ARIZONA NEWS

Court vacates sentence for teen gang member given life without parole

Jul 13, 2019, 4:05 AM | Updated: Aug 18, 2023, 7:13 pm

Arizona woman sentenced to 27 months in prison for illegally transporting migrants...

(Unsplash Photo)

(Unsplash Photo)

WASHINGTON – A federal appeals court vacated the sentence for a Phoenix-area gang member who was still a teen when he got a mandatory life without parole sentence for crimes that “terrorized” the Salt River reservation in the 1990s.

A divided 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Tuesday that since Riley Briones Jr.’s sentencing in 1997, the U.S. Supreme Court has banned life without parole except for “the rarest” of juveniles who are permanently incorrigible – and Briones has been a model prisoner.

It will be the second resentencing for Briones, whose life sentence was reimposed in 2016 by U.S. District Judge Douglas Rayes after he reviewed it in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling.

In a dissent Tuesday, Circuit Judge Mark Bennett disagreed with the majority and said the district court got it right, saying Rayes “did exactly” what the Supreme Court requires in such cases.

“The district court very clearly considered Briones’s youth, youth-related characteristics, and post-incarceration rehabilitation efforts,” before deciding that a life sentence was proper considering the crimes involved, Bennett wrote.

Briones was convicted of murder, arson, assault and tampering with a witness as part of a string of crimes committed in 1994 and 1995 by the Eastside Crips Rolling 30’s, a gang founded and led by him, his brother Ricardo and his father, Riley Sr.

The gang repeatedly firebombed rival gang members’ homes, set other fires to divert firefighters from the firebomb attacks and engaged in a drive-by shooting of one house, court documents show. They also violently assaulted a fellow gang member they suspected of cooperating with police, and discussed plans to blow up the Salt River Police Department and kill a tribal judge and federal prosecutors.

Riley Jr. was just weeks shy of his 18th birthday when he took part in the robbery of a Subway restaurant that ended in the murder of Brian Patrick Lindsay, the sole employee in the store at the time. Briones was driving the getaway car, but the district court said he had planned the crime and was a “pillar of strength” for the gunman, who came out and spoke briefly to Briones before returning to the store and shooting Lindsay repeatedly.

Briones refused a 20-year plea agreement and went to trial, where he was convicted on 10 counts including murder, which carried a mandatory sentence of life without parole at the time. He remains in the Federal Correctional Institution in Phoenix.

But in the intervening two decades, Briones has been a model prisoner, Circuit Judge Morgan Christen wrote in her opinion Tuesday.

“In addition to maintaining a perfect disciplinary record, Briones held a job in food service; volunteered to speak with young inmates about how to change their lives; completed his GED,” Christen wrote.

She also noted that his behavior came before the Supreme Court’s ruling on life sentences for juveniles, meaning “the only plausible motivation for his spotless prison record was improvement for improvement’s sake.”

“This is precisely the sort of evidence of capacity for change that is key to determining whether a defendant is permanently incorrigible,” a key to the Supreme Court’s ruling, she said.

The Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that mandatory life without parole for juveniles constituted “cruel and unusual punishment,” because it did not account for a youth’s capacity for rehabilitation. In subsequent cases, the high court said a life sentence should be reserved for the “rarest of juvenile offenders” whose crimes reflect “irreparable corruption.”

Under that ruling, Christen said, courts “must reorient the sentencing analysis to a forward-looking assessment of the defendant’s capacity for change or propensity for incorrigibility, rather than a backward-focused review of the defendant’s criminal history.” It was not clear the district court judge did that, she wrote, which is why the sentence needs to be considered again.

“If subsequent events effectively show that the defendant has changed or is capable of changing,” Christen said, life without parole is not an option for a juvenile, “even when they commit terrible crimes.”

But Bennett said there was ample evidence that Judge Rayes did consider Briones’ age, his troubled background and his exemplary life behind bars before ultimately deciding that “some decisions have lifelong consequences” and that a life sentence was appropriate for his crimes.

“The record supports that Briones’s crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility, as opposed to transient immaturity,” Bennett wrote. “The district court therefore imposed a permissible sentence.”

Christen said the case was sent back so the district court could “explain its sentence sufficiently to permit meaningful review,” a move that Bennett said was merely asking Rayes “to do again what (he) has already done.”

We want to hear from you.

Have a story idea or tip? Pass it along to the KTAR News team here.

Arizona News

Glendale Mayor Jerry Weiers holds the supersized scissors at the ribbon cutting at Glendale's newly...

Damon Allred

Glendale officials cut ribbon at newly renovated city court

Glendale officials welcomed a newly updated courthouse, as city leaders cut the ribbon at the public service building.

2 hours ago

indicted in fake elector scheme Arizona Republicans...

KTAR.com

State grand jury indicts 11 Arizona Republicans in fake elector investigation

Eleven defendants were indicted in a fake elector scheme on Wednesday, according to Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes.

5 hours ago

Boy injured after hit-and-run died, Glendale police say...

KTAR.com

13-year-old boy hit by truck in Glendale 2 weeks ago dies

The Glendale Police Department announced that a 13-year-old boy injured by a hit-and-run died on Tuesday after two weeks in the hospital.

7 hours ago

Image shows Chucho Produce facility in Nogales. (Chucho Produce)...

SuElen Rivera

4 Arizona businesses get nearly $1M from USDA for clean energy projects

The funding totaling $975,000 was provided by the Inflation Reduction Act, according to the Department of Agriculture.

8 hours ago

A collage of photos showing a wooden raft, a headshot of Thomas L. Robison, and a photo of the miss...

KTAR.com

Man who may have taken homemade raft onto Colorado River in Arizona goes missing

A man who may have been trying to float down the Colorado River with his dog on a homemade raft is missing.

10 hours ago

Split image of the Arizona flag on the left and state Rep. Matt Gress on the House floor April 24, ...

KTAR.com

Democrats in Arizona House get enough GOP help to pass bill to repeal near-total abortion ban

Arizona House Democrats, with help from a few Republicans, passed a bill Wednesday to repeal the state’s near-total abortion ban.

10 hours ago

Sponsored Articles

...

Midwestern University

Midwestern University Clinics: transforming health care in the valley

Midwestern University, long a fixture of comprehensive health care education in the West Valley, is also a recognized leader in community health care.

...

Day & Night Air Conditioning, Heating and Plumbing

Day & Night is looking for the oldest AC in the Valley

Does your air conditioner make weird noises or a burning smell when it starts? If so, you may be due for an AC unit replacement.

...

Fiesta Bowl Foundation

The 51st annual Vrbo Fiesta Bowl Parade is excitingly upon us

The 51st annual Vrbo Fiesta Bowl Parade presented by Lerner & Rowe is upon us! The attraction honors Arizona and the history of the game.

Court vacates sentence for teen gang member given life without parole