Timothy S. Willbanks v. Missouri Department of Corrections

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 2015
DocketWD77913
StatusPublished

This text of Timothy S. Willbanks v. Missouri Department of Corrections (Timothy S. Willbanks v. Missouri Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy S. Willbanks v. Missouri Department of Corrections, (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

TIMOTHY S. WILLBANKS, ) ) Appellant, ) ) WD77913 v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) October 27, 2015 MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF ) CORRECTIONS, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri The Honorable Daniel R. Green, Judge

Before Division Three: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, and Lisa White Hardwick and Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judges

Timothy Willbanks appeals the grant of the Department of Corrections (DOC) motion for

judgment on the pleadings in his declaratory judgment action. Willbanks sought a declaration

that Missouri statutes and regulations imposing mandatory minimum prison terms before parole

eligibility are unconstitutional, as applied to juveniles, under the United States Supreme Court’s

holding in Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48 (2010), when the statutes and regulations operate to

deny a juvenile a parole eligibility date outside of his natural life expectancy. Because Graham is inapplicable to Willbanks’s multiple, consecutive, term-of-years sentences, the trial court

committed no error in granting DOC’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.1

Background

On January 28, 1999, Willbanks (then age 17) approached the victim, a 24-year-old

woman just returning home from work, in the parking lot of her apartment complex. Willbanks

was carrying a sawed-off shotgun. When the victim saw it, she begged him to take her car, her

purse, and her money, but to leave her alone. Willbanks ordered the victim back into the driver’s

seat of her car, while he sat in the back seat and directed her to drive to an ATM, where, using

the victim’s card and number, Willbanks removed all of the money from her account. The

victim repeatedly begged Willbanks not to hurt her, and he responded by threatening to do just

that if she continued begging.

After leaving the ATM, Willbanks directed the victim to drive toward the river, but when

she reached a “Y” intersection, she turned the wrong way, and Willbanks became angry and told

her to stop the car. Willbanks then forced the victim into the trunk so that he could drive.

Willbanks drove recklessly, causing the victim to be tossed about the trunk; Willbanks yelled at

her to stop moving around so much. Willbanks then ate some fast food the victim had in the car

and criticized the victim, saying, “bitch, there’s nothing on this cheeseburger.”

While in the trunk, the victim removed her jewelry and tried to hide it, in hopes that

Willbanks would not find it. After Willbanks finally stopped the car, he let the victim out of the

trunk and demanded that she turn over her jewelry. When the victim indicated that she wasn’t

wearing any, Willbanks made her climb back into the trunk and retrieve the jewelry she had

1 This decision is limited to cases involving multiple term-of-year sentences imposed for multiple offenses and does not address cases involving a single term-of-year sentence imposed for only one offense.

2 hidden. Willbanks also took her coat, purse, wallet, phone, credit cards, driver’s license, and

social security card.

Two other individuals (then ages 19 and 20), who had been at the victim’s apartment

parking lot with Willbanks, had followed Willbanks and the victim in their own car. Willbanks

told the other two men that he wanted to shoot the victim, but the other two wanted to leave her

alone. Nevertheless, Willbanks directed the victim to turn around and walk toward a tree; as she

walked, Willbanks shot her four times, striking her right arm, shoulder, lower back, and head.

The victim fell on the river bank, and Willbanks left her for dead. Willbanks later told a friend

that he had shot as many times and as fast as he could and that he liked the way the victim

screamed.

Despite receiving numerous severe injuries, the victim was able to crawl for forty

minutes to find help. Though she survived, she suffered many disfiguring and irreparable

injuries.

Willbanks was apprehended, and he was charged and convicted by a jury of one count of

kidnapping, one count of first-degree assault, two counts of first-degree robbery, and three

counts of armed criminal action. The court sentenced Willbanks to consecutive terms of fifteen

years for kidnapping, life imprisonment for assault, twenty years for each robbery count, and one

hundred years for each armed criminal action count, for an aggregate sentence of life plus 355

years. According to Willbanks, because of both statutory and regulatory mandatory minimum

sentencing requirements preceding parole eligibility, he will not be eligible for parole until he is

approximately 85 years old. According to actuarial statistics from the Center for Disease

Control, a person with Willbanks’s characteristics is not expected to live beyond age 79.5.

3 Willbanks’s convictions and sentences were affirmed on direct appeal, State v. Willbanks,

75 S.W.3d 333 (Mo. App. W.D. 2002); as was the denial of his post-conviction relief motion

under Rule 29.15, Willbanks v. State, 167 S.W.3d 789 (Mo. App. W.D. 2005).

Beginning in 2005, the United States Supreme Court issued a series of opinions

addressing the constitutionality of various sentencing practices as they related to juvenile

offenders. The first in the series was Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005), wherein the Court

declared that the execution of those who were under the age of 18 at the time of their crimes

violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court expanded its traditional “death is

different” analysis and determined that juveniles are also different and, therefore, “cannot with

reliability be classified among the worst offenders.” Id. at 569. The Court identified three

specific factors that made juveniles distinct: (1) juveniles generally lack maturity and have an

underdeveloped sense of responsibility, which often leads to “impetuous and ill-considered

actions and decisions”; (2) “juveniles are more vulnerable or susceptible to negative influences

and outside pressures, including peer pressure”; and (3) “the character of a juvenile is not as well

formed as that of an adult,” and “[t]he personality traits of juveniles are more transitory, less

fixed.” Id. Based upon all of these factors, the Court reasoned that juveniles, as a class, had a

greater capacity for reform than adults and, correspondingly, a lessened culpability; accordingly,

the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments precluded the State from “extinguish[ing] [a juvenile

offender’s] life and his potential to attain a mature understanding of his own humanity.” Id. at

574.

In 2010, the Court decided the second in the series: Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48

(2010), which held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits sentencing juvenile offenders to life

without parole (LWOP) for nonhomicide offenses. The Court relied on its analysis in Roper

4 determining that juveniles are different, analogized an LWOP sentence to the death penalty, and

recognized that the death penalty is not permitted for nonhomicide offenses. Id. at 68-75. The

Court held that, while “[a] State is not required to guarantee eventual freedom to a juvenile

offender convicted of a nonhomicide crime[,] . . . [it must] give defendants like Graham some

meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Id.

at 75.

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