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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Michigan judge condemns 16 year old to life sentence with
no parole
By Jerry White
18 March 1999
On March 12 a Wayne County Family Court judge ordered 16-year-old
Gregory Petty to spend the rest of his life in jail, without the
chance of parole. Last January Petty was convicted for the 1998
murder of a barber during a robbery in Highland Park, an impoverished
working class suburb of Detroit. Prosecutors said Petty, 15 years
old at the time, gave a gun to then- 12-year-old McKinley Moore
and told him to shoot and rob the man.
Petty is believed to be the youngest person in Michigan history
to be convicted as an adult for murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Before sentencing the boy Judge Freddie Burton said the prospect
of sending a minor to prison until he dies "takes your breath
away." The judge then imposed the cruelest punishment possible
under a new state law that sets no minimum age limit for children
to be tried and sentenced as adults.
Burton had the option of sentencing Petty to juvenile rehabilitation
until the age of 21 or imposing a "blended sentence,"
in which a prison term is suspended while the youth undergoes
rehabilitation in a juvenile facility. In the previous case of
McKinley Moore, the judge sentenced the 13-year-old boy to serve
six years in a high-security juvenile facility. When he is 19
a final decision will be made on whether to release Moore, keep
him in jail until he is 21 or send him to prison for life. The
judge warned that if Moore were charged with a single violation
during his term, or committed a new crime, he would be brought
back to court and sentenced to life as an adult.
Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Craig Yaldoo asked the judge
to sentence Petty to adult prison for life. He said the boy could
not be rehabilitated by the age of 21 and sought to prove this
by saying Petty had already served 90 days in a Family Independence
Agency facility for delinquent boys for a previous offense--carrying
a concealed weapon--and then had other run-ins with the police.
Yaldoo rejected the argument that Petty was too young to be fully
responsible for his actions, saying, he "put a 12-year-old
up to kill that man to distance himself from the crime."
This proved he knew right from wrong, the prosecutor asserted.
The judge ignored arguments by Petty's attorney that the boy
had shown he could improve by qualifying for the honor roll at
the school in the detention facility, despite years of failing
grades in Highland Park schools. Nor did the judge take into account
Petty's history of poverty and social neglect.
The youth grew up without his father, who was imprisoned for
murder when the boy was three years old. Gregory's older brother
was put away in the state juvenile justice system. He knew no
other surroundings other than the destitution of Highland Park,
the poorest city in Michigan, with a poverty rate approaching
40 percent.
A clinical social worker, arguing against a life sentence,
told the judge that Petty had so many psychological problems he
would need several years of intensive therapy to change course.
"Without a structured program he is probably going to do
the same thing or worse than what he's here for now," the
specialist said.
The sentencing of Petty hardly rated a mention in the news
media. Only one of Detroit's two daily newspapers reported the
story and the national media ignored it. While the US Bill of
Rights declared more than 200 years ago that citizens should not
be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment, news commentators
and the political establishment in America no longer consider
such treatment of children either cruel or unusual.
The US is one of the few countries in the world which has refused
to sign the Convention on the Rights of the Child, an international
treaty which prohibits the death penalty or life imprisonment
without parole for persons who have committed an offense while
younger than 18.
Michigan is not the only US state which jails children for
life. In California there are currently 14 prisoners who were
sentenced to life without parole at ages 16 or 17. There are no
doubt scores of others in other states. Since 1995 state governments
in the US have executed six prisoners for crimes committed when
those convicted were minors, including two in 1998, and another
70 await their fate on death row.
According to Amnesty International more than 11,000 youth,
including some as young as 13, are in US prisons and other long-term
adult correctional facilities. Thirty-eight states permit the
housing of children in the general population in adult facilities.
Once inside, many are subjected to solitary confinement, physical
and chemical restraints and sexual and other forms of abuse from
adult prisoners.
Two days after the Wayne County judge condemned Petty, the
Justice Department released a report showing that the number of
jailed Americans has more than doubled over the past 12 years,
and reached its highest level ever in 1998. More than 1.8 million
people--approximately 1 in 150 residents--are incarcerated in
the nation's federal and state prisons and local jails.
For an American born this year, the chance of living some part
of life in a correctional facility is 1 in 20; for black Americans,
it is 1 in 4. Within the next two years the US is expected to
surpass Russia as the nation with the highest rate of imprisonment.
Prison construction has become a booming business with prisons
being built at the rate of one a week. Private jail companies
like Corrections Corporation of America have seen their stock
value increase ten-fold since 1994. In state after state increases
for correctional spending have far outstripped increases for public
and higher education.
The US prison population continues to burgeon despite a fall
in crime levels. Much of the increase is the result of the law
and order campaign launched by the Democrats and Republicans in
the 1980s, which included mandatory minimum sentencing for first-time
offenders and those caught with even small amounts of illegal
substances.
Like Gregory Petty, the vast majority of those languishing
in America's prisons and jails are poor, and disproportionately
minority. An estimated 70 percent of the prison population is
functionally illiterate and approximately 200,000 inmates suffer
from serious mental illnesses.
The vindictive treatment of the most psychologically and physically
vulnerable says a great deal about capitalist America. More than
a century ago social reformers championed the humane conception
that society could and should rehabilitate troubled children and
help them lead constructive lives. Today's misanthropic politicians,
prosecutors and judges reject any such notion and criminalize
poor children as "super-predators," holding them responsible,
along with their adult counterparts, for problems that are ultimately
rooted in conditions of poverty and social inequality.
The powers-that-be have neither the will nor the ability to
resolve these social problems, and incarceration has increasingly
become the most aggressively pursued social policy in America.
See Also:
13-year old child sentenced
as adult in Michigan
[19 February 1999]
Twelve-year-old
faces murder charges in the US
The system puts one of its victims on trial
[7 May 1998]
The Brutal
Society: social commentary on the United States
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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