Kennedy v. Louisiana ( 2008 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2007                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    No. 07–343.      Argued April 16, 2008—Decided June 25, 2008; modified
    October 1, 2008
    Louisiana charged petitioner with the aggravated rape of his then-8-
    year-old stepdaughter. He was convicted and sentenced to death un-
    der a state statute authorizing capital punishment for the rape of a
    child under 12. The State Supreme Court affirmed, rejecting peti-
    tioner’s reliance on Coker v. Georgia, 
    433 U. S. 584
    , which barred the
    use of the death penalty as punishment for the rape of an adult
    woman but left open the question which, if any, other nonhomicide
    crimes can be punished by death consistent with the Eighth Amend-
    ment. Reasoning that children are a class in need of special protec-
    tion, the state court held child rape to be unique in terms of the harm
    it inflicts upon the victim and society and concluded that, short of
    first-degree murder, there is no crime more deserving of death. The
    court acknowledged that petitioner would be the first person executed
    since the state law was amended to authorize the death penalty for
    child rape in 1995, and that Louisiana is in the minority of jurisdic-
    tions authorizing death for that crime. However, emphasizing that
    four more States had capitalized child rape since 1995 and at least
    eight others had authorized death for other nonhomicide crimes, as
    well as that, under Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U. S. 551
    , and Atkins v.
    Virginia, 
    536 U. S. 304
    , it is the direction of change rather than the
    numerical count that is significant, the court held petitioner’s death
    sentence to be constitutional.
    Held: The Eighth Amendment bars Louisiana from imposing the death
    penalty for the rape of a child where the crime did not result, and
    was not intended to result, in the victim’s death. Pp. 8–36.
    1. The Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause
    “draw[s] its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that
    mark the progress of a maturing society.” Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U. S. 86
    , 101. The standard for extreme cruelty “itself remains the same,
    2                        KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Syllabus
    but its applicability must change as the basic mores of society
    change.” Furman v. Georgia, 
    408 U. S. 238
    , 382. Under the precept
    of justice that punishment is to be graduated and proportioned to the
    crime, informed by evolving standards, capital punishment must “be
    limited to those offenders who commit ‘a narrow category of the most
    serious crimes’ and whose extreme culpability makes them ‘the most
    deserving of execution.’ ” Roper, supra, at 568. Applying this princi-
    ple, the Court held in Roper and Atkins that the execution of juve-
    niles and mentally retarded persons violates the Eighth Amendment
    because the offender has a diminished personal responsibility for the
    crime. The Court also has found the death penalty disproportionate
    to the crime itself where the crime did not result, or was not intended
    to result, in the victim’s death. See, e.g., Coker, 
    supra;
     Enmund v.
    Florida, 
    458 U. S. 782
    . In making its determination, the Court is
    guided by “objective indicia of society’s standards, as expressed in
    legislative enactments and state practice with respect to executions.”
    Roper, 
    supra, at 563
    .        Consensus is not dispositive, however.
    Whether the death penalty is disproportionate to the crime also de-
    pends on the standards elaborated by controlling precedents and on
    the Court’s own understanding and interpretation of the Eighth
    Amendment’s text, history, meaning, and purpose. Pp. 8–10.
    2. A review of the authorities informed by contemporary norms, in-
    cluding the history of the death penalty for this and other nonhomi-
    cide crimes, current state statutes and new enactments, and the
    number of executions since 1964, demonstrates a national consensus
    against capital punishment for the crime of child rape. Pp. 11–25.
    (a) The Court follows the approach of cases in which objective in-
    dicia of consensus demonstrated an opinion against the death penalty
    for juveniles, see Roper, 
    supra,
     mentally retarded offenders, see At-
    kins, 
    supra,
     and vicarious felony murderers, see Enmund, 
    supra.
    Thirty-seven jurisdictions—36 States plus the Federal Government—
    currently impose capital punishment, but only six States authorize it
    for child rape. In 45 jurisdictions, by contrast, petitioner could not be
    executed for child rape of any kind. That number surpasses the 30
    States in Atkins and Roper and the 42 in Enmund that prohibited the
    death penalty under the circumstances those cases considered.
    Pp. 11–16.
    (b) Respondent’s argument that Coker’s general discussion con-
    trasting murder and rape, 
    433 U. S., at 598
    , has been interpreted too
    expansively, leading some States to conclude that Coker applies to
    child rape when in fact it does not, is unsound. Coker’s holding was
    narrower than some of its language read in isolation indicates. The
    Coker plurality framed the question as whether, “with respect to rape
    of an adult woman,” the death penalty is disproportionate punish-
    ment, 
    id., at 592
    , and it repeated the phrase “adult woman” or “adult
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                      3
    Syllabus
    female” eight times in discussing the crime or the victim. The dis-
    tinction between adult and child rape was not merely rhetorical; it
    was central to Coker’s reasoning, including its analysis of legislative
    consensus. See, e.g., 
    id.,
     at 595–596. There is little evidence to sup-
    port respondent’s contention that state legislatures have understood
    Coker to state a broad rule that covers minor victims, and state
    courts have uniformly concluded that Coker did not address that
    crime. Accordingly, the small number of States that have enacted
    the death penalty for child rape is relevant to determining whether
    there is a consensus against capital punishment for the rape of a
    child. Pp. 17–22.
    (c) A consistent direction of change in support of the death pen-
    alty for child rape might counterbalance an otherwise weak demon-
    stration of consensus, see, e.g., Atkins, 
    536 U. S., at 315
    , but no show-
    ing of consistent change has been made here. That five States may
    have had pending legislation authorizing death for child rape is not
    dispositive because it is not this Court’s practice, nor is it sound, to
    find contemporary norms based on legislation proposed but not yet
    enacted. Indeed, since the parties submitted their briefs, the legisla-
    tion in at least two of the five States has failed. Further, evidence
    that, in the last 13 years, six new death penalty statutes have been
    enacted, three in the last two years, is not as significant as the data
    in Atkins, where 18 States between 1986 and 2001 had enacted legis-
    lation prohibiting the execution of mentally retarded persons. See
    
    id.,
     at 314–315. Respondent argues that this case is like Roper be-
    cause, there, only five States had shifted their positions between
    1989 and 2005, one less State than here. See 
    543 U. S., at 565
    . But
    the Roper Court emphasized that the slow pace of abolition was coun-
    terbalanced by the total number of States that had recognized the
    impropriety of executing juvenile offenders. See 
    id.,
     at 566–567.
    Here, the fact that only six States have made child rape a capital of-
    fense is not an indication of a trend or change in direction comparable
    to the one in Roper. The evidence bears a closer resemblance to that
    in Enmund, where the Court found a national consensus against
    death for vicarious felony murder despite eight jurisdictions having
    authorized it. See 
    458 U. S., at 789, 792
    . Pp. 22–24.
    (d) Execution statistics also confirm that there is a social consen-
    sus against the death penalty for child rape. Nine States have per-
    mitted capital punishment for adult or child rape for some length of
    time between the Court’s 1972 Furman decision and today; yet no in-
    dividual has been executed for the rape of an adult or child since
    1964, and no execution for any other nonhomicide offense has been
    conducted since 1963. Louisiana is the only State since 1964 that has
    sentenced an individual to death for child rape, and petitioner and
    4                       KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Syllabus
    another man so sentenced are the only individuals now on death row
    in the United States for nonhomicide offenses. Pp. 24–25.
    3. Informed by its own precedents and its understanding of the
    Constitution and the rights it secures, the Court concludes, in its in-
    dependent judgment, that the death penalty is not a proportional
    punishment for the crime of child rape. Pp. 25–37.
    (a) The Court’s own judgment should be brought to bear on the
    death penalty’s acceptability under the Eighth Amendment. See,
    e.g., Coker, 
    supra, at 597
    . Rape’s permanent and devastating impact
    on a child suggests moral grounds for questioning a rule barring capi-
    tal punishment simply because the crime did not result in the vic-
    tim’s death, but it does not follow that death is a proportionate pen-
    alty for child rape. The constitutional prohibition against excessive
    or cruel and unusual punishments mandates that punishment “be
    exercised within the limits of civilized standards.” Trop, 
    356 U. S., at
    99–100. Evolving standards of decency counsel the Court to be most
    hesitant before allowing extension of the death penalty, especially
    where no life was taken in the commission of the crime. See, e.g.,
    Coker, 
    433 U. S., at
    597–598; Enmund, 
    458 U. S., at 797
    . Consistent
    with those evolving standards and the teachings of its precedents, the
    Court concludes that there is a distinction between intentional first-
    degree murder on the one hand and nonhomicide crimes against in-
    dividuals, even including child rape, on the other. The latter crimes
    may be devastating in their harm, as here, but “in terms of moral de-
    pravity and of the injury to the person and to the public,” they cannot
    compare to murder in their “severity and irrevocability,” id, at 598.
    The Court finds significant the substantial number of executions that
    would be allowed for child rape under respondent’s approach. Al-
    though narrowing aggravators might be used to ensure the death
    penalty’s restrained application in this context, as they are in the
    context of capital murder, all such standards have the potential to re-
    sult in some inconsistency of application. The Court, for example,
    has acknowledged that the requirement of general rules to ensure
    consistency of treatment, see, e.g., Godfrey v. Georgia, 
    446 U. S. 420
    ,
    and the insistence that capital sentencing be individualized, see, e.g.,
    Woodson v. North Carolina, 
    428 U. S. 280
    , have resulted in tension
    and imprecision. This approach might be sound with respect to capi-
    tal murder but it should not be introduced into the justice system
    where death has not occurred. The Court has spent more than 32
    years developing a foundational jurisprudence for capital murder to
    guide the States and juries in imposing the death penalty. Beginning
    the same process for crimes for which no one has been executed in
    more than 40 years would require experimentation in an area where
    a failed experiment would result in the execution of individuals un-
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                      5
    Syllabus
    deserving of death. Pp. 25–32.
    (b) The Court’s decision is consistent with the justifications of-
    fered for the death penalty, retribution and deterrence, see, e.g.,
    Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U. S. 153
    , 183. Among the factors for deter-
    mining whether retribution is served, the Court must look to whether
    the death penalty balances the wrong to the victim in nonhomicide
    cases. Cf. Roper, 
    supra, at 571
    . It is not at all evident that the child
    rape victim’s hurt is lessened when the law permits the perpetrator’s
    death, given that capital cases require a long-term commitment by
    those testifying for the prosecution. Society’s desire to inflict death
    for child rape by enlisting the child victim to assist it over the course
    of years in asking for capital punishment forces a moral choice on the
    child, who is not of mature age to make that choice. There are also
    relevant systemic concerns in prosecuting child rape, including the
    documented problem of unreliable, induced, and even imagined child
    testimony, which creates a “special risk of wrongful execution” in
    some cases. Cf. Atkins, supra, at 321. As to deterrence, the evidence
    suggests that the death penalty may not result in more effective en-
    forcement, but may add to the risk of nonreporting of child rape out
    of fear of negative consequences for the perpetrator, especially if he is
    a family member. And, by in effect making the punishment for child
    rape and murder equivalent, a State may remove a strong incentive
    for the rapist not to kill his victim. Pp. 32–37.
    4. The concern that the Court’s holding will effectively block fur-
    ther development of a consensus favoring the death penalty for child
    rape overlooks the principle that the Eighth Amendment is defined
    by “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a
    maturing society,” Trop, 
    356 U. S., at 101
    . Confirmed by the Court’s
    repeated, consistent rulings, this principle requires that resort to
    capital punishment be restrained, limited in its instances of applica-
    tion, and reserved for the worst of crimes, those that, in the case of
    crimes against individuals, take the victim’s life. Pp. 37–38.
    
    957 So. 2d 757
    , reversed and remanded.
    KENNEDY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which STEVENS,
    SOUTER, GINSBURG, and BREYER, JJ., joined. ALITO, J., filed a dissenting
    opinion, in which ROBERTS, C. J., and SCALIA and THOMAS, JJ., joined.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                              1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–343
    _________________
    PATRICK KENNEDY, PETITIONER v. LOUISIANA
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    LOUISIANA
    [June 25, 2008; modified October 1, 2008]
    JUSTICE KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court.
    The National Government and, beyond it, the separate
    States are bound by the proscriptive mandates of the
    Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
    States, and all persons within those respective jurisdic-
    tions may invoke its protection. See Amdts. 8 and 14, §1;
    Robinson v. California, 
    370 U. S. 660
     (1962). Patrick
    Kennedy, the petitioner here, seeks to set aside his death
    sentence under the Eighth Amendment. He was charged
    by the respondent, the State of Louisiana, with the aggra-
    vated rape of his then-8-year-old stepdaughter. After a
    jury trial petitioner was convicted and sentenced to death
    under a state statute authorizing capital punishment for
    the rape of a child under 12 years of age. See 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     (West 1997 and Supp. 1998). This case pre-
    sents the question whether the Constitution bars respon-
    dent from imposing the death penalty for the rape of a
    child where the crime did not result, and was not intended
    to result, in death of the victim. We hold the Eighth
    Amendment prohibits the death penalty for this offense.
    The Louisiana statute is unconstitutional.
    2                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    I
    Petitioner’s crime was one that cannot be recounted in
    these pages in a way sufficient to capture in full the hurt
    and horror inflicted on his victim or to convey the revul-
    sion society, and the jury that represents it, sought to
    express by sentencing petitioner to death. At 9:18 a.m. on
    March 2, 1998, petitioner called 911 to report that his
    stepdaughter, referred to here as L. H., had been raped.
    He told the 911 operator that L. H. had been in the garage
    while he readied his son for school. Upon hearing loud
    screaming, petitioner said, he ran outside and found L. H.
    in the side yard. Two neighborhood boys, petitioner told
    the operator, had dragged L. H. from the garage to the
    yard, pushed her down, and raped her. Petitioner claimed
    he saw one of the boys riding away on a blue 10-speed
    bicycle.
    When police arrived at petitioner’s home between 9:20
    and 9:30 a.m., they found L. H. on her bed, wearing a
    T-shirt and wrapped in a bloody blanket. She was bleed-
    ing profusely from the vaginal area. Petitioner told police
    he had carried her from the yard to the bathtub and then
    to the bed. Consistent with this explanation, police found
    a thin line of blood drops in the garage on the way to the
    house and then up the stairs. Once in the bedroom, peti-
    tioner had used a basin of water and a cloth to wipe blood
    from the victim. This later prevented medical personnel
    from collecting a reliable DNA sample.
    L. H. was transported to the Children’s Hospital. An
    expert in pediatric forensic medicine testified that L. H.’s
    injuries were the most severe he had seen from a sexual
    assault in his four years of practice. A laceration to the
    left wall of the vagina had separated her cervix from the
    back of her vagina, causing her rectum to protrude into
    the vaginal structure. Her entire perineum was torn from
    the posterior fourchette to the anus. The injuries required
    emergency surgery.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)               3
    Opinion of the Court
    At the scene of the crime, at the hospital, and in the first
    weeks that followed, both L. H. and petitioner maintained
    in their accounts to investigators that L. H. had been
    raped by two neighborhood boys. One of L. H.’s doctors
    testified at trial that L. H. told all hospital personnel the
    same version of the rape, although she reportedly told one
    family member that petitioner raped her. L. H. was inter-
    viewed several days after the rape by a psychologist. The
    interview was videotaped, lasted three hours over two
    days, and was introduced into evidence at trial. On the
    tape one can see that L. H. had difficulty discussing the
    subject of the rape. She spoke haltingly and with long
    pauses and frequent movement. Early in the interview,
    L. H. expressed reservations about the questions being
    asked:
    “I’m going to tell the same story. They just want me
    to change it. . . . They want me to say my Dad did
    it. . . . I don’t want to say it. . . . I tell them the same,
    same story.” Def. Exh. D–7, 01:29:07–:36.
    She told the psychologist that she had been playing in
    the garage when a boy came over and asked her about Girl
    Scout cookies she was selling; and that the boy “pulled
    [her by the legs to] the backyard,” 
    id.,
     at 01:47:41–:52,
    where he placed his hand over her mouth, “pulled down
    [her] shorts,” Def. Exh. D–8, 00:03:11–:12, and raped her,
    
