a sentence is parole eligible is relevant
    during an abbreviated proportionality review because parole can reduce the actual
    period of confinement and render the penalty less harsh. See Drake, 785 P.2d at
    1275.
    2. Extended Proportionality Review (Step Two)
    ¶15     Consistent with Harmelin’s reading of Solem, we have established that, while
    reviewing courts must complete an abbreviated proportionality review (step one)
    whenever a defendant challenges his sentence on proportionality grounds, it is not
    appropriate for them to conduct an extended proportionality review (step two)
    unless the abbreviated proportionality review gives rise to an inference of gross
    disproportionality. See Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1004
    ; Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 524. In the
    rare situation in which the analysis advances to step two, however, our cases are
    11
    not in complete harmony with Solem and Harmelin. The difference, though, is not
    intentional. It is the result of some confusion our caselaw has inadvertently
    created regarding intrajurisdictional comparisons, one of the two categories of
    comparisons prescribed in Solem and discussed in Harmelin.
    ¶16   Close incorrectly described intrajurisdictional comparisons as involving “the
    sentences imposed on other criminals who commit the same crime in the same
    jurisdiction.” 48 P.3d at 534 (emphasis added). Deroulet did the same. 48 P.3d at
    524 (referring to “a comparison of the sentences imposed on other criminals who
    commit the same crime in the same jurisdiction” (emphasis added)). And divisions
    of the court of appeals have consistently followed suit. See, e.g., People v. Hargrove,
    
    2013 COA 165
    , ¶ 13, 
    338 P.3d 413
    , 417 (same).          But the Court in Solem had
    something else in mind. It was not concerned with sentences imposed on other
    criminals in the jurisdiction for the same crime. Rather, it directed courts to compare
    the challenged sentence to sentences for other crimes in the same jurisdiction. It
    explained that, “[i]f more serious crimes are subject to the same penalty, or to less
    serious penalties, that is some indication that the punishment at issue may be
    excessive.” Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 291
     (emphasis added). Harmelin confirmed this—it
    referred to a “comparative analysis” of “sentences imposed for other crimes” in the
    same jurisdiction. 
    501 U.S. at 1004
     (emphasis added). Thus, the intrajurisdictional
    comparisons Solem envisioned were to sentences for other crimes.
    12
    ¶17   We now clarify that, in conformity with federal precedent, Colorado courts
    conducting an extended proportionality review should compare the sentence at
    issue to (1) sentences for other crimes in the same jurisdiction and (2) sentences for
    the same crime in other jurisdictions. To the extent our prior cases have provided
    contrary instructions, they have done so incorrectly.
    3. Summary of Colorado Law on Proportionality Review
    ¶18   As a recap of Colorado law on proportionality review, we hope that the
    following flowchart can assist in understanding this relatively complex analysis:
    13
    PROPORTIONALITY REVIEW
    Abbreviated Proportionality Review (Step One)
    Per se grave or serious
    Gravity or Seriousness of the Offense
    (First Subpart)
    • Harm caused or threatened
    to the victim or society
    • Culpability of the offender
    Harshness of the Penalty
    (Second Subpart)
    •   Includes parole eligibility
    Inference of Gross Disproportionality        No Inference of Gross Disproportionality
    No further analysis needed;
    proportionality challenge
    fails
    Extended Proportionality Review (Step Two)
    • Comparison to sentences for other crimes in the same jurisdiction
    • Comparison to sentences for the same crime in other jurisdictions
    14
    II. Habitual Criminal Punishment
    A. General Principles
    ¶19   Section 18-1.3-801, C.R.S. (2019), governs habitual criminal punishment in
    Colorado.   As pertinent here, when a defendant is convicted of a felony (a
    triggering offense), he may be adjudicated a habitual criminal if he “has been three
    times previously convicted . . . of a felony” based on charges separately brought
    and tried that arose out of separate and distinct criminal episodes (predicate
    offenses). § 18-1.3-801(2)(a)(I). A defendant adjudicated a habitual criminal based
    on three or more predicate offenses must be punished for the triggering offense
    “by imprisonment in the department of corrections for a term of four times the
    maximum of the presumptive range . . . for the class or level of felony” of the
    triggering offense. § 18-1.3-801(2)(a)(I)(A). However, as we discuss later in the
    Analysis section, there is a provision in section 18-1.3-801 that shields certain drug
    felonies from habitual criminal punishment. See § 18-1.3-801(2)(b).7
    B. Proportionality Review of a Habitual Criminal Sentence
    ¶20   We have cautioned that “the Habitual Criminal Act create[s] a unique
    possibility” that a defendant will receive a sentence that “is not proportionate to
    the crime for which [he] has been convicted.” Alvarez v. People, 
    797 P.2d 37
    , 40
    7 There is also a provision in section 18-1.3-801 that renders some escape offenses
    ineligible for habitual criminal punishment, see § 18-1.3-801(5), but that provision
    is not relevant here.
    15
    (Colo. 1990). The concern lies in the “formulaic and formalistic nature” of the
    habitual criminal statute. Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 526. By increasing a defendant’s
    punishment based on mandatory provisions, the habitual criminal statute “strip[s]
    the sentencing court of any discretion in sentencing.” Close, 48 P.3d at 540. Indeed,
    the only discretion exercised in the imposition of a habitual criminal sentence is
    by the prosecution when it decides whether to seek to adjudicate the defendant a
    habitual criminal. See id.
    ¶21   Nevertheless, we have emphasized “that in most instances the General
    Assembly’s determinations regarding the sentencing of habitual criminals will
    result in constitutionally proportionate sentences.”      Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 526.
    Hence, we have predicted that in habitual criminal cases, as in other cases raising
    Eighth Amendment challenges, an abbreviated proportionality review will almost
    always yield a finding that the sentence is not unconstitutionally disproportionate,
    thereby protecting “the primacy of the General Assembly in crafting sentencing
    schemes.” Id. It follows that an extended proportionality review is just as rare in
    this context as it is when the sentence is not based on the defendant’s status as a
    habitual criminal.
    ¶22   This begs the question of how to properly apply Harmelin in the context of
    a habitual criminal sentence. In Ewing, the plurality used Harmelin as a guidepost,
    but explained that in weighing gravity or seriousness, it had to “place on the scales
    16
    not only [Ewing’s] current felony, but also his long history of felony recidivism.”
    
    538 U.S. at 29
    . Ewing’s plurality worried that any other approach would fail to
    accord proper deference to the legislature’s policy judgments in its choice of
    sanctions for repeat offenders. 
    Id.
     (pointing out that the State’s interest in enacting
    the three-strikes law was not in simply punishing the offense of conviction; it was
    also “in dealing in a harsher manner with those who by repeated criminal acts
    have shown that they are simply incapable of conforming to the norms of society
    as established by its criminal law” (quoting Rummel v. Estelle, 
    445 U.S. 263
    , 276
    (1980))).   The plurality reasoned that any proportionality review of Ewing’s
    sentence needed to consider this legitimate penological goal. 
    Id.
     In holding that
    Ewing’s sentence, though harsh, was constitutional, the plurality concluded that
    “Ewing’s [was] not ‘the rare case in which a threshold comparison of the crime
    committed and the sentence imposed leads to an inference of gross
    disproportionality.’” Id. at 30 (quoting Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1005
     (Kennedy, J.,
    concurring in part and concurring in the judgment)).
    ¶23   Concordant with the plurality opinion in Ewing, in Colorado, when the
    proportionality of a habitual criminal sentence is challenged, the grave or serious
    inquiry includes consideration of the defendant’s history of felony recidivism. The
    two subparts in step one entail an analysis of: (1) the gravity or seriousness of all
    the offenses in question—the triggering offense and the predicate offenses; and
    17
    (2) the harshness of the sentence imposed on the triggering offense. See Rutter v.
    People, 
    2015 CO 71
    , ¶ 18, 
    363 P.3d 183
    , 188. The court must scrutinize the triggering
    offense and the predicate offenses and determine whether in combination they are
    so lacking in gravity or seriousness so as to suggest that the sentence is
    unconstitutionally disproportionate to the crime, taking into account the
    defendant’s eligibility for parole. 
    Id.
    ¶24   If there are multiple triggering offenses, the reviewing court must look at
    the sentence imposed for each such offense and engage in a proportionality review
    of that sentence because each sentence represents a separate punishment for a
    distinct and separate crime. See Close, 48 P.3d at 538–39.8 As to each sentence, the
    inquiry is whether the corresponding triggering offense and the predicate
    offenses, considered together, are so lacking in gravity or seriousness as to suggest
    that the sentence is grossly disproportionate. Id. at 540. If the proportionality
    review assessed instead the cumulative effect of the sentences imposed on all the
    triggering offenses, it could result in an inference of gross disproportionality
    merely because the defendant committed multiple crimes.
