Serving life for providing car to killers
By Adam Liptak | December 4, 2007
CRAWFORDVILLE, Florida: Early in the morning of March 10, 2003, after a raucous party that lasted into the small hours, a groggy and hungover 20-year-old named Ryan Holle lent his Chevrolet Metro to a friend. That decision, prosecutors later said, was tantamount to murder.
The friend used the car to drive three men to the Pensacola home of a marijuana dealer, aiming to steal a safe. The burglary turned violent, and one of the men killed the dealer's 18-year-old daughter by beating her head in with a shotgun he found in the home.
Holle was a mile and a half away, but that did not matter.
He was convicted of murder under a distinctively American legal doctrine that makes accomplices as liable as the actual killer for murders committed during felonies like burglaries, rapes and robberies.
Holle, who had given the police a series of statements in which he seemed to admit knowing about the burglary, was convicted of first-degree murder. He is serving a sentence of life without the possibility of parole at the Wakulla Correctional Institution here, 20 miles southwest of Tallahassee.
A prosecutor explained the theory to the jury at Holle's trial in Pensacola in 2004. "No car, no crime," said the prosecutor, David Rimmer. "No car, no consequences. No car, no murder."
Most scholars trace the doctrine, which is an aspect of the felony murder rule, to English common law, but Parliament abolished it in 1957. The felony murder rule, which has many variations, generally broadens murder liability for participants in violent felonies in two ways. An unintended killing during a felony is considered murder under the rule. So is, as Holle learned, a killing by an accomplice.
India and other common law countries have followed England in abolishing the doctrine. In 1990, the Canadian Supreme Court did away with felony murder liability for accomplices, saying it violated "the principle that punishment must be proportionate to the moral blameworthiness of the offender."
Countries outside the common law tradition agree. "The view in Europe," said James Whitman, a professor of comparative law at Yale, "is that we hold people responsible for their own acts and not the acts of others."
But prosecutors and victims' rights groups in the United States say that punishing accomplices as though they had been the actual killers is perfectly appropriate.
"The felony murder rule serves important interests," said Rimmer, the prosecutor in the Holle case, "because it holds all persons responsible for the actions of each other if they are all participating in the same crime."
Kent Scheidegger, the legal director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, a victims' rights group, said "all perpetrators of the underlying felony, not just the one who pulls the trigger" should be held accountable for murder.
"A person who has chosen to commit armed robbery, rape or kidnapping has chosen to do something with a strong possibility of causing the death of an innocent person," Scheidegger said. "That choice makes it morally justified to convict the person of murder when that possibility happens."
About 16 percent of homicides in 2006 occurred during felonies, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Statistics concerning how many of those killings led to the murder prosecutions of accomplices are not available, but legal experts say such prosecutions are relatively common in the more than 30 states that allow them. About 80 people have been sentenced to death in the last three decades for participating in a felony that led to a murder though they did not kill anyone.
Terry Snyder, whose daughter Jessica was the victim in Holle's case, said Holle's conduct was as blameworthy as that of the man who shattered her skull.
"It never would have happened unless Ryan Holle had lent the car," Snyder said. "It was as good as if he was there."
Prosecutors sometimes also justify the doctrine on the ground that it deters murders. Criminals who know they will face harsh punishment if someone dies in the course of a felony, supporters of the felony murder rule say, may plan their crimes with more care, may leave deadly weapons at home and may decide not to commit the underlying felony at all.
But the evidence of a deterrent effect is thin. An unpublished analysis of FBI crime data from 1970 to 1998 by Anup Malani, a law professor at the University of Chicago, found that the presence of the felony murder rule had a relatively small effect on criminal behavior, reducing the number of deaths during burglaries and car thefts slightly, not affecting deaths during rapes and, perversely, increasing the number of deaths during robberies. That last finding, the study said, "is hard to explain" and "warrants further exploration."
The felony murder rule's defenders acknowledge that it can be counterintuitive.
"It may not make any sense to you," Rimmer, the prosecutor in Holle's case, told the jury. "He has to be treated just as if he had done all the things the other four people did."
Prosecutors sought the death penalty for Charles Miller Jr., the man who actually killed Jessica Snyder, but he was sentenced to life without parole. So were the men who entered the Snyders' home with him, Donnie Williams and Jermond Thomas. So was William Allen Jr., who drove the car. So was Holle.
Holle had no criminal record. He had lent his car to Allen, a housemate, countless times before.
"All he did was go say, 'Use the car,' " Allen said of Holle in a pretrial deposition. "I mean, nobody really knew that girl was going to get killed. It was not in the plans to go kill somebody, you know."
But Holle did testify that he had been told it might be necessary to "knock out" Jessica Snyder. Holle is 25 now, a tall, lean and lively man with a rueful sense of humor, alert brown eyes and an unusually deep voice. In a spare office at the prison here, he said that he had not taken the talk of a burglary seriously.
"I honestly thought they were going to get food," he said of the men who used his car, all of whom had attended the nightlong party at Holle's house, as had Jessica Snyder.
"When they actually mentioned what was going on, I thought it was a joke," Holle added, referring to the plan to steal the Snyders' safe. "I thought they were just playing around. I was just very naïve. Plus from being drinking that night, I just didn't understand what was going on."
Holle's trial lawyer, Sharon Wilson, said the statements he had given to the police were the key to the case, given the felony murder rule.
"It's just draconian," Wilson said. "The worst thing he was guilty of was partying too much and not being discriminating enough in who he was partying with."
Holle's trial took one day. "It was done, probably, by 5 o'clock," Holle said. "That's with the deliberations and the verdict and the sentence."
Witnesses described the horror of the crime. Christine Snyder, for instance, recalled finding her daughter, her head bashed in and her teeth knocked out.
"Then what did you do?" the prosecutor asked her.
"I went screaming out of the home saying they blew my baby's face off," Snyder said.
The safe had belonged to Christine Snyder. The police found a pound of marijuana in it, and, after her daughter's funeral, she was sentenced to three years in prison for possessing it.
Not every state's version of the felony murder rule is as strict as Florida's, and a few states, including Hawaii, Kentucky and Michigan, have abolished it entirely.
"The felony-murder rule completely ignores the concept of determination of guilt on the basis of individual misconduct," the Michigan Supreme Court wrote in 1980.
The vast majority of states retain it in various forms, but courts and officials have taken occasional steps to limit its harshest applications.
In August, for instance, Governor Rick Perry of Texas commuted the death sentence of Kenneth Foster, the driver of a getaway car in a robbery spree that ended in a murder.
Holle was the only one of the five men charged with murdering Jessica Snyder who was offered a plea bargain, one that might have led to 10 years in prison.
"I did so because he was not as culpable as the others," said Rimmer, the prosecutor.
Holle, who rejected the deal, has spent some time thinking about the felony murder rule.
"The laws that they use to convict people are just — they have to revise them," he said. "Just because I lent these guys my car, why should I be convicted the same as these people that actually went to the scene of the crime and actually committed the crime?"
Rimmer sounded ambivalent on this point.
"Whether or not the felony murder rule can result in disproportionate justice is a matter of opinion," Rimmer said. "The father of Jessica Snyder does not think so."