    id.,
     at 00:14:39–:40.
    Eight days after the crime, and despite L. H.’s insistence
    that petitioner was not the offender, petitioner was ar-
    rested for the rape. The State’s investigation had drawn
    the accuracy of petitioner and L. H.’s story into question.
    Though the defense at trial proffered alternative explana-
    tions, the case for the prosecution, credited by the jury,
    was based upon the following evidence: An inspection of
    the side yard immediately after the assault was inconsis-
    tent with a rape having occurred there, the grass having
    4                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    been found mostly undisturbed but for a small patch of
    coagulated blood. Petitioner said that one of the perpetra-
    tors fled the crime scene on a blue 10-speed bicycle but
    gave inconsistent descriptions of the bicycle’s features,
    such as its handlebars. Investigators found a bicycle
    matching petitioner and L. H.’s description in tall grass
    behind a nearby apartment, and petitioner identified it as
    the bicycle one of the perpetrators was riding. Yet its tires
    were flat, it did not have gears, and it was covered in
    spider webs. In addition police found blood on the under-
    side of L. H.’s mattress. This convinced them the rape
    took place in her bedroom, not outside the house.
    Police also found that petitioner made two telephone
    calls on the morning of the rape. Sometime before 6:15
    a.m., petitioner called his employer and left a message
    that he was unavailable to work that day. Petitioner
    called back between 6:30 and 7:30 a.m. to ask a colleague
    how to get blood out of a white carpet because his daugh-
    ter had “ ‘just become a young lady.’ ” Brief for Respondent
    12. At 7:37 a.m., petitioner called B & B Carpet Cleaning
    and requested urgent assistance in removing bloodstains
    from a carpet. Petitioner did not call 911 until about an
    hour and a half later.
    About a month after petitioner’s arrest L. H. was re-
    moved from the custody of her mother, who had main-
    tained until that point that petitioner was not involved in
    the rape. On June 22, 1998, L. H. was returned home and
    told her mother for the first time that petitioner had raped
    her. And on December 16, 1999, about 21 months after
    the rape, L. H. recorded her accusation in a videotaped
    interview with the Child Advocacy Center.
    The State charged petitioner with aggravated rape of a
    child under 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     (West 1997 and Supp.
    1998) and sought the death penalty. At all times relevant
    to petitioner’s case, the statute provided:
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)            5
    Opinion of the Court
    “A. Aggravated rape is a rape committed . . . where
    the anal or vaginal sexual intercourse is deemed to be
    without lawful consent of the victim because it is
    committed under any one or more of the following cir-
    cumstances:
    .          .           .          .           .
    “(4) When the victim is under the age of twelve
    years. Lack of knowledge of the victim’s age shall not
    be a defense.
    .          .           .          .           .
    “D. Whoever commits the crime of aggravated rape
    shall be punished by life imprisonment at hard labor
    without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of
    sentence.
    “(1) However, if the victim was under the age of
    twelve years, as provided by Paragraph A(4) of this
    Section:
    “(a) And if the district attorney seeks a capital ver-
    dict, the offender shall be punished by death or life
    imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole,
    probation, or suspension of sentence, in accordance
    with the determination of the jury.”
    (Since petitioner was convicted and sentenced, the statute
    has been amended to include oral intercourse within the
    definition of aggravated rape and to increase the age of the
    victim from 12 to 13. See 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     (West
    Supp. 2007).)
    Aggravating circumstances are set forth in La. Code
    Crim. Proc. Ann., Art. 905.4 (West 1997 Supp.). In perti-
    nent part and at all times relevant to petitioner’s case, the
    provision stated:
    “A. The following shall be considered aggravating
    circumstances:
    “(1) The offender was engaged in the perpetration or
    attempted perpetration of aggravated rape, forcible
    6                  KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    rape, aggravated kidnapping, second degree kidnap-
    ping, aggravated burglary, aggravated arson, aggra-
    vated escape, assault by drive-by shooting, armed
    robbery, first degree robbery, or simple robbery.
    .           .           .         .          .
    “(10) The victim was under the age of twelve years
    or sixty-five years of age or older.”
    The trial began in August 2003. L. H. was then 13
    years old. She testified that she “ ‘woke up one morning
    and Patrick was on top of [her].’ ” She remembered peti-
    tioner bringing her “[a] cup of orange juice and pills
    chopped up in it” after the rape and overhearing him on
    the telephone saying she had become a “young lady.”
    2005–1981, pp. 12, 15, 16 (La. 5/22/07), 
    957 So. 2d 757
    ,
    767, 769, 770. L. H. acknowledged that she had accused
    two neighborhood boys but testified petitioner told her to
    say this and that it was untrue. 
    Id., at 769
    .
    The jury having found petitioner guilty of aggravated
    rape, the penalty phase ensued. The State presented the
    testimony of S. L., who is the cousin and goddaughter of
    petitioner’s ex-wife. S. L. testified that petitioner sexually
    abused her three times when she was eight years old and
    that the last time involved sexual intercourse. 
    Id., at 772
    .
    She did not tell anyone until two years later and did not
    pursue legal action.
    The jury unanimously determined that petitioner should
    be sentenced to death. The Supreme Court of Louisiana
    affirmed. See 
    id.,
     at 779–789, 793; see also State v. Wil-
    son, 96–1392, 96–2076 (La. 12/13/96), 
    685 So. 2d 1063
    (upholding the constitutionality of the death penalty for
    child rape). The court rejected petitioner’s reliance on
    Coker v. Georgia, 
    433 U. S. 584
     (1977), noting that, while
    Coker bars the use of the death penalty as punishment for
    the rape of an adult woman, it left open the question
    which, if any, other nonhomicide crimes can be punished
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)            7
    Opinion of the Court
    by death consistent with the Eighth Amendment. Because
    “ ‘children are a class that need special protection,’ ” the
    state court reasoned, the rape of a child is unique in terms
    of the harm it inflicts upon the victim and our society. 957
    So. 2d, at 781.
    The court acknowledged that petitioner would be the
    first person executed for committing child rape since 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     was amended in 1995 and that Louisi-
    ana is in the minority of jurisdictions that authorize the
    death penalty for the crime of child rape. But following
    the approach of Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U. S. 551
     (2005),
    and Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U. S. 304
     (2002), it found
    significant not the “numerical counting of which [S]tates
    . . . stand for or against a particular capital prosecution,”
    but “the direction of change.” 957 So. 2d, at 783 (emphasis
    deleted). Since 1993, the court explained, four more
    States—Oklahoma, South Carolina, Montana, and Geor-
    gia—had capitalized the crime of child rape and at least
    eight States had authorized capital punishment for other
    nonhomicide crimes. By its count, 14 of the then-38 States
    permitting capital punishment, plus the Federal Govern-
    ment, allowed the death penalty for nonhomicide crimes
    and 5 allowed the death penalty for the crime of child
    rape. See id., at 785–786.
    The state court next asked whether “child rapists rank
    among the worst offenders.” Id., at 788. It noted the
    severity of the crime; that the execution of child rapists
    would serve the goals of deterrence and retribution; and
    that, unlike in Atkins and Roper, there were no character-
    istics of petitioner that tended to mitigate his moral cul-
    pability. Id., at 788–789. It concluded: “[S]hort of first-
    degree murder, we can think of no other non-homicide
    crime more deserving [of capital punishment].” Id., at
    789.
    On this reasoning the Supreme Court of Louisiana
    rejected petitioner’s argument that the death penalty for
    8                  KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    the rape of a child under 12 years is disproportionate and
    upheld the constitutionality of the statute. Chief Justice
    Calogero dissented. Coker, 
    supra,
     and Eberheart v. Geor-
    gia, 
    433 U. S. 917
     (1977), in his view, “set out a bright-line
    and easily administered rule” that the Eighth Amendment
    precludes capital punishment for any offense that does not
    involve the death of the victim. 957 So. 2d, at 794.
    We granted certiorari. See 552 U. S. ___ (2008).
    II
    The Eighth Amendment, applicable to the States
    through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides that
    “[e]xcessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines
    imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”
    The Amendment proscribes “all excessive punishments, as
    well as cruel and unusual punishments that may or may
    not be excessive.” Atkins, 
    536 U. S., at 311, n. 7
    . The
    Court explained in Atkins, 
    id., at 311
    , and Roper, 
    supra, at 560
    , that the Eighth Amendment’s protection against
    excessive or cruel and unusual punishments flows from
    the basic “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).
    Whether this requirement has been fulfilled is determined
    not by the standards that prevailed when the Eighth
    Amendment was adopted in 1791 but by the norms that
    “currently prevail.” Atkins, 
    supra, at 311
    . The Amend-
    ment “draw[s] its meaning from the evolving standards of
    decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.”
    Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U. S. 86
    , 101 (1958) (plurality opinion).
    This is because “[t]he standard of extreme cruelty is not
    merely descriptive, but necessarily embodies a moral
    judgment. The standard itself remains the same, but its
    applicability must change as the basic mores of society
    change.” Furman v. Georgia, 
    408 U. S. 238
    , 382 (1972)
    (Burger, C. J., dissenting).
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           9
    Opinion of the Court
    Evolving standards of decency must embrace and ex-
    press respect for the dignity of the person, and the pun-
    ishment of criminals must conform to that rule. See Trop,
    
    supra, at 100
     (plurality opinion). As we shall discuss,
    punishment is justified under one or more of three princi-
    pal rationales: rehabilitation, deterrence, and retribution.
    See Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U. S. 957
    , 999 (1991)
    (KENNEDY, J., concurring in part and concurring in judg-
    ment); see also Part IV–B, infra. It is the last of these,
    retribution, that most often can contradict the law’s own
    ends. This is of particular concern when the Court inter-
    prets the meaning of the Eighth Amendment in capital
    cases. When the law punishes by death, it risks its own
    sudden descent into brutality, transgressing the constitu-
    tional commitment to decency and restraint.
    For these reasons we have explained that capital pun-
    ishment must “be limited to those offenders who commit ‘a
    narrow category of the most serious crimes’ and whose
    extreme culpability makes them ‘the most deserving of
    execution.’ ” Roper, 
    supra, at 568
     (quoting Atkins, 
    supra, at 319
    ). Though the death penalty is not invariably un-
    constitutional, see Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U. S. 153
     (1976),
    the Court insists upon confining the instances in which
    the punishment can be imposed.
    Applying this principle, we held in Roper and Atkins
    that the execution of juveniles and mentally retarded
    persons are punishments violative of the Eighth Amend-
    ment because the offender had a diminished personal
    responsibility for the crime. See Roper, 
    supra,
     at 571–573;
    Atkins, 
    supra, at 318, 320
    . The Court further has held
    that the death penalty can be disproportionate to the
    crime itself where the crime did not result, or was not
    intended to result, in death of the victim. In Coker, 
    433 U. S. 584
    , for instance, the Court held it would be uncon-
    stitutional to execute an offender who had raped an adult
    woman. See also Eberheart, supra (holding unconstitu-
    10                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    tional in light of Coker a sentence of death for the kidnap-
    ing and rape of an adult woman). And in Enmund v.
    Florida, 
    458 U. S. 782
     (1982), the Court overturned the
    capital sentence of a defendant who aided and abetted a
    robbery during which a murder was committed but did not
    himself kill, attempt to kill, or intend that a killing would
    take place. On the other hand, in Tison v. Arizona, 
    481 U. S. 137
     (1987), the Court allowed the defendants’ death
    sentences to stand where they did not themselves kill
    the victims but their involvement in the events leading
    up to the murders was active, recklessly indifferent, and
    substantial.
    In these cases the Court has been guided by “objective
    indicia of society’s standards, as expressed in legislative
    enactments and state practice with respect to executions.”
    Roper, 
    543 U. S., at 563
    ; see also Coker, 
    supra,
     at 593–597
    (plurality opinion) (finding that both legislatures and
    juries had firmly rejected the penalty of death for the rape
    of an adult woman); Enmund, 
    supra, at 788
     (looking to
    “historical development of the punishment at issue, legis-
    lative judgments, international opinion, and the sentenc-
    ing decisions juries have made”). The inquiry does not end
    there, however. Consensus is not dispositive. Whether
    the death penalty is disproportionate to the crime commit-
    ted depends as well upon the standards elaborated by
    controlling precedents and by the Court’s own understand-
    ing and interpretation of the Eighth Amendment’s text,
    history, meaning, and purpose. See 
    id.,
     at 797–801;
    Gregg, 
    supra,
     at 182–183 (joint opinion of Stewart, Powell,
    and STEVENS, JJ.); Coker, 
    supra,
     at 597–600 (plurality
    opinion).
    Based both on consensus and our own independent
    judgment, our holding is that a death sentence for one who
    raped but did not kill a child, and who did not intend to
    assist another in killing the child, is unconstitutional
    under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           11
    Opinion of the Court
    III
    A
    The existence of objective indicia of consensus against
    making a crime punishable by death was a relevant con-
    cern in Roper, Atkins, Coker, and Enmund, and we follow
    the approach of those cases here. The history of the death
    penalty for the crime of rape is an instructive beginning
    point.
    In 1925, 18 States, the District of Columbia, and the
    Federal Government had statutes that authorized the
    death penalty for the rape of a child or an adult. See
    Coker, 
    supra, at 593
     (plurality opinion). Between 1930
    and 1964, 455 people were executed for those crimes. See
    5 Historical Statistics of the United States: Earliest Times
    to the Present, pp. 5–262 to 5–263 (S. Carter et al. eds.
    2006) (Table Ec343–357). To our knowledge the last
    individual executed for the rape of a child was Ronald
    Wolfe in 1964. See H. Frazier, Death Sentences in Mis-
    souri, 1803–2005: A History and Comprehensive Registry
    of Legal Executions, Pardons, and Commutations 143
    (2006).
    In 1972, Furman invalidated most of the state statutes
    authorizing the death penalty for the crime of rape; and in
    Furman’s aftermath only six States reenacted their capital
    rape provisions. Three States—Georgia, North Carolina,
    and Louisiana—did so with respect to all rape offenses.
    Three States—Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee—did so
    with respect only to child rape. See Coker, 
    supra,
     at 594–
    595 (plurality opinion). All six statutes were later invali-
    dated under state or federal law. See Coker, 
    supra
     (strik-
    ing down Georgia’s capital rape statute); Woodson v. North
    Carolina, 
    428 U. S. 280
    , 287, n. 6, 301–305 (1976) (plural-
    ity opinion) (striking down North Carolina’s mandatory
    death penalty statute); Roberts v. Louisiana, 
    428 U. S. 325
    (1976) (striking down Louisiana’s mandatory death pen-
    alty statute); Collins v. State, 
    550 S. W. 2d 643
    , 646 (Tenn.
    12                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    1977) (striking down Tennessee’s mandatory death pen-
    alty statute); Buford v. State, 
    403 So. 2d 943
    , 951 (Fla.
    1981) (holding unconstitutional the imposition of death for
    child rape); Leatherwood v. State, 
    548 So. 2d 389
    , 402–403
    (Miss. 1989) (striking down the death penalty for child
    rape on state-law grounds).
    Louisiana reintroduced the death penalty for rape of a
    child in 1995. See 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     (West Supp.
    1996). Under the current statute, any anal, vaginal, or
    oral intercourse with a child under the age of 13 consti-
    tutes aggravated rape and is punishable by death. See 
    La. Stat. Ann. §14:42
     (West Supp. 2007). Mistake of age is not
    a defense, so the statute imposes strict liability in this
    regard. Five States have since followed Louisiana’s lead:
    Georgia, see 
    Ga. Code Ann. §16
    –6–1 (2007) (enacted 1999);
    Montana, see 
    Mont. Code Ann. §45
    –5–503 (2007) (enacted
    1997); Oklahoma, see Okla. Stat., Tit. 10, §7115(K) (West
    2007 Supp.) (enacted 2006); South Carolina, see S. C. Code
    Ann. §16–3–655(C)(1) (Supp. 2007) (enacted 2006); and
    Texas, see 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §12.42
    (c)(3) (West Supp.
    2007) (enacted 2007); see also 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §22.021
    (a) (West Supp. 2007). Four of these States’ stat-
    utes are more narrow than Louisiana’s in that only of-
    fenders with a previous rape conviction are death eligible.
    See 
    Mont. Code Ann. §45
    –5–503(3)(c); Okla. Stat., Tit. 10,
    §7115(K); S. C. Code Ann. §16–3–655(C)(1); 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §12.42
    (c)(3). Georgia’s statute makes child
    rape a capital offense only when aggravating circum-
    stances are present, including but not limited to a prior
    conviction. See 
    Ga. Code Ann. §17
    –10–30 (Supp. 2007).
    By contrast, 44 States have not made child rape a capi-
    tal offense. As for federal law, Congress in the Federal
    Death Penalty Act of 1994 expanded the number of federal
    crimes for which the death penalty is a permissible sen-
    tence, including certain nonhomicide offenses; but it did
    not do the same for child rape or abuse. See 108 Stat.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           13
    Opinion of the Court
    1972 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 18
    U. S. C.). Under 
    18 U. S. C. §2245
    , an offender is death
    eligible only when the sexual abuse or exploitation results
    in the victim’s death.
    Petitioner claims the death penalty for child rape is not
    authorized in Georgia, pointing to a 1979 decision in
    which the Supreme Court of Georgia stated that
    “[s]tatutory rape is not a capital crime in Georgia.” Pres-
    nell v. State, 
    243 Ga. 131
    , 132–133, 
    252 S. E. 2d 625
    , 626.
    But it appears Presnell was referring to the separate crime
    of statutory rape, which is not a capital offense in Georgia,
    see 
    Ga. Code Ann. §26
    –2018 (1969); cf. Ga. Code. Ann.
    §16–6–3 (2007). The State’s current capital rape statute,
    by contrast, is explicit that the rape of “[a] female who is
    less than ten years of age” is punishable “by death.” 
    Ga. Code Ann. §§16
    –6–1(a)(2), (b) (2007). Based on a recent
    statement by the Supreme Court of Georgia it must be
    assumed that this law is still in force: “Neither the United
    States Supreme Court, nor this Court, has yet addressed
    whether the death penalty is unconstitutionally dispropor-
    tionate for the crime of raping a child.” State v. Velazquez,
    
