Fry v. Lopez
Fry v. Lopez
Dissenting Opinion
{144} The Majority's position-executing Fry and Allen would be immoral, unethical, and unjust given the rarity with which murderers in New Mexico are put to death-has appeal at some very basic level. But I must respectfully dissent. I do not know if executing Fry and Allen would be immoral, unethical, or unjust. I know only that a jury comprised of women and men from our state concluded that Fry and Allen forfeited their right to continue living among us for brutally killing innocent and by all accounts gentle and caring women. I am certain also that the jurors assembled to sentence Fry and Allen took their responsibilities to decide Fry's and Allen's fate with the gravity and seriousness the task required.
{145} The legislative command that this Court assure that Fry's and Allen's death sentences are not "disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases" should not be construed in the way embraced by the Majority. Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) (1979, repealed 2009). They perceive in that language authority to conclude that, because so few *1127offenders in New Mexico have ever been sentenced to die, no offenders shall ever again be sentenced to die in New Mexico. I respectfully contend that the Majority's judgment is error.
{146} Our Legislature created a refined category of death-eligible crimes and gave to capital-sentencing juries guided discretion to decide the fate of those who offend community norms in the most egregious ways. These facts must play some role in our construction of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). State v. Garcia ,
{147} The Majority strays beyond the limited authority granted us under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) and overrules the decision of previous members of this Court on inescapably subjective questions. They do this despite the fact that there has been no change in the law since the proportionality of Fry's and Allen's death sentences were previously considered, and there have been no inroads made about how to measure the proportionality of any given death sentence.
{148} The legislative repeal of the death penalty is not support for the Majority's arguments or outcome. The repeal was achieved through a compromise that required Fry and Allen to submit to their death sentences. It in no way suggests the Legislature has doubts about our comparative proportionality methodology or our assessment of the proportionality of Fry's and Allen's death sentences.
{149} These general thoughts guide this dissent. In what follows, I explain my position in much greater detail. A series of preliminary points are addressed first to dispose of several arguments the Majority makes and that are irrelevant to the statutory and constitutional questions at issue here. Discussion there follows.
I. PRELIMINARY POINTS
A. Sentence Versus Execution
{150} The Majority emphasizes that only one individual has been executed in New Mexico since the enactment of the Capital Felony Sentencing Act (CFSA). Maj. Op. ¶¶ 28, 35, 37, 93, 109; Concurrence ¶¶ 140-141. This is inapposite. We must determine if the "sentence of death" in any particular case is "disproportionate." Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) (emphasis added). Our focus is on the "sentence" imposed and not on whether the individual sentenced to die is actually executed.
B. "Heinous Crimes" and "Aberrant" Juries
{151} The Majority focuses on whether Fry's and Allen's crimes were "the most heinous" and whether their juries acted "aberrantly" by imposing death sentences. See Maj. Op. ¶¶ 1, 17, 66, 71, 73, 77, 90 n.22, 97, 102, 119, 120. The words "most heinous" and "aberrant" are not value neutral and inject normative considerations into this matter in a way that is troubling and problematic.
{152} The CFSA does require us to consider whether sentencing disparities have occurred in the capital context. But this is a task very different than that in which the Majority is engaged. They are asking whether Fry's and Allen's crimes were sufficiently "heinous" to justify their death sentences and whether their juries' decisions to impose the death penalty were "aberrant." This is error. We are not and should never attempt to be "finely tuned calibrator[s] of depravity, demarcating for a watching world the various gradations of dementia that lead men and women to kill their neighbors." Godfrey v. Georgia ,
C. Gregory and Race-Based Imposition of Capital Punishment
{153} The Majority states that we are here "faced with similar concerns regarding proportionality *1128review" that prompted the Washington Supreme Court in State v. Gregory ,
{154} To the best of my knowledge, only one author has been willing to suggest that, in New Mexico, "race and ethnicity play[ ] a role in determining who w[ill] live and who w[ill] die." Marcia J. Wilson, The Application of the Death Penalty in New Mexico, July 1979 Through December 2007: An Empirical Analysis ,
{155} There is no evidence that Fry's and Allen's death sentences were imposed as a consequence of Fry and Allen's race or the race of their victims. Fry and Allen are both white, non-Hispanic; Fry's victim was a woman of mixed ethnicity and was part Navajo, and Allen's victim was white, with no evidence that she was an ethnic minority. We are not presented here with circumstances equivalent to those the Supreme Court of Washington confronted in Gregory . This case is different.
II. DISCUSSION
{156} The question here is whether the Court should overturn the judgment of previous members of this Court who concluded that Fry's and Allen's death sentences are not comparatively disproportionate. We should not for the following reasons: (A) the capital sentences imposed by Fry's and Allen's respective sentencing juries were neither excessive nor disproportionate given the facts and severity of Fry's and Allen's crimes; (B) the parties did not ask us to reconsider Garcia ; (C) the Majority misinterprets the federal constitutional principles it cites as grounds compelling reconsideration of Garcia ; (D) competing concerns within the CFSA counsel against the revised approach to comparative proportionality review embraced by the Majority; (E) Garcia correctly construed Section 31-20A-4(C)(4), it was sensibly applied in Fry's and Allen's cases, and that construction is entitled to deference under stare decisis; and finally, (F) revisiting the comparative proportionality of Fry's and Allen's death sentences violates principles of finality.
A. The Facts and Severity of Fry's and Allen's Cases
{157} It is essential to begin with the facts of Fry's and Allen's crimes because proportionality review "is first and foremost directed to the particular circumstances of a crime and the specific character of the defendant." Garcia ,
1. The facts of Fry's case
{158} On the night of June 8, 2000, Fry bragged to companions that he was "wearing an eight-inch bowie knife" and intended to "stick someone." Fry encountered Betty Lee, a woman in her thirties and a mother of five, by pure chance at a convenience store at approximately 2:00 a.m. on June 9, 2000. Fry and Betty had never met before.
{159} Betty was using a pay phone, was emotionally distraught, and stranded. Fry was driving a vehicle and was accompanied by one male companion, Leslie Engh. Fry offered Betty a ride home, and she accepted.
{160} Fry drove away from the store with Betty and Engh and turned off the paved roadway and onto a dirt road that led out into the desert. Fry claimed that he needed to urinate and drove a "pretty good" distance away from the paved road. Betty sensed something was not right, and when Fry stopped the car, exited, and began urinating, she also exited the vehicle and began walking back towards the paved road. Fry reentered his vehicle, drove alongside Betty, and coaxed her back in.
{161} After Betty reentered the car, Fry drove some distance further, then stopped, and dragged Betty out of the car by her hair. A struggle ensued and Fry summoned Engh to hold Betty's legs, which Engh did. Fry then attempted to take off Betty's shirt, but she kicked him. Fry drew his bowie knife and "slammed" it into Betty's chest. The knife traveled two inches into Betty and penetrated her breast bone and heart sac. She fell to the ground and Fry and Engh attempted to pull off her pants. As they did this, Betty yelled at the men "why are you doing this to me?" She then removed the knife from her chest, threw it into a ravine, broke free, got to her feet, and started running.
{162} As she ran, Betty screamed loudly at a high pitch. Her shirt was around her neck and her chest exposed. Fry chased her, caught her, and then the two men succeeded in pulling off her pants. After they disrobed her, Betty once more broke free and again started running. At this point, she was completely naked.
{163} Fry instructed Engh to find the knife and Fry obtained a sledgehammer from the car. As Engh searched in bushes with a flashlight for the knife, he saw Fry swinging the sledgehammer in the distance. Betty's screaming came to an end.
{164} Fry struck Betty on the head three to five times with the sledgehammer. The wounds the blows inflicted indicated that Betty had been facedown on the ground when she was struck. Her scalp was torn, her skull split, and her brain lacerated. These blows, in conjunction with the stab wound, caused her death.
{165} After Fry killed Betty, Fry and Engh dragged her corpse by its wrists to some bushes by a ravine, an area where they believed it would not be discovered. Engh did not want to look at the corpse but did and saw that the face was covered in blood and the hair was "in all sorts of different funny directions." They kicked Betty's clothes "off towards the edge of the ravine" so that they too would not be discovered.
{166} Fry and Engh drove away from the scene of the murder, but their car became stuck in "a wash." Fry contacted his parents on his cell phone. It was nearly 4:00 a.m. Fry's parents, oblivious to what Fry and Engh had just done, met the men at the paved roadway.
{167} Betty's corpse was discovered by a lineman later that morning. When questioned by the police, Fry denied any involvement in the killing. He did not testify at trial. The evidence presented to Fry's jury overwhelmingly demonstrated that Fry had killed Betty. Engh testified as a witness for the State and provided the testimony that serves as *1130the principal foundation for the narrative produced above.
{168} After Fry's jury returned a guilty verdict, several of Betty's siblings and children offered victim impact testimony at the sentencing phase of the proceedings. The general thrust of that testimony was that Betty had been a kind and generous woman, that Betty's family was greatly distressed by the thought of the terror she experienced at the time of her death, and that the family's grieving and loss was profound. The sole aggravating circumstance found by the jury was that Fry perpetrated his murder in the course of a kidnapping. State v. Fry ,
{169} Four witnesses presented mitigating evidence for Fry. Id. ¶ 46. A psychologist stated that it was unlikely Fry would engage in additional violence in prison. A pastor stated his belief that Fry had grown spiritually since being incarcerated. Fry's mother and father indicated a desire to continue knowing their son and spoke of his interests and community involvement. The trial judge informed the jury that, if Fry received a prison sentence for his crimes, he would be imprisoned for a minimum of sixty-seven years.
2. The facts of Allen's case
{170} On February 7, 1994, Allen happened to encounter Sandra Phillips as Sandra walked through Flora Vista, New Mexico to complete an errand and apply for a job at a local restaurant. State v. Allen ,
{171} Allen drove Sandra out into the hills "because he wanted to make love to her." He tied a rope around Sandra's neck "so he could control her while he made love to her." Initially, the rope was wrapped around Sandra's neck three times and then knotted. Allen tightened the rope to a point that it cut off the blood supply to Sandra's brain. Sandra struggled with Allen for about thirty seconds as he attempted to rape her, but she lost consciousness and went limp. Allen pulled Sandra's blouse over her chest, removed Sandra's left boot, and then removed Sandra's left leg from her pants and underwear. Even though Sandra was unconscious, she was still breathing. Allen wrapped the rope around her neck a fourth time and again knotted it. Sandra died one to two minutes after losing consciousness. She was slowly strangled to death. In the course of the struggle, Allen sustained a facial scratch and a bruised lip. Id. ¶ 5.
{172} After murdering Sandra, Allen put her half-naked corpse in a ditch three-and-one-half miles from Flora Vista. Id. ¶ 3. The evidence indicated that the killing occurred somewhere other than where the body was discovered. Id. ¶ 7. Allen cleaned his truck to eliminate any evidence of the murder. Sandra's corpse remained in the ditch until it was discovered by a shepherd six weeks later. Id. ¶ 3. The jury was shown sixteen photographs of Sandra's half-naked, decaying corpse.
{173} When the police informed Allen that they suspected he killed Sandra, Allen informed them that the perpetrator was, in fact, a man named David Anderson from Jemez Springs. Yet, Allen told his wife and others that he raped and then killed Sandra in order to prevent her from reporting the rape and expressed to others that he thought he would not be convicted for the crime.
