How Long Is a Life Sentence in Louisiana? (2026 Guide)

This article was last reviewed and updated on March 17, 2026. All statutes, case law, and sentencing data have been verified against current Louisiana government sources.
In Louisiana, a life sentence means exactly what it says — life. Louisiana is one of only six states in the country where every life sentence is automatically life without the possibility of parole (LWOP). There is no parole hearing, no minimum number of years to serve, and no path to release through the parole system.
This makes Louisiana one of the harshest sentencing states in America. Both first-degree murder and second-degree murder carry mandatory life without parole. The only exceptions carved out in recent years apply to juvenile offenders, and even those are narrow.
Understanding what a life sentence means in Louisiana requires examining the specific statutes, the limited 2017 reforms for youth offenders, the state's dormant but technically active death penalty, and the staggering racial disparities in who serves life in Louisiana's prisons.
Louisiana Life Sentence Statutes
Louisiana's criminal code defines murder and its penalties across several key statutes. Both degrees of murder carry mandatory life sentences — and in Louisiana, life always means LWOP.
First-Degree Murder (La. R.S. 14:30): First-degree murder includes intentional killings carried out with specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm, killings committed during the perpetration of certain enumerated felonies (armed robbery, kidnapping, aggravated rape, aggravated burglary, aggravated arson, aggravated escape, and others), and killings of law enforcement officers, firefighters, or other specified victims. First-degree murder carries a mandatory sentence of life without parole or death.
Second-Degree Murder (La. R.S. 14:30.1): Second-degree murder includes intentional killings that do not meet the specific criteria for first-degree murder, killings that occur during the commission of certain felonies regardless of intent, and distribution of controlled dangerous substances that directly cause death. Second-degree murder carries a mandatory sentence of life without parole. There is no possibility of the death penalty for second-degree murder, but the sentence is still LWOP with no parole eligibility.
Manslaughter (La. R.S. 14:31): A homicide committed in sudden passion or heat of blood caused by provocation sufficient to deprive an average person of self-control. Manslaughter carries a maximum sentence of 40 years at hard labor.
Negligent Homicide (La. R.S. 14:32): The killing of a human being by criminal negligence. This carries a maximum of 5 years, with or without hard labor.
Why Life Means LWOP in Louisiana
Louisiana belongs to a small group of six states — along with Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Pennsylvania, and South Dakota — where all life sentences are imposed as life without parole. There is no "life with parole" option anywhere in Louisiana's criminal code for adult offenders.
This means that when a Louisiana judge sentences someone to life imprisonment, the sentence carries no parole eligibility. The person will die in prison unless they receive executive clemency from the governor or win a court-ordered resentencing on appeal.
For first-degree murder, the sentence is mandatory. For second-degree murder, the sentence is also mandatory. Judges have no discretion to impose a lesser sentence for either offense. This mandatory sentencing structure has been upheld by Louisiana courts repeatedly.
The practical impact is enormous. Louisiana has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world, and its mandatory LWOP sentencing for both degrees of murder means that thousands of people are serving sentences with no realistic path to release.
The 2017 Youth Sentencing Reforms
The most significant change to Louisiana's life sentencing framework came in 2017, when the legislature created a narrow parole eligibility pathway for certain juvenile offenders.
Act 277 (2017) amended La. R.S. 15:574.4 to allow individuals who were under 18 at the time of their offense and were convicted of second-degree murder to petition for parole consideration after serving 25 years. This was Louisiana's response to the U.S. Supreme Court's rulings in Miller v. Alabama (2012) and Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016), which prohibited mandatory LWOP for juveniles and made that prohibition retroactive.
The 2017 reform was limited in scope. It applies only to second-degree murder convictions — not first-degree murder. Juveniles convicted of first-degree murder in Louisiana still face mandatory LWOP (unless the death penalty was originally sought, in which case Miller applies).
Parole eligibility under this provision does not guarantee release. The individual must demonstrate rehabilitation, complete educational and behavioral programs, and satisfy the parole board. The Committee on Parole reviews these cases with input from victims and the district attorney.
This reform resulted in the resentencing and eventual release of several individuals who had been incarcerated since their teenage years. However, advocates argue that the reform does not go far enough, as it excludes juveniles convicted of first-degree murder and imposes a 25-year minimum that many consider excessive for offenders who were children at the time of their crimes.
Death Penalty in Louisiana
Louisiana has the death penalty on the books, but the state has not carried out an execution since 2010. The last person executed was Gerald Bordelon, who waived his appeals and was executed by lethal injection on January 7, 2010.
Why Executions Have Stopped
Louisiana's executions have been halted since 2010 primarily because of lethal injection drug shortages. Pharmaceutical manufacturers have refused to supply execution drugs, and Louisiana has been unable to obtain the necessary chemicals to carry out lethal injections.
Governor John Bel Edwards signed an executive order in 2020 placing an unofficial moratorium on executions during his administration. While subsequent governors have not formally continued the moratorium, the practical barriers to obtaining execution drugs have kept the death chamber idle.