    283 Ga. 206
    , 208, 
    657 S. E. 2d 838
    , 840 (2008).
    Respondent would include Florida among those States
    that permit the death penalty for child rape. The state
    statute does authorize, by its terms, the death penalty for
    “sexual battery upon . . . a person less than 12 years of
    age.” 
    Fla. Stat. §794.011
    (2) (2007); see also §921.141(5)
    (2007). In 1981, however, the Supreme Court of Florida
    held the death penalty for child sexual assault to be un-
    constitutional. See Buford, 
    supra.
     It acknowledged that
    Coker addressed only the constitutionality of the death
    penalty for rape of an adult woman, 
    403 So. 2d, at 950
    , but
    held that “[t]he reasoning of the justices in Coker . . .
    compels [the conclusion] that a sentence of death is grossly
    disproportionate and excessive punishment for the crime
    of sexual assault and is therefore forbidden by the Eighth
    14                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    Amendment as cruel and unusual punishment,” 
    id., at 951
    . Respondent points out that the state statute has not
    since been amended. Pursuant to 
    Fla. Stat. §775.082
    (2)
    (2007), however, Florida state courts have understood
    Buford to bind their sentencing discretion in child rape
    cases. See, e.g., Gibson v. State, 
    721 So. 2d 363
    , 367, and
    n. 2 (Fla. App. 1998) (deeming it irrelevant that “the Flor-
    ida Legislature never changed the wording of the sexual
    battery statute”); Cooper v. State, 
    453 So. 2d 67
     (Fla. App.
    1984) (“After Buford, death was no longer a possible pen-
    alty in Florida for sexual battery”); see also 
    Fla. Stat. §775.082
    (2) (“In the event the death penalty in a capital
    felony is held to be unconstitutional by the Florida Su-
    preme Court . . . the court having jurisdiction over a per-
    son previously sentenced to death for a capital felony . . .
    shall sentence such person to life imprisonment”).
    Definitive resolution of state-law issues is for the States’
    own courts, and there may be disagreement over the
    statistics. It is further true that some States, including
    States that have addressed the issue in just the last few
    years, have made child rape a capital offense. The sum-
    mary recited here, however, does allow us to make certain
    comparisons with the data cited in the Atkins, Roper, and
    Enmund cases.
    When Atkins was decided in 2002, 30 States, including
    12 noncapital jurisdictions, prohibited the death penalty
    for mentally retarded offenders; 20 permitted it. See 
    536 U. S., at
    313–315. When Roper was decided in 2005, the
    numbers disclosed a similar division among the States: 30
    States prohibited the death penalty for juveniles, 18 of
    which permitted the death penalty for other offenders; and
    20 States authorized it. See 
    543 U. S., at 564
    . Both in
    Atkins and in Roper, we noted that the practice of execut-
    ing mentally retarded and juvenile offenders was infre-
    quent. Only five States had executed an offender known
    to have an IQ below 70 between 1989 and 2002, see At-
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                    15
    Opinion of the Court
    kins, 
    supra, at 316
    ; and only three States had executed a
    juvenile offender between 1995 and 2005, see Roper, su-
    pra, at 564–565.
    The statistics in Enmund bear an even greater similar-
    ity to the instant case. There eight jurisdictions had
    authorized imposition of the death penalty solely for par-
    ticipation in a robbery during which an accomplice com-
    mitted murder, see 
    458 U. S., at 789
    , and six defendants
    between 1954 and 1982 had been sentenced to death for
    felony murder where the defendant did not personally
    commit the homicidal assault, 
    id., at 794
    . These facts, the
    Court concluded, “weigh[ed] on the side of rejecting capital
    punishment for the crime.” 
    Id., at 793
    .
    The evidence of a national consensus with respect to the
    death penalty for child rapists, as with respect to juve-
    niles, mentally retarded offenders, and vicarious felony
    murderers, shows divided opinion but, on balance, an
    opinion against it. Thirty-seven jurisdictions—36 States
    plus the Federal Government—have the death penalty.
    As mentioned above, only six of those jurisdictions author-
    ize the death penalty for rape of a child. Though our
    review of national consensus is not confined to tallying the
    number of States with applicable death penalty legisla-
    tion, it is of significance that, in 45 jurisdictions, petitioner
    could not be executed for child rape of any kind. That
    number surpasses the 30 States in Atkins and Roper and
    the 42 States in Enmund that prohibited the death pen-
    alty under the circumstances those cases considered.*
    ——————
    * When issued and announced on June 25, 2008, the Court’s decision
    neither noted nor discussed the military penalty for rape under the
    Uniform Code of Military Justice. See 
    10 U. S. C. §§856
    , 920; Manual
    for Courts-Martial, United States, Part IV, ¶45.f(1) (2008). In a peti-
    tion for rehearing respondent argues that the military penalty bears on
    our consideration of the question in this case. For the reasons set forth
    in the statement respecting the denial of rehearing, post, p. ___, we find
    that the military penalty does not affect our reasoning or conclusions.
    16                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    B
    At least one difference between this case and our Eighth
    Amendment proportionality precedents must be ad-
    dressed. Respondent and its amici suggest that some
    States have an “erroneous understanding of this Court’s
    Eighth Amendment jurisprudence.” Brief for Missouri
    Governor Matt Blunt et al. as Amici Curiae 10. They
    submit that the general propositions set out in Coker,
    contrasting murder and rape, have been interpreted in too
    expansive a way, leading some state legislatures to con-
    clude that Coker applies to child rape when in fact its
    reasoning does not, or ought not, apply to that specific
    crime.
    This argument seems logical at first, but in the end it is
    unsound. In Coker, a four-Member plurality of the Court,
    plus Justice Brennan and Justice Marshall in concurrence,
    held that a sentence of death for the rape of a 16-year-old
    woman, who was a minor under Georgia law, see 
    Ga. Code Ann. §74
    –104 (1973), yet was characterized by the Court
    as an adult, was disproportionate and excessive under the
    Eighth Amendment. See 
    433 U. S., at
    593–600; see also
    
    id., at 600
     (Brennan, J., concurring in judgment); 
    ibid.
    (Marshall, J., concurring in judgment). (The Court did not
    explain why the 16-year-old victim qualified as an adult,
    but it may be of some significance that she was married,
    had a home of her own, and had given birth to a son three
    weeks prior to the rape. See Brief for Petitioner in Coker
    v. Georgia, O. T. 1976, No. 75–5444, pp. 14–15.)
    The plurality noted that only one State had a valid
    statute authorizing the death penalty for adult rape and
    that “in the vast majority of cases, at least 9 out of 10,
    juries ha[d] not imposed the death sentence.” Coker, 
    433 U. S., at 597
    ; see also 
    id., at 594
     (“Of the 16 States in
    which rape had been a capital offense, only three provided
    the death penalty for rape of an adult woman in their
    revised statutes—Georgia, North Carolina, and Louisiana.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)            17
    Opinion of the Court
    In the latter two States, the death penalty was mandatory
    for those found guilty, and those laws were invalidated by
    Woodson and Roberts”). This “history and . . . objective
    evidence of the country’s present judgment concerning the
    acceptability of death as a penalty for rape of an adult
    woman,” 
    id., at 593
    , confirmed the Court’s independent
    judgment that punishing adult rape by death was not
    proportional:
    “Rape is without doubt deserving of serious pun-
    ishment; but in terms of moral depravity and of the
    injury to the person and to the public, it does not com-
    pare with murder, which does involve the unjustified
    taking of human life. Although it may be accompa-
    nied by another crime, rape by definition does not in-
    clude the death of . . . another person. The murderer
    kills; the rapist, if no more than that, does not. . . . We
    have the abiding conviction that the death penalty,
    which ‘is unique in its severity and irrevocability,’
    Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U. S., at 187
    , is an excessive
    penalty for the rapist who, as such, does not take hu-
    man life.” Id., at 598 (footnote omitted).
    Confined to this passage, Coker’s analysis of the Eighth
    Amendment is susceptible of a reading that would prohibit
    making child rape a capital offense. In context, however,
    Coker’s holding was narrower than some of its language
    read in isolation. The Coker plurality framed the question
    as whether, “with respect to rape of an adult woman,” the
    death penalty is disproportionate punishment. Id., at 592.
    And it repeated the phrase “an adult woman” or “an adult
    female” in discussing the act of rape or the victim of rape
    eight times in its opinion. See Coker, 
    supra.
     The distinc-
    tion between adult and child rape was not merely rhetori-
    cal; it was central to the Court’s reasoning. The opinion
    does not speak to the constitutionality of the death penalty
    for child rape, an issue not then before the Court. In
    18                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    discussing the legislative background, for example, the
    Court noted:
    “Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee also authorized
    the death penalty in some rape cases, but only where
    the victim was a child and the rapist an adult. The
    Tennessee statute has since been invalidated because
    the death sentence was mandatory. The upshot is
    that Georgia is the sole jurisdiction in the United
    States at the present time that authorizes a sentence
    of death when the rape victim is an adult woman, and
    only two other jurisdictions provide capital punish-
    ment when the victim is a child. . . . [This] obviously
    weighs very heavily on the side of rejecting capi-
    tal punishment as a suitable penalty for raping an
    adult woman.” 
    Id.,
     at 595–596 (citation and footnote
    omitted).
    Still, respondent contends, it is possible that state legis-
    latures have understood Coker to state a broad rule that
    covers the situation of the minor victim as well. We see
    little evidence of this. Respondent cites no reliable data to
    indicate that state legislatures have read Coker to bar
    capital punishment for child rape and, for this reason,
    have been deterred from passing applicable death penalty
    legislation. In the absence of evidence from those States
    where legislation has been proposed but not enacted we
    refuse to speculate about the motivations and concerns of
    particular state legislators.
    The position of the state courts, furthermore, to which
    state legislators look for guidance on these matters, indi-
    cates that Coker has not blocked the emergence of legisla-
    tive consensus. The state courts that have confronted the
    precise question before us have been uniform in conclud-
    ing that Coker did not address the constitutionality of the
    death penalty for the crime of child rape. See, e.g., Wilson,
    685 So. 2d, at 1066 (upholding the constitutionality of the
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           19
    Opinion of the Court
    death penalty for rape of a child and noting that “[t]he
    plurality [in Coker] took great pains in referring only to
    the rape of adult women throughout their opinion” (em-
    phasis deleted)); Upshaw v. State, 
    350 So. 2d 1358
    , 1360
    (Miss. 1977) (“In Coker the Court took great pains to limit
    its decision to the applicability of the death penalty for the
    rape of an adult woman. . . . As we view Coker the Court
    carefully refrained from deciding whether the death pen-
    alty for the rape of a female child under the age of twelve
    years is grossly disproportionate to the crime”). See also
    Simpson v. Owens, 
    207 Ariz. 261
    , 268, n. 8, 
    85 P. 3d 478
    ,
    485, n. 8 (App. 2004) (addressing the denial of bail for
    sexual offenses against children and noting that
    “[a]lthough the death penalty was declared in a plurality
    opinion of the United States Supreme Court to be a dis-
    proportionate punishment for the rape of an adult woman
    . . . the rape of a child remains a capital offense in some
    states”); People v. Hernandez, 
    30 Cal. 4th 835
    , 869, 
    69 P. 3d 446
    , 466 (2003) (addressing the death penalty for
    conspiracy to commit murder and noting that “the consti-
    tutionality of laws imposing the death penalty for crimes
    not necessarily resulting in death is unresolved”).
    There is, to be sure, some contrary authority contained
    in various state-court opinions. But it is either dicta, see
    State v. Barnum, 
    921 So. 2d 513
    , 526 (Fla. 2005) (address-
    ing the retroactivity of Thompson v. State, 
    695 So. 2d 691
    (Fla. 1997)); State v. Coleman, 
    185 Mont. 299
    , 327, 
    605 P. 2d 1000
    , 1017 (1979) (upholding the defendant’s death
    sentence for aggravated kidnaping); State v. Gardner, 
    947 P. 2d 630
    , 653 (Utah 1997) (addressing the constitutional-
    ity of the death penalty for prison assaults); equivocal in
    its conclusion, see People v. Huddleston, 
    212 Ill. 2d 107
    ,
    141, 
    816 N. E. 2d 322
    , 341–342 (2004) (citing law review
    articles for the proposition that the constitutionality of the
    death penalty for nonhomicide crimes “is the subject of
    debate”); or from a decision of a state intermediate court
    20                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    that has been superseded by a more specific statement of
    the law by the State’s supreme court, compare, e.g., Parker
    v. State, 
    216 Ga. App. 649
    , 650, n. 1, 
    455 S. E. 2d 360
    , 361,
    n. 1 (1995) (characterizing Coker as holding that the death
    penalty “is no longer permitted for rape where the victim
    is not killed”), with Velazquez, 
    283 Ga., at 208
    , 
    657 S. E. 2d, at 840
     (“[T]he United States Supreme Court . . . has
    yet [to] addres[s] whether the death penalty is unconstitu-
    tionally disproportionate for the crime of raping a child”).
    The Supreme Court of Florida’s opinion in Buford could
    be read to support respondent’s argument. But even there
    the state court recognized that “[t]he [Supreme] Court has
    yet to decide whether [Coker’s rationale] holds true for the
    rape of a child” and made explicit that it was extending
    the reasoning but not the holding of Coker in striking
    down the death penalty for child rape. 
    403 So. 2d, at 950, 951
    . The same is true of the Supreme Court of California’s
    opinion in Hernandez, 
    supra, at 867
    , 
    69 P. 3d, at 464
    .
    We conclude on the basis of this review that there is no
    clear indication that state legislatures have misinter-
    preted Coker to hold that the death penalty for child rape
    is unconstitutional. The small number of States that have
    enacted this penalty, then, is relevant to determining
    whether there is a consensus against capital punishment
    for this crime.
    C
    Respondent insists that the six States where child rape
    is a capital offense, along with the States that have pro-
    posed but not yet enacted applicable death penalty legisla-
    tion, reflect a consistent direction of change in support of
    the death penalty for child rape. Consistent change might
    counterbalance an otherwise weak demonstration of con-
    sensus. See Atkins, 
    536 U. S., at 315
     (“It is not so much
    the number of these States that is significant, but the
    consistency of the direction of change”); Roper, 543 U. S.,
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           21
    Opinion of the Court
    at 565 (“Impressive in Atkins was the rate of abolition of
    the death penalty for the mentally retarded”). But what-
    ever the significance of consistent change where it is cited
    to show emerging support for expanding the scope of the
    death penalty, no showing of consistent change has been
    made in this case.
    Respondent and its amici identify five States where, in
    their view, legislation authorizing capital punishment for
    child rape is pending. See Brief for Missouri Governor
    Matt Blunt et al. as Amici Curiae 2, 14. It is not our
    practice, nor is it sound, to find contemporary norms based
    upon state legislation that has been proposed but not yet
    enacted. There are compelling reasons not to do so here.
    Since the briefs were submitted by the parties, legislation
    in two of the five States has failed. See, e.g., S. 195, 66th
    Gen. Assembly, 2d Reg. Sess. (Colo. 2008) (rejected by
    Senate Appropriations Committee on Apr. 11, 2008);
    S. 2596, 2008 Leg., Reg. Sess. (Miss. 2008) (rejected by
    House Committee on Mar. 18, 2008). In Tennessee, the
    house bills were rejected almost a year ago, and the senate
    bills appear to have died in committee. See H. R. 601,
    105th Gen. Assembly, 1st Reg. Sess. (2007) (taken off
    Subcommittee Calendar on Apr. 4, 2007); H. R. 662, 
    ibid.
    (failed for lack of second on Mar. 21, 2007); H. R. 1099,
    
