Cyntoia Brown, a Tennessee woman who was convicted as a teenager for shooting a man who picked her up while she was a victim of sex-trafficking, must remain in prison for at least 51 years before she is eligible for release, Tennessee’s Supreme Court said Thursday.
The court’s opinion was in response to a lawsuit that argues that Brown’s life sentence is unconstitutional due to a 2012 ruling by the U.S. Supreme court that said mandatory life sentences without parole for juveniles violates the U.S. Constitution.
In response to the court’s opinion, the Women’s March on Saturday announced a nationwide march in support of Brown and other sex-trafficking victims to be held on Jan. 19.
Brown was 16 years old in 2004 when she killed real estate agent Johnny Allen, 43. At the time, Brown had run away from home and was living with her 24-year-old boyfriend, a pimp known as “Kut Throat,” who raped her and forced her into prostitution, according to Brown’s lawyers.
According to court documents, Allen solicited Brown for sex, then brought her back to his home and into his bed. Brown said she thought Allen was reaching for his gun to shoot her, so she grabbed a handgun from her purse and shot him first.
According to court documents, Allen solicited Brown for sex, then brought her back to his home and into his bed. Brown said she thought Allen was reaching for his gun to shoot her, so she grabbed a handgun from her purse and shot him first.
Brown was tried as an adult, convicted of first-degree murder, felony murder and especially aggravated robbery and was sentenced to life in prison for Allen’s death.
Tennessee’s Supreme Court on Thursday said that, under the state’s law, defendants like Brown who were convicted of first-degree murder after July 1, 1995, can only be released from prison after serving at least 51 years of their sentences.
Brown has described her life sentence as a “cruel and unusual punishment,” pointing to the 2012 Supreme Court ruling on mandatory life sentences without parole for juveniles, according to court documents.
But a U.S. District Court in Tennessee denied Brown’s motion, noting that she received a “life sentence, not a sentence of life without the possibility of parole.”
Brown has appealed that decision, which is pending before the U.S. Sixth Court of Appeals.
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This is very troubling to say the least, especially given she was 16-years-old at the time and Johnny Allen was 43, the man who solicited a child for sex. I do believe she was scared and do believe she felt her life was in danger and it's sad she will more likely have to finish out her time before being eligible for release. Now what's interesting we hear all the time from people in the medical field, media, and people online about how someone her age brain is not fully developed, but of course the people I am talking about are usually white, so I guess because Cyntoia Brown have some Black in her that doesn't apply at all and her brain was fully developed? this is shameful.
You can read the full and complete story by clicking here.
This is very troubling to say the least, especially given she was 16-years-old at the time and Johnny Allen was 43, the man who solicited a child for sex. I do believe she was scared and do believe she felt her life was in danger and it's sad she will more likely have to finish out her time before being eligible for release. Now what's interesting we hear all the time from people in the medical field, media, and people online about how someone her age brain is not fully developed, but of course the people I am talking about are usually white, so I guess because Cyntoia Brown have some Black in her that doesn't apply at all and her brain was fully developed? this is shameful.
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