{174} At the sentencing phase, the jury learned that Allen had taken measures to silence other women he had victimized. The jury was informed that, in the 1980s, Allen stole money from a woman and, when she confronted him about the theft, he grabbed her by the throat, pushed her against a wall, and threatened to kill her if she reported the incident to the police. Allen was imprisoned for this conduct. Id. ¶ 80. This testimony in conjunction with Allen's statements to his wife and others that he raped Sandra and then killed her to prevent her from reporting the rape formed the basis for the jury's finding that Allen killed Sandra with the aggravating circumstance that he murdered *1131to silence a witness. Id. ¶¶ 79 -80. At the sentencing hearing, Sandra's mother and a family friend testified, and a short video of Sandra on a camping trip was played for the jury. Id. ¶¶ 56 -58. This evidence was, by all accounts, particularly forceful and established that Allen's actions irreparably wounded Sandra's family and friends. See id. at ¶ 145 (Franchini, J., partial concurrence and partial dissent).
{175} Allen also spoke to the jury at sentencing. Id. ¶ 82. He offered mitigating evidence on his own behalf, the only mitigating evidence presented. Id. He "sobbed," "cried," and told the jury "he was sorry for the pain he had caused."
B. The Parties Did Not Ask Us to Reconsider the Merits of Garcia
{176} Neither Fry nor Allen raised the issue of the validity of the comparative proportionality methodology embraced in Garcia until this Court directed them to do so. Fry and Allen argued that executing them after the legislative repeal of the death penalty would constitute cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment and deprive them of the equal protection of law. The Court declined to answer these questions and, instead, directed the parties to submit briefs about the merits of Garcia and the merits of this Court's application of the principles articulated in Garcia in Fry's and Allen's direct appeals. This is troubling.
{177} "The premise of our adversarial system is that appellate courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry and research, but essentially as arbiters of legal questions presented and argued by the parties before them." Carducci v. Regan ,
{178} I am not arguing that this Court is without power to independently exercise its authority and decide questions not briefed when it is prudent and necessary to do so. I have advocated for and have done just this. Rather, I contend that we should not reach issues not raised by the parties and not implicated by their arguments. And this is particularly true where doing so requires us to reverse the decisions of prior members of this Court on questions that are, as will be shown, inescapably subjective and based on settled law.
C. Federal Constitutional Principles
{179} The Majority justifies its decision to direct this litigation to Garcia and comparative proportionality review because, in their view, the construction of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) embraced in Garcia does not uphold the "promises of the United States Constitution" and is "insufficient to eliminate the possibility of an arbitrary and capricious sentence, contrary to Furman. " Maj. Op. ¶¶ 12, 34. " Furman and Gregg ," they contend, "require more." Maj. Op. ¶¶ 74-75.
{180} The Majority misinterprets the United States Supreme Court's case law on capital punishment and comparative proportionality review and wrongly concludes that this Court is required to ensure a form symmetry in the capital sentencing context that is not required. As we shall see, the federal Constitution does not forbid the application of the death penalty simply because other defendants who committed superficially similar crimes did not receive death sentences. The Supreme Court's case law points in the opposite direction.
{181} "The origins of the [Supreme] Court's death penalty reform efforts can be traced to 1932, when it ruled [in Powell v. Alabama ,
*1132From 1932 until the 1960s, the "prehistory of death penalty jurisprudence," it "seemed unlikely ... that a constitutional claim against the death penalty as such would ever gain serious attention."
{182} In McGautha , the Court considered whether a defendant's "constitutional rights were infringed by permitting the jury to impose the death penalty without any governing standards."
{183} Justice Douglas openly questioned, in Furman , how the textual source of the right could explain the obvious tension between McGautha and Furman . Furman ,
{184} Furman was issued only one year after McGautha and, as is well known, it is comprised of nine separate opinions. Every Justice on the Court wrote. "[T]he majority 'opinion' in [ Furman ] is a one-paragraph per curiam invalidating under the Eighth Amendment the death sentences imposed on the three petitioners in the case." Carol S. Steiker & Jordan M. Steiker, Sober Second Thoughts: Reflections on Two Decades of Constitutional Regulation of Capital Punishment ,
{185} Scholarship points out that "identifying the 'concerns' of Furman is a daunting task." Steiker, supra , 362. Any reader who picks up the opinion will see the truth of this immediately. The various "opinions present[ ] a staggering array of arguments for and against the constitutionality of the death penalty and offer[ ] little means, aside from shrewd political prediction, of determining which arguments would dominate in the decision of any future cases." Id. One writer suggests that Furman "so starkly deviated from the traditional format that it can be characterized as a decision in which there was not only no Court opinion but no Court-only a confederation of individual, even separately sovereign, Justices." Burt, supra , at 1758. The Justices themselves later acknowledged that "the variety of opinions supporting the judgment in Furman engendered confusion as to what was required in order to impose the death penalty in accord with the Eighth Amendment." Lockett v. Ohio ,
{186} Several of the Justices concurring in Furman pointed to statistics that showed that the death penalty was being applied on racial lines and with pronounced frequency on black defendants.
*1133see generally Samuel R. Gross and Robert Mauro, Patterns of Death: An Analysis of Racial Disparities in Capital Sentencing and Homicide Victimization ,
{187} In the wake of and in reaction to Furman , thirty-five state legislatures amended and then reenacted their death-penalty statutes. Burt, supra , at 1765. To some of the Justices concurring in Furman , this reenactment came as a surprise. Burt, supra , at 1766-67. These events prompted Marshall to openly question whether the American public was in fact an "informed citizenry." Gregg v. Georgia ,
{188} "Unlike Furman , each of the Justices did not speak or vote alone [in Gregg and its companion cases]. As in Furman , however, there was no Court at work. The judgments resulted from an aggregation of plurality voting lacking any majority rationale to explain the different outcomes in these cases." Burt, supra , at 1765. Yet, an outcome was produced.
{189} "[T]he Georgia [ ( Gregg ) ], Florida [ (Profitt ) ], and Texas [ ( Jurek ) ] statutes that specified various substantive standards for jury discretion" were upheld and "the North Carolina [ ( Woodson ) ] and Louisiana [ ( Roberts ) ] statutes that purported to abolish jury discretion by mandating death as the penalty for specific criminal offenses" were invalidated. Burt, supra , at 1765. " Gregg and its accompanying quartet clarified that the death penalty was not per se invalid under the Eighth Amendment and that the Court would now be involved in the ongoing business of determining which state schemes could pass constitutional muster." Steiker, supra , at 363. "The Gregg , Proffitt , and Jurek opinions did not attempt to list in any definitive fashion the prerequisites for a valid capital punishment regime; rather, they simply upheld each particular scheme presented on the basis of its own peculiar mix of procedural protections." Steiker, supra , at 363. Whether comparative proportionality was such a prerequisite was eventually litigated in Pulley .
{190} Unlike Furman and Gregg , Pulley garnered a six-justice majority opinion by Justice White.
{191} The Court examined the line of cases beginning with Furman and emphasized that those cases simply did not require comparative proportionality review to ensure that death sentences are not arbitrarily imposed. Pulley ,
Any capital sentencing scheme may occasionally produce aberrational outcomes. Such inconsistencies are a far cry from the major systemic defects identified in Furman . As we have acknowledged in the past, there can be no perfect procedure for deciding in which cases governmental authority should be used to impose death.
Pulley ,
{192} There, Justice White rejected the contention, in broad and sweeping language, that capital sentencing must be carried out with perfect symmetry or not at all. I reproduce his words in their entirety as they have a force that is difficult to replicate.
[The] argument that there is an unconstitutional amount of discretion in the system which separates those suspects who receive the death penalty from those who receive life imprisonment, a lesser penalty, or are acquitted or never charged, seems to be in final analysis an indictment of our entire system of justice. Petitioner has argued, in effect, that no matter how effective the death penalty may be as a punishment, government, created and run as it must be by humans, is inevitably incompetent to administer it. This cannot be accepted as a proposition of constitutional law. Imposition of the death penalty is surely an awesome responsibility for any system of justice and those who participate in it. Mistakes will be made and discriminations will occur which will be difficult to explain. However, one of society's most basic tasks is that of protecting the lives of its citizens and one of the most basic ways in which it achieves the task is through criminal laws against murder. I decline to interfere with the manner in which Georgia has chosen to enforce such laws on what is simply an assertion of lack of faith in the ability of the system of justice to operate in a fundamentally fair manner.
{193} The defendant in McCleskey -a black, male, resident of Georgia-was sentenced to death for murdering a white police officer in the course of a robbery.
{194} The Court understood the defendant to be arguing that his death sentence violated the Eighth Amendment because it was "disproportionate to the sentences in other murder cases[,]"
{195} The Court explained that " Furman held only that, in order to minimize the risk that the death penalty would be imposed on a capriciously selected group of offenders, the decision to impose it had to be guided by standards so that the sentencing authority would focus on the particularized circumstances of the crime and the defendant."
Individual jurors bring to their deliberations qualities of human nature and varieties of human experience, the range of which is unknown and perhaps unknowable. The capital sentencing decision requires the individual jurors to focus their collective judgment on the unique characteristics of a particular criminal defendant. It is not surprising that such collective judgments often are difficult to explain. But the inherent lack of predictability of jury decisions does not justify their condemnation. On the contrary, it is the jury's function to make the difficult and uniquely human judgments that defy codification and that buil[d] discretion, equity, and flexibility into a legal system.
{196} The Majority cannot contend that the need to engage in the comparative proportionality review they suggest is necessary derives from the "promise" of the federal constitution. Where proportionality review need not be conducted to satisfy the constitution, it cannot be that a death sentence is *1136unconstitutional because of some claimed failure to conduct meaningful enough statutory comparative proportionality review. In addition, the contention that Fry and Allen have been subjected to unconstitutionally arbitrary death sentences because of allegedly inadequate comparative proportionality review entirely ignores the fact that Fry and Allen are members of a select and specific cadre of murderers that may, under the CFSA, ever be permissibly put to death, and that Fry's and Allen's juries were only permitted to impose death sentences after Fry and Allen received the many procedural protections assured them by the CFSA. In other words, the Majority makes such a monolith of comparative proportionality review that they effectively ignore the many limiting and channeling functions of the CFSA.
D. Competing Forces at Work in the CFSA
{197} The Majority's construction of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) seems to assume that, so long as we are assiduous enough in unearthing comparison cases and do as robust a comparative review as possible, we can be assured an objectively correct answer about the merits of a jury's capital sentencing decision will emerge. I respectfully disagree. This view ignores the tensions at work in the CFSA between the statute's requirement for individualized capital sentencing proceedings and consistent capital sentencing outcomes. These commands are at odds with one another and any construction of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) must necessarily impose a compromise between them.
{198} The Majority appears to believe that these difficult tensions are resolved by the basic realization that "[c]omparative proportionality is not a question for the jury but rather is intended to serve as a check on the exercise of jury discretion in sentencing" and that "[t]he primary focus [in assessing the comparative proportionality of a death sentence] is not on the reasonableness of the jury's sentence of death, but rather on how that sentence compares to jury dispositions in comparable cases." Maj. Op. ¶ 77 (third alteration in original) (quoting Papasavvas ,
1. The importance of individualized sentencing in the capital context
{199} All of the provisions of the CFSA must be considered when construing its terms. State v. Thompson ,
{200} "[I]n capital cases the fundamental respect for humanity underlying the Eighth Amendment requires consideration of the character and record of the individual offender and the circumstances of the particular offense as a constitutionally indispensable part of the process of inflicting the penalty of death." Woodson, 428 U.S. at 304,
{201} Despite the fact that the CFSA gives to sentencing juries the authority to determine whether to impose death or extend mercy, and despite the fact that this *1137delegation of authority has a constitutional dimension and necessarily grants discretion, Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) nevertheless directs this Court to verify the correctness of the sentencing jury's determination. The problem inherent with Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) should be self-evident.
