The rampant growth of life without parole

Source Miller-McCune

A new study by The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit that advocates for criminal justice reform, notes that one out of every 11 prisoners in state and federal lockups is serving a life sentence, and of those, nearly one-third, more than 41,000 convicts, have been sentenced to life without parole. The report notes that life without parole judgments have tripled since 1992, and nearly two-thirds of prisoners serving these sentences are ethnic and racial minorities. As noted in my recent Miller-McCune.com piece–"Should Minors Ever Face Life Without Parole?"–the U.S. already has more than 1,700 juveniles serving life without parole. The U.S., according to The Sentencing Project report, "No Exit: The Expanding Use of Life Sentences In America," is the only country that hands out such judgments. The organization, as you might expect, opposes life without parole. Major reasons for these harsh verdicts include "three strikes laws and other overly punitive sentences," says The Sentencing Project's Ashley Nellis. "California has 24 percent of all the nation's lifers, and they have this excessively punitive three strikes law in place. Also, the abandonment of parole has had a huge impact, as has the limiting of judicial discretion in sentencing and the expansion of prosecutorial discretion."