    ibid.
     (taken off notice for Judiciary Committee calendar on
    May 16, 2007); S. 22, 
    ibid.
     (referred to General Subcom-
    mittee of Senate Finance, Ways, and Means Committee on
    June 11, 2007); S. 157, 
    ibid.
     (referred to Senate Judiciary
    Committee on Feb. 7, 2007; action deferred until Jan.
    2008); S. 841, 
    ibid.
     (referred to General Subcommittee of
    Senate Judiciary Committee on Mar. 27, 2007). In Ala-
    bama, the recent legislation is similar to a bill that failed
    in 2007. Compare H. R. 456, 2008 Leg., Reg. Sess. (2008),
    with H. R. 335, 2007 Leg., Reg. Sess. (2007). And in Mis-
    souri, the 2008 legislative session has ended, tabling the
    pending legislation. See Mo. Const., Art. III, §20(a).
    22                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    Aside from pending legislation, it is true that in the last
    13 years there has been change towards making child rape
    a capital offense. This is evidenced by six new death
    penalty statutes, three enacted in the last two years. But
    this showing is not as significant as the data in Atkins,
    where 18 States between 1986 and 2001 had enacted
    legislation prohibiting the execution of mentally retarded
    persons. See Atkins, 
    supra,
     at 313–315. Respondent
    argues the instant case is like Roper because, there, only
    five States had shifted their positions between 1989 and
    2005, one less State than here. See Roper, 
    supra, at 565
    .
    But in Roper, we emphasized that, though the pace of
    abolition was not as great as in Atkins, it was counterbal-
    anced by the total number of States that had recognized
    the impropriety of executing juvenile offenders. See 
    543 U. S., at
    566–567. When we decided Stanford v. Kentucky,
    
    492 U. S. 361
     (1989), 12 death penalty States already
    prohibited the execution of any juvenile under 18, and 15
    prohibited the execution of any juvenile under 17. See
    Roper, 
    supra,
     at 566–567 (“If anything, this shows that the
    impropriety of executing juveniles between 16 and 18
    years of age gained wide recognition earlier”). Here, the
    total number of States to have made child rape a capital
    offense after Furman is six. This is not an indication of a
    trend or change in direction comparable to the one sup-
    ported by data in Roper. The evidence here bears a closer
    resemblance to the evidence of state activity in Enmund,
    where we found a national consensus against the death
    penalty for vicarious felony murder despite eight jurisdic-
    tions having authorized the practice. See 
    458 U. S., at 789, 792
    .
    D
    There are measures of consensus other than legislation.
    Statistics about the number of executions may inform the
    consideration whether capital punishment for the crime of
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)          23
    Opinion of the Court
    child rape is regarded as unacceptable in our society. See,
    e.g., 
    id.,
     at 794–795; Roper, 
    supra,
     at 564–565; Atkins,
    
    supra, at 316
    ; Cf. Coker, 
    433 U. S., at
    596–597 (plurality
    opinion). These statistics confirm our determination from
    our review of state statutes that there is a social consen-
    sus against the death penalty for the crime of child rape.
    Nine States—Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
    Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and
    Texas—have permitted capital punishment for adult or
    child rape for some length of time between the Court’s
    1972 decision in Furman and today. See supra, at 12;
    Coker, 
    supra, at 595
     (plurality opinion). Yet no individual
    has been executed for the rape of an adult or child since
    1964, and no execution for any other nonhomicide offense
    has been conducted since 1963. See Historical Statistics of
    the United States, at 5–262 to 5–263 (Table Ec343–357).
    Cf. Thompson v. Oklahoma, 
    487 U. S. 815
    , 852–853 (1988)
    (O’Connor, J., concurring in judgment) (that “four decades
    have gone by since the last execution of a defendant who
    was younger than 16 at the time of the offense . . . sup-
    port[s] the inference of a national consensus opposing the
    death penalty for 15-year-olds”).
    Louisiana is the only State since 1964 that has sen-
    tenced an individual to death for the crime of child rape;
    and petitioner and Richard Davis, who was convicted and
    sentenced to death for the aggravated rape of a 5-year-old
    child by a Louisiana jury in December 2007, see State v.
    Davis, Case No. 262,971 (1st Jud. Dist., Caddo Parish,
    La.) (cited in Brief for Respondent 42, and n. 38), are the
    only two individuals now on death row in the United
    States for a nonhomicide offense.
    After reviewing the authorities informed by contempo-
    rary norms, including the history of the death penalty for
    this and other nonhomicide crimes, current state statutes
    and new enactments, and the number of executions since
    1964, we conclude there is a national consensus against
    24                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    capital punishment for the crime of child rape.
    IV
    A
    As we have said in other Eighth Amendment cases,
    objective evidence of contemporary values as it relates to
    punishment for child rape is entitled to great weight, but
    it does not end our inquiry. “[T]he Constitution contem-
    plates that in the end our own judgment will be brought to
    bear on the question of the acceptability of the death
    penalty under the Eighth Amendment.” Coker, supra, at
    597 (plurality opinion); see also Roper, 
    supra, at 563
    ;
    Enmund, 
    supra, at 797
     (“[I]t is for us ultimately to judge
    whether the Eighth Amendment permits imposition of the
    death penalty”). We turn, then, to the resolution of the
    question before us, which is informed by our precedents
    and our own understanding of the Constitution and the
    rights it secures.
    It must be acknowledged that there are moral grounds
    to question a rule barring capital punishment for a crime
    against an individual that did not result in death. These
    facts illustrate the point. Here the victim’s fright, the
    sense of betrayal, and the nature of her injuries caused
    more prolonged physical and mental suffering than, say, a
    sudden killing by an unseen assassin. The attack was not
    just on her but on her childhood. For this reason, we
    should be most reluctant to rely upon the language of the
    plurality in Coker, which posited that, for the victim of
    rape, “life may not be nearly so happy as it was” but it is
    not beyond repair. 
    433 U. S., at 598
    . Rape has a perma-
    nent psychological, emotional, and sometimes physical
    impact on the child. See C. Bagley & K. King, Child Sex-
    ual Abuse: The Search for Healing 2–24, 111–112 (1990);
    Finkelhor & Browne, Assessing the Long-Term Impact of
    Child Sexual Abuse: A Review and Conceptualization in
    Handbook on Sexual Abuse of Children 55–60 (L. Walker
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           25
    Opinion of the Court
    ed. 1988). We cannot dismiss the years of long anguish
    that must be endured by the victim of child rape.
    It does not follow, though, that capital punishment is a
    proportionate penalty for the crime. The constitutional
    prohibition against excessive or cruel and unusual pun-
    ishments mandates that the State’s power to punish “be
    exercised within the limits of civilized standards.” Trop,
    
    356 U. S., at 99, 100
     (plurality opinion). Evolving stan-
    dards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing
    society counsel us to be most hesitant before interpreting
    the Eighth Amendment to allow the extension of the death
    penalty, a hesitation that has special force where no life
    was taken in the commission of the crime. It is an estab-
    lished principle that decency, in its essence, presumes
    respect for the individual and thus moderation or restraint
    in the application of capital punishment. See 
    id., at 100
    .
    To date the Court has sought to define and implement
    this principle, for the most part, in cases involving capital
    murder. One approach has been to insist upon general
    rules that ensure consistency in determining who receives
    a death sentence. See California v. Brown, 
    479 U. S. 538
    ,
    541 (1987) (“[D]eath penalty statutes [must] be structured
    so as to prevent the penalty from being administered in an
    arbitrary and unpredictable fashion” (citing Gregg, 
    428 U. S. 153
    ; Furman, 
    408 U. S. 238
    )); Godfrey v. Georgia,
    
    446 U. S. 420
    , 428 (1980) (plurality opinion) (requiring a
    State to give narrow and precise definition to the aggra-
    vating factors that warrant its imposition). At the same
    time the Court has insisted, to ensure restraint and mod-
    eration in use of capital punishment, on judging the
    “character and record of the individual offender and the
    circumstances of the particular offense as a constitution-
    ally indispensable part of the process of inflicting the
    penalty of death.” Woodson, 428 U. S., at 304 (plurality
    opinion); Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U. S. 586
    , 604–605 (1978)
    (plurality opinion).
    26                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    The tension between general rules and case-specific
    circumstances has produced results not all together satis-
    factory. See Tuilaepa v. California, 
    512 U. S. 967
    , 973
    (1994) (“The objectives of these two inquiries can be in
    some tension, at least when the inquiries occur at the
    same time”); Walton v. Arizona, 
    497 U. S. 639
    , 664–665
    (1990) (SCALIA, J., concurring in part and concurring in
    judgment) (“The latter requirement quite obviously de-
    stroys whatever rationality and predictability the former
    requirement was designed to achieve”). This has led some
    Members of the Court to say we should cease efforts to
    resolve the tension and simply allow legislatures, prosecu-
    tors, courts, and juries greater latitude. See 
    id.,
     at 667–
    673 (advocating that the Court adhere to the Furman line
    of cases and abandon the Woodson-Lockett line of cases).
    For others the failure to limit these same imprecisions by
    stricter enforcement of narrowing rules has raised doubts
    concerning the constitutionality of capital punishment
    itself. See Baze v. Rees, 553 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2008) (slip
    op., at 13–17) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment);
    Furman, 
    supra,
     at 310–314 (White, J., concurring); Callins
    v. Collins, 
    510 U. S. 1141
    , 1144–1145 (1994) (Blackmun,
    J., dissenting from denial of certiorari).
    Our response to this case law, which is still in search of
    a unifying principle, has been to insist upon confining the
    instances in which capital punishment may be imposed.
    See Gregg, 
    supra, at 187, 184
     (joint opinion of Stewart,
    Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.) (because “death as a punish-
    ment is unique in its severity and irrevocability,” capital
    punishment must be reserved for those crimes that are “so
    grievous an affront to humanity that the only adequate
    response may be the penalty of death” (citing in part
    Furman, 
    408 U. S., at
    286–291 (Brennan, J., concurring);
    
    id., at 306
     (Stewart, J., concurring))); see also Roper, 
    543 U. S., at 569
     (the Eighth Amendment requires that “the
    death penalty is reserved for a narrow category of crimes
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)            27
    Opinion of the Court
    and offenders”).
    Our concern here is limited to crimes against individual
    persons. We do not address, for example, crimes defining
    and punishing treason, espionage, terrorism, and drug
    kingpin activity, which are offenses against the State. As
    it relates to crimes against individuals, though, the death
    penalty should not be expanded to instances where the
    victim’s life was not taken. We said in Coker of adult rape:
    “We do not discount the seriousness of rape as a
    crime. It is highly reprehensible, both in a moral
    sense and in its almost total contempt for the personal
    integrity and autonomy of the female victim . . . .
    Short of homicide, it is the ‘ultimate violation of
    self.’ . . . [But] [t]he murderer kills; the rapist, if no
    more than that, does not. . . . We have the abiding
    conviction that the death penalty, which ‘is unique in
    its severity and irrevocability,’ is an excessive penalty
    for the rapist who, as such, does not take human life.”
    
