Convicted murderer can’t use IL juvy reform law to win chance at parole

Convicted murderer can’t use IL juvy reform law to win chance at parole

A Chicago gang member in the midst of a 40-year sentence for shooting and killing an innocent man while the other man was carrying his three-year-old son to a neighborhood store on Chicago’s South Side can’t use an Illinois criminal justice reform law passed nearly two decades after his conviction to potentially secure an early release from prison, a federal appeals court has ruled.

On Dec. 23, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the appeal of Israel Ruiz, finding the new state law shouldn’t be read to apply to offenses committed before the law was enacted and that such a reading doesn’t violate his rights under the prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishments under the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment.

The ruling could potentially staunch what could have been a wave of lawsuits from others, like Ruiz, serving long prison sentences for murder and other violent crimes committed while they were under the age of 21, asserting they have been wrongly denied the chance for early release on parole.

The case landed before the Seventh Circuit after U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey ruled in favor of the state of Illinois in Ruiz’s legal action.

Ruiz had filed suit in 2022, seeking to secure the chance to shorten his 40-year prison sentence.

At that point, Ruiz was considered to have served about 23 years of the sentence he had received in connection to his 2000 murder conviction in the gang-related shooting death of Nathaniel Walls in 1998.

According to published reports, at the time he was shot, Walls was walking to a store, carrying his three-year-old son, in the 8900 block of South Brandon Avenue in Chicago’s South Chicago neighborhood when he was caught in gang crossfire. Walls was not the intended target of the gunfire, but was still struck by bullets and died.

Ruiz, who was then 18 years old, was among three men charged in connection with Walls’ murder. Ruiz was convicted at trial two years later and was declared to be ineligible for parole.

However, in 2019, as part of a series of criminal justice reforms enacted in the name of social justice and racial equity, Illinois Democratic state lawmakers and Gov. JB Pritzker enacted a new law creating new parole opportunities for people who were convicted of criminal offenses they committed between the ages of 18 and 21.

Under the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2012 decision in Miller v Alabama, the high court has declared that life sentences without the possibility of parole are unconstitutional when applied to juvenile offenders. At the time, juvenile offenders were considered to be those under the age of 18.

However, in the years since, criminal justice reformers, citing scientific evidence which they said shows that human brains are continuing to develop well beyond the 18th year of life, have enacted a series of laws extending the Miller decision’s protections for juvenile offenders to older offenders, as well.

In Illinois’ case, the 2019 law, known as Public Act 100-1182, extended those protections to people up to the age of 21, and automatically made such offenders eligible for parole after serving at least 20 years in prison. However, the law only applied to those sentenced after June 1, 2019, and is not retroactive to those sentenced before that date.

In his lawsuit, Ruiz challenged the state’s decision to limit the reforms to those convicted only after the law took effect. He argued that clause in the reform law violated his rights to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment and to protection against cruel and unusual punishments under the Eighth Amendment.

Ruiz is represented in the action by attorneys Ann H. MacDonald, William P. Ziegelmueller, and Meera Gorjala, of the firm Arentfox Schiff LLP, of Chicago.

However, judges disagreed, saying that the state’s “rational basis” for making the distinction was enough to uphold the law.

In the appellate ruling, the Seventh Circuit judges said they would not overrule Illinois lawmakers on the question, nor would they extend Miller protections to Ruiz and other “juvenile offenders” convicted for murder and other violent crimes committed before their 21st birthday.

The decision was authored by Seventh Circuit Judge Joshua P. Kolar. Circuit judges Doris L. Pryor and Nancy L. Maldonado concurred in the decision. All three judges were appointed to the court by former President Joe Biden.

The judges noted Illinois is among a growing number of states have moved to revise state sentencing and parole laws to make it easier for juvenile offenders convicted of murder and other violent crimes to avoid lengthy prison sentences or potentially secure an early release decades before their sentence would otherwise expire.

“While Illinois’s passage of Public Act 100-1182 is of a piece with this trend, the General Assembly specifically declined to extend the Act’s protections to offenders like Ruiz retroactively,” Kolar and his colleagues wrote.

“We will not supersede that legislature’s authority to make these policy judgments in the first instance.”

“… Ruiz asks us to broaden the Illinois legislature’s selective extension of Miller’s protections beyond the constitutional baseline set by the Supreme Court; this we cannot do.”

Ruiz and his lawyers could now seek to appeal that decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: IL Senate GOP proposes SAFE-T Act changes for domestic violence violations

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran says his caucus has proposed changes to the SAFE-T Act that...
Illinois open-burn bill ignites capitol clash

Illinois open-burn bill ignites capitol clash

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposal aimed at giving local fire protection districts more oversight of open burning in unincorporated...
AMA's medical education infused with political ideology, Do No Harm says

AMA’s medical education infused with political ideology, Do No Harm says

By Tate MillerThe Center Square In its ongoing fight against identity politics in medicine, Do No Harm exposed the American Medical Association this week for content related to identity politics...
Los Angeles police chief declines to enforce ICE mask ban

Los Angeles police chief declines to enforce ICE mask ban

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square California has a new law that prohibits law enforcement from wearing masks, but don’t expect it to be enforced in Los Angeles. At least not...
Surge in gas-fired power for data centers, with Texas leading

Surge in gas-fired power for data centers, with Texas leading

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square The amount of gas-fired power generation in development in the U.S. nearly tripled over the past year to a record-high 252 gigawatts, with a third...
Entrepreneurs push back as Illinois city proposes new business registry

Entrepreneurs push back as Illinois city proposes new business registry

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Despite existing state registration requirements, Pontiac officials are proposing a new local business registration program aimed...
Benghazi attack suspect arrested, will face charges in U.S.

Benghazi attack suspect arrested, will face charges in U.S.

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A suspect in a 2012 attack on a United States compound in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans was arrested and will be prosecuted in...
Canada looks to shift auto industry away from U.S.

Canada looks to shift auto industry away from U.S.

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney wants his nation's auto industry to look far beyond its usual American market with investments in electric vehicles and other...
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker's fiscal update blasts Trump administration

Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker’s fiscal update blasts Trump administration

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget says tax provisions in the Big Beautiful Bill Act would...
Civil group seeks revival of student loan forgiveness lawsuit

Civil group seeks revival of student loan forgiveness lawsuit

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The New Civil Liberties Alliance presented oral arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit this week, after filing an opening brief...
Professor: California sees nation's least affordable electricity

Professor: California sees nation’s least affordable electricity

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California is experiencing the country's biggest hikes in electricity rates, according to new research from the Energy Institute at the Haas School of Business at...
December job openings lowest in five years

December job openings lowest in five years

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Despite several quarters of strong GDP growth, job openings continued trending downward in December to an estimated 6.5 million – the lowest number in five...
Trump admin moves to more easily fire federal workers

Trump admin moves to more easily fire federal workers

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The Trump administration finalized a rule on Thursday that would make it easier to fire an estimated 50,000 federal employees. The Office of Personnel Management...
Trump's call for federal oversight intensifies clash over Michigan elections

Trump’s call for federal oversight intensifies clash over Michigan elections

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square As the 2026 election season ramps up, tensions are rising over oversight of Michigan’s elections as state and federal leaders clash over election integrity. President...
Siri class action lawsuit greenlit, billions at stake

Siri class action lawsuit greenlit, billions at stake

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A judge has cleared the way for as many as 3 million Apple device users in Illinois to be included in a...