{202} On one hand, the constitution requires an individual assessment of the capital defendant's circumstances and crime and the CFSA ensures that this will occur by granting to juries the right to decide the propriety of capital punishment. On the other hand, Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) assumes that the facts giving rise to death sentences may be flattened for comparison and that this Court may, somehow, meaningfully judge the capital sentencing determinations of juries. I am not the first to acknowledge that these concerns are entirely at odds with one another and present us with what appears to be an unresolvable conflict.
{203} Other courts have already recognized that comparison of capital sentences is inherently problematic given the "constitutional requirement for individualized sentencing in the imposition of death sentences," and is also inherently illogical as "that which is unique is also incommensurable." Addison ,
{204} The Majority mentions the statistical model of comparative proportionality review adopted by the New Jersey Supreme Court, Maj. Op. ¶ 45, but fails to note that some scholars denounce New Jersey's attempts-which have been vigorous and resource intensive-to make comparative proportionality review an empirical and scientific endeavor as nothing more than an "abject failure." Barry Latzer, The Failure of Comparative Proportionality Review of Capital Cases (with Lessons from New Jersey) ,
{205} Comparative proportionality review "is conducted on an individual basis for each death sentence" and "[a]t its heart, ... will always be a subjective judgment as to whether a particular death sentence fairly represents the values inherent in [any given] sentencing scheme for [the most depraved forms of] murder." Gregory ,
2. The limitations of comparison
{206} The Majority holds out cross-case comparison as a reliable method to evaluate the merits of death sentences and suggests that consistency in outcomes of capital cases is not only desirable but required. They embrace two incorrect assumptions: first, comparing death sentences, in the way envisioned by the Majority, reliably answers whether a death sentence has been appropriately imposed; and second, any perceived inconsistency in the application of the death penalty is unacceptable. Both of these assumptions are wrong.
{207} The type of comparison in which the Majority engages-one that seeks to assess the correctness of death sentences by scrutinizing the facts and details of capital crimes and sentences-is inappropriate. As one court effectively and imaginatively explained, a court undertaking comparative proportionality *1138review should not treat the endeavor as a forensic scientist would.
[The defendant] would have us review [the comparative disproportionality of his death sentence] as a forensic scientist analyzes fingerprints, looking for a specified number of identity points. Only if one can conclusively determine that each swirl, ridge, and whorl is present in both samples is a match declared. We decline to do this. Crimes, particularly the brutal and extreme ones with which we deal in death penalty cases, are unique and cannot be matched up like so many points on a graph.
State v. Lord ,
{208} This Court does not sit in judgment of what crimes are most severe, heinous, and deserving of the death penalty. Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) cannot be construed to provide this Court that authority. To do so intrudes into an area that is reserved solely for the jury, the only entity capable of deciding what punishment is appropriate for the most severe violations of community norms. So what is the concern for courts undertaking a comparative proportionality review?
{209} The concern "is with alleviating the types of major systemic problems identified in Furman : random arbitrariness and imposition of the death sentence based on race." Lord ,
{210} For these reasons, the secondary literature indicates that death sentences are overturned as comparatively disproportionate only very rarely. See Leigh B. Bienen, The Proportionality Review of Capital Cases By State High Courts After Gregg: Only "The Appearance of Justice? ",
3. Consistency at all costs
{211} There is no reason why a death sentence imposed upon a defendant who committed a particularly deplorable, death-eligible murder could not stand alone as a permissible death sentence despite the fact that all other death-eligible defendants received only life sentences. The existence of a statistical outlier in no way establishes that the imposition of a death sentence is necessarily comparatively disproportionate so long as there is some justification for that death sentence . Garcia seems to have embraced this very thought when it observed that a death sentence could be justified even if life sentences were normally imposed for the category of murder in which the crime producing the sentence belongs so long as there is "some justification" for that death sentence.
{212} It is difficult to see how, if our Legislature ever elected to reinstate the death penalty, any murder involving kidnapping or sexual assault could possibly be deemed not comparatively disproportionate in the wake of the Majority's opinion. And this illuminates the point that comparative disproportionality is-if taken too far and permitted to serve as a demand for the sort of symmetry and consistency in sentencing Pulley and McCleskey made clear is neither practical nor required-the "poisoned pill"
*1139the Majority claims it is not. See Maj. Op. ¶ 53 (stating that comparative proportionality review is not a "poisoned pill" designed to eliminate the death penalty in entire categories of murder, an outcome that would indeed be a "de facto repeal of the death penalty").
E. Garcia , Its Application in Fry's and Allen's Cases, and Stare Decisis
1. Garcia was correctly decided
{213} Garcia construed Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) as limiting the pool of comparison cases to those "in which a defendant was convicted under the same aggravating circumstance(s) and then received either the death penalty or life imprisonment" Garcia ,
{214} First, Section 31-20A-4 is closely related to Georgia's death-penalty statute. Ruth Musgrave Silver, Constitutionality of the New Mexico Capital Punishment Statute ,
{215} Second, Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) states that the inquiry into the excessiveness or disproportionality of a death sentence is one evaluated with respect "to the penalty imposed in similar cases" and must take into account "both the crime and the defendant." The manner in which the statute uses the words "cases" and "crime" is suggestive.
{216} Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) 's use of these two words confirms that the Legislature clearly understood they have distinct and different meanings. See Norman J. Singer and Shambie Singer, 2A Sutherland Statutes and Statutory Construction § 46:6 (7th ed. 2014). A murder "case" is a specific iteration of murder involving a specific set of facts. This is distinct from murder as a "crime," a concept that would encompass a wide array of different types of murder cases. Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) 's use of the phrase "similar cases" suggests that the pool of cases for comparison should be comprised of a limited number of cases closely mirroring the murder for which a defendant received the death sentence. Garcia does just this.
2. Application of Garcia in Fry's and Allen's cases
{217} Review of how Garcia was applied in Fry's and Allen's direct appeals shows that Garcia sensibly construed the statutory language. Fry's death sentence was compared with six cases. These cases involved the aggravating circumstance of kidnapping-the aggravating factor that made Fry death eligible. Four of the comparison cases were death sentences: Allen ,
{218} In Allen , the Court relied on the comparative proportionality analysis in Clark given the similarities between Clark's and Allen's crimes. In Clark , this Court identified two cases where defendants received death sentences for murders involving the aggravating factors of kidnapping and murder of a witness-*1140Guzman ,
{219} There is nothing wrong or inadequate about the Court's analysis in either case. In both instances, the Court paid appropriate deference to the respective jury determinations while simultaneously examining death and life sentences in similar cases.
3. Stare decisis
{220} The principle of stare decisis is at its zenith when this Court is asked to reconsider the meaning of statutes where the previous interpretation was accepted by our Legislature. United States v. Lane ,
{221} Garcia has been challenged over the years and this Court has repeatedly declined to reconsider the comparative proportionality methodology adopted there. See Fry ,
{222} For these reasons, there can be no doubt that the Legislature was aware of the debate surrounding Garcia and was perfectly capable of overturning our construction of its words if they believed our construction lacking in some respect. It did not, and this failure to act has unquestionable significance. The Legislature embraced Garcia . The Majority rejects this conclusion, but for reasons that do not withstand scrutiny.
{223} The Majority states that "the Legislature's intent in adopting Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) is clear from its history, and our application of Garcia has not fulfilled that purpose." Maj. Op. ¶ 81. They cite authority stating that legislative inactivity cannot ratify a clearly erroneous interpretation of a statute. Maj. Op. ¶ 82. That the Majority is certain that Garcia was wrongly decided does nothing to change the fact that this Court has consistently affirmed Garcia for decades. The suggestion that legislative acquiescence has no force here because it was always plain to see that Garcia was wrongly decided strains credulity.
F. Finality
{224} The Majority's ruling tells those convicted and sentenced under lawful proceedings later affirmed that they need never "reconcile themselves" to sentences imposed and affirmed and broadcasts to the public "that we have no confidence that the laws are administered justly." Spalding v. Aiken ,
{225} In 1981, Michael Guzman abducted Colleen Bush and her friend Julie Jackson as they walked home late one night from UNM. Guzman ,
No one in the criminal justice process has ever asked what it's like for me, as the victim in this case, to survive the defendant's requests for new hearings over the last 25 years. ... It is excruciating. Your honor, to go through delay after delay has been torture for me. Here we are again, with another habeas corpus petition. ... [T]he habeas corpus procedures ... need to be reformed to prevent continuing state-sanctioned psychological brutalization of victims of horrific crimes like myself. ... This man kidnapped, raped and murdered my best friend, who was a kind and gentle person, and he thought he had done the same to me. As the victim of a violent crime I have rights, too. I have the right to be treated with fairness and respect for my dignity. I have the right to a timely disposition. Where is the fairness? Where is the dignity? And where is the timely disposition? This needs to stop now. Each continuance is like a knife in my heart and, your honor, I have been stabbed enough.
Leslie Linthicum, Guzman murder case hearings reopen old wounds , Albuquerque Journal (Aug. 1, 2013), https://www.abqjournal.com/240179/guzman-murder-case-hearings-reopen-old-wounds.html (last visited May 23, 2019). It is unnecessary to state in express terms what this Court should glean, in the present context, from this victim's agony.
III. CONCLUSION
{226} The words of Justice Brennan, made in a similar context but for different reasons, summarize my thoughts: "In my view the Court errs at all points from its premises to its conclusions." McGautha ,
{227} For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
I CONCUR:
PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice, Retired, Sitting by designation
Opinion of the Court
I. INTRODUCTION
{1} In this case we revisit our statutory responsibility to ensure that the death penalty is reserved for the most heinous crimes. Since 1979, the New Mexico Legislature has directed this Court to ensure that "the death penalty shall not be imposed if ... the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases." NMSA 1978, § 31-20A-4(C)(4) (1979, repealed 2009).
{2} In 2009, the Legislature abolished the death penalty as a sentencing option for murders committed after July 1, 2009.
{3} In this consolidated appeal of the district court's denial of Petitioners' motions to dismiss their death sentences, we hold that Petitioners' death sentences are disproportionate and violate Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). Guided by our recognition that our Legislature intended for comparative proportionality review to protect against the arbitrary imposition of the death penalty, we conclude that there is no meaningful basis for distinguishing Fry and Allen from the many similar cases in which the death penalty was not imposed. Because Petitioners' death sentences are statutorily disproportionate to the penalties imposed in similar cases, we remand each case to the district court to impose a sentence of life imprisonment.
II. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
{4} Prior to the 2009 statutory repeal of the death penalty, Petitioners Fry and Allen were sentenced to death. Allen was convicted of first-degree murder for the 1994 killing of a seventeen-year-old girl. State v. Allen ,
{5} In accordance with the Capital Felony Sentencing Act, Allen's sentence for murder was determined in a separate proceeding. Id. ¶¶ 1, 15 ; see NMSA 1978, § 31-20A-1(B) (1979, repealed 2009). At sentencing, Allen's jury found the aggravating circumstances of kidnapping and murder of a witness and unanimously voted to impose the death penalty. Allen ,
{6} On June 9, 2000, Fry and an accomplice kidnapped a woman who was stranded at a convenience store. State v. Fry ,
{7} On direct appeal to this Court, both Fry and Allen argued that their death sentences were disproportionate to the penalties imposed in similar cases and therefore violated Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). Fry ,
{8} Petitioners' cases were in postconviction habeas proceedings when the Legislature repealed the death penalty effective July *10931, 2009. Following the repeal, Fry and Allen filed motions to dismiss their death sentences, arguing that the repeal rendered their death sentences unconstitutional. Fry and Allen asserted that the prospective-only application of the repeal violated state and federal prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment, state and federal guarantees of equal protection, and the prohibition of special laws in the New Mexico Constitution. The district court denied Petitioners' motions and concluded that the death sentences were constitutional. However, it granted Petitioners' requests for an interlocutory appeal and stayed their executions pending the outcome of the interlocutory appeal.