    433 U. S., at
    597–598 (plurality opinion) (citation
    omitted).
    The same distinction between homicide and other seri-
    ous violent offenses against the individual informed the
    Court’s analysis in Enmund, 
    458 U. S. 782
    , where the
    Court held that the death penalty for the crime of vicari-
    ous felony murder is disproportionate to the offense. The
    Court repeated there the fundamental, moral distinction
    between a “murderer” and a “robber,” noting that while
    “robbery is a serious crime deserving serious punishment,”
    it is not like death in its “severity and irrevocability.” 
    Id., at 797
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Consistent with evolving standards of decency and the
    teachings of our precedents we conclude that, in determin-
    ing whether the death penalty is excessive, there is a
    distinction between intentional first-degree murder on the
    one hand and nonhomicide crimes against individual
    28                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    persons, even including child rape, on the other. The
    latter crimes may be devastating in their harm, as here,
    but “in terms of moral depravity and of the injury to the
    person and to the public,” Coker, 
    433 U. S., at 598
     (plural-
    ity opinion), they cannot be compared to murder in their
    “severity and irrevocability.” 
    Ibid.
    In reaching our conclusion we find significant the num-
    ber of executions that would be allowed under respon-
    dent’s approach. The crime of child rape, considering its
    reported incidents, occurs more often than first-degree
    murder. Approximately 5,702 incidents of vaginal, anal,
    or oral rape of a child under the age of 12 were reported
    nationwide in 2005; this is almost twice the total incidents
    of intentional murder for victims of all ages (3,405) re-
    ported during the same period. See Inter-University
    Consortium for Political and Social Research, National
    Incident-Based Reporting System, 2005, Study No. 4720,
    http://www.icpsr.umich.edu (as visited June 12, 2008, and
    available in Clerk of Court’s case file). Although we have
    no reliable statistics on convictions for child rape, we can
    surmise that, each year, there are hundreds, or more, of
    these convictions just in jurisdictions that permit capital
    punishment. Cf. Brief for Louisiana Association of Crimi-
    nal Defense Lawyers et al. as Amici Curiae 1–2, and n. 2
    (noting that there are now at least 70 capital rape indict-
    ments pending in Louisiana and estimating the actual
    number to be over 100). As a result of existing rules, see
    generally Godfrey, 
    446 U. S., at
    428–433 (plurality opin-
    ion), only 2.2% of convicted first-degree murderers are
    sentenced to death, see Blume, Eisenberg, & Wells, Ex-
    plaining Death Row’s Population and Racial Composition,
    1 J. of Empirical Legal Studies 165, 171 (2004). But under
    respondent’s approach, the 36 States that permit the
    death penalty could sentence to death all persons con-
    victed of raping a child less than 12 years of age. This
    could not be reconciled with our evolving standards of
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           29
    Opinion of the Court
    decency and the necessity to constrain the use of the death
    penalty.
    It might be said that narrowing aggravators could be
    used in this context, as with murder offenses, to ensure
    the death penalty’s restrained application. We find it
    difficult to identify standards that would guide the deci-
    sionmaker so the penalty is reserved for the most severe
    cases of child rape and yet not imposed in an arbitrary
    way. Even were we to forbid, say, the execution of first-
    time child rapists, see supra at 12, or require as an aggra-
    vating factor a finding that the perpetrator’s instant rape
    offense involved multiple victims, the jury still must bal-
    ance, in its discretion, those aggravating factors against
    mitigating circumstances. In this context, which involves
    a crime that in many cases will overwhelm a decent per-
    son’s judgment, we have no confidence that the imposition
    of the death penalty would not be so arbitrary as to be
    “freakis[h],” Furman, 
    408 U. S., at 310
     (Stewart, J., con-
    curring). We cannot sanction this result when the harm to
    the victim, though grave, cannot be quantified in the same
    way as death of the victim.
    It is not a solution simply to apply to this context the
    aggravating factors developed for capital murder. The
    Court has said that a State may carry out its obligation to
    ensure individualized sentencing in capital murder cases
    by adopting sentencing processes that rely upon the jury
    to exercise wide discretion so long as there are narrowing
    factors that have some “ ‘common-sense core of meaning
    . . . that criminal juries should be capable of understand-
    ing.’ ” Tuilaepa, 
    512 U. S., at 975
     (quoting Jurek v. Texas,
    
    428 U. S. 262
    , 279 (1976) (White, J., concurring in judg-
    ment)). The Court, accordingly, has upheld the constitu-
    tionality of aggravating factors ranging from whether the
    defendant was a “ ‘cold-blooded, pitiless slayer,’ ” Arave v.
    Creech, 
    507 U. S. 463
    , 471–474 (1993), to whether the
    “perpetrator inflict[ed] mental anguish or physical abuse
    30                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    before the victim’s death,” Walton, 
    497 U. S., at 654
    , to
    whether the defendant “ ‘would commit criminal acts of
    violence that would constitute a continuing threat to
    society,’ ” Jurek, 
    supra, at 269-270
    , 274–276 (joint opinion
    of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.). All of these stan-
    dards have the potential to result in some inconsistency of
    application.
    As noted above, the resulting imprecision and the ten-
    sion between evaluating the individual circumstances and
    consistency of treatment have been tolerated where the
    victim dies. It should not be introduced into our justice
    system, though, where death has not occurred.
    Our concerns are all the more pronounced where, as
    here, the death penalty for this crime has been most infre-
    quent. See Part III–D, supra. We have developed a foun-
    dational jurisprudence in the case of capital murder to
    guide the States and juries in imposing the death penalty.
    Starting with Gregg, 
    428 U. S. 153
    , we have spent more
    than 32 years articulating limiting factors that channel
    the jury’s discretion to avoid the death penalty’s arbitrary
    imposition in the case of capital murder. Though that
    practice remains sound, beginning the same process for
    crimes for which no one has been executed in more than
    40 years would require experimentation in an area where
    a failed experiment would result in the execution of indi-
    viduals undeserving of the death penalty. Evolving stan-
    dards of decency are difficult to reconcile with a regime
    that seeks to expand the death penalty to an area where
    standards to confine its use are indefinite and obscure.
    B
    Our decision is consistent with the justifications offered
    for the death penalty. Gregg instructs that capital pun-
    ishment is excessive when it is grossly out of proportion to
    the crime or it does not fulfill the two distinct social pur-
    poses served by the death penalty: retribution and deter-
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           31
    Opinion of the Court
    rence of capital crimes. See 
    id., at 173, 183, 187
     (joint
    opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.); see also
    Coker, 
    433 U. S., at 592
     (plurality opinion) (“A punishment
    might fail the test on either ground”).
    As in Coker, here it cannot be said with any certainty
    that the death penalty for child rape serves no deterrent
    or retributive function. See 
    id., at 593, n. 4
     (concluding
    that the death penalty for rape might serve “legitimate
    ends of punishment” but nevertheless is disproportionate
    to the crime). Cf. Gregg, 
    supra,
     at 185–186 (joint opinion
    of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.) (“[T]here is no
    convincing empirical evidence either supporting or refut-
    ing th[e] view [that the death penalty serves as a signifi-
    cantly greater deterrent than lesser penalties]. We may
    nevertheless assume safely that there are murderers . . .
    for whom . . . the death penalty undoubtedly is a signifi-
    cant deterrent”); 
    id., at 186
     (the value of capital punish-
    ment, and its contribution to acceptable penological goals,
    typically is a “complex factual issue the resolution of
    which properly rests with the legislatures”). This argu-
    ment does not overcome other objections, however. The
    incongruity between the crime of child rape and the
    harshness of the death penalty poses risks of overpunish-
    ment and counsels against a constitutional ruling that the
    death penalty can be expanded to include this offense.
    The goal of retribution, which reflects society’s and the
    victim’s interests in seeing that the offender is repaid for
    the hurt he caused, see Atkins, 
    536 U. S., at 319
    ; Furman,
    
    supra, at 308
     (Stewart, J., concurring), does not justify the
    harshness of the death penalty here. In measuring retri-
    bution, as well as other objectives of criminal law, it is
    appropriate to distinguish between a particularly de-
    praved murder that merits death as a form of retribution
    and the crime of child rape. See Part IV–A, supra; Coker,
    
    supra,
     at 597–598 (plurality opinion).
    There is an additional reason for our conclusion that
    32                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    imposing the death penalty for child rape would not fur-
    ther retributive purposes. In considering whether retribu-
    tion is served, among other factors we have looked to
    whether capital punishment “has the potential . . . to allow
    the community as a whole, including the surviving family
    and friends of the victim, to affirm its own judgment that
    the culpability of the prisoner is so serious that the ulti-
    mate penalty must be sought and imposed.” Panetti v.
    Quarterman, 551 U. S. ___, ____ (2007) (slip op., at 26). In
    considering the death penalty for nonhomicide offenses
    this inquiry necessarily also must include the question
    whether the death penalty balances the wrong to the
    victim. Cf. Roper, 
    543 U. S., at 571
    .
    It is not at all evident that the child rape victim’s hurt is
    lessened when the law permits the death of the perpetra-
    tor. Capital cases require a long-term commitment by
    those who testify for the prosecution, especially when guilt
    and sentencing determinations are in multiple proceed-
    ings. In cases like this the key testimony is not just from
    the family but from the victim herself. During formative
    years of her adolescence, made all the more daunting for
    having to come to terms with the brutality of her experi-
    ence, L. H. was required to discuss the case at length with
    law enforcement personnel. In a public trial she was
    required to recount once more all the details of the crime
    to a jury as the State pursued the death of her stepfather.
    Cf. G. Goodman et al., Testifying in Criminal Court: Emo-
    tional Effects on Child Sexual Assault Victims 50, 62, 72
    (1992); Brief for National Association of Social Workers
    et al. as Amici Curiae 17–21. And in the end the State
    made L. H. a central figure in its decision to seek the
    death penalty, telling the jury in closing statements: “[L.
    H.] is asking you, asking you to set up a time and place
    when he dies.” Tr. 121 (Aug. 26, 2003).
    Society’s desire to inflict the death penalty for child rape
    by enlisting the child victim to assist it over the course of
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)          33
    Opinion of the Court
    years in asking for capital punishment forces a moral
    choice on the child, who is not of mature age to make that
    choice. The way the death penalty here involves the child
    victim in its enforcement can compromise a decent legal
    system; and this is but a subset of fundamental difficulties
    capital punishment can cause in the administration and
    enforcement of laws proscribing child rape.
    There are, moreover, serious systemic concerns in prose-
    cuting the crime of child rape that are relevant to the
    constitutionality of making it a capital offense. The prob-
    lem of unreliable, induced, and even imagined child testi-
    mony means there is a “special risk of wrongful execution”
    in some child rape cases. Atkins, supra, at 321. See also
    Brief for National Association of Criminal Defense Law-
    yers et al. as Amici Curiae 5–17. This undermines, at
    least to some degree, the meaningful contribution of the
    death penalty to legitimate goals of punishment. Studies
    conclude that children are highly susceptible to suggestive
    questioning techniques like repetition, guided imagery,
    and selective reinforcement. See Ceci & Friedman, The
    Suggestibility of Children: Scientific Research and Legal
    Implications, 
    86 Cornell L. Rev. 33
    , 47 (2000) (there is
    “strong evidence that children, especially young children,
    are suggestible to a significant degree—even on abuse-
    related questions”); Gross, Jacoby, Matheson, Montgom-
    ery, & Patil, Exonerations in the United States 1989
    Through 2003, 95 J. Crim. L. & C. 523, 539 (2005) (dis-
    cussing allegations of abuse at the Little Rascals Day Care
    Center); see also Quas, Davis, Goodman, & Myers, Re-
    peated Questions, Deception, and Children’s True and
    False Reports of Body Touch, 12 Child Maltreatment 60,
    61–66 (2007) (finding that 4- to 7-year-olds “were able to
    maintain [a] lie about body touch fairly effectively when
    asked repeated, direct questions during a mock forensic
    interview”).
    Similar criticisms pertain to other cases involving child
    34                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    witnesses; but child rape cases present heightened con-
    cerns because the central narrative and account of the
    crime often comes from the child herself. She and the
    accused are, in most instances, the only ones present when
    the crime was committed. See Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
    
    480 U. S. 39
    , 60 (1987). Cf. Goodman, Testifying in
    Criminal Court, at 118. And the question in a capital case
    is not just the fact of the crime, including, say, proof of
    rape as distinct from abuse short of rape, but details bear-
    ing upon brutality in its commission. These matters are
    subject to fabrication or exaggeration, or both. See Ceci
    and Friedman, supra; Quas, supra. Although capital
    punishment does bring retribution, and the legislature
    here has chosen to use it for this end, its judgment must
    be weighed, in deciding the constitutional question,
    against the special risks of unreliable testimony with
    respect to this crime.
    With respect to deterrence, if the death penalty adds to
    the risk of non-reporting, that, too, diminishes the pen-
    alty’s objectives. Underreporting is a common problem
    with respect to child sexual abuse. See Hanson, Resnick,
    Saunders, Kilpatrick, & Best, Factors Related to the Re-
    porting of Childhood Rape, 23 Child Abuse & Neglect 559,
    564 (1999) (finding that about 88% of female rape victims
    under the age of 18 did not disclose their abuse to authori-
    ties); Smith et al., Delay in Disclosure of Childhood Rape:
    Results From A National Survey, 24 Child Abuse & Ne-
    glect 273, 278–279 (2000) (finding that 72% of women
    raped as children disclosed their abuse to someone, but
    that only 12% of the victims reported the rape to authori-
    ties). Although we know little about what differentiates
    those who report from those who do not report, see Han-
    son, supra, at 561, one of the most commonly cited reasons
    for nondisclosure is fear of negative consequences for the
    perpetrator, a concern that has special force where the
    abuser is a family member, see Goodman-Brown, Edel-
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           35
    Opinion of the Court
    stein, Goodman, Jones, & Gordon, Why Children Tell: A
    Model of Children’s Disclosure of Sexual Abuse, 27 Child
    Abuse & Neglect 525, 527–528 (2003); Smith, supra, at
    283–284 (finding that, where there was a relationship
    between perpetrator and victim, the victim was likely to
    keep the abuse a secret for a longer period of time, per-
    haps because of a “greater sense of loyalty or emotional
    bond”); Hanson, supra, at 565–566, and Table 3 (finding
    that a “significantly greater proportion of reported than
    nonreported cases involved a stranger”); see also Ritchie,
    
    supra, at 60
    . The experience of the amici who work with
    child victims indicates that, when the punishment is
    death, both the victim and the victim’s family members
    may be more likely to shield the perpetrator from discov-
    ery, thus increasing underreporting. See Brief for Na-
    tional Association of Social Workers et al. as Amici Curiae
    11–13. As a result, punishment by death may not result
    in more deterrence or more effective enforcement.
    In addition, by in effect making the punishment for
    child rape and murder equivalent, a State that punishes
    child rape by death may remove a strong incentive for the
    rapist not to kill the victim. Assuming the offender be-
    haves in a rational way, as one must to justify the penalty
    on grounds of deterrence, the penalty in some respects
    gives less protection, not more, to the victim, who is often
    the sole witness to the crime. See Rayburn, Better Dead
    Than R(ap)ed?: The Patriarchal Rhetoric Driving Capital
    Rape Statutes, 78 St. John’s L. Rev. 1119, 1159–1160
    (2004). It might be argued that, even if the death penalty
    results in a marginal increase in the incentive to kill, this
    is counterbalanced by a marginally increased deterrent to
    commit the crime at all. Whatever balance the legislature
    strikes, however, uncertainty on the point makes the
    argument for the penalty less compelling than for homi-
    cide crimes.
    Each of these propositions, standing alone, might not
    36                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    Opinion of the Court
    establish the unconstitutionality of the death penalty for
    the crime of child rape. Taken in sum, however, they
    demonstrate the serious negative consequences of making
    child rape a capital offense. These considerations lead us
    to conclude, in our independent judgment, that the death
    penalty is not a proportional punishment for the rape of a
    child.
    V
    Our determination that there is a consensus against the
    death penalty for child rape raises the question whether
    the Court’s own institutional position and its holding will
    have the effect of blocking further or later consensus in
    favor of the penalty from developing. The Court, it will be
    argued, by the act of addressing the constitutionality of
    the death penalty, intrudes upon the consensus-making
    process. By imposing a negative restraint, the argument
    runs, the Court makes it more difficult for consensus to
    change or emerge. The Court, according to the criticism,
    itself becomes enmeshed in the process, part judge and
    part the maker of that which it judges.
    These concerns overlook the meaning and full substance
    of the established proposition that the Eighth Amendment
    is defined by “the evolving standards of decency that mark
    the progress of a maturing society.” Trop, 
    356 U. S., at 101
     (plurality opinion). Confirmed by repeated, consistent
    rulings of this Court, this principle requires that use of the
    death penalty be restrained. The rule of evolving stan-
    dards of decency with specific marks on the way to full
    progress and mature judgment means that resort to the
    penalty must be reserved for the worst of crimes and
    limited in its instances of application. In most cases jus-
    tice is not better served by terminating the life of the
    perpetrator rather than confining him and preserving the
    possibility that he and the system will find ways to allow
    him to understand the enormity of his offense. Difficulties
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           37
    Opinion of the Court
    in administering the penalty to ensure against its arbi-
    trary and capricious application require adherence to a
    rule reserving its use, at this stage of evolving standards
    and in cases of crimes against individuals, for crimes that
    take the life of the victim.
    The judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana up-
    holding the capital sentence is reversed. This case is
    remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with
    this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)            1
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–343
    _________________
    PATRICK KENNEDY, PETITIONER v. LOUISIANA
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    LOUISIANA
    [June 25, 2008; modified October 1, 2008]
    JUSTICE ALITO, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE
    SCALIA, and JUSTICE THOMAS join, dissenting.
    The Court today holds that the Eighth Amendment
    categorically prohibits the imposition of the death penalty
    for the crime of raping a child. This is so, according to the
    Court, no matter how young the child, no matter how
    many times the child is raped, no matter how many chil-
    dren the perpetrator rapes, no matter how sadistic the
    crime, no matter how much physical or psychological
    trauma is inflicted, and no matter how heinous the perpe-
    trator’s prior criminal record may be. The Court provides
    two reasons for this sweeping conclusion: First, the Court
    claims to have identified “a national consensus” that the
    death penalty is never acceptable for the rape of a child;
    second, the Court concludes, based on its “independent
    judgment,” that imposing the death penalty for child rape
    is inconsistent with “ ‘the evolving standards of decency
    that mark the progress of a maturing society.’ ” Ante, at 8,
    10, 15, 24 (citation omitted). Because neither of these
    justifications is sound, I respectfully dissent.
    I
    A
    I turn first to the Court’s claim that there is “a national
    consensus” that it is never acceptable to impose the death
    penalty for the rape of a child. The Eighth Amendment’s
    2                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    requirements, the Court writes, are “determined not by
    the standards that prevailed” when the Amendment was
    adopted but “by the norms that ‘currently prevail.’ ” Ante,
    at 8 (quoting Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U. S. 304
    , 311
    (2002)). In assessing current norms, the Court relies
    primarily on the fact that only 6 of the 50 States now have
    statutes that permit the death penalty for this offense.
    But this statistic is a highly unreliable indicator of the
    views of state lawmakers and their constituents. As I will
    explain, dicta in this Court’s decision in Coker v. Georgia,
    
