Louisiana Inmate Instrumental in Ending Juvenile Life Sentences Freed From Prison

Henry Montgomery, 75, was released from prison after serving 58 years for a killing he committed when he was just 17.

In 1963, Henry Montgomery was skipping school when a plainclothes officer walked up on him. As a Black teen living in the South, he was startled by the white man so he shot him. Montgomery was just 17 and didnโ€™t know the man heโ€™d just shot was East Baton Rouge Sheriffโ€™s Deputy Charles Hurt. Montgomery was initially sentenced to death but was later re-sentenced to life in prison.

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On Wednesday, after 58 years in prison, a three-member Louisiana parole board voted unanimously in favor of Montgomeryโ€™s parole.

NBC News notes that Montgomery, who spent his entire adult life in Louisiana State Penitentiary, also known as Angola, was upbeat after learning of his release.

โ€œItโ€™s wonderful. Everything has changed. Itโ€™s a whole new game,โ€ he said.

Montgomery, who has always taken responsibility for his crime, was remorseful for what happened that day in 1963.

โ€œIโ€™m really sorry that I, that this happened,โ€ Montgomery said during his hearing, NBC News reports. โ€œI am going to have to live with this all my life, the rest of my life.โ€

From NBC News:

Greeting Montgomery upon his release was Andrew Hundley, the first former juvenile lifer in Louisiana to have been released because of Montgomeryโ€™s Supreme Court case. After his release following nearly 20 years in prison, Hundley co-founded the Louisiana Parole Project, a nonprofit group that helps former inmates re-enter life outside prison. Montgomery will now be part of the program.

โ€œToday, Henry being home is a symbol of hope,โ€ Hundley said. โ€œFor individuals who go to prison when they are young people, Henry coming home is a message to them that their lives matter and that they can redeem themselves and that they are better than the worst mistake that they ever made.โ€

Hundley said it says a lot about Montgomeryโ€™s character โ€œthat he was happy and full of grace in knowing that people were able to come home after the U.S. Supreme Court decision that holds his name.โ€

Not everyone was happy to hear that Montgomery was being released. Hurtโ€™s daughter, Linda Hurt Woods, noted that she doesnโ€™t believe Montgomery is sorry.

โ€œI donโ€™t believe heโ€™s sorry. He made a decision at 17 years old,โ€ she said. โ€œYou know right from wrong at 17 years old. I did. I was raised if I made a mistake, I suffered the consequences.โ€

In 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that life sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional. โ€œThe decision said in part that science showed that โ€˜it is increasingly clear that adolescent brains are not yet fully mature in regions and systems related to higher-order executive functions such as impulse control, planning ahead, and risk avoidance,โ€™โ€ NBC News notes.

In 2019, Montgomery told NBC Newsโ€™ Lester Holt he wasnโ€™t upset that several juveniles had benefited from his case and hoped that more would be released.

Montgomery was denied parole in 2019 and was still upbeat.

โ€œIโ€™m going to keep my mind on trying to get out,โ€ he said. โ€œYou got to keep your hope alive.โ€

Straight From The Root

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