DETROIT (AP) — A man who has been in prison for nearly 50 years for murder when he was a teenager won a major decision from the Michigan Court of Appeals that should lead to his eventual release.
A Wayne County judge violated David Bennett’s rights when he cited mental health as a reason to keep him locked up with no chance for parole, the appeals court said Thursday.
Bennett, now 66, has become a “productive, stable and peaceful adult” while in prison, even saving more than $40,000 through various jobs, the court said.
Bennett, who was 17 when he fatally stabbed Vivian Berry, was automatically sentenced to life in prison without parole in 1972. But like hundreds of other convicted teens in Michigan, he was eligible for a new hearing based on U.S. Supreme Court decisions that say minors must be treated differently than adults at sentencing.
A judge must consider the crime but also the background of the offender.
“The evidence established that Bennett had been severely abused — physically and emotionally — by his parents,” the appeals court said. “The experts explained that this abuse deeply scarred the young man’s already fragile psyche.
“Although the details of the crime are horrific,” the court said, “they reflected a ‘rage state of frenetic violence,’ one of the psychologists expressed, shaped by serious and untreated mental illness rather than sadistic depravity.”
The Wayne County prosecutor’s office still had sought a second no-parole sentence. Judge Dalton Roberson acknowledged Bennett’s improved mental health but said he might have problems living on his own.
The appeals court, however, said Bennett now must be sentenced to a term of years “with all deliberate speed,” which would likely make him eligible for release because of years already served and credits for good behavior.
There was no immediate comment from prosecutors, who could seek an appeal at the Michigan Supreme Court.
Bennett’s lawyer, Susan McKeever, said she’s delighted by the decision.
“We believe that Mr. Bennett’s excellent record and long time served should ... result in a relatively quick release,” she said.
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