    433 U. S. 584
     (1977), has stunted legislative consideration
    of the question whether the death penalty for the targeted
    offense of raping a young child is consistent with prevail-
    ing standards of decency. The Coker dicta gave state
    legislators and others good reason to fear that any law
    permitting the imposition of the death penalty for this
    crime would meet precisely the fate that has now befallen
    the Louisiana statute that is currently before us, and this
    threat strongly discouraged state legislators—regardless
    of their own values and those of their constituents—from
    supporting the enactment of such legislation.
    As the Court correctly concludes, the holding in Coker
    was that the Eighth Amendment prohibits the death
    penalty for the rape of an “ ‘adult woman,’ ” and thus Coker
    does not control our decision here. See ante, at 17. But
    the reasoning of the Justices in the majority had broader
    implications.
    Two Members of the Coker majority, Justices Brennan
    and Marshall, took the position that the death penalty is
    always unconstitutional. 
    433 U. S., at 600
     (Brennan, J.,
    concurring in judgment) and (Marshall, J., concurring in
    judgment). Four other Justices, who joined the controlling
    plurality opinion, suggested that the Georgia capital rape
    statute was unconstitutional for the simple reason that
    the impact of a rape, no matter how heinous, is not griev-
    ous enough to justify capital punishment. In the words of
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           3
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    the plurality: “Life is over for the victim of the murderer;
    for the rape victim, life may not be nearly so happy as it
    was, but it is not over and normally is not beyond repair.”
    
    Id., at 598
    . The plurality summarized its position as
    follows: “We have the abiding conviction that the death
    penalty . . . is an excessive penalty for the rapist who, as
    such, does not take human life.” 
    Ibid.
    The implications of the Coker plurality opinion were
    plain. Justice Powell, who concurred in the judgment
    overturning the death sentence in the case at hand, did
    not join the plurality opinion because he understood it to
    draw “a bright line between murder and all rapes—
    regardless of the degree of brutality of the rape or the
    effect upon the victim.” 
    Id., at 603
    . If Justice Powell read
    Coker that way, it was reasonable for state legislatures to
    do the same.
    Understandably, state courts have frequently read
    Coker in precisely this way. The Court is correct that
    state courts have generally understood the limited scope of
    the holding in Coker, ante, at 18, but lower courts and
    legislators also take into account—and I presume that this
    Court wishes them to continue to take into account—the
    Court’s dicta. And that is just what happened in the wake
    of Coker. Four years after Coker, when Florida’s capital
    child rape statute was challenged, the Florida Supreme
    Court, while correctly noting that this Court had not held
    that the Eighth Amendment bars the death penalty for
    child rape, concluded that “[t]he reasoning of the justices
    in Coker v. Georgia compels us to hold that a sentence of
    death is grossly disproportionate and excessive punish-
    ment for the crime of sexual assault and is therefore for-
    bidden by the Eighth Amendment as cruel and unusual
    punishment.” Buford v. State, 
    403 So. 2d 943
    , 951 (1981).
    Numerous other state courts have interpreted the Coker
    dicta similarly. See State v. Barnum, 
    921 So. 2d 513
    , 526
    (Fla. 2005) (citing Coker as holding that “ ‘a sentence of
    4                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    death is grossly disproportionate and excessive punish-
    ment for the crime of rape,’ ” not merely the rape of an
    adult woman); People v. Huddleston, 212 Ill. 2d. 107, 141,
    
    816 N. E. 2d 322
    , 341 (2004) (recognizing that “the consti-
    tutionality of state statutes that impose the death penalty
    for nonhomicide crimes is the subject of debate” after
    Coker); People v. Hernandez, 
    30 Cal. 4th 835
    , 867, 
    69 P. 3d 446
    , 464–467 (2003) (Coker “rais[ed] serious doubts that
    the federal Constitution permitted the death penalty for
    any offense not requiring the actual taking of human life”
    because “[a]lthough the high court did not expressly hold
    [in Coker] that the Eighth Amendment prohibits capital
    punishment for all crimes not resulting in death, the
    plurality stressed that the crucial difference between rape
    and murder is that a rapist ‘does not take human life’ ”);
    State v. Gardner, 
    947 P. 2d 630
    , 653 (Utah 1997) (“The
    Coker holding leaves no room for the conclusion that any
    rape, even an ‘inhuman’ one involving torture and aggra-
    vated battery but not resulting in death, would constitu-
    tionally sustain imposition of the death penalty”); Parker
    v. State, 
    216 Ga. App. 649
    , n. 1, 
    455 S. E. 2d 360
    , 361, n. 1
    (1995) (citing Coker for the proposition that the death
    penalty “is no longer permitted for rape where the victim
    is not killed”); Leatherwood v. State, 
    548 So. 2d 389
    , 406
    (Miss. 1989) (Robertson, J., concurring) (“There is as much
    chance of the Supreme Court sanctioning death as a pen-
    alty for any non-fatal rape as the proverbial snowball
    enjoys in the nether regions”); State v. Coleman, 
    185 Mont. 299
    , 327–328, 
    605 P. 2d 1000
    , 1017 (1979) (stating that
    “[t]he decision of the Court in Coker v. Georgia is relevant
    only to crimes for which the penalty has been imposed
    which did not result in the loss of a life” (citations omit-
    ted)); Boyer v. State, 
    240 Ga. 170
    , 
    240 S. E. 2d 68
     (1977)
    (per curiam) (stating that “[s]ince death to the victim did
    not result . . . the death penalty for rape must be set
    aside”); see also 2005–1981 (La. Sup. Ct. 5/22/07), 957 So.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                    5
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    2d 757, 794 (case below) (Calogero, C. J., dissenting) (cit-
    ing the comments of the Coker plurality and concluding
    that the Louisiana child rape law cannot pass constitu-
    tional muster).1
    For the past three decades, these interpretations have
    posed a very high hurdle for state legislatures considering
    the passage of new laws permitting the death penalty for
    the rape of a child. The enactment and implementation of
    any new state death penalty statute—and particularly a
    new type of statute such as one that specifically targets
    the rape of young children—imposes many costs. There is
    ——————
    1 Commentators have expressed similar views. See Fleming, Louisi-
    ana’s Newest Capital Crime: The Death Penalty for Child Rape, 89 J.
    Crim. L. & C. 717, 727 (1999) (the Coker Court drew a line between
    “crimes which result in loss of life, and crimes which do not”); Baily,
    Death is Different, Even on the Bayou: The Disproportionality of
    Crime, 
    55 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1335
    , 1357 (1998) (noting that “[m]any
    post-Coker cases interpreting the breadth of Coker’s holding suggest
    that the Mississippi Supreme Court’s narrow reading of Coker in
    Upshaw is a minority position”); Matura, When Will It Stop? The Use of
    the Death Penalty for Non-homicide Crimes, 
    24 J. Legis. 249
    , 255
    (1998) (stating that the Coker Court did not “draw a distinction be-
    tween the rape of an adult woman and the rape of a minor”); Garvey,
    “As the Gentle Rain from Heaven”: Mercy in Capital Sentencing, 
    81 Cornell L. Rev. 989
    , 1009, n. 74 (1996) (stating that courts generally
    understand Coker to prohibit death sentences for crimes other than
    murder); Nanda, Recent Developments in the United States and
    Internationally Regarding Capital Punishment—An Appraisal, 67 St.
    John’s L. Rev. 523, 532 (1993) (finding that Coker stands for the propo-
    sition that a death sentence is excessive when the victim is not killed);
    Ellis, Guilty but Mentally Ill and the Death Penalty: Punishment Full
    of Sound and Fury, Signifying Nothing, 43 Duke L. J. 87, 94 (1994)
    (referencing Coker to require capital offenses to be defined by unjusti-
    fied human death); Dingerson, Reclaiming the Gavel: Making Sense out
    of the Death Penalty Debate in State Legislatures, 18 N. Y. U. Rev. L.
    & Soc. Change 873, 878 (1991) (stating that Coker “ruled that the
    imposition of the death penalty for crimes from which no death results
    violates the cruel and unusual punishment provision of the eighth
    amendment” and that “[n]o subsequent Supreme Court decision has
    challenged this precedent”).
    6                 KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    the burden of drafting an innovative law that must take
    into account this Court’s exceedingly complex Eighth
    Amendment jurisprudence. Securing passage of contro-
    versial legislation may interfere in a variety of ways with
    the enactment of other bills on the legislative agenda.
    Once the statute is enacted, there is the burden of training
    and coordinating the efforts of those who must implement
    the new law. Capital prosecutions are qualitatively more
    difficult than noncapital prosecutions and impose special
    emotional burdens on all involved. When a capital sen-
    tence is imposed under the new law, there is the burden of
    keeping the prisoner on death row and the lengthy and
    costly project of defending the constitutionality of the
    statute on appeal and in collateral proceedings. And if the
    law is eventually overturned, there is the burden of new
    proceedings on remand. Moreover, conscientious state
    lawmakers, whatever their personal views about the
    morality of imposing the death penalty for child rape, may
    defer to this Court’s dicta, either because they respect our
    authority and expertise in interpreting the Constitution or
    merely because they do not relish the prospect of being
    held to have violated the Constitution and contravened
    prevailing “standards of decency.” Accordingly, the Coker
    dicta gave state legislators a strong incentive not to push
    for the enactment of new capital child-rape laws even
    though these legislators and their constituents may have
    believed that the laws would be appropriate and desirable.
    B
    The Court expresses doubt that the Coker dicta had this
    effect, but the skepticism is unwarranted. It would be
    quite remarkable if state legislators were not influenced
    by the considerations noted above. And although state
    legislatures typically do not create legislative materials
    like those produced by Congress, there is evidence that
    proposals to permit the imposition of the death penalty for
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           7
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    child rape were opposed on the ground that enactment
    would be futile and costly.
    In Oklahoma, the opposition to the State’s capital child-
    rape statute argued that Coker had already ruled the
    death penalty unconstitutional as applied to cases of
    rape. See Oklahoma Senate News Release, Senator
    Nichols Targets Child Predators with Death Penalty,
    Child Abuse Response Team, May 26, 2006, on line at
    http://www.oksenate.gov/news/press_releases/press_releases_
    2006/pr20060526d.htm (all Internet materials as visited
    June 23, 2008, and available in Clerk of Court’s case file).
    Likewise, opponents of South Carolina’s capital child-rape
    law contended that the statute would waste state re-
    sources because it would undoubtedly be held unconstitu-
    tional. See The State, Death Penalty Plan in Spotlight:
    Attorney General to Advise Senate Panel on Proposal for
    Repeat Child Rapists, Mar. 28, 2006 (quoting Laura Hud-
    son, spokeswoman for the S. C. Victim Assistance Net-
    work, as stating that “ ‘[w]e don’t need to be wasting state
    money to have an appeal to the [United States] Supreme
    Court, knowing we are going to lose it’ ”). Representative
    Fletcher Smith of the South Carolina House of Represen-
    tatives forecast that the bill would not meet constitutional
    standards because “death isn’t involved.” See Davenport,
    Emotion Drives Child Rape Death Penalty Debate in
    South Carolina, Associated Press, Apr. 4, 2006.
    In Texas, opponents of that State’s capital child-rape
    law argued that Coker’s reasoning doomed the proposal.
    House Research Organization Bill Analysis, Mar. 5, 2007
    (stating that “the law would impose an excessive punish-
    ment and fail to pass the proportionality test established
    by the U. S. Supreme Court” and arguing that “Texas
    should not enact a law of questionable constitution-
    ality simply because it is politically popular, especially
    given clues by the U. S. Supreme Court that death penalty
    laws that would be rarely imposed or that are not sup-
    8                  KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    ported by a broad national consensus would be ruled
    unconstitutional”).
    C
    Because of the effect of the Coker dicta, the Court is
    plainly wrong in comparing the situation here to that in
    Atkins or Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U. S. 551
     (2005). See
    ante, at 14–15. Atkins concerned the constitutionality of
    imposing the death penalty on a mentally retarded defen-
    dant. Thirteen years earlier, in Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U. S. 302
     (1989), the Court had held that this was permit-
    ted by the Eighth Amendment, and therefore, during the
    time between Penry and Atkins, state legislators had
    reason to believe that this Court would follow its prior
    precedent and uphold statutes allowing such punishment.
    The situation in Roper was similar. Roper concerned a
    challenge to the constitutionality of imposing the death
    penalty on a defendant who had not reached the age of 18
    at the time of the crime. Sixteen years earlier in Stanford
    v. Kentucky, 
    492 U. S. 361
     (1989), the Court had rejected a
    similar challenge, and therefore state lawmakers had
    cause to believe that laws allowing such punishment
    would be sustained.
    When state lawmakers believe that their decision will
    prevail on the question whether to permit the death pen-
    alty for a particular crime or class of offender, the legisla-
    tors’ resolution of the issue can be interpreted as an ex-
    pression of their own judgment, informed by whatever
    weight they attach to the values of their constituents. But
    when state legislators think that the enactment of a new
    death penalty law is likely to be futile, inaction cannot
    reasonably be interpreted as an expression of their under-
    standing of prevailing societal values. In that atmosphere,
    legislative inaction is more likely to evidence acquiescence.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                   9
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    D
    If anything can be inferred from state legislative devel-
    opments, the message is very different from the one that
    the Court perceives. In just the past few years, despite
    the shadow cast by the Coker dicta, five States have
    enacted targeted capital child-rape laws. See 
    Ga. Code Ann. §16
    –6–1 (1999); 
    Mont. Code Ann. §45
    –5–503 (1997);
    Okla. Stat., Tit. 10, §7115(K) (West Supp. 2008); S. C.
    Code Ann. §16–3–655(C)(1) (Supp. 2007); 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§22.021
    (a), 12.42(c)(3) (West Supp. 2007). If, as the
    Court seems to think, our society is “[e]volving” toward
    ever higher “standards of decency,” ante, at 36–37, these
    enactments might represent the beginning of a new evolu-
    tionary line.
    Such a development would not be out of step with
    changes in our society’s thinking since Coker was decided.
    During that time, reported instances of child abuse have
    increased dramatically;2 and there are many indications of
    growing alarm about the sexual abuse of children. In
    1994, Congress enacted the Jacob Wetterling Crimes
    Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registra-
    tion Program, 
    42 U. S. C. §14071
     (2000 ed. and Supp. V),
    ——————
    2 From 1976 to 1986, the number of reported cases of child sexual
    abuse grew from 6,000 to 132,000, an increase of 2,100%. A. Lurigio,
    M. Jones, & B. Smith, Child Sexual Abuse: Its Causes, Consequences,
    and Implications for Probation Practice, 59 Sep Fed. Probation 69
    (1995). By 1991, the number of cases totaled 432,000, an increase of
    another 227%. 
    Ibid.
     In 1995, local child protection services agencies
    identified 126,000 children who were victims of either substantiated or
    indicated sexual abuse. Nearly 30% of those child victims were be-
    tween the age of four and seven. Rape, Abuse & Incest National
    Network Statistics, online at http://www.rainn.org/get-information/
    statistics/sexual-assault-victims. There were an estimated 90,000
    substantiated cases of child sexual abuse in 2003. Crimes Against
    Children Research Center, Reports from the States to the National
    Child Abuse and Neglect Data System, available at www.unh.edu/ccrc/
    sexual-abuse/Child%20Sexual%20Abuse.pdf.
    10                    KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    which requires States receiving certain federal funds to
    establish registration systems for convicted sex offenders
    and to notify the public about persons convicted of the
    sexual abuse of minors. All 50 States have now enacted
    such statutes.3 In addition, at least 21 States and the
    ——————
    3 Ala. Code §§13A–11–200 to 13A–11–203, 1181 (1994); Alaska Stat
    §§1.56.840, 12.63.010–100, 18.65.087, 28.05.048, 33.30.035 (1994, 1995,
    and 1995 Cum. Supp.); 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§13
    –3821 to –3825 (1989
    and Supp. 1995); 
    Ark. Code Ann. §§12
    –12–901 to –909 (1995); Cal.
    Penal Code Ann. §§290 to 290.4 (West Supp. 1996); 
    Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. §18
    –3–412.5 (Supp. 1996); 
    Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann. §§54
    –102a to
    54–102r (Supp. 1995); Del. Code Ann. Tit. 11, §4120 (1995); 
    Fla. Stat. Ann. §§775.13
    , 775.22 (1992 and Supp. 1994); 
    Ga. Code Ann. §42
    –9–
    44.1 (1994); 1995 Haw. Sess. Laws No. 160 (enacted June 14, 1995);
    