    8 Close involved consecutive crime-of-violence sentences. 48 P.3d at 538. But we
    do not read the scope of our analysis there to be limited to consecutive sentences
    or to sentences imposed pursuant to the crime-of-violence statute. In our view,
    the rationale applies with equal force to habitual criminal sentences, regardless of
    whether they were ordered to be served consecutively or concurrently.
    18
    ¶25   We note that our proportionality cases appear to have muddied the waters
    a bit in the habitual criminal context as well. We pause to clarify them.
    ¶26   In Gaskins, we said that “[t]he rule to be gleaned” from our earlier cases is
    “that only an abbreviated review is necessary when the crimes supporting a
    habitual criminal sentence include grave or serious offenses and when the
    defendant will become eligible for parole.” 825 P.2d at 36. We repeated this
    comment in Close and Deroulet, adding that it was supported by Gaskins’s adoption
    of the “rule of Harmelin.” Close, 48 P.3d at 537; Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 524; see also
    Rutter, ¶ 18, 363 P.3d at 188 (“[A]n abbreviated proportionality review is s ufficient
    when the crimes supporting a sentence imposed under the habitual criminal
    statute include grave or serious offenses.”). But this view is problematic for five
    reasons: (1) it improperly implies that the harshness of the penalty can be
    disregarded; (2) it suggests that the outcome of an abbreviated proportionality
    review under these circumstances will always be a finding of no inference of gross
    disproportionality; (3) it finds no support in Harmelin, Ewing, or any other
    Supreme Court case; (4) it fails to indicate whether it refers to triggering offenses,
    predicate offenses, or both; and (5) it does not specify how many of the offenses
    involved must be grave or serious.
    ¶27   We take this opportunity to make clear that even when the triggering
    offenses and/or the predicate offenses supporting a habitual criminal sentence
    19
    include grave or serious crimes and the defendant is parole eligible, a court
    conducting a proportionality review must follow the analytical framework we set
    forth in this opinion. Thus, it would be improper for a court to skip the second
    subpart of an abbreviated proportionality review and neglect to consider the
    harshness of the penalty or to conclude that when the circumstances described are
    present there can be no inference of gross disproportionality.
    ¶28    With this in-depth overview of the pertinent legal principles as a backdrop,
    we now turn to the facts and procedural history of this case.
    III. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶29   In June 2012, Pat Crouch, an undercover agent with the Colorado Bureau of
    Investigation, received information from a confidential informant that Belinda
    May Wells-Yates was stealing identity documents from cars. He arranged a
    meeting with Wells-Yates during which she sold him a birth certificate, a social
    security card, and a New Mexico driver’s license. Before the meeting ended,
    Wells-Yates raised the prospect of future transactions, including the sale of opioids
    and guns.
    ¶30   Several days later, the Waldo Canyon fire started. When the fire had spread
    to a large area, Wells-Yates told the agent that she was “chasing the fire”
    —stealing property from homes that had been evacuated. The agent scheduled
    another meeting with her during which she sold him stolen property, including
    20
    jewelry, coins, musical instruments, power tools, electronics, and business checks.
    After that meeting, Wells-Yates was arrested. A search of Wells-Yates and her
    belongings revealed a bag containing a small amount of methamphetamine, a set
    of scales, small plastic bags, and other drug paraphernalia. As part of the ensuing
    investigation, the agent learned that Wells-Yates had also stolen personal checks
    and had used a stolen gas card to purchase gasoline for multiple vehicles.
    ¶31   The prosecution charged Wells-Yates in 2012 with second degree burglary,
    conspiracy to commit second degree burglary, theft, possession with intent to sell
    or distribute 7 grams or less of a schedule II controlled substance
    (methamphetamine), four counts of identity theft, and three habitual criminal
    counts. In February 2013, a jury found Wells-Yates guilty of all the substantive
    charges. Following a bench trial in May 2013, the court adjudicated her a habitual
    criminal based on three predicate offenses:
    • A 1996 conviction for possession with intent to sell or distribute 7 grams
    or less of a schedule II controlled substance (methamphetamine), a class
    3 felony;
    • a 1997 conviction for possession of 2 grams or less of a schedule II
    controlled substance (methamphetamine), a class 4 felony; and
    • a 1999 conviction for possession of 2 grams or less of a schedule II
    controlled substance (methamphetamine), a class 4 felony.
    21
    ¶32    The court subsequently conducted a sentencing hearing. For each of the
    eight triggering offenses, it imposed the statutorily required prison sentence—four
    times the maximum prison term in the presumptive range:
    • 48 years (12 × 4) on count 1, second degree burglary, a class 3 felony;
    • 24 years (6 × 4) on count 2, conspiracy to commit second degree burglary,
    a class 4 felony;
    • 24 years (6 × 4) on count 3, theft, a class 4 felony;
    • 48 years (12 × 4) on count 4, possession with intent to sell or distribute 7
    grams or less of a schedule II controlled substance (methamphetamine),
    a class 3 felony;9 and
    • 24 years (6 × 4) on each of the four class 4 felony counts of identity theft
    (counts 5, 6, 7, and 12).
    ¶33   The court ordered all of the sentences, with the exception of the sentence on
    count 7, to be served concurrently.10 In total, Wells-Yates received an aggregate
    prison term of 72 years: 24 years on count 7, consecutive to all the other sentences
    9 The parties agree that the sentence on count 4 was incorrectly calculated; it
    should have been 64 years, not 48 years. Possession with intent to sell or distribute
    7 grams or less of methamphetamine on the date charged in count 4 was an
    extraordinary risk class 3 felony, see § 18-1.3-401(10)(b)(XI), C.R.S. (2012); the
    maximum term of years in the presumptive range for such a felony is 16, not 12,
    years, see § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(V)(A), C.R.S. (2019). Therefore, the trial court should
    have multiplied 16 × 4, not 12 × 4.
    10 The basis of count 7 was the sale of the identity documents during Wells-Yates’s
    first meeting with the agent; the sentence on that count was ordered to be served
    consecutive to all the other sentences.
    22
    (the longest of which were the 48-year concurrent sentences on counts 1 and 4).11
    She is eligible for parole.
    ¶34      Wells-Yates advanced a proportionality challenge. After conducting an
    abbreviated proportionality review of the aggregate prison term, the trial court
    found that it was not unconstitutionally disproportionate. A division of the court
    of appeals affirmed. Wells-Yates then filed a petition for certiorari review, which
    we granted in part.12
    11 Given the error regarding the sentence on count 4, the parties agree that
    Wells-Yates should have received an aggregate prison term of 88, not 72, years (24
    + 64, instead of 24 + 48).
    12   We granted certiorari to review the following five issues:
    1. Whether a 72-year prison sentence based on a defendant’s habitual
    offender status is grossly disproportionate when the defendant
    has only three prior felony drug possession convictions, which the
    legislature has re-classified and which could no longer be used to
    quadruple a defendant’s sentence.
    2. Whether a court, when conducting an abbreviated proportionality
    review of a habitual sentence, can consider the General Assembly’s
    subsequent reclassification of a crime or amendment of the
    habitual criminal statute that made an underlying crime
    inapplicable for purposes of habitual criminal adjudication.
    3. Whether this Court in Rutter v. People, 
    2015 CO 71
    , 
    363 P.3d 183
    ,
    intended to overrule its prior precedent establishing that courts
    must look at both the triggering conviction and prior convictions
    in combination when assessing whether a sentence is
    disproportionate under the Eighth Amendment.
    4. Whether this Court’s announcement in People v. Deroulet, 
    48 P.3d 520
     (Colo. 2002), that all narcotics-related offenses are per se grave
    23
    IV. Standard of Review
    ¶35   Whether a sentence is grossly disproportionate in violation of the Eighth
    Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and article II, section 20 of the Colorado
    Constitution is a question of law, not a sentencing decision requiring deference to
    the trial court. People v. Mershon, 
    874 P.2d 1025
    , 1035 (Colo. 1994). Therefore, our
    review is de novo. Rutter, ¶ 12, 363 P.3d at 187.
    V. Analysis
    ¶36   Having generally discussed the relevant law and facts, and having set forth
    the governing standard of review, we are finally ready to address the five issues
    we agreed to consider in this appeal. We analyze each in turn.
    A. To Determine Gravity or Seriousness, Should the
    Triggering and Predicate Offenses Be Considered
    Together?
