People of Michigan v. Sarah Elizabeth Sykes

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 2026
Docket367133
StatusPublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Sarah Elizabeth Sykes (People of Michigan v. Sarah Elizabeth Sykes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Sarah Elizabeth Sykes, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinions

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION June 17, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellee, 12:08 PM

v No. 367133 Washtenaw Circuit Court SARAH ELIZABETH SYKES, LC No. 2006-001231-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: CAMERON, P.J., and BOONSTRA and SWARTZLE, JJ.

SWARTZLE, J.

This case returns to the Court on remand from our Supreme Court with directions to consider as on leave granted “whether the defendant’s life sentence for second-degree murder violates Const 1963, art 1, § 16” in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in People v Taylor, ___ Mich ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2025) (Docket Nos. 166428 and 166654). People v Sykes, 21 NW3d 859 (Mich, 2025). As explained, under current case law, defendant’s sentence is not cruel or unusual, and there is nothing in this record on which we could conclude otherwise.

I. BACKGROUND

Defendant, when she was 20 years old, was involved in a shooting which resulted in two deaths. She pleaded guilty to two counts of open murder and two counts of possession of a firearm during a felony. After conducting a degree hearing, the trial court found defendant guilty of two counts of second-degree murder and sentenced her to serve two concurrent parolable life sentences. The trial court denied defendant’s first motion for relief from judgment, this Court denied defendant’s application for delayed appeal, People v Sykes, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 19, 2011 (Docket No. 302114), and our Supreme Court denied defendant’s application for leave to appeal, People v Sykes, 492 Mich 854 (2012).

A decade later, defendant again moved for relief from judgment, arguing that she received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. As a result, the trial court restarted defendant’s time to appeal her convictions and sentences. Two years later, defendant moved “for Resentencing and to Amend the PSIR or in the alternative to Withdraw Plea or for a Ginther Hearing,” claiming in

-1- part that her sentence was cruel or unusual because “offenders with far more violent backgrounds and far more serious crimes are sentenced to lesser terms” than life with parole, and prisoners serving parolable life sentences were rarely paroled.

Over a month after her initial motion, defendant filed a supplement to her motion, arguing that People v Parks, 510 Mich 225; 987 NW2d 161 (2022), and People v Stovall, 510 Mich 301; 987 NW2d 85 (2022), supported resentencing. Defendant claimed, “she should be given the same benefit as afforded to juveniles neurologically identical to her at the time of this offense,” but she did not cite evidence to support her claim. The prosecutor responded that defendant did “not fit into the paradigm created by either Parks or Stovall.” Further, although defendant claimed that the “science,” as understood by our Supreme Court, supported a trend toward states prohibiting life-parolable sentences for any offenders, the prosecutor argued that “as of the filing of this supplement, neither the Michigan Supreme Court nor the [L]egislature” has disallowed a sentence of life with the possibility of parole for non-juvenile offenders and therefore, defendant was not entitled to relief under Parks or Stovall.

The trial court denied defendant’s motion, in relevant part because Parks and Stovall did not entitle her to relief:

Defendant in this matter was not subject to a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole (Parks) and was 20 years old at the time of the sentencing offenses (Stovall). While Defendant’s constitutional argument may represent a logical extension of those two decisions and the Supreme Court’s focus on individualized sentencing, this Court concludes that the law presently in effect does not entitle Defendant to the relief sought in the Motion.

Defendant applied for leave to appeal the trial court’s order, and this Court denied defendant’s application. People v Sykes, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 2, 2024 (Docket No. 367133). When defendant applied for leave to appeal to our Supreme Court, her application was held in abeyance pending the resolution of other cases before the Supreme Court. Those cases have now been decided, People v Taylor, ___ Mich ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2025) (Docket Nos. 166428 and 166654), and our Supreme Court remanded this matter to this Court as described earlier.

II. ANALYSIS

The issue before the Court on remand is whether the defendant’s life sentence with the possibility of parole is cruel or unusual punishment under Const 1963, art 1, § 16. We review for an abuse of discretion the trial court’s decision on a motion for relief from judgment. People v Robinson, ___ Mich ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2026) (Docket No. 167595); slip op at 3. An abuse of discretion occurs if the trial court makes an error of law or its decision “falls outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes.” People v Christian, 510 Mich 52, 75; 987 NW2d 29 (2022). We review de novo whether a defendant’s sentence constitutes cruel or unusual punishment under the Michigan Constitution of 1963. Stovall, 510 Mich at 312.

B. CURRENT CASE LAW

-2- The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s motion. The trial court correctly found that defendant was not entitled to relief based on the law, and recent decisions by our Supreme Court or another panel of this Court do not dictate otherwise. There is no binding precedent that requires relief under article 1, § 16 of our Constitution of 1963 for a defendant convicted of second-degree murder who committed the murder when she was 20 years old and received an individualized (not mandatory) sentence of parolable life as a consequence. For example, Parks involved first-degree murder, mandatory life without the possibility of parole, and applied only to 18-year-olds, 510 Mich at 268; defendant’s case contains none of these attributes. Stovall could be viewed as closer, given that it applies to a parolable life sentence for second- degree murder, but that case applied solely to actual juveniles, i.e., those under the age of majority. 510 Mich at 307-309. Adding Taylor into the mix does not alter the calculus on intermediate appellate review. Even though Taylor applied to offenders ages 19 and 20, Taylor involved the offense of first-degree murder and mandatory life without parole. ___ Mich ___; slip op at 2. Thus, there is nothing in current case law that compels relief for defendant.

C. EXTENSION OF CURRENT CASE LAW

To be clear, defendant does not point to any mental or physical condition of which she, herself, suffers as justification for a lighter sentence. (She makes fleeting reference to depression in her brief.) Instead, defendant asks us to extend our Supreme Court’s precedent to give blanket relief under article 1, § 16, to any 20-year-old who, like defendant, commits murder and receives a nonmandatory sentence of parolable life as a consequence. This we cannot do.

From a factual standpoint, defendant grounds her entire appellate claim on the bare fact that she was 20 years old when she participated in second-degree murder. Thus, although we know her age at the time of the murder, we do not have any other potentially relevant facts or evidence, including:

• any factual findings by a trial court relevant to whether it was cruel or unusual to sentence this defendant—or any 20-year-old—to parolable life for second- degree murder;

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Related

People v. Bullock
485 N.W.2d 866 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1992)

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People of Michigan v. Sarah Elizabeth Sykes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-sarah-elizabeth-sykes-michctapp-2026.