    Idaho Code §§9
    –340(11)(f), 18–8301 to 18–8311 (Supp. 1995); Ill. Comp.
    Stat. Ann., ch. 730, §§150/1 to 150/10 (2002); 
    Ind. Code §§5
    –2–12–1 to
    5–2–12–13 (West Supp. 1995); 
    1995 Iowa Legis. Serv. 146
     (enacted May
    3, 1995); 
    Kan. Stat. Ann. §§22
    –4901 to 22–4910 (1995); 
    Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§17.500
     to 17.540 (West Supp. 1994); 
    La. Stat. Ann. §§15:540
     to
    15:549 (West Supp. 1995); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann., Tit. 34–A, §§11001 to
    11004 (West Supp. 1995); 1995 Md. Laws p. 142 (enacted May 9, 1995);
    Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 6, §178D; 1994 Mich. Pub. Acts p. 295
    (enacted July 13, 1994); 
    Minn. Stat. §243.166
     (1992 and Supp. 1995);
    
    Miss. Code Ann. §§45
    –33–1 to 45–33–19 (Supp. 1995); 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. §§566.600
     to 566.625 (Supp. 1996); 
    Mont. Code Ann. §§46
    –23–501 to
    46–23–507 (1994); 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§4001
     to 4014; 
    Nev. Rev. Stat. §§207.080
    , 207.151 to 207.157 (1992 and Supp. 1995); N. H. Rev. Stat.
    Ann. §§632–A:11 to 632–A:19 (Supp. 1995); N. J. Stat. Ann. §§2c:7–1 to
    2c:7–11 (1995); N. M. Stat. Ann. §§29–11A–1 to 29–11A–8 (Supp. 1995);
    N. Y. Correct. Law Ann. §§168 to 168–V (West Supp. 1996); N. C. Gen.
    Stat. Ann. §§14–208.5–10 (Lexis Supp. 1995); N. D. Cent. Code §12.1–
    32–15 (Lexis Supp. 1995); 
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§2950.01
    –.08 (Baldwin
    1997); Okla. Stat., Tit. 57, §§582–584 (2003 Supp.); Ore. Rev. Stat.
    §§181.507 to 181.519 (1993); 1995 Pa. Laws p. 24 (enacted Oct. 24,
    1995); R. I. Gen. Laws §11–37–16 (1994); S. C. Code Ann. §23–3–430;
    S. D. Codified Laws §§22–22–30 to 22–22–41 (Supp. 1995) 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§40
    –39–101 to 40–39–108 (2003); Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann., Art.
    6252–13c.1 (Vernon Supp. 1996); 
    Utah Code Ann. §§53
    –5–212.5, 77–
    27–21.5 (Lexis Supp. 1995); Vt. Stat. Ann., Tit. 13, §5402; 
    Va. Code Ann. §§19.2
    –298.1 to 19.2–390.1 (Lexis 1995); 
    Wash. Rev. Code §§4.24.550
    , 9A.44.130, 9A.44.140, 10.01.200, 70.48.470, 72.09.330 (1992
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                    11
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    District of Columbia now have statutes permitting
    the involuntary commitment of sexual predators,4 and at
    least 12 States have enacted residency restrictions for sex
    offenders.5
    ——————
    and Supp. 1996); 
    W. Va. Code §§61
    –8F–1 to 61–8F–8 (Lexis Supp.
    1995); 
    Wis. Stat. §175.45
     (Supp. 1995); 
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§7
    –19–301 to
    7–19–306 (1995).
    4 Those States are Arizona, California, Connecticut, the District of
    Columbia, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts,
    Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, North Dakota, Oregon,
    Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and
    Wisconsin. See 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§36
    –3701 to 36–3713 (West 2003 and
    Supp. 2007); Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code Ann. §§6600 to 6609.3 (West 1998
    and Supp. 2008); Conn. Gen. Stat. §17a–566 (1998); D. C. Code §§22–
    3803 to 22–3811 (2001); 
    Fla. Stat. §§394.910
     to 394.931 (West 2002 and
    Supp. 2005); Ill. Comp. Stat., ch. 725, §§207/1 to 207/99 (2002); Iowa
    Code §§229A.1–.16 (Supp. 2005); 
    Kan. Stat. Ann. §59
    –29a02 (2004 and
    Supp. 2005); Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §202A.051 (West ___); Mass. Gen.
    Laws, ch. 123A (1989); Minn. Stat. §253B.02 (1992); 
    Mo. Ann. Stat. §§632.480
     to 632.513 (West 2000 and Supp. 2006); 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§83
    –174 to 83–174.05 (2007); N. J. Stat. Ann. §§30:4–27.24 to 30:4–
    27.38 (West Supp. 2004); N. D. Cent. Code Ann. §25–03.3 (Lexis 2002);
    Ore. Rev. Stat. §426.005 (1998); Pa. Stat. Ann., Tit. 42, §§9791 to
    9799.9 (2007); S. C. Code Ann. §§44–48–10 to 44–48–170 (2002 and
    Supp. 2007); 
    Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§841.001
     to 841.147
    (West 2003); 
    Va. Code Ann. §§37.2
    –900 to 37.2–920 (2006 and Supp.
    2007); 
    Wash. Rev. Code §71.09.010
     (West 1992 and Supp. 2002); 
    Wis. Stat. §980.01
    –13 (2005).
    5 See 
    Ala. Code §15
    –20–26 (Supp. 2000) (restricts sex offenders from
    residing or accepting employment within 2,000 feet of school or child-
    care facility); 
    Ark. Code Ann. §5
    –14–128 (Supp. 2007) (unlawful for
    level three or four sex offenders to reside within 2,000 feet of school or
    daycare center); Cal. Penal Code Ann. §3003 (West Supp. 2008) (parol-
    ees may not live within 35 miles of victim or witnesses, and certain sex
    offenders on parole may not live within a quarter mile from a primary
    school); 
    Fla. Stat. §947.1405
    (7)(a)(2) (2001) (released sex offender with
    victim under 18 prohibited from living within 1,000 feet of a school,
    daycare center, park, playground, or other place where children regu-
    larly congregate); 
    Ga. Code Ann. §42
    –1–13 (Supp. 2007) (sex offenders
    required to register shall not reside within 1,000 feet of any childcare
    facility, school, or area where minors congregate); Ill. Comp. Stat., ch.
    720, §5/11–9.3(b–5) (Supp. 2008) (child sex offenders prohibited from
    12                    KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    Seeking to counter the significance of the new capital
    child-rape laws enacted during the past two years, the
    Court points out that in recent months efforts to enact
    similar laws in five other States have stalled. Ante, at 21.
    These developments, however, all took place after our
    decision to grant certiorari in this case, see 552 U. S. ___
    (2008), which gave state legislators reason to delay the
    enactment of new legislation until the constitutionality of
    such laws was clarified. And there is no evidence of which
    I am aware that these legislative initiatives failed because
    the proposed laws were viewed as inconsistent with our
    society’s standards of decency.
    On the contrary, the available evidence suggests other-
    wise. For example, in Colorado, the Senate Appropria-
    tions Committee in April voted 6 to 4 against Senate Bill
    195, reportedly because it “would have cost about
    $616,000 next year for trials, appeals, public defenders,
    and prison costs.” Associated Press, Lawmakers Reject
    Death Penalty for Child Sex Abusers, Denver Post, Apr.
    11, 2008. Likewise, in Tennessee, the capital child-rape
    bill was withdrawn in committee “because of the high
    associated costs.” The bill’s sponsor stated that “ ‘[b]e-
    cause of the state’s budget situation, we thought to with-
    ——————
    knowingly residing within 500 feet of schools); 
    Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §17.495
     (West 2000) (registered sex offenders on supervised release
    shall not reside within 1,000 feet of school or childcare facility); La.
    Rev. Stat. Ann. §14:91.1 (West Supp. 2004) (sexually violent predators
    shall not reside within 1,000 feet of schools unless permission is given
    by school superintendent); 
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §2950.031
     (Lexis 2003)
    (sex offenders prohibited from residing within 1,000 feet of school);
    Okla. Stat., Tit. 57, §590 (West 2003) (prohibits sex offenders from
    residing within 2,000 feet of schools or educational institutions); Ore.
    Rev. Stat. §§144.642, 144.643 (1999) (incorporates general prohibition
    on supervised sex offenders living near places where children reside);
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –39–111 (2006) (repealed by Acts 2004, ch. 921, §4,
    effective Aug. 1, 2004) (sex offenders prohibited from establishing
    residence within 1,000 feet of school, childcare facility, or victim).
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)                 13
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    draw that bill. . . . We’ll revisit it next year to see if we
    can reduce the cost of the fiscal note.’ ” Green, Small
    Victory in Big Fight for Tougher Sex Abuse Laws, The
    Leaf-Chronicle, May 8, 2008, p. 1A. Thus, the failure to
    enact capital child-rape laws cannot be viewed as evidence
    of a moral consensus against such punishment.
    E
    Aside from its misleading tally of current state laws, the
    Court points to two additional “objective indicia” of a
    “national consensus,” ante, at 11, but these arguments are
    patent makeweights. The Court notes that Congress has
    not enacted a law permitting a federal district court to
    impose the death penalty for the rape of a child, ante, at
    12–13, but due to the territorial limits of the relevant
    federal statutes, very few rape cases, not to mention child-
    rape cases, are prosecuted in federal court. See 
    18 U. S. C. §§2241
    , 2242 (2000 ed. and Supp. V); United States Sen-
    tencing Commission, Report to Congress: Analysis of
    Penalties for Federal Rape Cases, p. 10, Table 1. Con-
    gress’ failure to enact a death penalty statute for this tiny
    set of cases is hardly evidence of Congress’ assessment of
    our society’s values.6
    Finally, the Court argues that statistics about the num-
    ber of executions in rape cases support its perception of a
    “national consensus,” but here too the statistics do not
    support the Court’s position. The Court notes that the last
    execution for the rape of a child occurred in 1964, ante, at
    23, but the Court fails to mention that litigation regarding
    the constitutionality of the death penalty brought execu-
    tions to a halt across the board in the late 1960’s. In 1965
    and 1966, there were a total of eight executions for all
    ——————
    6 Moreover, as noted in the petition for rehearing, the Uniform Code
    of Military Justice permits such a sentence. See 
    10 U. S. C. §856
    ;
    Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, Part II, Ch. X, Rule
    1004(c)(9) (2008); 
    id.,
     Part IV, ¶45.f(1).
    14                     KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    offenses, and from 1968 until 1977, the year when Coker
    was decided, there were no executions for any crimes.7
    The Court also fails to mention that in Louisiana, since
    the state law was amended in 1995 to make child rape a
    capital offense, prosecutors have asked juries to return
    death verdicts in four cases. See State v. Dickerson, 01–
    1287 (La. App. 6/26/02), 
    822 So. 2d 849
     (2002); State v.
    LeBlanc, 01–1322 (La. App. 5/13/01), 
    788 So. 2d 1255
    ;
    2005–1981 (La. Sup. Ct. 5/22/07), 
    957 So. 2d 757
    ; State v.
    Davis, Case No. 262,971 (1st Jud. Dist., Caddo Parish,
    La.) (cited in Brief for Respondent 42, and n. 38). In two of
    those cases, Louisiana juries imposed the death penalty.
    See 2005–1981 (La. Sup. Ct. 5/22/07), 
    957 So. 2d 757
    ;
    Davis, supra. This 50% record is hardly evidence that
    juries share the Court’s view that the death penalty for
    the rape of a young child is unacceptable under even the
    most aggravated circumstances.8
    F
    In light of the points discussed above, I believe that the
    “objective indicia” of our society’s “evolving standards of
    decency” can be fairly summarized as follows. Neither
    Congress nor juries have done anything that can plausibly
    be interpreted as evidencing the “national consensus” that
    the Court perceives. State legislatures, for more than 30
    years, have operated under the ominous shadow of the
    Coker dicta and thus have not been free to express their
    own understanding of our society’s standards of decency.
    And in the months following our grant of certiorari in this
    ——————
    7 Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, online at
    http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/tables/exetab.htm; see also Death
    Penalty Information Center, Executions in the U. S. 1608–2002:
    The ESPY File Executions by Date (2007), online at http://www.death
    penaltyinfo.org/ESPYyear.pdf.
    8 Of course, the other five capital child rape statutes are too recent for
    any individual to have been sentenced to death under them.
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           15
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    case, state legislatures have had an additional reason to
    pause. Yet despite the inhibiting legal atmosphere that
    has prevailed since 1977, six States have recently enacted
    new, targeted child-rape laws.
    I do not suggest that six new state laws necessarily
    establish a “national consensus” or even that they are sure
    evidence of an ineluctable trend. In terms of the Court’s
    metaphor of moral evolution, these enactments might
    have turned out to be an evolutionary dead end. But they
    might also have been the beginning of a strong new evolu-
    tionary line. We will never know, because the Court today
    snuffs out the line in its incipient stage.
    II
    A
    The Court is willing to block the potential emergence of
    a national consensus in favor of permitting the death
    penalty for child rape because, in the end, what matters is
    the Court’s “own judgment” regarding “the acceptability of
    the death penalty.” Ante, at 24. Although the Court has
    much to say on this issue, most of the Court’s discussion is
    not pertinent to the Eighth Amendment question at hand.
    And once all of the Court’s irrelevant arguments are put
    aside, it is apparent that the Court has provided no coher-
    ent explanation for today’s decision.
    In the next section of this opinion, I will attempt to weed
    out the arguments that are not germane to the Eighth
    Amendment inquiry, and in the final section, I will ad-
    dress what remains.
    B
    A major theme of the Court’s opinion is that permitting
    the death penalty in child-rape cases is not in the best
    interests of the victims of these crimes and society at
    large. In this vein, the Court suggests that it is more
    painful for child-rape victims to testify when the prosecu-
    16                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    tion is seeking the death penalty. Ante, at 32. The Court
    also argues that “a State that punishes child rape by
    death may remove a strong incentive for the rapist not to
    kill the victim,” ante, at 35, and may discourage the re-
    porting of child rape, ante, at 34–35.
    These policy arguments, whatever their merits, are
    simply not pertinent to the question whether the death
    penalty is “cruel and unusual” punishment. The Eighth
    Amendment protects the right of an accused. It does not
    authorize this Court to strike down federal or state crimi-
    nal laws on the ground that they are not in the best inter-
    ests of crime victims or the broader society. The Court’s
    policy arguments concern matters that legislators
    should—and presumably do—take into account in deciding
    whether to enact a capital child-rape statute, but these
    arguments are irrelevant to the question that is before us
    in this case. Our cases have cautioned against using “ ‘the
    aegis of the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause’ to cut
    off the normal democratic processes,” Atkins v. Virginia,
    
