William Jennings, and his mother, Audrey Jennings Hudgins, in a 2019 photo at the Wakulla Correctional Institution.

This was the 25th Christmas of my son’s natural life sentence, a sentence he received in 1998 at 21 years old for a non-fatal, no physical /contact crime.

My son’s crime was robbery with a firearm, which is considered a violent crime, as it should be. Certainly, his crimes warranted a prison sentence but not a natural life sentence.

Natural life sentences are often referred to as death by death by incarceration. Under normal state sentencing guidelines my son would have received between nine and 16 years for his crimes. Florida’s Prisoner Releasee Reoffender mandatory maximum guideline – PRR – changed that. PRR directs prosecutors to seek the maximum sentence for someone who commits a felony within three years of leaving prison, which often means a lifetime behind bars.



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