{9} We granted Petitioners' applications for interlocutory appeal. Because "[w]e seek to avoid an interpretation of a statute that would raise constitutional concerns," this Court asked for supplemental briefing on the statutory validity of Petitioners' death sentences. See State v. Pangaea Cinema ,
III. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
{10} By statute and under Article VI, Section 2 of the New Mexico Constitution, this Court has "exclusive jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals in criminal cases where a defendant faces possible life imprisonment or execution." State v. Ameer ,
{11} Our role in reviewing a death sentence is not to question the wisdom of the repeal nor to insert our own policy judgment in place of the Legislature's. As Justice Franchini wrote, "this Court is powerless"-despite practical or philosophical opposition to the death penalty-"to change [public policy] unless the statutory law underlying the policy is declared unconstitutional." State v. Clark ,
{12} We review statutory and constitutional challenges de novo. Ameer ,
IV. DISCUSSION
{13} Because the purpose of comparative proportionality review is most clear from its history, we begin with the origin of comparative proportionality review. In the 1970s, the United States Supreme Court decided a series of landmark cases concerning the constitutionality of capital punishment, which in turn impacted whether and how states could impose the death penalty. See generally Furman v. Georgia ,
{14} The first of the landmark federal cases concerning the death penalty was Furman ,
{15} The Furman Court expressed concern with disproportionate sentencing. Justice White observed, "the death penalty is exacted with great infrequency even for the most atrocious crimes," and "there is no meaningful basis for distinguishing the few cases in which it is imposed from the many cases in which it is not."
cruel and unusual in the same way that being struck by lightning is cruel and unusual. For, of all the people convicted of rapes and murders ..., many just as reprehensible as these, the petitioners are among a capriciously selected random handful upon whom the sentence of death has in fact been imposed. ... [T]he Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence of death under legal systems that permit this unique penalty to be so wantonly and so freakishly imposed.
{16} In the aftermath of Furman , New Mexico took the path of many other states and enacted a mandatory capital sentencing scheme, "apparently on the theory that if there was no discretion, there was no problem."
{17} Four years after Furman , the Supreme Court upheld a revised capital sentencing scheme in Gregg , 428 U.S. at 196-99,
*1095substantially eliminate[ ] the possibility that a person will be sentenced to die by the action of an aberrant jury. If a time comes when juries generally do not impose the death sentence in a certain kind of murder case, the appellate review procedures assure that no defendant convicted under such circumstances will suffer a sentence of death.
{18} New Mexico adopted the Capital Felony Sentencing Act, complete with procedures modeled on the Georgia scheme, in 1979. Compare NMSA 1978, §§ 31-20A-1 to -6 (1979), with Gregg , 428 U.S. at 162-63, 197-98,
A. The judgment of conviction and sentence of death shall be automatically reviewed by the supreme court of the state of New Mexico.
B. In addition to the other matters on appeal, the supreme court shall rule on the validity of the death sentence.
C. The death penalty shall not be imposed if:
(1) the evidence does not support the finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance;
(2) the evidence supports a finding that the mitigating circumstances outweigh the aggravating circumstances;
(3) the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or any other arbitrary factor; or
(4) the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant .
(Emphasis added.) Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) is the basis for the comparative proportionality requirement at issue in this appeal.
{19} New Mexico also narrowed the class of offenders eligible for the death penalty to those guilty of first-degree murder where the sentencing jury unanimously finds one of seven aggravating circumstances: murder for hire; murder of a witness; murder of a police officer; murder in the commission of or attempt to commit a kidnapping, criminal sexual contact of a minor, or criminal sexual penetration; murder in an attempt to escape a penal institution; murder of an employee of the corrections department by an inmate of the corrections department; and murder of a fellow inmate or person lawfully on the premises of a penal institution. Section 31-20A-3 ; see also NMSA 1978, § 31-20A-5(A)-(G) (1981). New Mexico's revised capital sentencing scheme remained largely unchanged from 1979 until the 2009 repeal and remains in force for murders committed before 2009 pursuant to the Legislature's savings clause. H.B. 285, 49th Leg., 1st Sess., Section 6. Based on its similarities to the Georgia statute, we interpret our scheme as incorporating the principles announced in Furman and Gregg . See Garcia ,
{20} The United States Supreme Court clarified in Pulley v. Harris that comparative proportionality review is not constitutionally required.
{21} Pulley also clarified that comparative proportionality is different from traditional proportionality review, which is the "abstract evaluation of the appropriateness of a sentence for a particular crime."
{22} Prior to Pulley , this Court adopted the existing approach to comparative proportionality review. Garcia ,
We assume that the Legislature means that in similar cases, considering both the crime and defendant, a defendant convicted of first degree murder under a specific aggravated circumstance should not be put to death if another defendant or other defendants, convicted of murder under the same aggravated circumstance is given life imprisonment, unless there is some justification. Therefore, we adopt the following guidelines for review under this Section.
1. We will review this issue only when raised on appeal.
2. In our review, we will consider only New Mexico cases in which a defendant has been convicted of capital murder under the same aggravating circumstance(s) .
3. Only those New Mexico cases in which a defendant was convicted under the same aggravating circumstance(s) and then received either the death penalty or life imprisonment and whose conviction and sentence have been upheld previously by this Court[ ] will be considered appropriate for comparison.
4. We will review the record and compare the facts of the offense and all other evidence presented by way of aggravation or mitigation to determine whether the sentence is excessive or disproportionate.
Garcia ,
{23} Justice Sosa dissented from the imposition of the death penalty, foreshadowing the issues that are now before this Court. Id. ¶¶ 43, 65 (Sosa, J., specially concurring). Among his concerns, Justice Sosa noted that the majority had not acknowledged the mandatory nature of comparative proportionality review. Id. ¶¶ 59, 61. He further noted that the statute failed to specify the relevant universe of cases. Id. ¶ 59. "What does similar mean?" he asked, and
[h]ow far back in New Mexico's judicial history should comparisons be made? Should extrajudicial cases be brought into the analysis? Are cases which ended in plea bargains relevant? If a prosecutor exercises discretion in the charging process and seeks an indictment without aggravating *1097circumstances, is that case similar?
{24} In this case, Fry and Allen argue that this Court should overrule Garcia and expand the universe of cases used in determining whether a sentence is disproportionate under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). In the alternative, Fry and Allen argue that this Court should find their sentences disproportionate under the Garcia approach to comparative proportionality review. We address their arguments in accordance with the Legislature's mandate in Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) that we conduct a comparative proportionality review in order to provide a "meaningful basis for distinguishing the few cases in which [the death penalty] is imposed from the many cases in which it is not." Furman ,
A. The Legislature's Repeal of the Death Penalty Is a Compelling Reason to Revisit the Comparative Proportionality of Petitioners' Death Sentences
{25} The State argues that we should refrain from revisiting the comparative proportionality of Petitioners' death sentences because we determined that the death sentences were not excessive or disproportionate in their direct appeals. Fry ,
{26} Because the essential purpose of habeas review is to reconsider and correct issues that were wrongly decided on direct appeal, "courts rarely apply principles of finality in habeas corpus proceedings with the same force as they do in ordinary litigation." Clark v. Tansy ,
{27} The State argues that the repeal was not technically a change in law because it left the comparative proportionality requirement undisturbed for murders committed before July 1, 2009.
{28} The repeal of the death penalty is also an intervening change in fact, presenting eminently relevant information that was not considered upon our initial review of Petitioners' death sentences. In determining the proper course of action, this Court is not limited to considering the instant record but rather "may take judicial notice of legislative facts by resorting to whatever materials it may have at its disposal establishing or tending to establish those *1098facts." Kerr v. Parsons ,
{29} Fry and Allen are currently the only two inmates facing the death penalty under the 1979 capital sentencing scheme and, due to the repeal's profound shift in fact and law, they are likely to be the last two inmates to ever face the death penalty under that statutory framework. The interests of justice require us to ensure that every person facing death under the 1979 capital sentencing scheme is afforded its full statutory protections. Under that capital sentencing scheme, we have an unqualified mandate to assure that a death sentence shall not be imposed if disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases. Section 31-20A-4(B), (C)(4) (providing that "the supreme court shall rule on the validity of the death sentence" and that "[t]he death penalty shall not be imposed if ... disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases"); see NMSA 1978, § 12-2A-4(A) (1997) (" 'Shall' ... express[es] a duty, obligation, requirement or condition precedent."). This is a heightened, additional, and continuing responsibility, and it is a mandatory and important component of New Mexico's capital sentencing scheme. Until an execution is carried out, justice requires us to ensure that a death sentence is not disproportionate.
{30} Our reconsideration of the proportionality of Petitioners' death sentences is consistent with the highest level of scrutiny which death penalty cases demand. Gregg , 428 U.S. at 187,
{31} While there is a legitimate interest in the finality of criminal judgments, the repeal of the death penalty presents a profound change in the legal and factual framework surrounding Petitioners' death sentences such that the interests of justice require that we ensure that those sentences are not disproportionate to the penalty imposed *1099in similar cases. We therefore exercise our discretion to reconsider the comparative proportionality of Petitioners' death sentences.
B. Our Prior Application of Garcia Did Not Substantially Eliminate the Risk of an Arbitrary and Capricious Death Sentence
{32} Since it was decided over thirty years ago, Garcia has garnered criticism for failing to "answer the central question of proportionality as proposed by Justice White: whether there is a real difference between the many cases in which the death penalty is not imposed and the few cases in which it is."
(1) Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) mandates that this Court conduct a comparative proportionality review in every case, but " Garcia says that review will be conducted only on request. [ Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) ] imposes responsibilities on the Supreme Court [while] Garcia imposes the responsibility on the defense to raise the issue and to supply comparison cases." Final Report, 18;
(2) Garcia "set[s] an overly restricted definition of the universe of cases" because "using the jury's finding of an aggravating circumstance as the characteristic that defines what is a 'similar' case ... [yields] only a handful of 'similar' cases to be considered." Final Report, 18-19;
(3) While "th[is] Court has consistently rejected defense challenges to the Garcia standard, it has not applied the standard consistently over time." Final Report, 19;
(4) "[This] Court has held sentences to be proportionate even when there are no other cases in which the defendant was sentenced to death," indicating that "the Court is using a reasonableness approach or ... has created an unspoken presumption that a death sentence is always proportionate." Final Report, 19;
(5) "[M]any cases simply state a conclusion-that the death penalty is not excessive or disproportionate-without explaining the process that led the Court to its conclusion. This makes it difficult for lawyers or the public to understand the basis for the conclusion." Final Report, 21;
(6) "[T]here are still unresolved issues about how the Garcia standard applies to particular cases," including whether this Court will consider cases with the same aggravating circumstance or, in the absence of a similar case, "point[ ] to [factual] circumstances ... [which] distinguish [the case under review] from the case in which a life sentence was imposed." Final Report, 21.