    ¶37   Wells-Yates maintains that courts should consider the triggering offense
    and the predicate offenses together in determining gravity or seriousness during
    an abbreviated proportionality review. The prosecution agrees. We do too. See
    Gaskins, 825 P.2d at 36. To the extent that our decision in Rutter may be construed
    otherwise, this opinion serves as clarification.
    and serious should be revisited in light of recent legislative
    amendments to our drug laws.
    5. Whether convictions for drug possession                  or    drug
    possession-with-intent are grave and serious.
    24
    ¶38   Here, though, there are eight triggering offenses, and the division lumped
    them all together and then determined whether, in combination, they were so
    lacking in gravity or seriousness as to give rise to an inference that the aggregate
    prison term of 72 years is grossly disproportionate.13 Wells-Yates urges us to accept
    this methodology. But we decline to do so because the division was required to
    decide whether each triggering offense and the predicate offenses, in combination,
    are so lacking in gravity or seriousness as to give rise to an inference that the
    sentence imposed on that particular triggering offense is grossly disproportionate. Id.
    Hence, for example, the division should have considered whether the triggering
    offense of second degree burglary and the three predicate offenses, in
    combination, are so lacking in gravity or seriousness as to suggest that the 48-year
    sentence imposed on that triggering offense is grossly disproportionate.
    ¶39   Because the division’s analysis is inconsistent with today’s holding, we
    conclude that it is erroneous. Therefore, we reverse the division’s judgment.
    13The division appears to have ignored the predicate offenses in this part of the
    analysis.
    25
    B. Should Relevant Statutory Amendments Enacted After
    the Dates of the Triggering and Predicate Offenses Be
    Considered During an Abbreviated Proportionality
    Review?
    ¶40   Wells-Yates argues that, during the abbreviated proportionality review
    (step one), the trial court should have factored in relevant legislative amendments
    enacted after the dates of the triggering and predicate offenses. The prosecution
    counters that such statutory changes may only be considered during an extended
    proportionality review (step two). Before settling the parties’ dispute, we examine
    the pertinent amendments.
    ¶41   Recall that the prosecution proved three predicate offenses, one for
    possession with intent to sell or distribute 7 grams or less of methamphetamine
    and two for possession of 2 grams or less of methamphetamine. More than a
    decade after Wells-Yates committed these offenses, the General Assembly
    amended the drug and habitual criminal statutes. More specifically, in 2010, it
    prospectively reclassified the possession of 2 grams or less of methamphetamine
    from a class 4 to a class 6 felony.14 See Ch. 259, sec. 4, § 18-18-403.5(2)(b)(I), 
    2010 Colo. Sess. Laws 1162
    , 1165. The following year, the legislature amended the
    14Class 6 felonies carry a presumptive term of imprisonment of 12 to 18 months,
    which is significantly less severe than the presumptive term of imprisonment of 2
    to 6 years for class 4 felonies. § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(V)(A.1) (applying to felonies
    committed on or after July 1, 2018); see also § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(V)(A) (applying to
    felonies committed on or after July 1, 1993, and before July 1, 2018).
    26
    habitual criminal statute to make it inapplicable to a class 6 felony for possession
    of methamphetamine. See Ch. 57, sec. 1, § 18-1.3-801(2)(b), 2011 Colo. Sess. Law
    151, 151.   But, like the reclassification change from the previous year, this
    amendment was expressly declared prospective, not retroactive. See Hargrove,
    ¶ 28, 
    338 P.3d at
    419 (citing Ch. 57, sec. 1, § 18-1.3-801(2)(b), 
    2011 Colo. Sess. Laws 151
    , 151–52).
    ¶42   Two years later, effective October 1, 2013, the legislature reclassified
    possession with intent to sell or distribute 7 grams or less of methamphetamine
    —one of the triggering offenses for which Wells-Yates was sentenced just months
    earlier in this case and also one of her predicate offenses—from an extraordinary
    risk class 3 felony to a level 3 drug felony.15 See Ch. 333, sec. 10, § 18-18-403.5(2)(c),
    
    2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1900
    , 1909–13. At the same time, the legislature transformed
    class 6 felonies for possession of methamphetamine into level 4 drug felonies; level
    4 drug felonies carry a presumptive term of imprisonment of 6 to 12 months, which
    is less severe than the presumptive term of imprisonment for class 6 felonies. See
    Ch. 333, sec. 8, § 18-18-403.5(2)(a), 
    2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1900
    , 1908. Compare
    15Level 3 drug felonies are not extraordinary risk crimes; they carry a presumptive
    term of imprisonment of 2 to 4 years, which is significantly less severe than the
    presumptive term of imprisonment of 4 to 16 years for extraordinary risk class 3
    felonies. Compare § 18-1.3-401.5(2)(a), C.R.S. (2019), with § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(V)(A),
    (10)(a).
    27
    § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(V)(A), C.R.S. (2019), with § 18-1.3-401.5(2)(a), C.R.S. (2019).
    Then, effective October 1, 2013, the legislature excluded from the scope of the
    habitual criminal statute all level 4 drug felonies for possession of
    methamphetamine when the quantity possessed “is not more than . . . two
    grams.”   See Ch. 333, sec. 36, § 18-1.3-801(2)(b), 
    2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1900
    ,
    1927–28; Ch. 333, sec. 71, § 18-1.3-801(2)(b), 
    2013 Colo. Sess. Laws 1900
    , 1943.
    ¶43   In other words, since Wells-Yates’s two predicate offenses of possession of
    2 grams or less of methamphetamine, the legislature has reclassified that crime
    from a class 4 felony that is eligible to be both a triggering offense and a predicate
    offense for habitual criminal purposes to a level 4 drug felony that carries less
    severe penalties and is not so eligible. And since both of Wells-Yates’s offenses for
    possession with intent to sell or distribute 7 grams or less of methamphetamine
    —one of the triggering offenses and one of the predicate offenses—the legislature
    has reclassified that crime from an extraordinary risk class 3 felony to a level 3
    drug felony that carries less severe penalties and is not considered an
    extraordinary risk crime. These changes mean that, had Wells-Yates committed
    the triggering offense of possession with intent on or after October 1, 2013, instead
    of in 2012, she would have faced a prison sentence of 2 to 4 years, not a mandatory
    habitual criminal sentence of 64 years.
    28
    ¶44   The General Assembly’s amendments were of no moment to the division.
    But the majority of the divisions of the court of appeals have taken a different view.
    See People v. Anaya, 
    894 P.2d 28
    , 32 (Colo. App. 1994) (“[W]hen the General
    Assembly subsequently amends a criminal sentencing statute, even though the
    [amended] statute is to be applied prospectively, the trial court may properly
    consider it when determining whether a defendant’s sentence was grossly
    disproportionate.”); accord People v. Loris, 
    2018 COA 101
    , ¶ 13, 
    434 P.3d 754
    , 757
    (“[A] court should also consider the General Assembly’s current evaluation of the
    seriousness of the offense at issue, including any relevant amendments to criminal
    sentencing statutes.”); Hargrove, ¶¶ 18–20, 
    338 P.3d at 418
     (finding that a
    subsequent amendment to the habitual criminal statute, which did not apply to
    Hargrove’s escape conviction, could nevertheless be considered for purposes of
    determining whether that conviction was grave or serious); People v. Patnode,
    
    126 P.3d 249
    , 261 (Colo. App. 2005) (explaining that, while a subsequent
    reclassification of an offense did not preclude use of Patnode’s two prior offenses
    under the habitual criminal statute, it was “appropriate to consider such a
    legislative amendment in assessing the relative gravity and seriousness of the
    offense”).
    ¶45   We agree with the majority approach.          In determining the gravity or
    seriousness of the offense during an abbreviated proportionality review, the trial
    29
    court should consider relevant legislative amendments enacted after the date of
    the offense, even if the amendments do not apply retroactively. Further, when
    undertaking this analysis with respect to a habitual criminal sentence, the court
    should consider any relevant legislative amendments related to the triggering
    offense and the predicate offenses.
    ¶46   That one or more of the offenses involved may previously have been
    designated per se grave or serious does not alter these conclusions.16 The Supreme
    Court has reasoned that whether a sentence contravenes the Eighth Amendment
    requires courts to “look beyond historical conceptions to ‘the evolving standards
    of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.’” Graham v. Florida,
    
    560 U.S. 48
    , 58 (2010) (quoting Estelle v. Gamble, 
    429 U.S. 97
    , 102 (1976)). And the
    “clearest and most reliable objective evidence” of these evolving standards “is the
    legislation enacted by the country’s legislatures.” Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    ,
    312 (2002) (quoting Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U.S. 302
    , 331 (1989)); see also Stanford v.
