Current:Home > NewsNorth Carolina court upholds life without parole for man who killed officers when a juvenile-LoTradeCoin
North Carolina court upholds life without parole for man who killed officers when a juvenile
View Date:2024-12-24 03:35:15
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina judge wasn’t careless while sentencing a man to life in prison without parole for the murders of two law enforcement officers during a traffic stop, crimes he participated in as a juvenile, the state Court of Appeals ruled on Tuesday.
The three-judge panel unanimously upheld the latest sentence for Kevin Salvador Golphin. He and his older brother, Tilmon, were initially sentenced to death for crimes including the 1997 murders of state Trooper Ed Lowry and Cumberland County Sheriff’s Deputy David Hathcock.
Kevin Golphin was 17 years and nine months old at the time of the crimes. His sentence was changed to mandatory life without parole after a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court ruling determined that death sentences for juveniles violated the U.S. Constitution’s provision against cruel and unusual punishment.
Subsequent Supreme Court decisions got rid of mandatory life sentences for juveniles and led North Carolina lawmakers to create a process by which a judge must evaluate factors before determining whether a juvenile should be sentenced to life without parole or life with the possibility of parole. The process then had to be applied retroactively to people like Golphin.
In April 2022, Superior Court Judge Thomas Lock resentenced Golphin, now 44, to life without parole after reviewing nine mitigating factors set out in state law.
While some factors carried little or slight mitigating weight, such as his age and ability to appreciate the consequences of his actions, Lock wrote that Golphin’s crimes “demonstrate his permanent incorrigibility and not his unfortunate yet transient immaturity” and align with life in prison without parole.
“We acknowledge there is room for different views on the mitigating impact of each factor, but given the sentencing court’s findings,” Lock didn’t abuse his discretion, Judge Donna Stroud wrote in Tuesday’s opinion.
Chief Judge Chris Dillon and Judge Michael Stading agreed with Stroud’s decision at the intermediate-level Court of Appeals. Golphin’s attorneys could ask the state Supreme Court to take up the case.
Tilmon Golphin, now 45, is also serving life in prison without parole through a now-repealed law that told state courts to commute death-row sentences to life when it’s determined racial bias was the reason or a significant factor in a offender’s death sentence. The Golphins are Black; the two slain officers were white.
veryGood! (69679)
Related
- Opinion: Chris Wallace leaves CNN to go 'where the action' is. Why it matters
- Kate, Princess of Wales, says she has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy
- Princess Kate announces she has cancer in video message. What's next for the royal family?
- Women’s March Madness live updates: Iowa State makes historic comeback, bracket, highlights
- Statue of the late US Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon, is unveiled in his native Alabama
- 2 Black officers allege discrimination at police department
- March's full moon will bring a subtle eclipse with it early Monday morning
- Relatives of Tyre Nichols, George Floyd and Eric Garner say lack of police reform is frustrating
- Justice Department says jail conditions in Georgia’s Fulton County violate detainee rights
- California doubles water allocation for most contractors following February storms
Ranking
- Chipotle unveils cilantro-scented soap, 'water' cup candles in humorous holiday gift line
- Kristin Cavallari’s Boyfriend Mark Estes Responds to Criticism Over Their 13-Year Age Gap
- School bus with 44 pre-K students, 11 adults rolls over in Texas; two dead
- Shop 39 Kyle Richards-Approved Must-Haves Up to 50% Off During the Amazon Big Spring Sale
- My Little Pony finally hits the Toy Hall of Fame, alongside Phase 10 and Transformers
- Miami Beach touts successful break up with spring break. Businesses tell a different story
- March Madness games today: Everything to know about NCAA Tournament schedule on Friday
- Another March Madness disappointment means it's time for Kentucky and John Calipari to part
Recommendation
-
Week 10 fantasy football rankings: PPR, half-PPR and standard leagues
-
King Charles III Shares Support for Kate Middleton Amid Their Respective Cancer Diagnoses
-
The market for hippo body parts is bigger than you think. Animal groups suing to halt trade
-
Auburn guard Chad Baker-Mazara ejected early for flagrant-2 foul vs. Yale
-
Bo the police K-9, who located child taken at knifepoint, wins Hero Dog Awards 2024
-
Auburn guard Chad Baker-Mazara ejected early for flagrant-2 foul vs. Yale
-
Democratic state senator files paperwork for North Dakota gubernatorial bid
-
Maryland US Rep. David Trone apologizes for using racial slur at hearing. He says it was inadvertent