{33} The problems identified in the Final Report were evident in Petitioners' direct appeals. In Allen ,
{34} We agree with the Final Report that we are required under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) to conduct a comparative proportionality review of every death sentence, contrary to Garcia . See Garcia ,
{35} Although New Mexico has authorized the use of capital punishment since before statehood, the death penalty has been infrequently imposed.
{36} Under the pre-repeal capital sentencing scheme, an offender convicted of first-degree murder could be subject to the death penalty only where the sentencing jury found one of seven aggravating circumstances. Section 31-20A-3 ; Section 31-20A-5(A)-(G). Most death-eligible cases did not reach the sentencing stage. Wilson, supra , at 271-72, 301. From July 1979 through December 2007, prosecutors sought the death penalty in only 211 cases. Id. at 266-67. Nearly half of these cases were resolved through plea bargains that removed death as a possible sentence. Id. at 268. The other half went to trial. See id. at 269. Thus, our limited universe of death penalty cases is in large part due to both plea bargaining and prosecutorial reluctance to seek the death penalty.
{37} Fifty-two cases advanced to death penalty sentencing proceedings.
{38} Because relatively few death-eligible cases reach the death penalty sentencing phase in New Mexico, use of the same aggravating circumstance as the sole criteria for identifying similar cases has produced an impracticably small pool of comparison cases. See Final Report, 19-21. This is particularly true in Fry , which at the time of Fry's direct appeal was the only case involving kidnapping as the sole aggravator that was affirmed on appeal. See Fry ,
{39} Additionally, there is no central repository of information regarding death penalty cases, making it difficult to obtain the details and records necessary to thoroughly conduct the comparative proportionality review. As Fry and Allen note, "[t]he [L]egislature obligated [this] Court to conduct a proportionality analysis, but failed to provide any mechanism to collect the cases that could be used in the analysis." Unlike other states, New Mexico does not collect data to support comparative proportionality review. See, e.g. , Tenn. Sup. Ct. Rule 12 (1) (requiring the trial court to prepare a postconviction report for *1102"all cases ... in which the defendant is convicted of first-degree murder" with data to be used in the proportionality analysis). The underlying records in most death penalty cases in New Mexico are not electronically available, with the exception of those cases that were prosecuted shortly before the repeal. This invariably affected both the ability of defense counsel to bring meritorious challenges to the comparative proportionality of their clients' death sentences and the depth of this Court's review.
C. We Modify Our Application of Garcia in Order to Fulfill the Legislature's Intent in Adopting Section 31-20A-4(C)(4)
{40} Fry and Allen urge us to overrule Garcia , asserting that Garcia has deprived them of a meaningful comparative proportionality review and that the mechanism for conducting this review should be modified in various ways. We decline to overrule Garcia . However, we modify Garcia in order to better fulfill the purposes of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4).
{41} We first recognize that the Washington Supreme Court, faced with similar concerns regarding proportionality review, recently declared Washington's death penalty scheme unconstitutional as administered in State v. Gregory ,
{42} While the United States Supreme Court has left states free to define the framework of their comparative proportionality reviews, see Pulley ,
{43} The Garcia Court defined the universe of cases as including cases in which the death penalty was sought and which resulted in a sentence of death or life imprisonment that was affirmed on appeal. Compare Garcia ,
{44} In the second step, the reviewing court must define what constitutes a "similar case." See Final Report, 15. This produces a pool of cases to be used for comparison purposes.
{45} The third and final step in conducting a comparative proportionality review is to define the test used to establish that a sentence is disproportionate. See Final Report, 15. Three approaches courts have taken in defining disproportionality are: (1) the statistical frequency approach, (2) the precedent-seeking approach, and (3) the reasonableness approach. Id. 16. The statistical frequency approach is "a measurement of the relative frequency of death sentences in factually similar cases." Papasavvas ,
{46} Garcia is a "precedent-seeking approach," which involves comparing the case to the pool of comparison cases in much the same way that a court typically reviews a case. Clark ,
{47} "The reasonableness approach turns on generalized notions of reasonableness, which are in turn based on the particular court's values, experience and general familiarity with prior cases." Final Report, 17. Our application of Garcia has garnered criticism because we "ha[ve] held sentences to be proportionate even when there are no other cases in which the defendant was sentenced to death," indicating that we have resorted to "a reasonableness approach or ... ha[ve] created an unspoken presumption that a death sentence is always proportionate." Final Report, 19. We will continue to adhere to a precedent-seeking approach but adopt the following modifications to Garcia .
1. We decline to expand the universe of cases beyond cases in which the death penalty was sought, the jury found at least one aggravating circumstance, and which resulted in a sentence of death or life imprisonment that was affirmed on appeal
{48} Fry and Allen urge this Court to expand the universe of cases from which similar cases have been drawn to include cases that could have been prosecuted as a death penalty case, regardless of whether the death penalty was actually pursued. Fry and Allen claim that death sentences are overrepresented under Garcia because the universe of cases excludes those in which the prosecutor did not seek the death penalty or offered a plea bargain in favor of life. Expanding the universe would enable us to examine the impact of prosecutorial discretion on the selection of which defendants were selected to receive the death penalty in New Mexico.
{49} The State argues that Garcia properly limits the universe of cases to those in which the prosecution sought and the jury had the option to impose a death sentence. See Garcia ,
{50} Whether the New Mexico Legislature intended for comparative proportionality review under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) to include reviewing the exercise of prosecutorial discretion presents a question of statutory interpretation. "We begin by looking at the language of the statute itself," while recognizing that the plain language "must yield on occasion to an intention otherwise discerned in terms of equity, legislative history, or other sources." State v. Smith ,
{51} Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) does not expressly define the universe of cases, much less address whether we should limit our review to those cases in which the prosecutor sought the death penalty. The Legislature did not provide specific guidance as to which cases should be considered substantively or procedurally similar for purposes of comparative proportionality review. However, the term "similar cases" appears within the phrase "the penalty imposed in similar cases" in Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). Other courts have construed identical language as communicating an intent for the court to consider cases in which the prosecutor sought the death penalty and which progressed to a death penalty sentencing hearing, whether it resulted in a sentence of death or life imprisonment. See, e.g. , Addison , 7 A.3d at 1247.
{52} This interpretation is consistent with the history of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). Our Legislature adopted Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) in response to Furman and *1105Gregg which, in turn, provide insight into the appropriate parameters of the comparative proportionality review. See Addison , 7 A.3d at 1230, 1239-40. Like other courts, we conclude that our comparative proportionality review requirement was designed to incorporate the constitutional standards which existed at the time of its adoption. Id.
{53} We gather from Furman that Petitioners' death sentences are not per se disproportionate based on how rarely New Mexico prosecutors have pursued the death penalty. Although the Furman Court did not discuss comparative proportionality review, it observed that the rare imposition of the death penalty was not enough to prove that it was being imposed arbitrarily. Furman ,
{54} Gregg confirms that the Furman Court was not concerned with prosecutorial discretion. Gregg , 428 U.S. at 199,
{55} This is consistent with the approach used by the majority of states. Most states limit their comparative proportionality reviews to cases in which the prosecutor sought the death penalty. See, e.g. , State v. Ross ,
{56} By contrast, few states have opted to include in the comparative proportionality review cases in which the prosecutor did not seek the death penalty. See, e.g. , Papasavvas ,
{57} Because the Gregg Court was not concerned with prosecutorial discretion, we also conclude that the New Mexico Legislature, by modeling its review on the comparative proportionality review endorsed in Gregg , did not intend for Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) to serve as a check on the exercise of prosecutorial discretion. Under Gregg , prosecutors are free to exercise their discretion in favor of life. See 428 U.S. at 199,
{58} We also consider whether the comparative proportionality review should be modified to account for the exercise of executive clemency. This power was given to the governor by the people. N.M. Const. art. V, § 6. Like prosecutorial discretion, the governor's power to commute sentences is "outside of the effective control of legislatures" and an "inevitable component[ ] of any capital scheme." Sherod Thaxton, Disciplining Death: Assessing and Ameliorating Arbitrariness in Capital Charging ,
{59} Governor Anaya commuted the majority of death sentences imposed under the pre-repeal, 1979 capital sentencing scheme. See Exec. Orders Nos. 86-37, 86-38, 86-39, 86-40, 86-41 (Nov. 26, 1986). Under Gregg , this does not render Petitioners' death sentences disproportionate. See 428 U.S. at 199,
{60} We also limit our review to cases prosecuted under the pre-repeal, 1979 capital sentencing scheme. "To include cases decided before enactment of the present [s]tatute would require consideration of cases decided under the various constitutionally infirm statutes which predate the current one," Flamer ,
{61} The Garcia Court's definition of the universe of cases includes one more restriction: we consider only those cases which were affirmed on appeal.
{62} In sum, we hold that the universe of cases is properly limited under Garcia to those cases in which the prosecutor decided to seek the death penalty, which advanced to a death penalty sentencing hearing in which the jury found at least one aggravating circumstance, and which resulted in a sentence of death or life imprisonment which was affirmed on appeal.
2. We expand the pool of cases to include both cases involving the same aggravating circumstance and factually similar cases in which the jury had the option to impose the death penalty
{63} The second step of the comparative proportionality review requires us to identify the particular characteristics to be used to identify a " 'similar case.' " Final Report, 15. While we adhere to Garcia's definition of the universe of cases, we reconsider the pool of comparison cases and determine that the pool must be expanded from cases involving first-degree murder convictions with the same aggravating circumstances to include factually similar crimes in which the jury considered the death penalty. In reaching this conclusion, we are guided by the Gregg Court's understanding that "[i ]f a time comes when juries generally do not impose the death sentence in a certain kind of murder case , the appellate review procedures assure that no defendant convicted under such circumstances will suffer a sentence of death." 428 U.S. at 206,
{64} The Garcia Court included within the pool of comparison cases only those cases involving the same aggravating circumstances.
{65} However, given the rarity of death penalty prosecutions in New Mexico, the Garcia Court's definition of the pool of comparison cases has proven to be unworkable. Final Report, 19 (describing the Garcia approach as "logical" but noting that it yields "only a handful of 'similar' cases" for the comparative proportionality review). Only four cases have aggravating circumstances identical to Allen ,
{66} We acknowledge, as Petitioners contend, that our comparative proportionality review must be applied to "fully answer the central question of ... whether there is a real difference between the many cases in *1108which the death penalty is not imposed and the few cases in which it is." Final Report, 18; see Furman ,
substantially eliminate[ ] the possibility that a person will be sentenced to die by the action of an aberrant jury. If a time comes when juries generally do not impose the death sentence in a certain kind of murder case, the appellate review procedures assure that no defendant convicted under such circumstances will suffer a sentence of death.
428 U.S. at 206,
{67} Other states include factually similar cases in the comparative proportionality review. See, e.g. , Addison , 7 A.3d at 1253 (reviewing the facts underlying the murder, the aggravating factors, and the mitigating factors because "[t]hese characteristics found by the jury establish the unique footprint of the case within which the jury considered ... the crime and the character and background of the particular defendant to decide whether to impose the death penalty"); Papasavvas ,
{68} In Tennessee, for example, the Supreme Court considers a non-exhaustive list including "the manner of death (e.g., violent, torturous, etc.)," "the victim's circumstances including age [and] physical and mental conditions," "the absence or presence of provocation ... [or] justification," and "the injury to and effects on nondecedent victims." Bland ,
{69} However, examining the universe of death penalty cases in New Mexico, we observe that juries had the option to impose the death penalty in a number of cases with factual similarities to Fry and Allen but which did not result in the same aggravating circumstances. Specifically, regardless of the aggravating circumstances alleged, many cases involved the murder of youthful, typically female victims in the commission of a sexual assault.