    Kentucky, 
    492 U.S. 361
    , 370 (1989) (“‘[F]irst’ among the ‘objective indicia that reflect
    the public attitude toward a given sanction’ are statutes passed by society’s elected
    representatives.” (quoting McCleskey v. Kemp, 
    481 U.S. 279
    , 300 (1987))), abrogated
    on other grounds by Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
     (2005).
    16Wells-Yates asserts that Rutter created confusion on this point. Even if she is
    correct, this opinion provides any needed clarification.
    30
    ¶47   Thus, the division should have considered the statutory amendments in
    question as objective indicia of the evolving standards of decency to determine the
    gravity or seriousness of the triggering offense of possession with intent and of the
    three predicate offenses. The amendments demonstrate that, starting in 2010,
    there has been a sea change in our General Assembly’s philosophy regarding the
    handling of drug offenses, with treatment now heavily favored over incarceration.
    These reliable indicia of the evolving standards of decency in Colorado are
    relevant to any proportionality challenge that includes drug offenses.
    ¶48   We are not persuaded otherwise by the prosecution’s reliance on the
    legislature’s choice to make the amendments prospective instead of retroactive.
    Whether statutory revisions apply retroactively “is a separate and distinct
    question from whether a defendant’s sentence is constitutionally proportionate.”
    Rutter, ¶ 35, 363 P.3d at 191 (Gabriel, J., dissenting). Consideration of the statutory
    changes as the most valid indicia of Colorado’s evolving standards of decency is
    not equivalent to the retroactive application of those changes. See Humphrey v.
    Wilson, 
    652 S.E.2d 501
    , 507 & n.41 (Ga. 2007) (determining that the “seismic shift
    in the legislature’s view of the gravity of” the defendant’s offense, though not
    retroactively applicable to his conviction, was “a factor representative of the
    evolving standard regarding the appropriate punishment” for the offense).
    31
    ¶49   The prosecution posits, though, that the legislative changes on which
    Wells-Yates relies are relevant only during an extended proportionality review.
    This position incorrectly likens consideration of legislative changes to a
    comparative analysis of Wells-Yates’s sentences and sentences imposed on other
    defendants under current Colorado law. We do not require a comparison of the
    challenged sentences to other sentences—at least not during an abbreviated
    proportionality review (step one). Rather, we simply rule that, during the first
    subpart of the abbreviated proportionality review, the division should have
    considered any relevant legislative changes as the best evidence of our evolving
    standards of decency.
    ¶50   We find equally unconvincing the prosecution’s claim that neither the
    classification of a crime nor the punishment prescribed for it is trustworthy
    evidence of the legislature’s view of the gravity or seriousness of the crime. Of
    course it is. Colorado’s criminal classifications and sentencing schemes clearly
    reflect that the more grave or serious an offense, the more serious the level of
    classification assigned and the harsher the punishment prescribed. In Mershon, we
    relied on the classification of the offenses and the punishment prescribed for them
    in disagreeing with the trial court’s conclusion that crimes of violence were
    inherently more grave or serious than heroin offenses. 874 P.2d at 1033–34. We
    observed that at that time heroin offenses and many violent crimes were classified
    32
    as class 3 felonies and subject to identical punishment.           Id. at 1034.    Such
    similarities, we reasoned, suggested that the legislature “viewed violent crimes
    and heroin trafficking crimes to be equally serious.” Id. We added that, while not
    determinative, “the legislature’s assessment of the seriousness of particular
    offenses is entitled to great deference.” Id.; see also Patnode, 
    126 P.3d at 261
     (finding
    that the decision to change the classification of an offense from a felony to a
    misdemeanor “indicate[d] the General Assembly’s conclusion that the offense
    [was] not grave and serious”).
    ¶51   The prosecution insists, however, that the recent statutory amendments are
    not proof that drug offenses are less grave or serious than they used to be, but
    instead reflect the legislature’s attempt to find an alternative solution to a
    persistent problem. This contention presents a false choice. There is no question
    that the General Assembly’s statutory modifications were motivated by its desire
    to find a more effective approach to drug offenses and that it ultimately settled on
    emphasizing treatment and deemphasizing imprisonment.                     See generally
    § 18-18-401(1) (reciting the legislature’s findings, determinations, and declarations
    in amending some narcotics-related statutory provisions). But these changes
    simultaneously signal the legislature’s recognition that drug offenses are generally
    less grave or serious than previously thought and deserve less severe punishment
    than other crimes. Id.; see also § 18-1.3-103.5(2)(a), C.R.S. (2019) (allowing some
    33
    drug convictions to be vacated upon successful completion of a probation or
    community corrections sentence); § 18-1.3-104.5, C.R.S. (2019) (requiring that all
    reasonable alternative sentencing options be exhausted before a prison sentence is
    imposed for some drug convictions).
    ¶52   We likewise disagree with the prosecution that the gravity or seriousness of
    an offense should be ascertained as of the date the offense was committed,
    including by consulting the relevant statutes in effect at that time. Inasmuch as
    analysis under the Eighth Amendment and article II, section 20 is concerned with
    evolving standards of decency related to punishment, legislative enactments that
    take effect after the date of the offense and have no retroactive application may
    nevertheless be relevant to evaluate the gravity or seriousness of the offense.
    ¶53   Because the division did not consider the statutory changes at issue, it erred.
    Therefore, we reverse its judgment.
    C. Should All Narcotics-Related Offenses Be Deemed Per
    Se Grave or Serious?
    ¶54   Wells-Yates urges us to rid ourselves entirely of the per se grave or serious
    designation in the context of an abbreviated proportionality review. Because this
    question is not before us and has not been fully briefed, we decline the invitation
    to address it. Instead, our focus is narrower: Should all narcotics-related offenses
    continue to be considered per se grave or serious in Colorado? For five reasons,
    we answer no.
    34
    ¶55   First, a careful look at its genesis reveals that the contested designation is
    premised on a misreading of Gaskins. Both Close and Deroulet cited Gaskins for the
    proposition that all narcotic offenses had previously been determined to be
    inherently grave or serious in Colorado. Close, 48 P.3d at 537; Deroulet, 48 P.3d at
    524. But Gaskins referred to the “sale of narcotic drugs” as being inherently grave
    or serious. Gaskins, 825 P.2d at 37 (emphasis added). It said nothing about other
    narcotic offenses, and it certainly did not declare that all narcotic offenses are
    inherently grave or serious.
    ¶56   True enough, Deroulet also cited People v. Cisneros, 
    855 P.2d 822
    , 830 (Colo.
    1993), in observing that our court had “previously held that the possession or sale
    of narcotics is a grave or serious offense.” Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 527 (emphasis
    added). However, Cisneros took the same misstep Close and Deroulet did: It relied
    on Gaskins for a principle that Gaskins cannot support—namely, the designation of
    the possession of narcotics as inherently grave or serious. Cisneros, 855 P.2d at 830.
    And, though Cisneros also cited Harmelin for this proposition, id., that citation is no
    more useful (or accurate) because Harmelin did not hold that the possession of
    narcotics—no matter how small the quantity involved—is inherently grave or
    serious.
    ¶57   To be sure, Harmelin both observed that the possession of narcotics
    “threatened to cause grave harm to society” and alluded to “the pernicious effects
    35
    of the drug epidemic in this country.” 
    501 U.S. at
    1002–03. Drug offenses in
    general, explained Harmelin, “represent ‘one of the greatest problems affecting the
    health and welfare of our population.’” 
    Id. at 1002
     (quoting Nat’l Treasury Emp.
    Union v. Von Raab, 
    489 U.S. 656
    , 668 (1989)). But the analysis didn’t end there. It
    also included consideration of the specific facts and circumstances surrounding
    Harmelin’s offense—he had possessed “more than 650 grams (over 1.5 pounds) of
    cocaine,” which had “a potential yield of between 32,500 and 65,000 doses.” 
    Id.
    Harmelin reasoned that, “[f]rom any standpoint,” the specific possession crime at
    issue there fell “in a different category from the relatively minor, nonviolent
    crime” of passing a worthless check in Solem. 
    Id.
     Stated differently, Harmelin did
    not conclude that all drug possession crimes are grave or serious irrespective of
    the surrounding facts and circumstances. Nor is the rule of Harmelin that a life
    sentence without parole can be imposed on any drug possession crime without
    ever running afoul of the Eighth Amendment.
    ¶58   Second, the recent legislative amendments impacting drug offenses militate
    against preserving a blanket rule rendering all such offenses inherently grave or
    serious. The General Assembly treats most drug felonies as substantially less
    grave or serious today than it has in the past, and this adjustment is the best
    evidence of the views held by our maturing society, as expressed through its
    representatives in the legislature.