    536 U. S. 304
    , 323 (2002) (Rehnquist, C. J., dissenting), in
    turn quoting Gregg v. Georgia, 
    428 U. S. 153
    , 176 (1976),
    (joint opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.), but
    the Court forgets that warning here.
    The Court also contends that laws permitting the death
    penalty for the rape of a child create serious procedural
    problems. Specifically, the Court maintains that it is not
    feasible to channel the exercise of sentencing discretion in
    child-rape cases, ante, at 29, and that the unreliability of
    the testimony of child victims creates a danger that inno-
    cent defendants will be convicted and executed, ante, at
    33–34. Neither of these contentions provides a basis for
    striking down all capital child-rape laws no matter how
    carefully and narrowly they are crafted.
    The Court’s argument regarding the structuring of
    sentencing discretion is hard to comprehend. The Court
    finds it “difficult to identify standards that would guide
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           17
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    the decisionmaker so the penalty is reserved for the most
    severe cases of child rape and yet not imposed in an arbi-
    trary way.” Ante, at 29. Even assuming that the age of a
    child is not alone a sufficient factor for limiting sentencing
    discretion, the Court need only examine the child-rape
    laws recently enacted in Texas, Oklahoma, Montana, and
    South Carolina, all of which use a concrete factor to limit
    quite drastically the number of cases in which the death
    penalty may be imposed. In those States, a defendant
    convicted of the rape of a child may be sentenced to death
    only if the defendant has a prior conviction for a specified
    felony sex offense. See 
    Mont. Code Ann. §45
    –5–503(3)(c)
    (2007) (“If the offender was previously convicted of [a
    felony sexual offense] . . . the offender shall be . . . pun-
    ished by death . . .”); Okla. Stat., Tit. 10, §7115(K) (West
    Supp. 2008) (“Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
    any parent or other person convicted of forcible anal or
    oral sodomy, rape, rape by instrumentation, or lewd mo-
    lestation of a child under fourteen (14) years of age subse-
    quent to a previous conviction for any offense of forcible
    anal or oral sodomy, rape, rape by instrumentation, or
    lewd molestation of a child under fourteen (14) years of
    age shall be punished by death”); S. C. Code Ann. §16–3–
    655(C)(1) (Supp. 2007) (“If the [defendant] has previously
    been convicted of, pled guilty or nolo contendere to, or
    adjudicated delinquent for first degree criminal sexual
    conduct with a minor who is less than eleven years of age
    . . . he must be punished by death or by imprisonment for
    life”); 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §12.42
    (c)(3) (2007 Supp.); (“[A]
    defendant shall be punished for a capital felony if it is
    shown on the trial of an offense under Section 22.021 . . .
    that the defendant has previously been finally convicted of
    [a felony sexual offense against a victim younger than
    fourteen years of age]”).
    Moreover, it takes little imagination to envision other
    limiting factors that a State could use to structure sen-
    18                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    tencing discretion in child rape cases. Some of these
    might be: whether the victim was kidnapped, whether the
    defendant inflicted severe physical injury on the victim,
    whether the victim was raped multiple times, whether the
    rapes occurred over a specified extended period, and
    whether there were multiple victims.
    The Court refers to limiting standards that are “indefi-
    nite and obscure,” ante, at 30, but there is nothing indefi-
    nite or obscure about any of the above-listed aggravating
    factors. Indeed, they are far more definite and clear-cut
    than aggravating factors that we have found to be ade-
    quate in murder cases. See, e.g., Arave v. Creech, 
    507 U. S. 463
    , 471 (1993) (whether the defendant was a “ ‘cold-
    blooded, pitiless slayer’ ”); Walton v. Arizona, 
    497 U. S. 639
    , 646 (1990) (whether the “ ‘perpetrator inflict[ed]
    mental anguish or physical abuse before the victim’s
    death’ ”); Jurek v. Texas, 
    428 U. S. 262
    , 269 (1976) (joint
    opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.) (whether
    the defendant “ ‘would commit criminal acts of violence
    that would constitute a continuing threat to society’ ”). For
    these reasons, concerns about limiting sentencing discre-
    tion provide no support for the Court’s blanket condemna-
    tion of all capital child-rape statutes.
    That sweeping holding is also not justified by the
    Court’s concerns about the reliability of the testimony of
    child victims. First, the Eighth Amendment provides a
    poor vehicle for addressing problems regarding the admis-
    sibility or reliability of evidence, and problems presented
    by the testimony of child victims are not unique to capital
    cases. Second, concerns about the reliability of the testi-
    mony of child witnesses are not present in every child-rape
    case. In the case before us, for example, there was undis-
    puted medical evidence that the victim was brutally raped,
    as well as strong independent evidence that petitioner was
    the perpetrator. Third, if the Court’s evidentiary concerns
    have Eighth Amendment relevance, they could be ad-
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)          19
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    dressed by allowing the death penalty in only those child-
    rape cases in which the independent evidence is sufficient
    to prove all the elements needed for conviction and imposi-
    tion of a death sentence. There is precedent for requiring
    special corroboration in certain criminal cases. For exam-
    ple, some jurisdictions do not allow a conviction based on
    the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice. See, e.g.,
    Ala. Code 12–21–222 (1986); 
    Alaska Stat. §12.45.020
    (1984); 
    Ark. Code Ann. §16
    –89–111(e)(1) (1977); Cal.
    Penal Code Ann. §1111 (West 1985); 
    Ga. Code Ann. §24
    –
    4–8 (1995); 
    Idaho Code §19
    –2117 (Lexis 1979); 
    Minn. Stat. §634.04
     (1983); 
    Mont. Code Ann. §46
    –16–213 (1985); 
    Nev. Rev. Stat. §175.291
     (1985); N. D. Cent. Code Ann. §29–21–
    14 (1974); Okla. St., Tit. 22, §742 (West 1969); Ore. Rev.
    Stat. §136.440 (1984); S. D. Codified Laws §23A–22–8
    (1979). A State wishing to permit the death penalty in
    child-rape cases could impose an analogous corroboration
    requirement.
    C
    After all the arguments noted above are put aside, what
    is left? What remaining grounds does the Court provide to
    justify its independent judgment that the death penalty
    for child rape is categorically unacceptable? I see two.
    1
    The first is the proposition that we should be “most
    hesitant before interpreting the Eighth Amendment to
    allow the extension of the death penalty.” Ante, at 25
    (emphasis added); see also ante, at 27, 30 (referring to
    expansion of the death penalty). But holding that the
    Eighth Amendment does not categorically prohibit the
    death penalty for the rape of a young child would not
    “extend” or “expand” the death penalty. Laws enacted by
    the state legislatures are presumptively constitutional,
    Gregg, 428 U. S., at 175 (joint opinion of Stewart, Powell,
    20                    KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    and STEVENS, JJ.) (“[I]n assessing a punishment selected
    by a democratically elected legislature against the consti-
    tutional measure, we presume its validity”), and until
    today, this Court has not held that capital child rape laws
    are unconstitutional, see ante, at 17 (Coker “does not
    speak to the constitutionality of the death penalty for child
    rape, an issue not then before the Court”). Consequently,
    upholding the constitutionality of such a law would not
    “extend” or “expand” the death penalty; rather, it would
    confirm the status of presumptive constitutionality that
    such laws have enjoyed up to this point. And in any event,
    this Court has previously made it clear that “[t]he Eighth
    Amendment is not a ratchet, whereby a temporary con-
    sensus on leniency for a particular crime fixes a perma-
    nent constitutional maximum, disabling States from giv-
    ing effect to altered beliefs and responding to changed
    social conditions.” Harmelin v. Michigan, 
    501 U. S. 957
    ,
    990 (1991) (principal opinion); see also Gregg, 
    supra, at 176
     (joint opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.).
    2
    The Court’s final—and, it appears, principal—
    justification for its holding is that murder, the only crime
    for which defendants have been executed since this
    Court’s 1976 death penalty decisions,9 is unique in
    its moral depravity and in the severity of the injury that
    it inflicts on the victim and the public. See ante, at
    27–29. But the Court makes little attempt to defend these
    conclusions.
    With respect to the question of moral depravity, is it
    really true that every person who is convicted of capital
    murder and sentenced to death is more morally depraved
    ——————
    9 Greggv. Georgia, 
    428 U. S. 153
     (1976); Proffitt v. Florida, 
    428 U. S. 242
     (1976); Jurek v. Texas, 
    428 U. S. 262
     (1976); Woodson v. North
    Carolina, 
    428 U. S. 280
     (1976); Roberts v. Louisiana, 
    428 U. S. 325
    (1976).
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           21
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    than every child rapist? Consider the following two cases.
    In the first, a defendant robs a convenience store and
    watches as his accomplice shoots the store owner. The
    defendant acts recklessly, but was not the triggerman and
    did not intend the killing. See, e.g., Tison v. Arizona, 
    481 U. S. 137
     (1987). In the second case, a previously con-
    victed child rapist kidnaps, repeatedly rapes, and tortures
    multiple child victims. Is it clear that the first defendant
    is more morally depraved than the second?
    The Court’s decision here stands in stark contrast to
    Atkins and Roper, in which the Court concluded that
    characteristics of the affected defendants—mental retar-
    dation in Atkins and youth in Roper—diminished their
    culpability. See Atkins, 
    536 U. S., at 305
    ; Roper, 
    543 U. S., at 571
    . Nor is this case comparable to Enmund v. Florida,
    
    458 U. S. 782
     (1982), in which the Court held that the
    Eighth Amendment prohibits the death penalty where the
    defendant participated in a robbery during which a mur-
    der was committed but did not personally intend for lethal
    force to be used. I have no doubt that, under the prevail-
    ing standards of our society, robbery, the crime that the
    petitioner in Enmund intended to commit, does not evi-
    dence the same degree of moral depravity as the brutal
    rape of a young child. Indeed, I have little doubt that, in
    the eyes of ordinary Americans, the very worst child rap-
    ists—predators who seek out and inflict serious physical
    and emotional injury on defenseless young children—are
    the epitome of moral depravity.
    With respect to the question of the harm caused by the
    rape of child in relation to the harm caused by murder, it
    is certainly true that the loss of human life represents a
    unique harm, but that does not explain why other grievous
    harms are insufficient to permit a death sentence. And
    the Court does not take the position that no harm other
    than the loss of life is sufficient. The Court takes pains to
    limit its holding to “crimes against individual persons”
    22                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    and to exclude “offenses against the State,” a category that
    the Court stretches—without explanation—to include
    “drug kingpin activity.” Ante, at 27. But the Court makes
    no effort to explain why the harm caused by such crimes is
    necessarily greater than the harm caused by the rape of
    young children. This is puzzling in light of the Court’s
    acknowledgment that “[r]ape has a permanent psychologi-
    cal, emotional, and sometimes physical impact on the
    child.” Ante, at 24. As the Court aptly recognizes, “[w]e
    cannot dismiss the years of long anguish that must be
    endured by the victim of child rape.” Ante, at 25.
    The rape of any victim inflicts great injury, and “[s]ome
    victims are so grievously injured physically or psychologi-
    cally that life is beyond repair.” Coker, 
    433 U. S., at 603
    (opinion of Powell, J.). “The immaturity and vulnerability
    of a child, both physically and psychologically, adds a
    devastating dimension to rape that is not present when an
    adult is raped.” Meister, Murdering Innocence: The Con-
    stitutionality of Capital Child Rape Statutes, 
    45 Ariz. L. Rev. 197
    , 208–209 (2003). See also State v. Wilson, 96–
    1392, p. 6 (La. Sup. Ct. 12/13/96),
    685 So. 2d 1063
    , 1067;
    Broughton, “On Horror’s Head Horrors Accumulate”: A
    Reflective Comment on Capital Child Rape Legislation, 39
    Duquesne L. Rev. 1, 38 (2000). Long-term studies show
    that sexual abuse is “grossly intrusive in the lives of chil-
    dren and is harmful to their normal psychological, emo-
    tional and sexual development in ways which no just or
    humane society can tolerate.” C. Bagley & K. King, Child
    Sexual Abuse: The Search for Healing 2 (1990).
    It has been estimated that as many as 40% of 7- to 13-
    year-old sexual assault victims are considered “seriously
    disturbed.” A. Lurigio, M. Jones, & B. Smith, Child Sex-
    ual Abuse: Its Causes, Consequences, and Implications for
    Probation Practice, 59 Sep Fed. Probation 69, 70 (1995).
    Psychological problems include sudden school failure,
    unprovoked crying, dissociation, depression, insomnia,
    Cite as: 554 U. S. ____ (2008)           23
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    sleep disturbances, nightmares, feelings of guilt and infe-
    riority, and self-destructive behavior, including an in-
    creased incidence of suicide. Meister, supra, at 209;
    Broughton, supra, at 38; Glazer, Child Rapists Beware!
    The Death Penalty and Louisiana’s Amended Aggravated
    Rape Statute, 
    25 Am. J. Crim. L. 79
    , 88 (1997).
    The deep problems that afflict child-rape victims often
    become society’s problems as well. Commentators have
    noted correlations between childhood sexual abuse and
    later problems such as substance abuse, dangerous sexual
    behaviors or dysfunction, inability to relate to others on an
    interpersonal level, and psychiatric illness. Broughton,
    supra, at 38; Glazer, supra, at 89; Handbook on Sexual
    Abuse of Children 7 (L. Walker ed. 1988). Victims of child
    rape are nearly 5 times more likely than nonvictims to be
    arrested for sex crimes and nearly 30 times more likely to
    be arrested for prostitution. Ibid.
    The harm that is caused to the victims and to society at
    large by the worst child rapists is grave. It is the judg-
    ment of the Louisiana lawmakers and those in an increas-
    ing number of other States that these harms justify the
    death penalty. The Court provides no cogent explanation
    why this legislative judgment should be overridden. Con-
    clusory references to “decency,” “moderation,” “restraint,”
    “full progress,” and “moral judgment” are not enough.
    III
    In summary, the Court holds that the Eighth Amend-
    ment categorically rules out the death penalty in even the
    most extreme cases of child rape even though: (1) This
    holding is not supported by the original meaning of the
    Eighth Amendment; (2) neither Coker nor any other prior
    precedent commands this result; (3) there are no reliable
    “objective indicia” of a “national consensus” in support of
    the Court’s position; (4) sustaining the constitutionality of
    the state law before us would not “extend” or “expand” the
    24                KENNEDY v. LOUISIANA
    ALITO, J., dissenting
    death penalty; (5) this Court has previously rejected the
    proposition that the Eighth Amendment is a one-way
    ratchet that prohibits legislatures from adopting new
    capital punishment statutes to meet new problems; (6) the
    worst child rapists exhibit the epitome of moral depravity;
    and (7) child rape inflicts grievous injury on victims and
    on society in general.
    The party attacking the constitutionality of a state
    statute bears the “heavy burden” of establishing that the
    law is unconstitutional. Gregg, 428 U. S., at 175 (joint
    opinion of Stewart, Powell, and STEVENS, JJ.). That bur-
    den has not been discharged here, and I would therefore
    affirm the decision of the Louisiana Supreme Court.