*1109{70} Additionally, we note that while New Mexico prosecutors maintained no written criteria for when to pursue the death penalty, they considered additional factors relevant in determining whether to seek the death penalty, including the age of the victim, whether the crime was ethnically motivated, opinions of the victim's family, the number of victims, the suffering of the victim, the generally severe or aggravated nature of the crime, and the impact of the crime on the community. Final Report, 14-15. We consider these factors relevant when determining what makes a case factually similar.
{71} In light of the limitations posed by the small universe of death penalty cases, we see no principled reason to exclude factually similar cases in which the jury considered the death penalty from the pool of comparison cases. These cases, like cases involving the same aggravating circumstance, are substantively and procedurally similar to the cases under review because the jury had the option to impose the death penalty based on similar facts. Expanding our review to consider these cases may reveal a pattern where no pattern was readily discernible among cases involving the same aggravating circumstances. This will better serve the purposes of comparative proportionality review by enabling us to determine whether Fry and Allen were sentenced to death by an aberrant jury, in accordance with Gregg , 428 U.S. at 206,
{72} We therefore expand the pool of cases to include factually similar cases in which the jury considered the death penalty. We adhere to Garcia to the extent that the Garcia approach uses the same aggravating circumstance as the starting point for identifying the pool of comparison cases. However, we will also give meaningful consideration to factually similar crimes in which the jury considered the death penalty.
3. A death sentence is disproportionate if juries do not generally impose a death sentence in similar cases and there is no justification for the death sentence to be imposed
{73} In the third step of our comparative proportionality review, we turn to the test to be used to establish that a sentence is disproportionate. Garcia states that a death sentence should not be affirmed when similar cases ended in life imprisonment, "unless there is some justification."
{74} In our initial review of Petitioners' death sentences, we did not explain why Petitioners' death sentences should be affirmed when the majority of defendants received life sentences for similarly shocking crimes. Instead, we concluded that certain facts justified their death sentences without meaningfully considering factually similar cases and whether juries generally imposed death sentences in those cases. See, e.g. , Fry ,
*1110{75} Furman and Gregg require more. Comparative proportionality review must provide "a meaningful basis for distinguishing the few cases in which [the death penalty] is imposed from the many cases in which it is not." See Furman ,
{76} At a minimum, comparative proportionality review requires that we thoroughly acknowledge and give meaningful consideration to similar cases that ended in a life sentence. State v. Timmendequas ,
{77} In practice, we have not addressed the question of whether a defendant's death sentence is an aberration and have instead conducted a traditional proportionality review. In focusing primarily on facts that could have justified the imposition of the death sentence without meaningfully considering other cases involving similar facts, we have not answered the central question of whether the defendant's death sentence is an aberration from the norm. See, e.g. , Garcia ,
{78} Other courts have clarified that
the appellate task under [comparative] proportionality review was not to determine whether the capital case before it in some way was, on a scale of moral blameworthiness, roughly equivalent to all other capital cases and, absent such rough equivalence, to reverse the sentence. Nor was that review considered to require that the capital case before the court must affirmatively be shown, on such a scale, to have been quantitatively different from all other cases in which the death penalty was not imposed and, absent such an affirmative *1111showing, to reverse the sentence. In the Supreme Court's view, rather, the appellate inquiry under proportionality review was whether the death penalty imposed in a particular case was aberrational, within the particular jurisdiction involved, with respect to similar cases.
State v. Webb ,
{79} Consistent with the constitutional principles of Furman and Gregg , we conclude that a death sentence is disproportionate if juries do not generally impose a death sentence in similar cases and there is no real justification for the death sentence.
4. Principles of stare decisis do not prevent us from modifying Garcia
{80} The State argues that stare decisis prevents us from overruling or modifying Garcia because the Legislature left Garcia undisturbed for nearly thirty years before the repeal. Because we "take care to overrule established precedent only when the circumstances require it," State v. Pieri ,
{81} This is not a case where the purpose of the statute must be inferred from silent acquiescence to a well-settled interpretation of law. See, e.g. , Patterson v. McLean Credit Union ,
{82} The State's argument would have greater force if we were overruling a functional approach to comparative proportionality review. Garcia proved to be unworkable in practice because it identified an overly restricted pool of cases. See Pieri ,
D. Imposition of Death Sentences Against Fry and Allen Is Disproportionate to the Penalties Imposed in Similar Cases
1. Cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as Fry and Allen did not generally result in death sentences
{83} To determine whether Petitioners' death sentences are statutorily proportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, we begin with the framework set forth in Garcia ,
{84} Fry was sentenced to death based on the aggravating circumstance of kidnapping.
*1112Fry ,
{85} Of cases advancing to a death penalty sentencing hearing, the only other case involving the sole aggravating circumstance of kidnapping which was affirmed on appeal also involved Robert Fry. See State v. Fry , S-1-SC-29025, dec. ¶¶ 1-5 (Aug. 28, 2007).
{86} Under a strict application of Garcia , the only case for comparison to Fry is a case involving the same defendant, the same accomplice, and very similar conduct, but which did not result in a death sentence. Similar cases involving two kidnapping aggravators also resulted in life sentences. In State v. Bedford , S-1-SC-30664, dec. ¶ 1, (June 23, 2010) (non-precedential) and Ortega ,
{87} Stanley Bedford received a life sentence for a murder in which the two victims were burned alive in the trunk of their car. Bedford , S-1-SC-30664, dec. ¶¶ 1-3. Bedford and the victims' nephew entered the victims' home. Bedford , S-1-SC-30664, dec. ¶ 2. There, Bedford attacked the victims, took their jewelry and credit cards, restrained them, forced the couple into the trunk of their car, drove them out of town, and beat the husband with a metal pipe. Id. ¶¶ 2-3. Bedford and the victims' nephew then filled *1113gas cans and Bedford watched as the victims' nephew poured the gas on the car and set it on fire with both victims most likely alive in the trunk. Id. ¶¶ 2-3, 30. Bedford was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of kidnapping, two counts of tampering with evidence, one count of aggravated burglary, and one count of disposal of stolen property. Id. ¶ 1. The jury found two kidnapping aggravators but did not agree unanimously on the death penalty. Bedford , D-911-CR-2005-00046, court's jury instructions (June 21, 2007) and special verdict (June 28, 2007).
{88} Similar to Bedford, the jury did not impose the death penalty on Richard Michael Ortega for a brutal double murder. Ortega ,
{89} Neither Bedford nor Ortega supports the conclusion that Fry's death sentence is statutorily proportionate. Fry had one victim; Bedford and Ortega each had two. The jury in Fry found one aggravator; the juries in Bedford and Ortega each found two. Yet Fry received a death sentence and Bedford and Ortega did not. Considering Bedford , Ortega , and Fry's later conviction, we conclude that the death penalty was not generally imposed in cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as Fry .
{90} Although the statutory proportionality requirement does not require perfect symmetry in sentencing, it does require some justification for a disparity between the death sentence under review and the life sentences in similar cases. Garcia ,
{91} Before we consider the expanded pool of factually similar cases, we turn to Allen, who was sentenced to death for murdering a seventeen-year-old girl. Allen ,
{92} For Allen , the comparison cases are clearly identifiable under Garcia . The aggravating circumstances were kidnapping and murder of a witness. Allen ,
{93} In more than a half century, Clark is the only case in which the State of New Mexico carried out an execution. Wilson, supra , at 271. Terry Clark was sentenced to death for kidnapping, raping, and murdering a nine-year-old girl. Clark ,
{94} Johnny Clifford Zinn and three others kidnapped and gang-raped a woman and then shot her in the head. Zinn ,
{95} Jerry Wayne Hutchinson abducted a woman from a rest stop before sexually assaulting and killing her. Hutchinson ,
{96} Travis McGuire enlisted his stepbrother in the kidnapping, rape, and murder of an Albuquerque woman. McGuire ,
{97} Examining these four similar cases involving the same aggravating circumstances, we find no immediately discernible reason for Allen's death sentence. In three of the four cases the jury declined to impose the death sentence for crimes that were very similar to and arguably more heinous than Allen's. Only one of the comparison cases resulted in a death sentence. Clark ,
{98} We note that both Allen and Clark share the disturbing characteristic of murder of a child. To determine whether that factual similarity is sufficient justification for the sentencing disparity, we explore that similarity in further detail when we consider factually similar crimes in the next section of the opinion.
{99} In sum, neither the cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as Fry nor the cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as Allen generally resulted in death sentences. But because Garcia limits the pool of cases for comparison, we turn to consider the expanded pool of comparison including cases factually similar to Fry and Allen in which the jury had the option to impose death but which did not involve the same aggravating circumstances.
2. Cases involving facts similar to Fry and Allen did not generally result in death sentences
{100} In order to ensure that we are conducting a thorough proportionality review, we now expand upon the Garcia approach to include factually similar cases in which the death penalty was an option. In the sentencing phases, the Allen jury found the aggravating circumstances of kidnapping and murder of a witness, the Fry jury found only the kidnapping aggravator, and both received the death sentence. Juries did not generally impose the death sentence for crimes with the same aggravating circumstances as either Fry or Allen , but juries had the option to impose the death penalty based on different aggravating circumstances in many cases involving facts similar to the facts in Fry and Allen . We therefore go beyond a strict application of Garcia to compare Petitioners' death sentences to the sentences imposed in cases in which the victim was a child (as in Allen ) and in cases involving the attempt or commission of criminal sexual penetration (as in both Fry and Allen ).
{101} By examining these cases, we can see whether juries generally imposed the death penalty in cases factually similar to Fry and Allen . We conclude from our examination that, although the death penalty was an option in many cases predicated on similar facts, the death sentence was rarely imposed. Our review of these cases does not reveal a justification for Petitioners' death sentences and instead demonstrates that Fry and Allen were singled out for the death penalty.
a. The death penalty has not been generally imposed in cases involving a youthful victim
{102} We consider the age of the victim to be a salient fact in our comparative proportionality review. New Mexico prosecutors *1116considered the age of the victim in determining whether to pursue the death penalty. Final Report, 14. The only execution to be carried since the 1979 enactment of the capital sentences scheme was for the murder of a nine-year-old girl. Wilson, supra , at 271; see Clark ,
{103} Of the cases involving a child victim which reached a death penalty sentencing hearing, Clark , Ortega , and Stills ,
{104} Other offenders did not receive a death-penalty review at sentencing because-although guilty of conduct resulting in the death of a child-they were not charged with a death-eligible offense. See, e.g. , State v. Jojola ,
{105} We also consider cases involving an elderly victim because some prosecutors reported that the age of the victim was important in deciding whether to pursue the death penalty. Final Report, 14. Robert Henderson, Jr. beat, raped, and strangled an eighty-nine-year-old *1117woman. Henderson ,
{106} Eddie Lee Adams raped and murdered an eighty-year-old Clovis woman and was convicted of kidnapping, criminal sexual penetration, aggravated burglary, robbery, tampering with evidence, and first-degree murder-where findings of the aggravating circumstances of murder of a witness, murder in the commission of a kidnapping, and murder in the commission of a criminal sexual penetration allowed the jury to consider the death penalty.
