Ban On Juvenile Life Without Parole Fails In New Mexico

New Mexico Second Chance Law Fails: New Mexico State Capitol tan adobe building front exterior, Santa Fe, NM

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The New Mexico State Capitol in Santa Fe. A bill that would have banned life-without-parole sentences for juveniles failed to pass this year.

A bill that would have prohibited life sentences and mandated earlier probation eligibility for juveniles has failed to become law in New Mexico, exposing deep rifts between those seeking judicial reform and victim advocates. 

Seventy-five New Mexicans are currently serving sentences longer than 15 years for crimes they committed before they were 18, according to the New Mexico Coalition for the Fair Sentencing of Youth. Legal challenges have argued that such lengthy sentences handed down to young people amount to de facto life-without-parole terms

Harsh sentencing sends a message to children that, “It doesn’t matter the kind of person that you become or the ways that you commit yourself to repairing the harm that you caused … [W]e don’t care,” said Denali Wilson, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico and a founding member of the coalition. 

At least 25 states and the District of Columbia have passed “Second Chance” legislation intended to curb harsh sentencing for juveniles. 

New Mexico’s Senate Bill 247, co-sponsored this year by State Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez and State Rep. Dayan Hochman-Vigil, both Bernalillo Democrats, would have banned life-without-parole sentences for juveniles and made them automatically eligible for parole after 15 years. 

SB247 passed 28-11 in the state Senate but languished and died without a vote in the House.

During the legislative session, The National Organization of Victims of Juvenile Murderers circulated a petition against the bill that included graphic descriptions of violent crimes committed by juveniles.

NOVJM argued the law would “deny justice” by diminishing the seriousness of violent crime and re-traumatize victims who participate in parole hearings.  

NOVJM President Jennifer Bishop-Jenkins said she founded the organization after her sister and brother-in-law, along with their baby, were murdered by someone under the age of 18. She worries legislative adjustments to youth sentencing could further ostracize victims and their families, who she said face emotional turmoil and unique challenges in legal proceedings due to the defendants’ age. 

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“Our purpose is to support and inform and advocate for the rights of the victims’ families,” Bishop-Jenkins said. “We’re not an organization built around [keeping juvenile offenders] in prison forever.”

Wilson said the New Mexico Coalition for the Fair Sentencing of Youth will continue to press lawmakers.

“We’re now behind half the country on this issue,” said Wilson. “It should’ve happened yesterday and it didn’t, so it needs to happen tomorrow.”

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