    36
    ¶59   Relatedly, the legislature does not treat all drug felonies equally.         For
    example, someone convicted of a level 1 drug felony faces a maximum
    presumptive sentence of 32 years in prison and a $1,000,000 fine. § 18-1.3-401.5(2).
    On the other hand, someone convicted of a level 4 drug felony faces a maximum
    presumptive sentence of 1 year in prison and a $100,000 fine. Id. Given this ocean
    of difference in legislative treatment, we are disinclined to label all drug felonies
    per se grave or serious. This is particularly the case considering that the significant
    reduction in the punishment prescribed for some drug felonies reflects that they
    are now deemed less grave or serious than the vast majority of felony offenses.
    The recent changes to the habitual criminal statute are illustrative: Possession of 2
    grams or less of methamphetamine is among the select felonies that the legislature
    has exempted from habitual criminal punishment. § 18-1.3-801(2)(b).
    ¶60   Third, because drug offenses encompass a wide spectrum of conduct, we
    believe that the most prudent course of action is to refrain from painting them all
    with the same broad brush. It makes little sense to automatically treat the sale of
    a large quantity of cocaine by the leader of a drug cartel as equally grave or serious
    as the mere possession of a very small quantity of cocaine by a drug addict who is
    not involved in sale or distribution.
    37
    ¶61   Fourth, as we have discussed, delineating certain crimes as per se grave or
    serious has no basis in Supreme Court jurisprudence and is unique to Colorado
    law. Therefore, the label should be used judiciously and deliberately.
    ¶62    Lastly, designating a crime per se grave or serious has significant
    consequences and courts should therefore do so cautiously. Once a crime has been
    deemed per se grave or serious, courts skip the first subpart of step one of an
    abbreviated proportionality review (gravity or seriousness) and proceed directly
    to the second subpart of that step (harshness of the penalty). What’s more, any
    review in the second subpart is substantially circumscribed because the
    legislature’s establishment of the harshness of the penalty deserves great
    deference. Close, 48 P.3d at 538; Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 526. Consequently, a per se
    grave or serious designation “renders a sentence nearly impervious to attack on
    proportionality grounds.” Close, 48 P.3d at 538. This concern is magnified in the
    habitual criminal context, where every sentence under review has been imposed
    without the trial court’s exercise of discretion. Id. at 540.
    ¶63    Accordingly, we now conclude that the designation of per se grave or
    serious for purposes of a proportionality review must be reserved for those rare
    crimes which, based on their statutory elements, necessarily involve grave or
    serious conduct. Put differently, a crime should not be designated per se grave or
    serious unless the court concludes that the crime would be grave or serious in
    38
    every potential factual scenario. Using the designation otherwise is fraught with
    peril.
    ¶64      Robbery is a perfect example of the type of crime that is appropriately
    viewed as per se grave or serious. No matter what facts and circumstances may
    be involved, if a defendant is convicted of robbery, it necessarily means that he
    knowingly took something of value from the person or presence of another by the
    use of force, threats, or intimidation. § 18-4-301(1), C.R.S. (2019). Thus, robbery,
    by its very nature, involves knowing conduct and grave harm (or the threat of
    grave harm) to the victim or society (or both). See Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 292
    . As such,
    it fits the standard we articulate today: A conviction for robbery is per se grave or
    serious because it will always involve knowing conduct and grave harm (or the
    threat of grave harm) to the victim or society (or both).
    ¶65      Aggravated robbery, burglary,17 accessory to first degree murder, and the
    sale or distribution of narcotics—the other crimes we have previously designated
    inherently grave or serious—satisfy the standard we announce today as well.18
    17Because the question is not before us, we do not address whether the designation
    of burglary as a per se grave or serious crime extends to third degree burglary,
    which includes breaking into a coin vending machine, see § 18-4-204(1), C.R.S.
    (2019), or even second degree burglary, which includes unlawfully remaining in a
    building or occupied structure after a lawful entry with the intent to commit
    therein a crime against property, see § 18-4-203(1), C.R.S. (2019).
    18Attempted burglary, conspiracy to commit burglary, and felony menacing were
    included in Close’s list of per se grave or serious crimes, see 48 P.3d at 538, but were
    39
    The statutory elements of these offenses ensure that, regardless of the facts and
    circumstances involved, a defendant who stands convicted of any such offense
    will have committed a crime that is necessarily grave or serious.
    ¶66   We cannot say the same about all narcotic crimes. We have held that the
    sale or distribution of any quantity of narcotics is inherently grave or serious
    because it causes “grave societal harm.” See Gaskins, 825 P.2d at 37. But based on
    the elements of a different drug offense, the underlying conduct may not always
    be grave or serious. Indeed, we conclude next that the drug offenses of possession
    and possession with intent should no longer be considered per se grave or serious.
    ¶67   Because the division determined that all narcotic offenses should continue
    to be designated per se grave or serious, it erred.     We therefore reverse its
    judgment.
    D. Should Possession and Possession With Intent Be
    Deemed Per Se Grave or Serious?
    ¶68   We conclude that the possession of narcotics and the possession with intent
    to sell, distribute, manufacture, or dispense narcotics should no longer be
    considered per se grave or serious. We take up possession first and then analyze
    possession with intent.
    simultaneously omitted from the list of per se grave or serious crimes in Deroulet,
    Close’s companion case, see 48 P.3d at 524. We need not, and therefore do not,
    decide whether these crimes should be considered per se grave or serious.
    40
    ¶69   Given that we have determined that not all narcotic offenses are per se grave
    or serious, and given further that possession is among the least (and arguably the
    least) grave or serious of all drug offenses, we have little difficulty declaring that
    possession should no longer be considered per se grave or serious. Of course,
    possession may be grave or serious—such as when a defendant possesses a large
    quantity of narcotics. See Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1002
    . But whether it is should turn
    on the facts and circumstances surrounding the specific crime committed—i.e.,
    based on consideration of the harm caused or threatened to the victim or society
    and the offender’s culpability. See Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 292
    . The point is that this
    must be an individualized determination.
    ¶70   Possession with intent is a much closer question. It involves more than mere
    possession, which we just determined is not per se grave or serious, but it involves
    less than sale or distribution, which we have long considered per se grave or
    serious. Although we anticipate that many convictions for possession with intent
    will be grave or serious, we believe that the wiser approach is to require a case-by-
    case evaluation.
    ¶71   Unlike aggravated robbery, robbery, burglary, accessory to first degree
    murder, and the sale or distribution of narcotics, possession with intent is not one
    of those crimes that we can predict with any degree of confidence will always be
    grave or serious. Given its statutory elements, possession with intent includes
    41
    wide-ranging conduct, not all of which rises to the level of grave or serious. For
    instance, an addict found in possession of baggies, a scale, and a very small
    quantity of narcotics may be convicted of possession with intent. Because there
    are facts and circumstances in which possession with intent cannot reasonably be
    deemed to belong in the same category as the offenses that are considered per se
    grave or serious, we cannot say that it is an inherently grave or serious crime.
    Instead, we conclude that the gravity or seriousness of possession with intent
    should be determined on a case-by-case basis by considering the surrounding facts
    and circumstances of the particular crime committed.
    ¶72     We recognize that the offenses of sale or distribution, on the one hand, and
    possession with intent, on the other, are set forth in the same statutory provision.
    See § 18-18-405(1)(a), C.R.S. (2019). Further, we acknowledge that a reasonable
    argument can be advanced that these crimes are sufficiently similar to warrant
    according both the per se designation. But we see a significant difference between
    them.     Whatever quantity may be involved and whatever other facts and
    circumstances may be present, anyone convicted of sale or distribution will
    necessarily have engaged in grave or serious conduct because he will have
    knowingly sold or distributed narcotics. Possession with intent, however, refers
    to someone who, while intending to sell, distribute, manufacture, or dispense
    narcotics, does not actually do so. One of the factors Solem instructs us to look at
    42
    in determining gravity or seriousness is whether the crime involves a completed
    act versus an attempt to commit an act. Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 293
    . Possession with
    intent requires less than the completed (or even the attempted) sale, distribution,
    manufacture, or dispensation of narcotics; it requires simply an intent to sell,
    distribute, manufacture, or dispense narcotics. This is a compelling factor in our
    decision to refrain from designating possession with intent per se grave or serious,
    even though sale or distribution retains such designation.
    ¶73   Because the division concluded that possession and possession with intent
    are per se grave or serious, it erred. Therefore, we reverse its judgment.
    E. Is Wells-Yates’s “72-Year Prison Sentence”
    Grossly Disproportionate?
