Kitchen v. Whitmer

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 21, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-11430
StatusUnknown

This text of Kitchen v. Whitmer (Kitchen v. Whitmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitchen v. Whitmer, (E.D. Mich. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION MICHAEL KITCHEN,

Plaintiff, Case No. 18-11430 Honorable Laurie J. Michelson v.

GRETCHEN WHITMER, HEIDI WASHINGTON, and BRIAN SHIPMAN,

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [95] AND GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [94] Michael Kitchen is 52 years old; he has spent every day of his adult life in prison. As a juvenile, Kitchen committed serious, but nonhomicide, crimes. For his crimes, he was sentenced to a minimum of 42 years in prison (and a maximum of 60 years). Under Michigan’s parole-eligibility laws, an offender cannot be evaluated for parole until he completes his minimum sentence (less disciplinary credits). In Kitchen’s case, that means he will not be evaluated for parole until he is almost 58 years old. And according to the only expert in this case, Kitchen is unlikely to live past his early sixties. In Graham v. Florida, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution prohibits states from sentencing juvenile, nonhomicide offenders to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The Supreme Court added, “A State is not required to guarantee eventual freedom to a juvenile offender convicted of a nonhomicide crime. What the State must do, however, is give defendants like Graham some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” 560 U.S. 48,

75 (2010) (emphases added). Based on the limited record before the Court, denying Kitchen parole review until he is nearly 58 years old runs afoul of Graham’s meaningful-opportunity mandate. As noted, an expert has opined that Kitchen will most likely die in his early 60s. That expert testimony has not been challenged as unreliable, and the record includes no rebuttal opinion. Accordingly, by the time Kitchen is first evaluated for parole, he will likely have only four or five years to live. And, in this Court’s opinion

and that of others, an opportunity for release at the very twilight of life is not a “meaningful” one under Graham. See e.g., People v. Contreras, 411 P.3d 445, 453–54 (Cal. 2018) (“[T]he language of Graham suggests that the high court envisioned more than the mere act of release or a de minimis quantum of time outside of prison. Graham spoke of the chance to rejoin society in qualitative terms.”). For these reasons and those set out below, the Court finds that Michigan’s parole-eligibility laws as

applied to Kitchen violate Graham’s meaningful-opportunity mandate. It follows that those laws are unconstitutional as applied to Kitchen.

In 1987, Kitchen was convicted of several crimes. Kitchen and two others entered a couple’s home and robbed them. (ECF No. 1, PageID.8.) During the robbery, one of the robbers digitally penetrated the female victim. (ECF No. 1, PageID.9.) Kitchen pled guilty to armed robbery and other charges but went to trial on one charge of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and charges of possessing a firearm

during a felony. (ECF No. 78, PageID.688–689.) A jury found Kitchen guilty. At the time of the home invasion, Kitchen was 17 years old. At Kitchen’s sentencing, Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Richard D. Kuhn varied upward from the guidelines range. (ECF No. 78, PageID.689.) Judge Kuhn stated, “this is one of the most heinous crimes that [he] had presided over.” (ECF No. 95-2, PageID.1027.) He further indicated that in formulating Kitchen’s sentence, he had considered “disciplin[e],” “punishment,” “protection of society,” and

“deterring of others.” (ECF No. 95-2, PageID.1028.) Without a word about how Kitchen’s youth did or did not mitigate a lengthy sentence, Judge Kuhn sentenced Kitchen to a minimum of 40 years in prison (and up to 60 years) for the criminal- sexual-conduct conviction and a consecutive two-year term for the felony-firearm convictions. (ECF No. 95-2, PageID.1027.) Thus, Kitchen was to spend a minimum of 42 years (less credits for good behavior) in prison. Restated, absent credits for good

behavior, the first time 17-year-old Kitchen would appear before the parole board for possible release would be when he was 59 years old.

Between 2010 and 2016, the Supreme Court decided three cases where juvenile offenders claimed that their sentences of life without parole amounted to “cruel and unusual punishment[]” prohibited by the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution. In Graham v. Florida, Terrance Graham was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for committing nonhomicide offenses at age 17. 560 U.S. 48, 54–55 (2010). The Supreme Court explained that, on the one hand, a life-

without-parole sentence “gives no chance for fulfillment outside prison walls, no chance for reconciliation with society, no hope,” id. at 79; it is an “irrevocable judgment about [the offender’s] value and place in society,” id. at 74. Yet, on the other hand, a juvenile’s immaturity not only makes him or her less blameworthy than an adult, it also makes him or her more amenable to rehabilitation than an adult. See id. at 68–69. And even if some juvenile offenders were truly incorrigible, a sentencer would have difficulty distinguishing that rare juvenile “from the many that have the

capacity for change.” Id. at 77. Because life without parole would usually be a disproportionate penalty for a nonhomicide offense committed by a juvenile, and because the exceptional cases could not be reliably identified, and for still other reasons, the Supreme Court created a categorical rule. Graham, 560 U.S. at 74, 77–78. The Court held that a State cannot sentence a juvenile, nonhomicide offender to life in prison without the possibility of

parole. Id. at 75. While the “Eighth Amendment does not foreclose the possibility that persons convicted of nonhomicide crimes committed before adulthood will remain behind bars for life,” “[i]t does prohibit States from making the judgment at the outset.” Id. Thus, States “must” give “defendants like Graham some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Id. Two years later, the Supreme Court decided Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012). There, two juveniles had committed homicide and their states mandated life without parole for their offenses, i.e., that punishment automatically followed from

the homicide convictions. Building on Graham and again recognizing a juvenile’s “diminished culpability” and “greater prospects for reform,” id. at 471, the Court held that “the Eighth Amendment forbids a sentencing scheme that mandates life in prison without possibility of parole for juvenile offenders,” id. at 479. While juvenile, homicide offenders could still be sentenced to life without parole, that sentence could not be automatic upon conviction; instead a sentencer needed “to take into account how children are different, and how those differences counsel against irrevocably

sentencing them to a lifetime in prison.” Id. at 480. In Montgomery v. Louisiana, the Court held that because Miller established a new, substantive rule of constitutional law, it applied retroactively. 577 U.S. 190, 206 (2016). Thus, even juvenile offenders whose convictions were final when Miller was decided could not be required to serve a mandatory, life-without-parole sentence.

In 2018, Kitchen filed this lawsuit pro se; at that time, Kitchen was 48 years old and had spent the prior 31 years in prison. This case had a number of threshold motions, including two motions to dismiss.

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