William Michael Meyer v. Ryan Thornell, Director, Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry, et al.
Punishment HabeasCorpus
Whether the state court adjudicated the petitioner's Eighth Amendment claim on the merits
QUESTIONS PRESENTED In 2015, Mr. Meyer was sentenced to a total of 230 years in prison after a jury convicted him of 23 counts of possession of child pornography. This was the mandatory minimum sentence under Arizona law. On direct appeal, Mr. Meyer argued that the total sentence violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. The Arizona Court of Appeals refused to adjudicate this claim, relying on Arizona’s general rule that state courts “will not consider the imposition of consecutive sentences in a proportionality inquiry.” State v. Berger, 134 P.3d 378, 384 (Ariz. 2006). Mr. Meyer filed a federal habeas petition, and again pressed his Eighth Amendment challenge. The district court denied the petition, and the court of appeals affirmed. The court of appeals first held that the state court had adjudicated Mr. Meyer’s claim on the merits, despite the Arizona Court of Appeals’s express reliance on Arizona’s general rule. It then held that the state-court decision was not an unreasonable application of clearly established law. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). This case presents the following questions: 1. When a state court expressly refuses to consider a petitioner’s constitutional claim, has that court nevertheless adjudicated that claim “on the merits” for purposes of § 2254(d)? 2. Has this Court clearly established, through over a century of Eighth Amendment proportionality cases, that “challenges to the length of term-of-years sentences given all the circumstances in a particular case,” Graham v. Florida, 560 U.S. 48, 59 (2010), extend to the aggregate length of multiple sentences?