In late March, Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court issued a momentous ruling overturning mandatory life sentences for people convicted of felony murder, also known as second-degree murder. Activists and advocates hailed the ruling as a victory that was years in the making and has the potential to impact the lives of more than a thousand people in the state, a majority of whom are Black.
Those sentenced to life without parole (LWOP) are, by definition, never allowed to go before a parole board and can only ever win freedom if the governor of their state grants them clemency. The ACLU calls LWOP sentences “permanent removal from society with no chance of reentry, no hope of freedom,” and therefore, “short of execution, the harshest imaginable punishment.” It’s no wonder activists involved in ending LWOP refer to it as “death by incarceration.”
Five states — Pennsylvania, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, and North Carolina — require mandatory life sentences without the possibility of parole for felony murder convictions. According to the Center for Constitutional Rights, Pennsylvania has the nation’s highest per capita rate of people serving death by incarceration sentences. Such a conviction — in spite of its name — doesn’t mean the person accused is directly responsible for a death. One can also be convicted of a felony murder if one’s actions indirectly and unintentionally resulted in someone’s death.
Read the full story from Truthout here.