Prisons & Jails – Constitutional – Life Sentences – 80 Years – Lesser Offenses
Lovette v. North Carolina Department of Correction When petitioners were sentenced to life imprisonment, life imprisonment was defined as 80 years. Although the petitioners in Jones v. Keller, 364 N.C. 249, 698 S.E.2d 49 (2010), were also sentenced to life imprisonment when that sentence was defined as 80 years, the Jones court limited its decision – refusing to apply earned credits to shorten the Jones petitioners’ sentences – to prisoners convicted of first-degree murder. Since petitioners in this case were convicted of lesser offenses (second-degree murder and second-degree burglary), Jones does not prevent the application of earned credits to their 80-year sentences.
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Published: August 22, 2012
Time posted: 11:12 am
Tags: 80 Years, Constitutional, Lesser Offenses, Life Sentences, Prisons & Jails






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