{107} Of cases involving a child or elderly victim, Clark is the only case in which the defendant was ultimately sentenced to death. The majority of cases involving the murder of a child or elderly victim resulted in a life sentence. Because the death penalty was not generally imposed for cases involving a child or elderly victim, these cases suggest that the age of Allen's victim provides no rational justification for his death sentence and that it is therefore disproportionate.
b. The death penalty has not been generally imposed in cases involving criminal sexual penetration
{108} Because Fry and Allen were both convicted of attempted criminal sexual penetration, cases with that aggravator serve as a useful point of comparison for purposes of comparative proportionality review. New Mexico prosecutors also considered the commission of a criminal sexual penetration to be a relevant factor in deciding whether to seek the death penalty. See Wilson, supra , at 275 (stating that kidnapping, murder of a witness, and criminal sexual penetration "were the most commonly filed and continue to be the most common aggravators in penalty *1118phase cases"). Furthermore, cases involving a criminal sexual penetration were among the most likely to proceed to a death penalty sentencing hearing. Id. Many cases besides Fry and Allen involved the aggravating circumstance of criminal sexual penetration, including Clark , Gilbert , Guzman , Cheadle , Adams , Stills , McGuire , Henderson , Zinn , Hutchinson , Lovett , Harris , and Bryant . We compare these cases to Fry and Allen .
{109} The death penalty was imposed in five cases involving the aggravating circumstance of criminal sexual penetration: Clark , Gilbert , Guzman , Cheadle , and Adams . Except for Clark , each of these death sentences was vacated or commuted. Exec. Orders Nos. 86-37 (Gilbert), 86-39 (Guzman), 86-41 (Adams) (Nov. 26, 1986); Cheadle ,
{110} Governor Anaya also commuted the death sentence of Michael Anthony Guzman. Exec. Order No. 86-39 (Nov. 26, 1986). Guzman was sentenced to death for an attempted double murder where one victim died and one victim was injured but survived. Guzman ,
*1119Id. ¶ 1. The jury sentenced Guzman to death based on the aggravating circumstances of kidnapping, criminal sexual penetration, and murder of a witness. Id. ¶¶ 17 -18.
{111} David Leon Cheadle was sentenced to death for robbing a man and a woman at gunpoint, attempting to rape the woman, and murdering the man. Cheadle ,
{112} In the majority of cases involving similarly disturbing incidents of criminal sexual penetration the defendants were sentenced to life in prison, despite facing the possibility of death. See, e.g. , Stills ,
{113} Life sentences were also imposed in Lovett , Harris , and Bryant . Paul Wayne Lovett did not receive the death sentence for the sexual assault and murder of a young woman. Lovett ,
{114} Miles Harris was sentenced to life in prison for raping a woman and using her bra to strangle her to death. Harris , S-1-SC-23306, dec. ¶¶ 1, 3. She was found dead in her apartment, in a complex where Harris had worked as a painter. Id. ¶ 3. Harris's DNA and sperm were discovered on the victim, and he had a scratch consistent with fingernail marks. Id. ¶¶ 3, 5. Harris was convicted of first-degree willful and deliberate murder, felony murder, criminal sexual penetration, aggravated burglary, larceny, and two counts of child abuse. Id. ¶ 1. Harris had also stolen the victim's car and traded it for cocaine. Id. ¶ 4. The jury found the aggravating circumstance of criminal sexual penetration, but did not unanimously agree on the death penalty. See State v. Harris , D-202-CR-1992-01433, verdict guilty and verdict not guilty (Sept. 21, 1995).
{115} Robert Bryant was sentenced to life imprisonment for strangling a woman as he raped her. Bryant , S-1-SC-26112, dec. ¶¶ 1, 22, 27. The victim's body was discovered padlocked inside of Bryant's camper shell. Id. ¶¶ 3, 19. She was wrapped in blankets and unclothed from the waist down, with the exception of her socks and tennis shoes. Id. ¶ 27. A pendant had been pressed deeply into the victim's neck, which was heavily bruised, and her bra was sliced and pushed out of place. Id. ¶¶ 22, 27. Bryant's pubic hair was discovered on the victim and his sperm was still inside of her and intact, suggesting that she had been killed in intercourse and had not moved since then. Id. ¶ 27. Bryant "was convicted of first-degree murder, kidnapping, criminal sexual penetration, and tampering with evidence." Id. ¶ 1. The jury found the aggravators of kidnapping and criminal sexual penetration, but did not unanimously agree on the death penalty. See State v. Bryant , D-101-CR-1998-00588, miscellaneous entries (Oct. 6, 1999).
{116} While criminal sexual penetration was a commonly alleged aggravating circumstance, see Wilson, supra , at 274, the death penalty was imposed in very few of these cases. Our comparison of these cases has revealed that the death penalty was far from generally imposed in cases involving similarly disturbing incidents of criminal sexual penetration and that these cases provide no rational justification for Petitioners' death sentences. Taken together, the cases suggest that Fry and Allen were singled out for the death penalty and that Petitioners' death sentences are disproportionate.
c. Petitioners' death sentences are disproportionate
{117} Considering cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as well as other factually similar cases, we conclude that Petitioners' death sentences are statutorily disproportionate. As we have discussed, death sentences were not generally imposed in cases involving the same aggravating circumstances as either Fry or Allen . Neither the age of Allen's victim nor Fry's and Allen's attempted criminal sexual penetration provide justification for this sentencing disparity, as death sentences were not generally imposed by juries in cases involving similar facts.
{118} Out of the entire pool of reliable comparison cases for either Fry or Allen , death sentences were imposed in only three cases, Clark , Gilbert , and Guzman .
{119} Although Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) does not require perfectly symmetrical sentencing, it does require us "to identify and invalidate the aberrant death sentence." Clark ,
V. CONCLUSION
{120} Ten years ago, the people of New Mexico, through their duly elected representatives in the Legislature, repealed the death penalty on a prospective basis. This historic shift in public and legislative response to the greatest punishment for the most heinous crimes compelled Petitioners to ask this Court to declare their death sentences unconstitutional. Consistent with our longstanding prudential obligation to "avoid deciding constitutional questions unless required to do so," Allen v. LeMaster ,
{121} Fulfilling the legislative mandate under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4), we conduct a post-verdict comparative proportionality review of Fry's and Allen's death sentences by comparing their death sentences to the sentences imposed in similar cases. Our previous examination of Fry's and Allen's death sentences under the approach to comparative proportionality review adopted in Garcia consisted more of a traditional proportionality review and did not satisfy the requirement of Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). This prior approach under Garcia has been a subject of criticism, both by a dissenting member of the enacting Court and in a comprehensive study on the issue. Given the historic repeal of the death penalty, we cannot ignore this criticism and therefore strengthen our approach under Garcia to ensure that each death sentence is thoroughly compared with similar cases in which the jury had the option to impose the death penalty.
{122} In this opinion we apply that modified Garcia approach-one which better fulfills our obligation to conduct a comparative proportionality analysis of Petitioners' death sentences. Doing so, we conclude that Petitioners' death sentences do not satisfy the comparative proportionality requirement under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). In comparing Petitioners' cases to other equally horrendous cases in which defendants were not sentenced to death, we find no meaningful distinction which justifies imposing the death sentence upon Fry and Allen. The absence of such a distinction renders the ultimate penalty *1122of death contrary to the people's mandate that the sentence be proportionate to the penalties imposed in similar cases. We therefore hold the imposition of the death sentence upon Fry and Allen to be disproportionate under Section 31-20A-4(C)(4), hereby vacate their death sentences, and remand for sentences of life imprisonment.
{123} IT IS SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice, Retired, Specially Concurring, Sitting by designation
CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice, Retired, Specially Concurring, Sitting by designation
JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Chief Justice, Dissenting
PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice, Retired, Concurring in Dissent, Sitting by designation
CHÁVEZ, Justice (specially concurring).
{124} The death penalty is the government's authority to plan and carry out the killing of a human being who is found guilty of committing a specified crime or crimes. The plan begins with legislation identifying which crimes warrant the death penalty, the procedure for finding the person guilty, the procedure for deciding whether the person should be sentenced to death, and, if sentenced to death, the method by which the person will be killed. There are limits on the government's authority.
{125} The government must plan and carry out the killing consistent with both the United States and New Mexico Constitutions. The United States Constitution dictates the minimum constitutional protections available to the person the government is planning to kill. The New Mexico Constitution can require greater protection for that person, but cannot require less protection. Legislation may also require greater protections for the person subject to the death penalty beyond what is required by either constitution.
{126} This case is not about constitutional protections. This case is about an additional protection required by the New Mexico Legislature. The protection is the requirement that the New Mexico Supreme Court automatically review a death sentence for, among other things, whether "the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases , considering both the crime and the defendant ."
{127} By necessity we must look at the facts in the case we are reviewing and in the case or cases we are comparing. Otherwise, we would not be able to determine whether the comparison cases are "similar cases," nor would we be able to compare the defendant and the crime in the comparison cases to the defendant and the crime in the case under review.
*1123{128} It seems obvious that a "similar case" would include cases where the victim was murdered. However, a death sentence can only be imposed if the judge or jury finds that the defendant murdered the victim under at least one of the following aggravating circumstances: 1) the victim was a peace officer acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty when murdered; 2) the murder was committed with the intent to kill in the commission or attempt to commit a) kidnapping, b) criminal sexual contact of a minor, or c) criminal sexual penetration; 3) the murder was committed by a defendant attempting to escape a penal institution; 4) the defendant, while incarcerated, murdered a person who was incarcerated or who was lawfully on the premises of the penal institution; 5) the defendant, while incarcerated, murdered an employee of the penal institution; 6) the defendant was hired to murder the victim; or 7) the defendant murdered a witness to prevent the witness from testifying or in retaliation for that testimony.
{129} Instead Justice Vigil narrows the focus by limiting our review to cases in which the jury had to decide whether to impose a death sentence in a case involving the same aggravating circumstance and in which the facts are similar to the case we are reviewing. This review eliminates the countless cases with similar facts where the prosecutor could have asked a jury to consider the death penalty under the same aggravating circumstance, but instead chose to pursue life in prison as the maximum sentence. For example, when a defendant is alleged to have killed a person during the course of attempting to or actually kidnapping or raping the victim, the prosecutor could choose to prosecute the defendant for first-degree murder but not seek the death penalty, in which case the maximum possible sentence for the murder would be life in prison. Excluding these cases from our review of "the penalty imposed in similar cases , considering both the crime and the defendant "
{130} I also understand that the review we undertake expands, although slightly, the analysis previously employed by this Court when performing a comparative proportionality review. I agree with the need to expand the review, particularly because Governor Richardson, when signing the repeal of the death penalty, squarely called into question whether the criminal justice system in New Mexico can be trusted to properly carry out the death penalty. Governor Richardson stated he signed the legislation because he lacked "confidence in the criminal justice system as it currently operates to be the final arbiter when it comes to who lives and who dies for their crime." See Press Release, Governor Bill Richardson Signs Repeal of the Death Penalty (Mar. 18, 2009), available at http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/documents/richardsonstatement.pdf. Governor Richardson also noted that in New Mexico four individuals who were sentenced to *1124death later had the charges against them dismissed. Id .
{131} The criminal justice system includes law enforcement, prosecutors, public and private defenders of an accused, penal institutions, trial courts, and appellate courts. This Court has the responsibility to assure that criminal justice stakeholders adhere strictly to 1) the United States and New Mexico Constitutions; 2) obligations imposed on the system by the Legislature; and 3) procedures required by this Court under its power of superintending control. As it specifically relates to the death penalty, this Court is the only court that has the authority and responsibility to determine whether the sentence of death is "excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant." Section 31-20A-4(C)(4). I am persuaded that our prior approach has been too narrow and, therefore, agree with the detailed approach taken by Justice Vigil and the result she reaches.
