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72 Stan. L. Rev. 749 (2020)
Fallacious Reasoning: Revisiting the Roper Trilogy in Light of the Sexual-Abuse-to-Prison Pipeline

handle is hein.journals/stflr72 and id is 771 raw text is: NOTE
Fallacious Reasoning: Revisiting the Roper
Trilogy in Light of the Sexual-Abuse-to-
Prison Pipeline
Marjory Anne Henderson Marquardt'
Abstract. Roper v. Simmons and its progeny fundamentally altered juvenile justice
jurisprudence. In the aftermath of these cases, scholars devoted research to the force
behind the Supreme Court's requirement that children have a meaningful opportunity
for release, state judicial and legislative responses to the cases, and possible extensions of
these cases to abolish certain juvenile sentencing and confinement practices.
This Note takes a different tack. The Roper trilogy's central principle declares juveniles to
be distinct from adults in terms of cognitive and socioemotional development. The trilogy
then makes these differences relevant to criminal liability and punishment. But these
differences come into greater relief for adolescents, particularly girls, who have suffered
trauma in the form of sexual abuse. This Note thus examines the Roper trilogy's
application to girls who have been sexually abused and subsequently swept into the
criminal justice system, the so-called sexual-abuse-to-prison pipeline.
In finding that these adolescents are meaningfully different from their peers in their
socioemotional and cognitive development, not to mention different from adults, this
Note argues that we should change juvenile justice law to conform to the Roper trilogy's
children are different principle. These girls' unique circumstances require alterations to
jury instructions and broader latitude for adolescent psychologists to contextualize their
* J.D. Candidate, Stanford Law School, 2020. First and foremost, this Note would not have
been written without the unending dedication of Norman Spaulding. He not only
encouraged me to write it in the first place but then enthusiastically assisted me through
the research, writing, and editing stages. I also wish to thank Jenny Carroll for her
support and guidance throughout the writing process. I would not have understood the
connection between the Roper trilogy and the sexual-abuse-to-prison pipeline if not for
my work at the Public Defender Service in Washington, D.C., with my supervisors
Nancy Glass, Brittany Mobley, and Clare Kruger. Rebecca Turner and Jody Kent Lavy's
work at the Campaign for Fair Sentencing of Youth helped me contextualize so much of
the aftermath of the Roper trilogy. Thank you to the entire Stanford Law Review team,
particularly Thomas Veitch, Nicole Collins, Ethan Amaker, Greg Terryn, Aletha Smith,
Lori Ding, Nathan Lange, Sam Gorsche, Thomas Schubert, and Jennifer Teitell. I could
not have done this without each of you. Finally, my deepest gratitude goes to my family
through whom all is achievable.

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