    ¶74   Wells-Yates asks us to rule that her “72-year prison sentence” is grossly
    disproportionate. We decline to do so. To begin, Wells-Yates did not receive a
    72-year prison sentence. She received multiple prison sentences, the aggregate of
    which is a 72-year imprisonment term. But that aggregate imprisonment term is
    not subject to proportionality review.       Instead, as we explained earlier, the
    sentence for each triggering offense is entitled to an abbreviated proportionality
    review consistent with the guidance we provide in this opinion.
    ¶75   Moreover, we have concluded that the predicate offenses in this case are not
    per se grave or serious and that the triggering offense of possession with intent
    —the offense responsible for Wells-Yates’s longest sentence—is likewise not per
    43
    se grave or serious. Therefore, the abbreviated proportionality review of the
    64-year sentence required for the triggering offense of possession with intent will
    entail an analysis of the facts and circumstances surrounding that offense and the
    facts and circumstances surrounding each of the three predicate offenses. A
    similar factual analysis will be necessary for the proportionality review of the
    sentences imposed on the other seven triggering offenses because each sentence is
    affected by the gravity or seriousness of the predicate offenses, none of which is
    per se grave or serious.19 Given that the trial court is “uniquely suited” to make
    these factual determinations, see Gaskins, 825 P.2d at 35, we remand to the court of
    appeals with instructions to return the case to the trial court for a new
    proportionality review with respect to each of Wells-Yates’s sentences in
    accordance with this opinion.20
    VI. Conclusion
    ¶76   We hold that: (1) during an abbreviated proportionality review of a habitual
    criminal sentence, the court must consider each triggering offense and the
    predicate offenses together and determine whether, in combination, they are so
    19We have not been called upon to decide in this case whether any of the other
    seven triggering offenses is per se grave or serious.
    20We anticipate that in the vast majority of cases requiring a refined analysis of the
    facts and circumstances related to any triggering or predicate offense, the court’s
    review will not be time-consuming or burdensome.
    44
    lacking in gravity or seriousness as to raise an inference that the sentence imposed
    on that triggering offense is grossly disproportionate; (2) in determining the
    gravity or seriousness of the triggering offense and the predicate offenses, the
    court should consider any relevant legislative amendments enacted after the dates
    of those offenses, even if the amendments do not apply retroactively; (3) not all
    narcotic offenses are per se grave or serious; and (4) the narcotic offenses of
    possession and possession with intent are not per se grave or serious. Because the
    division’s decision is at odds with the conclusions we reach today, we reverse its
    judgment. Accordingly, we remand with instructions to return the case to the trial
    court for a new proportionality review consistent with this opinion.
    JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in the judgment.
    CHIEF JUSTICE COATS dissents.
    45
    JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, concurring in the judgment.
    ¶77   I agree with Chief Justice Coats that the majority is engaging in an
    unnecessary “global rewrite of our proportionality jurisprudence” and is writing
    “so broadly” that its opinion effectively overturns “propositions long accepted by
    this court.”   Dis. op. ¶ 1.   And I further agree that “the ‘exceedingly rare’
    circumstance in which a term of years could successfully be challenged as
    disproportionate . . . is limited to an exceedingly, and necessarily, long term of
    years imposed for crime that is neither violent, grave, nor serious.” Id. at ¶ 8
    (internal citation omitted). I write separately, however, because I do agree with
    the majority that certain offenses that we previously determined are per se grave
    or serious need to be reexamined and that amendments to relevant statutes should
    be considered when conducting a proportionality review. Specifically, I agree
    with the majority that theft (as discussed in Melton v. People, 
    2019 CO 89
    , __ P.3d
    __) and mere possession of drugs should no longer be deemed per se grave or
    serious. Conversely, I respectfully disagree with the majority about the treatment
    of possession with intent to sell or distribute. In my view, any offense that includes
    the intent to sell or distribute drugs should remain per se grave or serious; hence,
    I concur in the judgment only and write separately to explain why.
    ¶78   First, the legislature recognizes that the sale or distribution of drugs and the
    possession with intent to sell or distribute are equally serious and should be
    1
    treated as such. After all, the two offenses are in the same statute. Section 18-18-
    405(1)(a), C.R.S. (2019), makes it unlawful to “knowingly . . . manufacture,
    dispense, sell, or distribute, or to possess with [the] intent to manufacture,
    dispense, sell, or distribute, a controlled substance” (emphasis added).              In
    attempting to distinguish between sale or distribution and possession with intent
    to sell or distribute, the majority threads the needle so finely that it actually
    bifurcates the statute criminalizing these acts. Not only are sale or distribution
    and possession with intent to sell or distribute in the same statutory scheme, and
    not only are they in the very same subsection as each other, but they are in fact in
    the very same sentence of the statute. Despite that, the majority holds that some
    offenses falling under the exact same statute, section 18-18-405(1)(a), will be per se
    grave or serious while others will not, simply because of the point in time that they
    are detected. This cannot be what the legislature intended. In other words, the
    plain meaning of the statute evinces that the legislature recognizes that a person
    who is detected after a drug transaction is as equally culpable as a person who is
    caught during a drug transaction. This is simply common sense.
    ¶79   Despite the plain language of the statute, which leads to the conclusion that
    possession with intent to sell or distribute is treated equally with distribution itself,
    the majority overturns not only our precedent regarding possession with intent to
    sell or distribute drugs as per se grave or serious but the United States Supreme
    2
    Court’s precedent as well. See Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
    , 1002 (1991)
    (Kennedy, J., concurring). Consistent with Supreme Court precedent, we have
    long maintained that the “[s]ale of narcotic drugs is viewed with great seriousness
    because of the grave societal harm caused by sale of illegal drugs and the evils
    associated with their use.” People v. Gaskins, 
    825 P.2d 30
    , 37 (Colo. 1992). The
    majority appears to agree with this proposition because it allows for the sale or
    distribution of drugs to remain per se grave or serious under the standard it
    announces today. Maj. op. ¶ 71. But at the same time, the majority holds that
    possession with intent to sell or distribute is not per se grave or serious. Id. at ¶ 68.
    While the majority sees daylight between the two offenses, I do not; after all, the
    goal of a person committing either offense is exactly the same—to sell or distribute
    drugs. Therefore, in my view, the grave societal harm is equal for both offenses.
    Because of this, I fail to see how possession with intent to sell or distribute does
    not satisfy the majority’s per se grave or serious standard announced today.
    ¶80   The majority holds that the standard for designating offenses per se grave
    or serious is whether the offense in question “necessarily involve[s] grave or
    serious conduct.” Id. at ¶ 63. The majority goes on to state, albeit in its robbery
    analysis, that such offenses are those that “always involve knowing conduct and
    grave harm (or the threat of grave harm) to the victim or society (or both).” Id. at ¶ 64
    (emphasis added). While the majority rightly remains convinced that the sale or
    3
    distribution of drugs involves knowing conduct and grave harm, it fails to
    recognize that possession with intent to sell or distribute threatens the very same
    grave harm that the actual sale or distribution produces. Regardless of which
    offense it is, there is always grave harm or the threat of grave harm to both the drug
    user, whose addiction is enabled and encouraged by sellers or distributors, as well
    as society, which is harmed by the myriad of consequences caused by the spread
    of illegal drug use. See Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1002
     (Kennedy, J., concurring)
    (“[U]se[] and distribution of illegal drugs represent ‘one of the greatest problems
    affecting the health and welfare of our population.’” (quoting Nat’l Treasury Emps.
    Union v. Von Raab, 
    489 U.S. 656
    , 668 (1989))).
    ¶81   The majority acknowledges that “[p]ossession with intent is a much closer
    question” than mere possession for per se grave or serious purposes. Maj. op. ¶ 70.
    But it elaborates that the reason for the closer question is that possession with
    intent to sell or distribute involves “less than sale or distribution, which we have
    long considered per se grave or serious.” 
    Id.
     Literally, that may be true: Sale or
    distribution is a completed act, while possession with intent to sell or distribute
    is—to use the majority’s words—“less than” that completed act. In reality, this
    difference is one of happenstance. Under the majority’s view, an individual who
    is caught selling or distributing a controlled substance is more culpable, her crime
    more “greatly serious,” than the person who intended to do—and in fact may have
    4
    already accomplished—the very same thing. But under the majority’s view,
    because the person who intended to sell or distribute was arrested before or after
    she had the opportunity to fulfill her intent, she is not subject to the sentencing
    implications of a per se grave or serious designation. I cannot grasp how the
    timing of the act of distribution can account for the difference in treatment between
    per se grave or serious and not.
