McKinley Kelly v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 2025
Docket25S-PC-00108
StatusPublished

This text of McKinley Kelly v. State of Indiana (McKinley Kelly v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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McKinley Kelly v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court FILED Supreme Court Case No. 25S-PC-108 Apr 30 2025, 11:00 am

CLERK McKinley Kelly, Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court Appellant/Petitioner,

–v–

State of Indiana, Appellee/Respondent.

Argued: November 6, 2024 | Decided: April 30, 2025

Appeal from the Lake Superior Court No. 3 No. 45G03-2002-PC-7 The Honorable Mark Watson, Magistrate and the Honorable Gina Jones, Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 23A-PC-1025

Opinion by Justice Molter Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Slaughter, and Goff concur. Molter, Justice.

McKinley Kelly was still emerging from a childhood enmeshed in violence when a jury found that he brutally murdered three young adults. He was sixteen years old when he committed the murders and seventeen when he was sentenced. The judge, after vacating one of those convictions, sentenced him to 110 years in prison—fifty-five-year consecutive sentences for each offense. Kelly unsuccessfully appealed his convictions and sentence, pursued state court post-conviction relief, and sought habeas relief in federal court.

But the landscape of juvenile sentencing—even for the most heinous crimes like these—has since changed. So the Court of Appeals authorized Kelly to file a successive petition for post-conviction relief challenging his sentence. His claims focus on a deepening scientific understanding of adolescent brain function, which better explains why juveniles are less culpable and more capable of change. Those developments, he contends, should lead either to a resentencing—reconsidering his sentence in light of this better understanding—or to a more lenient sentence offering more hope for a meaningful period of life outside prison walls.

After permitting Kelly to amend his claims, the post-conviction court denied his petition, and when he appealed, the Court of Appeals affirmed. Today, we grant transfer to address important procedural issues for post- conviction relief and important substantive issues for juvenile sentencing. Like the Court of Appeals, we affirm the post-conviction court, and we reach three key conclusions along the way.

First, while the Indiana Rules of Post-Conviction Remedies (“Post- Conviction Rules”) require appellate screening before filing a successive petition for post-conviction relief, those rules do not require appellate screening before amending a successive petition. So the post-conviction court’s decision to permit Kelly to amend his claims was appropriate. Second, the state and federal constitutional provisions Kelly cites with various sentencing restrictions and requirements for equal treatment do not compel a more lenient sentence here. And third, Kelly’s sentence is not inappropriate based on the nature of his offenses and his character.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-PC-108 | April 30, 2025 Page 2 of 29 We hasten to note, though, that in this procedural posture we are only reviewing Kelly’s claims that our state and federal constitutions, along with our court rules, compelled more leniency when he was sentenced. That is different than reviewing a request for a statutorily authorized sentence modification, which involves considering an offender’s personal, rehabilitative progress after sentencing. A key premise of Kelly’s arguments is that “a court cannot reliably determine at the time of sentencing whether a child is irredeemable.” Appellant’s Br. at 42. That is true, but that mystery is just as much a reason not to shorten a sentence— after all, time may prove the child is irreparably corrupted.

Helpfully, the legislature addressed this dilemma recently by amending its sentence modification statute to offer juvenile offenders like Kelly a right to have their sentences reexamined after twenty years. Ind. Code § 35-38-1-17(n). At that point, the reviewing court will have the benefit of evidence related to Kelly’s rehabilitative successes or failures. And all the constitutional provisions that guide sentencing and direct distinct treatment of juvenile offenders will continue to inform the reviewing courts’ analysis and discretion.

Facts and Procedural History Violence enveloped McKinley Kelly’s childhood. His father sometimes beat him, once by whipping him repeatedly with an extension cord and another time by beating him with a stick and kicking him in the head. Bullets came through the windows of his family home. When Kelly was fifteen, he was shot in the shoulder. And he witnessed the death of his best friend, who died in his arms after being shot. After enduring one tragedy after another, Kelly did not expect he would reach adulthood. Under these circumstances, it is unfortunate but unsurprising that Kelly ended up joining a gang.

While tragic, Kelly’s circumstances do not excuse or justify what he did on the evening of January 8, 1996. Sixteen-year-old Kelly and three of his friends were driving around East Chicago and came upon Maurice Hobson, Karl Jackson, and Vincent Ray, who were standing in a driveway.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-PC-108 | April 30, 2025 Page 3 of 29 Armed with a revolver, Kelly got out of the car and confronted Jackson. Kelly initiated the confrontation, argued with Jackson, and then pulled out his gun and shot Jackson. After Jackson fell, Kelly stood over him and fired more shots into him.

Hobson asked Kelly why he had shot Jackson. In response, Kelly shot Hobson in the head and chest. One of Kelly’s companions, Leo Dent, also shot Hobson with a shotgun. Kelly then left the scene, but Dent stayed behind to kill Ray.

Kelly was charged with murdering Jackson, Ray, and Hobson, and a jury found him guilty on all three counts. The trial court vacated Kelly’s conviction for Ray’s murder. The court then sentenced Kelly—who was seventeen at that point—to the presumptive term of fifty-five years for each murder, to run consecutively for an aggregate term of 110 years. The court imposed this sentence only after considering Kelly’s young age as a mitigating factor.

On direct appeal, this Court affirmed, rejecting Kelly’s arguments that there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions and that his sentence was manifestly unreasonable given his age and his brother’s influence over his actions. Kelly v. State, 719 N.E.2d 391, 394, 395 (Ind. 1999). Kelly petitioned for post-conviction relief in 2001. The post- conviction court denied relief, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. He then petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, which a federal district court denied.

In 2012, the United States Supreme Court decided Miller v. Alabama, in which it held that mandatory life without parole sentences for juveniles violate the Eighth Amendment. 567 U.S. 460, 479 (2012). Before a juvenile convicted of a homicide offense can be sentenced to life without parole (“LWOP”), a court must consider the defendant’s age, since it is only “the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable corruption.” Id. at 479–80. While Kelly did not receive an LWOP sentence, he nonetheless applied to file a second petition for a writ of habeas corpus on the theory that he was serving a de facto life sentence in violation of Miller.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-PC-108 | April 30, 2025 Page 4 of 29 The Seventh Circuit accepted that Kelly was serving a de facto life sentence but dismissed his application, holding that the sentencing court considered Kelly’s age before sentencing him, as Miller required. Kelly v. Brown, 851 F.3d 686, 687–88 (7th Cir. 2017).

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