Youth

Extending Roper: Is 18 Too Young?

On August 4, 2017, a Kentucky tri­al court, rely­ing on new evi­dence about the brains of ado­les­cents, expand­ed Ropers pro­scrip­tion against exe­cut­ing juve­nile offend­ers to include defen­dants younger than age 21. In Commonwealth v. Bredhold, the court cred­it­ed the sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence pre­sent­ed by the defense and found that the same con­sid­er­a­tions that led to the Supreme Court’s rul­ing in Roper applied to defen­dants aged 18 – 20. Holding that apply­ing the death penal­ty to defen­dants under age 21 vio­lat­ed the Eighth Amendment’s evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy, the Fayette County Circuit Court barred Commonwealth pros­e­cu­tors from pur­su­ing the death penal­ty against Travis Bredhold, who was 18 years old when the mur­der with which he was charged was com­mit­ted. Prosecutors appealed the tri­al court’s rul­ing, and the case is pend­ing in the Kentucky Supreme Court.

On September 6, 2017, the Fayette County Circuit Court entered a sim­i­lar order in the case of Commonwealth v. Diaz, the case in which it actu­al­ly took the tes­ti­mo­ny on new sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence relat­ing to brain mat­u­ra­tion and development.

For more dis­cus­sion of these issues, see: 

Execution of Youth under Age 21 on the Date of Offense: Ending with a Bang or a Whimper? by Hollis A. Whitson and Eric Samler, September 2019

American Bar Association Resolution Recommending that all Persons Under the Age of Twenty-One Be Exempted from the Death Penalty: Seth Miller and Robert Weiner, Resolution 111, American Bar Association Death Penalty Due Process Review Project and Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice, February 2018