    ¶82   The flaw in the majority’s logic is best illustrated by a hypothetical. Under
    the majority’s holding, a well-known drug dealer who is planning to sell hundreds
    of pounds of an illegal drug but gets caught prior to actually selling it would be
    charged with possession with intent to distribute, whereas a one-time seller who
    completes a transaction selling a small amount of the same drug but is caught in
    the act would be charged with distribution. By the majority’s logic, the well-
    known drug dealer’s offense is not per se grave or serious, but the one-time seller’s
    is. That result is inequitable and illogical. In both cases, it is the underlying intent
    to distribute illegal drugs—and not whether that intent was actually completed—
    that is grave or serious.
    ¶83   Because I believe that we cannot and should not draw such a fine line
    between the sale or distribution of drugs and the possession with intent to sell or
    distribute drugs, I cannot support the majority’s holding that possession with
    intent to sell or distribute should no longer be deemed per se grave or serious.
    5
    Here, because two of Wells-Yates’s predicate convictions were for simple
    possession—and because I agree with the majority that such offenses are not per
    se grave or serious, and that a trial court should consider ameliorative legislation
    for the purposes of proportionality—I would remand for the trial court to conduct
    a new proportionality review (under the standard from our previous
    proportionality precedent for the reasons discussed in the dissent). Accordingly,
    while I agree with the rationale of the dissent, I concur in the majority’s judgment
    only.
    6
    CHIEF JUSTICE COATS, dissenting.
    ¶84   Unlike the majority, I think it clear that the defendant’s recidivist sentences
    in this case are not constitutionally disproportionate, a matter determinable by this
    court without regard for the analysis below, and I would therefore affirm without
    remand for further consideration. Rather than limit itself to the sentence in this
    case, the proportionality of which I believe to pose no serious question, the
    majority attempts a global rewrite of our proportionality jurisprudence,
    reinterpreting controlling United States Supreme Court precedent and disputing
    in a number of critical respects our own prior guidance for applying it. Because
    the Supreme Court has not found it necessary to parse any more finely the
    principles governing proportionality relative to sentences to terms of years, and
    because this court has largely been able to appropriately reject the proportionality
    challenges with which it has been faced in any event, I have not previously found
    it necessary to write in this area. Because, however, the majority writes so broadly
    today, criticizing and at several points overturning propositions long accepted by
    this court, and because it considers itself unable at this stage to simply declare the
    defendant’s sentence constitutional, I feel compelled to briefly express my
    different understanding of the principles governing non-capital, constitutional
    proportionality review. I therefore respectfully dissent and write separately.
    1
    ¶85   As an initial matter, I note that the majority dismisses as inconsequential
    what I consider to be the single most direct and important Supreme Court
    authority concerning constitutional proportionality limitations governing
    recidivist sentencing. See Ewing v. California, 
    538 U.S. 11
     (2003) (O’Connor, J.,
    concurring). For the same reasons we, and most other jurisdictions, have accepted
    the opinion of Justice Kennedy as the “rule,” or controlling authority, of
    Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
     (1991), the opinion authored by Justice
    O’Connor represents the controlling authority of Ewing. See Marks v. United States,
    
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193 (1977); see also Close v. People, 
    48 P.3d 528
    , 535, 537 (Colo. 2002).
    And just as Harmelin represents the Court’s latest statement concerning
    proportionality in non-capital sentencing generally, and non-recidivist sentencing
    in particular, Ewing represents the Court’s latest statement concerning recidivist
    sentencing.   While making clear that it is “guided by” the proportionality
    principles distilled in Justice Kennedy’s opinion in Harmelin, the controlling
    opinion in Ewing also acknowledges for the first time that along with the
    sentencing goals of deterrence and retribution, which warranted the life without
    parole sentence for drug dealing in Harmelin, incapacitation, as another
    appropriate legislative sentencing goal, must be considered in the balance of
    gravity and harshness in what the Ewing Court terms “the new context” of
    recidivist sentencing implicated in that case. Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at
    23–25.
    2
    ¶86   Harmelin had already made clear             that controlling principles of
    proportionality review require both that substantial deference be shown to
    legislatures, which necessarily possess broad authority in determining the types
    and limits of punishment for crime, and that any such review must be informed
    by objective factors to the maximum extent possible. 
    501 U.S. at
    998–99. Finding
    a relative lack of objective standards to distinguish between sentences for different
    terms of imprisonment imposed by legislation, the Court therefore concluded that
    such sentences are reviewable only for gross disproportionality and, in fact, that
    the possibility of successful challenges to the proportionality of particular prison
    sentences must therefore be exceedingly rare. 
    Id. at 1001
     (quoting Solem v. Helm,
    
    463 U.S. 277
    , 289–90 (1983)).    Unlike Harmelin, which addressed gravity and
    harshness with respect to a particular offense, Ewing made clear that in recidivist
    sentencing the question of gravity must include consideration of not only the
    defendant’s current offense but also his criminal history as a whole, and that the
    state has a legitimate interest not only in punishing for the “triggering” offense but
    also “in dealing in a harsher manner with those who by repeated criminal acts
    have shown that they are simply incapable of conforming to the norms of society
    as established by its criminal law.” Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at 29
     (quoting Rummel v. Estelle,
    
    445 U.S. 263
    , 276 (1980)).
    3
    ¶87   Both Harmelin and Ewing, however, made clear that the controlling question
    for purposes of proportionality review is simply whether the legislature had a
    “reasonable,” or “rational,” basis for choosing the sentence it did: With regard to
    the drug conviction in Harmelin, the question was whether “the Michigan
    legislature could with reason conclude that the threat posed to the individual and
    society by possession of this large an amount of cocaine . . . is momentous enough
    to warrant the deterrence and retribution of a life sentence without parole,”
    
    501 U.S. at 1003
    ; and for the recidivist sentence in Ewing, whether “the State of
    California has a reasonable basis for believing that dramatically enhanced
    sentences for habitual felons ‘advance[s] the goals of [its] criminal justice system
    in any substantial way,’” 
    538 U.S. at 28
     (quoting Solem, 
    463 U.S. at
    297 n.22). In
    each case the Court found that the respective legislature could and did. Ewing,
    
    538 U.S. at
    30–31; Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at
    1008–09.
    ¶88   The controlling opinion in Ewing distinguished the result in Solem, in which
    the Court found a recidivist sentence to be unconstitutionally disproportionate,
    from that in Rummel, in which the Court found no disproportionality, not on
    grounds that either the triggering or prior offenses in the former case were less
    serious, but solely on the ground that the sentence at issue in Solem, unlike that in
    Rummel, did not permit discretionary release to parole. Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at
    22 (citing
    Solem, 
    463 U.S. at 297
    ). The Ewing Court therefore held that a sentence of twenty-
    4
    five years to life in prison, imposed under California’s three strikes law for the
    offense of felony grand theft, despite the sentencing court’s discretion to classify it
    as only a misdemeanor, was not grossly disproportionate. 
    Id.
     at 30–31. The
    defendant in this case was sentenced for felony possession with intent to sell
    methamphetamine, following three prior convictions for felony possession or
    possession with intent to sell the same illegal drug, to a mandatory term of
    imprisonment with parole eligibility after serving fewer than thirty years, as well
    as felony identity theft following the same three prior convictions, to a mandatory
    term of imprisonment with parole eligibility after serving fewer than ten years.
    See Ankeney v. Raemisch, 
    2015 CO 14
    , ¶ 12, 
    344 P.3d 847
    , 850–51. I believe no further
    analysis or finding is necessary to mandate a determination by this court that the
    legislature had a rational basis to believe incapacitation of a person committing
    this number of such felonies, seriatim—each following conviction for the last—
    would advance the goals of our criminal justice system by incapacitating the
    defendant for the prescribed number of years.
    ¶89   I therefore consider the majority’s substantial revision of the applicable
    standards for a constitutional proportionality review to be not only unnecessary
    but in fact highly problematic. While I agree that our understanding of the
    constitutional requirement of proportionality in non-capital sentencing has not
    always been either clear or consistent, and has in fact morphed to accommodate
    5
    different sentencing questions and the often-changing and cryptic dictates of the
    Supreme Court, I do not agree with the majority’s characterization of either our or
    the Supreme Court’s prior pronouncements in this area, or the majority’s
    extension of those pronouncements to the consideration of legislative
    amendments to the classification and sentencing schemes involved in this case.
    Although my disagreements with the majority are more fundamental and
    therefore impact much of both its reasoning and conclusions, I believe our
    differences stem in large part from our different understandings of the role and
    determination of the gravity and seriousness of offenses and what appears to me
    to be the majority’s reluctance to defer to the rational choices of the legislature
    concerning terms of imprisonment.