{132} The result in this case means that both Allen and Fry will have their death sentences reduced to life in prison. Under the law, they will be entitled to a parole hearing after thirty years.
{133} Allen was thirty-four years old at the time of his trial in 1995. Allen ,
{134} Fry, who was born August 18, 1973, faces a minimum sentence of one-hundred-twenty years just for his life sentences, which run consecutively to the first sentence imposed on Fry.
{135} For all of the foregoing reasons, I concur with the analysis and result reached by Justice Vigil.
DANIELS, Justice (specially concurring).
{136} The opinion of the Court undertakes a cautious exercise of our exclusive statutory responsibility under the Capital Felony Sentencing Act to ensure that a defendant is not *1125put to death if that sanction "is ... disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases," Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) (1979, repealed 2009). In doing so, it avoids at least some of the clear inequities that resulted from the narrow strictures of the majority opinion in Garcia ,
{137} Because we resolve this case on statutory grounds, there is no need for us to reach further and decide in a precedential opinion whether the inconsistent administration of our death sentence statutes also violates state constitutional guarantees, as the Connecticut and Washington Supreme Courts recently have ruled. State v. Santiago ,
{138} As judges, of course, we should not substitute our own personal political, philosophical, or moral views about the death penalty for lawful statutory or constitutional mandates. Members of our society and polity have expressed a number of sharply differing views on the death penalty, ranging from a view that evolving standards of civilization and decency have rejected killing at the hands of the state to a view that exacting an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth is an appropriate justification for the state's extermination of murderers. As judges we should not presume to make those choices-either way-for the citizens of our self-governing democracy. Our focused responsibility is to make sure the law is applied according to statutory and constitutional requirements, including those that incorporate the ultimate precept of equal justice summarized in the inscription behind our bench, "Dedicated to the Administration of Equal Justice Under Law," and the similar expression, "Equal Justice Under Law," that is chiseled into the marble above the doors of the United States Supreme Court. We are also bound by the specific statutory task the New Mexico Legislature has assigned to us with regard to the imposition of the death penalty in this state, to ensure that our justice system does not arbitrarily put to death a few defendants and not the majority of equally eligible others, under either a statutory or constitutional analysis.
{139} Theory often fails to foresee reality. Any expectations of a fairly administered death penalty scheme the drafters of the Act may have entertained forty years ago proved in practice to be wrong. And whatever future the Garcia majority may have anticipated in creating a method for trying to comply with our then-new proportionality oversight responsibility, decades of real-life experience have now demonstrated that its technical limitations focused so narrowly on individual categorical exclusions from the proportionality analysis that it failed to anticipate the complete picture of the inconsistent administration of the death penalty that emerged so clearly over the subsequent years for defendants who committed their crimes between 1979 and 2009, when the Act was in effect.
{140} Our justice system, our citizens, and our public officials in all three branches of New Mexico government for decades often talked the talk of having an equitable and constitutional capital punishment policy but collectively never found themselves willing to walk the walk. Despite the commission of hundreds of brutal, cold-blooded, and deliberate first-degree murders of adult and child victims, our state has executed a total of one of those murderers over the course of decades, a unique defendant who waived both his trial and then his habeas corpus review before this Court, submitting voluntarily to becoming the only person executed by the New Mexico justice system in well over half *1126a century. See Jolene Gutierrez Krueger, Recalling the Last Execution in New Mexico , Albuquerque Journal, August 24, 2016, available at https://www.abqjournal.com/832100/remembering-the-last-killer-put-to-death-in-new-mexico.html (last visited December 20, 2018).
{141} Other than the uniquely anomalous case of Mr. Clark, even those very few defendants whose cases were deemed on direct appeal to be theoretically appropriate under the narrow Garcia limitations to be used as comparisons for proportionality, including Mr. Garcia himself, were all ultimately spared by our state from execution of the death penalty. And despite the "grandfather" clause in the death penalty repeal retaining, at least on paper, the 1979 provisions for execution of murderers who committed their crimes before the 2009 repeal, the reality is that in almost a decade since the repeal the number of first-degree murderers who have been either sentenced to death or executed has been exactly zero, including the defendant for whom the grandfather clause was primarily created. See Dave Maass, Lethal Invective: Accused Cop Killer Michael Astorga Talks Death Penalty Politics , Santa Fe Reporter, March 17, 2009, available at https://www.sfreporter.com/news/2009/03/17/lethal-invective/ (last visited December 20, 2018). Despite having been convicted of the cold-blooded and deliberate execution of a young officer making a routine traffic stop and despite being eligible for the death penalty under the 2009 prospective repeal of the 1979 Act, Michael Astorga was sentenced to life in prison because the sentencing jury did not impose the death penalty. Astorga ,
{142} The disproportionality of New Mexico's administration of the death penalty may be explained in part, but not excused, by the fact that various actors exercising authority of our entire state justice system, and not just individual jurors, have participated in creating the inconsistent application of the death penalty. There are sound policy reasons why each of those actors should have nonreversible discretion to extend mercy, whether in jury verdicts that spare a defendant from either a conviction or death sentence, or decisions of prosecutors to bargain death off the table or not to seek it at all, or the historic and constitutional authority of governors to commute death sentences that have been returned by juries and upheld by courts on appeal. But when the collective result of all the actions taken under authority of our state justice system is that one or even three cold-blooded murderers out of hundreds are executed by the state while the equally culpable majority are spared, our state cannot honestly claim it has imposed the death penalty in a proportionate manner.
{143} A killer's crimes reflect who he is. What we do to the killer reflects who we are. Can we really look anyone in the eye and say that executing these two defendants would be proportionate when compared to non-deadly punishment our state has overwhelmingly meted out in virtually all equally serious first-degree murder cases, and specifically in similar cases, since enactment of the Capital Felony Sentencing Act in 1979? I, for one, cannot honestly do so. I CONCUR in the judgment of the Court.
H.B. 285, 49th Leg., 1st Sess., Section 6 (N.M. 2009), available at https://www.nmlegis.gov/sessions/09% 20Regular/final/HB0285.pdf (last visited June 4, 2019).
Marcia J. Wilson, The Application of the Death Penalty in New Mexico, July 1979 Through December 2007: An Empirical Analysis ,
The repeal must be read as leaving the statutory proportionality requirement and constitutionally required protections undisturbed for murders committed prior to July 1, 2009. This is due to the savings clause, Section 6 of H.B. 285, 49th Leg., 1st Sess., and because the procedures afforded under the pre-repeal, 1979 capital sentencing scheme were constitutionally mandated components of a capital sentencing scheme. Pulley ,
State Bar of New Mexico, Task Force to Study the Administration of the Death Penalty in New Mexico, Final Report, 18 (Jan. 23, 2004) (hereinafter "Final Report"), https://www.nmbar.org/NMBARDOCS/PubRes/Reports/TaskforceDeathPenalty.pdf (last visited June 4, 2019) (referring to Furman ,
Allen ,
Fry ,
Wilson, supra , at 301; see, e.g. , Territory v. Ketchum ,
In addition to the fifty-one cases advancing to death penalty sentencing before the completion of Marcia Wilson's study in 2007, Wilson, supra , at 269, a jury also considered the death penalty for Michael Astorga. See State v. Astorga ,
See Wilson, supra , at 272. The following fourteen opinions and one waiver of direct appeal document these fifteen death sentences: State v. Treadway ,
Treadway ,
Clark v. Tansy ,
Exec. Orders No. 86-37 (Gilbert), 86-38 (Garcia), 86-39 (Guzman), 86-40 (Compton), 86-41 (Adams) (Nov. 26, 1986) (commuting the five death sentences); see generally Toney Anaya, Statement by Toney Anaya on Capital Punishment ,
Jerome Martinez , S-1-SC-22330, order at 1-2.
Compare
See Final Report, 15-16. Courts often use the phrases "universe of cases" and "pool of cases" interchangeably. For clarity, this opinion uses the term "universe" to refer to the broad group of cases from which comparison cases are drawn, and "pool" to refer to the cases selected for comparison.
2007 N.J. Sess. Law Serv. ch. 204 (West)
McGuire ,
State v. Fry , S-1-SC-29025, dec. ¶¶ 4-5 (Aug. 28, 2007) (noting that the State sought the death penalty on the aggravating circumstance of kidnapping); State v. Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00542, miscellaneous entry (Sep. 4, 2003) (finding the aggravating circumstance of murder in the commission of a kidnapping).
See, e.g. , State v. Lovett ,
Jacobs is not a reliable comparison case because the death sentence was not affirmed on appeal. See
State v. Bedford , D-911-CR-2005-00046, court's jury instructions (June 21, 2007) (finding kidnapping aggravators for both victims); State v. Ortega , D-202-CR-1988-44752, miscellaneous entries (Nov. 15, 1988) (finding kidnapping aggravators for both victims).
We acknowledge that, according to his accomplice's testimony, Bedford did not set the car on fire himself. Bedford , S-1-SC-30664, dec. ¶¶ 2-3. This does not serve to justify the sentencing disparity between Bedford and Fry because in the majority of the cases similar to Fry which resulted in a life sentence the defendant committed the heinous acts himself. See Lovett ,
Because the death sentences of Jerome Martinez and Frank Martinez were not affirmed on appeal, they do not qualify for consideration under Garcia ,
The supplemental briefs of Fry and Allen filed in this Court both assert these facts, which are not contested by any party, despite the unavailability of court records to support them. Nevertheless, the information is consistent with all other sources we have located concerning the charges, convictions, and sentencing of Adams.
James Coates, A Governor's Fit Of Conscience Over An Unconscionable Crime , Chicago Tribune, Dec. 7, 1986, http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1986-12-07/news/8604010437_1_noel-johnson-toney-anaya-garrey-carruthers (last visited June 4, 2019).
On retrial for the murder of the first victim, Lovett was again convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. See State v. Lovett , S-1-SC-34815, dec. ¶¶ 1-3 (June 2, 2016) (non-precedential); Lovett , D-506-CR-2003-00406, judgment, sentence, and commitment (June 17, 2014).
Although death sentences were initially imposed in Adams , Cheadle , and Henderson , none of those cases reliably support the imposition of the death penalty. See Henderson ,
See Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) (1979, repealed 2009) (emphasis added); Garcia ,
Section 31-20A-5.
Section 31-20A-4(C)(4) (emphasis added).
Compton v. Lytle,
Allen was sentenced to death for first-degree murder, twenty-five years for kidnapping resulting in great bodily harm, and thirteen years for attempted criminal sexual penetration resulting in great bodily harm. State v. Allen , D-1116-CR-9500014, judgment, sentence, and commitment (Dec. 22, 1995). The latter two sentences were merged and run concurrently to each other but run consecutive to the sentence for the murder conviction.
Including the death sentence reduced to a life sentence in this case, Fry has been sentenced to life in prison four times. State v. Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00513, judgment, sentence, and commitment (Apr. 24, 2002) (sentencing Fry to death); Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00542, judgment, sentence, and commitment (Nov. 20, 2003) (sentencing Fry to life in prison for first-degree murder, to run consecutively to the sentence in Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00513); State v. Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-01055, judgment, sentence, and commitment (Feb. 25, 2005) (sentencing Fry to two sentences of life in prison for two counts of first-degree murder, to run consecutively to each other and to the sentences imposed in Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00513 and Fry , D-1116-CR-2000-00542).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Robert FRY v. James LOPEZ, Warden, Penitentiary of New Mexico, and Timothy C. Allen v. Tim LeMaster, Warden
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published