As of March 2026, 56 people remain on Louisiana's death row. Their cases continue through various stages of appeal.
Death Penalty Procedures
Under Louisiana law, the death penalty may only be imposed for first-degree murder (La. R.S. 14:30) when aggravating circumstances are present. The sentencing phase is conducted before a jury after a guilty verdict.
Aggravating Factors (La. C.Cr.P. Art. 905.4)
Louisiana's statutory aggravating circumstances include:
- The offender was engaged in the perpetration of an enumerated felony (armed robbery, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape, aggravated arson, aggravated burglary, or others)
- The victim was a law enforcement officer, firefighter, or corrections officer acting in the line of duty
- The offender has a significant prior history of criminal activity
- The offender knowingly created a risk of death or great bodily harm to more than one person
- The offense was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner
- The victim was under 12 years of age or over 65 years of age
- The offense was committed for remuneration or the promise of remuneration
- The offender was a member of an organized criminal enterprise
The jury must unanimously find at least one aggravating factor beyond a reasonable doubt to impose death. If the jury does not recommend death, the sentence is life without parole.
Angola — Louisiana State Penitentiary
Any discussion of life sentences in Louisiana must address Angola. The Louisiana State Penitentiary, commonly known as Angola, is the largest maximum-security prison in the United States. It sits on 18,000 acres of former plantation land in West Feliciana Parish — land that was once a slave plantation, a fact that shapes the facility's deeply fraught legacy.
Angola houses the majority of Louisiana's life-sentenced population. Because life means LWOP in Louisiana, most people sent to Angola will never leave. The prison has its own cemetery, Point Lookout, where unclaimed bodies of inmates who die in custody are buried — many of them lifers.
The prison earned a notorious reputation for violence in the mid-20th century, when it was known as "the bloodiest prison in America." Conditions have improved since the 1970s following federal court intervention, but Angola remains a powerful symbol of Louisiana's harsh sentencing regime.
Angola operates an extensive work program. Inmates work in the prison's farm operations, manufacturing, and other industries. The prison also hosts the famous Angola Prison Rodeo, held twice a year and open to the public — an event that has drawn both tourists and criticism from prison reform advocates.
Racial Disparities in Louisiana Life Sentencing
The racial disparities in Louisiana's life sentencing are among the most severe in the United States.
According to the Sentencing Project, more than one in four Black prisoners in Louisiana is serving a life sentence. Louisiana is one of seven states — alongside Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Maryland, and Delaware — where this extreme disparity exists.
Louisiana's prison population is approximately 66% Black, despite Black residents comprising only about 33% of the state's total population. The disparity is even more pronounced among life-sentenced individuals.
These disparities are the product of multiple systemic factors. Louisiana's mandatory LWOP sentencing for both first- and second-degree murder removes judicial discretion that might otherwise account for individual circumstances. Prosecutorial discretion in charging decisions has been shown to disproportionately affect Black defendants. And Louisiana was, until 2018, one of only two states that allowed non-unanimous jury verdicts for serious felonies — a practice rooted in Jim Crow-era efforts to diminish the influence of Black jurors.
The non-unanimous jury provision was eliminated by a constitutional amendment (Amendment 2) approved by Louisiana voters in November 2018. The U.S. Supreme Court subsequently ruled in Ramos v. Louisiana (2020) that the Sixth Amendment right to a unanimous jury verdict applies to state criminal trials. However, Ramos was not made fully retroactive, meaning many people convicted by non-unanimous juries before 2019 remain incarcerated under those verdicts.
Notable Life Sentence Cases in Louisiana
Corey Miller (C-Murder) — Non-Unanimous Jury Conviction
Rapper Corey Miller, known as C-Murder, was convicted of second-degree murder in 2009 for the 2002 shooting of Steve Thomas at a nightclub. He was sentenced to mandatory LWOP. His conviction was secured by a 10-2 non-unanimous jury verdict — below the unanimous standard later required by Ramos v. Louisiana. Despite widespread public advocacy for his case to be revisited, Miller remains incarcerated because Ramos has not been applied retroactively to his case as of 2026.
Fair Wayne Bryant — Life for Attempted Theft (2020 Reversal)
Fair Wayne Bryant was sentenced to life without parole in 1997 under Louisiana's habitual offender law (La. R.S. 15:529.1) for attempting to steal hedge clippers — a crime valued at less than $20. Because he had prior convictions, the habitual offender statute mandated LWOP. His case drew national attention as an example of extreme sentencing. In 2020, the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld his sentence in a 5-1 decision, with Chief Justice Bernette Johnson writing a blistering dissent calling the sentence "a modern manifestation of the evils of Jim Crow."