    ¶90   The majority enumerates five reasons why it considers “problematic” the
    “view” expressed in People v. Gaskins, 
    825 P.2d 30
     (Colo. 1992), and subsequent
    cases, concerning the adequacy of an abbreviated review when the supporting
    offenses are grave or serious, with virtually all of which I disagree. Maj. op. ¶ 26.
    In this regard, I understand Gaskins to have held that an abbreviated review was
    sufficient to determine that the offenses supporting the defendant’s recidivist
    sentence in that case were not so lacking in gravity or seriousness as to suggest
    that a life sentence allowing for the possibility of parole was constitutionally
    disproportionate. Gaskins, 825 P.2d at 36. Rather than implying that the harshness
    6
    of the penalty could be disregarded, we clearly indicated that any habitual
    criminal sentence supported by the named offenses to a term of years that includes
    eligibility for parole would not be grossly disproportionate. See id. at 37. Our
    subsequent cases of Close and People v. Deroulet, 
    48 P.3d 520
     (Colo. 2002), which
    actually addressed the question whether a defendant would even be entitled to a
    proportionality review of crime of violence or habitual criminal sentences in this
    jurisdiction, are best understood as simply acknowledging that although no
    penalty is per se constitutional, virtually any recidivist sentence to a term of years
    for those crimes already found to be sufficiently grave or serious in Gaskins will be
    nearly impervious to a proportionality challenge.        See Close, 48 P.3d at 538;
    Deroulet, 48 P.3d at 526–27.         In the absence of an inference of gross
    disproportionality having been the result of an abbreviated review alone, Harmelin
    made clear that such an abbreviated review was all that was required.
    ¶91   It appears to me that the majority’s demand for a balance of gravity and
    harshness in every case evidences a failure to heed Harmelin’s admonition that the
    lack of clear objective standards to distinguish between sentences for different
    terms of years and mandatory deference to rational legislative choices precludes
    judicial findings of all but gross disproportionality. Rather, the “exceedingly rare”
    circumstance in which a term of years could successfully be challenged as
    disproportionate, see Harmelin, 
    501 U.S. at 1001
    , is limited to an exceedingly, and
    7
    necessarily, long term of years imposed for crime that is neither violent, grave, nor
    serious, in the sense that it amounts to no more than malum prohibitum or “one
    of the most passive felonies a person could commit,” 
    id. at 1002
     (quoting Solem,
    
    463 U.S. at 296
    ). In its last word on recidivist sentencing and justification of such
    sentences in terms of incapacitation, the Supreme Court distinguished Rummel, in
    which it upheld a recidivist sentence against a proportionality challenge, from
    Solem, in which it did not, solely on the ground that the life sentence in the former
    allowed for the possibility of parole while the life sentence in the latter did not.
    Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at 22
    . Emphasizing that Solem expressly declined to overrule
    Rummel, the Ewing Court further recounted with favor that Mr. Rummel was
    sentenced to a lengthy prison term for felony theft of $120.75 by false pretenses,
    after having been convicted of no more than fraudulent use of a credit card to
    obtain $80 worth of goods and services and of passing a forged check in the
    amount of $28.36. Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at
    21–23. Finally, Ewing recounted that the
    Rummel Court offered, by way of example, that the proportionality principle
    would come into play if a legislature were to make overtime parking a felony
    punishable by life imprisonment, and that the Rummel Court, by contrast, upheld
    the mandatory life sentence being challenged in that case against an Eighth
    Amendment challenge. Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at 21
    .
    8
    ¶92   The majority’s unwillingness to concede that possession of illegal drugs,
    much less possession with intent to sell illegal drugs, necessarily amounts to a
    serious crime for purposes of proportionality review demonstrates the extent to
    which I believe it fails to appreciate the limited nature of the crimes considered by
    the Supreme Court to be other than serious and, correspondingly, the limited
    nature of the role of proportionality review in non-capital sentencing.           The
    Harmelin controlling opinion explains in great detail why the possession, use, and
    distribution of illegal drugs represent not only a serious crime but in fact one of
    the greatest problems affecting the health and welfare of our population. 
    501 U.S. at
    1002–03.   It not only notes the pernicious effects on the individual who
    consumes illegal drugs, but also finds a direct nexus between illegal drugs and
    crimes of violence, expressly enumerating at least three ways in which the “use”
    of illegal drugs relates to the commission of crime: 1) drug users may commit
    crime because of drug-induced changes in physiological functions, cognitive
    ability, and mood; 2) drug users may commit crime in order to obtain money to
    buy drugs; and 3) a violent crime may occur as part of the drug business or culture.
    
    Id.
     I view the majority’s demand that the individual circumstances surrounding
    the commission of possession or possession with intent to sell illegal drugs be a
    necessary consideration in determining whether a particular defendant’s crime of
    possession or possession with intent to sell is serious as clear evidence of the extent
    9
    to which it is willing to second-guess legislative judgments concerning sentences
    to terms of years in general, and the merits of incapacitating defendants who
    remain undeterred from committing drug felonies in particular.
    ¶93   Finally, with regard to the effect of subsequent legislative amendments on
    the sentencing scheme—the central question on which the defendant’s challenge
    rests—I believe the majority has simply lost sight of the object of the inquiry. With
    regard to recidivist sentencing in particular, the controlling opinion in Ewing
    makes clear that for purposes of proportionality it was enough that the California
    legislature had a reasonable basis for believing that the dramatically enhanced
    sentences of its three-strikes law advanced the goals of its criminal justice system,
    not least among which is the incapacitation of those who have demonstrated that
    they are incapable of conforming to the norms of society. 
    538 U.S. at
    28–29. By
    expressly making “prospective only” particular ameliorative amendments to a
    recidivist sentencing scheme—whether that be by reducing the penalty for some
    predicate offenses or by eliminating some crimes from the category of predicate
    offenses altogether—the legislature has made clear its judgment that the inability
    or unwillingness of those previously convicted to conform their conduct to the
    norms of society reflected in the criminal law, as that law existed at the time it was
    violated, continues to merit incapacitation by enhanced punishment.
    10
    ¶94   Quite apart from the fact that the legislature has not relegated the drug
    crimes at issue in this case to the status of mere regulatory offenses or offenses
    more minor even than those for which a lengthy prison term was upheld in
    Rummel, and therefore that it would have been inconsequential for proportionality
    purposes even if the legislature had made its amendments retroactive, unless it
    lacked a rational basis for doing so, it was for the legislature to make the judgment
    that the need for incapacitation of the defendant should be based on her failure to
    conform to the norms of society as reflected in the criminal law at the time she
    violated it. See Ewing, 
    538 U.S. at
    28–29. While courts must of course account for
    legislation in effect at the time of sentencing, unless the legislature lacked a rational
    basis for not altering its prior judgment about the need for habitual criminal
    sentencing by making any subsequent ameliorative legislation retroactive, the
    proportionality of such habitual criminal sentences could not be affected in any
    way by the new legislation.
    ¶95   It is well established that legislatures do not lack a rational basis for, and
    principles of equal protection are therefore in no way violated by, penalizing
    violators of the same criminal proscription differently, as long as such violators
    committed their crimes during different time periods. Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v.
    Rhodes, 
    220 U.S. 502
    , 505 (1911) (“[T]he 14th Amendment does not forbid statutes
    and statutory changes to have a beginning, and thus to discriminate between the
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    rights of an earlier and later time.”); Doe v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police, 
    490 F.3d 491
    ,
    505–06 (6th Cir. 2007) (employing rational basis review and finding no equal
    protection violation where Michigan prospectively amended its sex offender
    registration law, effectively creating pre-amendment and post-amendment
    offender classes); Ex parte Zimmerman, 
    838 So. 2d 408
    , 412 (Ala. 2002) (upholding
    prospective application of ameliorative sentencing legislation, citing state’s
    legitimate interests in maintaining the finality of judgments and assuring that
    penal laws will maintain their desired deterrent effect by carrying out original
    prescribed punishment as written); People v. Floyd, 
    72 P.3d 820
    , 827 (Cal. 2003)
    (rejecting defendant’s assertion that prospective legislation fails rational basis
    review and noting state’s legitimate interests in ensuring “penal laws will
    maintain their desired deterrent effect by carrying out the original prescribed
    punishment as written”).
    ¶96   To the extent the majority intends that ameliorative legislation expressly
    made prospective only is nevertheless relevant to the question whether a habitual
    criminal sentence, based on crimes to which that legislation was expressly made
    inapplicable, is constitutionally disproportionate, I therefore strongly disagree.
    ¶97   I therefore respectfully dissent.
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