Henry Montgomery — The Supreme Court Case That Changed Juvenile Sentencing
Henry Montgomery was 17 years old when he killed a deputy sheriff in East Baton Rouge Parish in 1963. He was sentenced to LWOP and spent more than 50 years at Angola. His case reached the U.S. Supreme Court as Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016), in which the Court held that its earlier Miller v. Alabama ruling must be applied retroactively to all juvenile LWOP cases. Montgomery was eventually granted parole in 2021 at the age of 75, after 57 years in prison.
Juvenile Life Sentences in Louisiana
Louisiana's treatment of juvenile life sentences has been shaped by several U.S. Supreme Court decisions and the state's 2017 legislative reform.
Graham v. Florida (2010): The Supreme Court held that LWOP for juveniles convicted of non-homicide offenses violates the Eighth Amendment. Louisiana had several affected cases.
Miller v. Alabama (2012): The Court held that mandatory LWOP for juveniles violates the Eighth Amendment. Individualized sentencing hearings are required.
Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016): The Court held that Miller applies retroactively, requiring states to offer parole or resentencing to those sentenced to mandatory JLWOP.
Following these rulings, Louisiana passed Act 277 in 2017, creating parole eligibility after 25 years for juveniles convicted of second-degree murder. However, Louisiana has not banned juvenile LWOP entirely. Discretionary JLWOP remains available for juveniles convicted of first-degree murder after an individualized hearing.
Advocates continue to push for broader reform. Louisiana has one of the highest rates of juvenile life sentences in the country, and the 25-year minimum under the 2017 reform means that even those eligible for parole will have spent their entire adult lives in prison before their first hearing.
Historical Context
Louisiana's sentencing history reflects broader patterns of racial and social inequality in the Deep South.
The Habitual Offender Law: Louisiana's habitual offender statute (La. R.S. 15:529.1) allows for dramatically enhanced sentences, including LWOP, for repeat offenders — even when the underlying offenses are nonviolent. This law has been widely criticized for producing disproportionate sentences, particularly for Black defendants.
Non-Unanimous Juries: From 1898 until 2018, Louisiana allowed felony convictions by non-unanimous juries (10-2 or 11-1 verdicts). This provision was adopted at a state constitutional convention explicitly designed to "establish the supremacy of the white race." The 2018 constitutional amendment and the 2020 Ramos decision ended this practice going forward, but thousands of people remain incarcerated under non-unanimous verdicts.
Angola's Plantation History: The Louisiana State Penitentiary sits on the site of the former Angola plantation, named after the African country from which many of its enslaved people were taken. After the Civil War, the state leased convicts to work the same land under conditions that historians have described as "slavery by another name." The plantation-to-prison pipeline at Angola remains a subject of intense scholarly and public debate.
Execution History: Louisiana has executed 28 people since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976. The state used electrocution until 1991 and lethal injection thereafter. No execution has taken place since 2010.
Recent Legislative Changes
| Year | Change |
|---|---|
| 2024 | Governor Jeff Landry signs legislation expanding death penalty eligibility for certain child sex offenses (constitutional challenge expected under Kennedy v. Louisiana) |
| 2020 | Ramos v. Louisiana: U.S. Supreme Court requires unanimous jury verdicts in state criminal trials |
| 2018 | Louisiana voters approve Amendment 2, requiring unanimous jury verdicts for serious felonies |
| 2017 | Act 277 creates parole eligibility after 25 years for juveniles convicted of second-degree murder |
| 2017 | Act 280 reforms juvenile sentencing procedures in compliance with Miller and Montgomery |
| 2010 | Last execution in Louisiana (Gerald Bordelon) |
Louisiana Life Sentence at a Glance
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Life = LWOP | Yes — all life sentences are LWOP |
| Parole eligibility (adults) | None |
| Parole eligibility (juveniles, 2nd-degree murder) | 25 years (since 2017) |
| Death penalty | On the books but no executions since 2010 |
| Death row population | 56 |
| Method of execution | Lethal injection |
| JLWOP banned | No (discretionary still allowed for 1st-degree murder) |
| Key statutes | La. R.S. 14:30, 14:30.1, 15:574.4, C.Cr.P. Art. 905.4 |
| Habitual offender law | La. R.S. 15:529.1 (can trigger LWOP for repeat offenders) |
| Unanimous jury required | Yes (since 2018 amendment; Ramos 2020) |
| Racial disparity | 1 in 4 Black prisoners serving life |
| Largest facility | Angola (Louisiana State Penitentiary) — largest max-security prison in U.S. |
Related Pages
Sources and References
- La. R.S. 14:30(law.justia.com)
- La. R.S. 14:30.1(law.justia.com)
- La. R.S. 14:31(law.justia.com)
- La. R.S. 14:32(law.justia.com)
- La. R.S. 15:574.4(law.justia.com)
- La. C.Cr.P. Art. 905.4(law.justia.com)
- Louisiana State Penitentiary(doc.louisiana.gov).gov
- Sentencing Project(sentencingproject.org)
- *Ramos v. Louisiana*(supremecourt.gov).gov
- La. R.S. 15:529.1(law.justia.com)
- *Montgomery v. Louisiana*(supremecourt.gov).gov