¶42 (concurring and dissenting) — I agree that Alvin Witherspoon’s conviction must be affirmed. There was certainly sufficient evidence to support his conviction of second degree robbery, despite the bravery of the victim in this case. The robbery statute focuses on the defendant’s “use or threatened use” of force, fear, etc., not on the courage of the victim in response. RCW 9A.56.190.
¶43 In addition, following State v. Grier, 171 Wn.2d 17, 246 P.3d 1260 (2011), the ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails on this direct appeal: if Mr. Witherspoon seeks to prove that his lawyer’s failure to ask for a lesser included offense instruction was something other than tactical, he must submit some evidence to prove it.
¶44 I respectfully disagree, however, with the majority’s decision to affirm the sentence. The trial judge in this case — an experienced jurist — stated that life without parole was disproportionately harsh for Witherspoon’s offense and that if he had any discretion to impose a lower sentence, he would have done so. The controlling Washington case interpreting the applicable provision of the Washington State Constitution is State v. Fain, 94 Wn.2d 387, 617 P.2d 720 (1980). Fain requires us to do just such a disproportionality analysis now, in reviewing the sentence.
¶45 We should therefore subject Witherspoon’s sentence to the four-factor disproportionality analysis this court adopted in Fain. Under that analysis, I conclude that Witherspoon’s sentence — a mandatory term of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the third “strike” offense of second degree robbery — violates article I, section 14 of our state constitution. I therefore respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding on that issue.
I. The Experienced Trial Judge Stated That He Would Not Have Imposed a Sentence of Life without the Possibility of Parole If He Was Not Required To Do So
¶46 Witherspoon received his “third strike” life sentence for a second degree robbery that is best described as inept. *896His victim attested to this at the sentencing hearing, where she exhorted him to pursue an interest to which he was better suited:
I just would like to address Alvin ... because I really had a lot of sleepless nights over this and felt that... I wanted a fair and just sentence or whatever for him. And [I] felt really bad for him and talked to a lot of people about this and nobody seemed to really have any compassion for him whatsoever. I think I had more compassion for him than anybody. And then I learned that he just does this over and over and over again and he doesn’t know anything else and I feel for his mom and his girlfriend and they stand behind him and he just keeps doing this over and over and he is a really lousy thief and he needs to know that he has other potential and that he could learn something else and he might not be so lucky next time, because I’m damned if I’m going to be the one dead. ... I hope you, Alvin, get some — there’s a lot of opportunities in jail and that you should take every one of them, and find what you’re good at, and it’s not being a thief so find something else and something that you like is - probably something you’re interested [in] is probably something that you’re good at and I doubt if it’s being a thief because you’re [not] getting much out of it.
Reporter’s Tr. on Appeal (TR) (Sentencing) at 37-38.
¶47 I quote Ms. Pittario’s statement at length not only because it captures the bumbling nature of Witherspoon’s crime but also because it expresses her sincere belief that Mr. Witherspoon, who was 36 at the time, might reform.
¶48 The trial judge who sentenced Witherspoon, the late Judge Craddock Verser, clearly shared this belief. His statement at sentencing, which I will also quote at length, leaves no doubt that were it not for the constraints imposed on him by the Persistent Offender Accountability Act (POAA) of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1981 (SRA), chapter 9.94A RCW, he would not have sentenced Wither-spoon to a life term:
When I first started in this profession years ago in 1980, there was a prison and parole system and judges had discretion *897to send people to jail, prison, parole, a number of different discretionary possibilities at every sentencing and you could take something like this crime and look at it and go, okay, serious crime, it obviously affected Ms. Pittario. Nevertheless, is this the type of crime that you want to put somebody in prison for the rest of their life for. And, um, exercising discretion I wouldn’t do that.
I — over the last week, I - I’ve never done a persistent offender sentencing, we just don’t have that many in Jefferson County. Over the last week I looked at the statute and I was looking at the case law of what kind of discretion if any I had. I don’t. I don’t have any discretion. I don’t take any pleasure, Mr. Witherspoon, in sentencing you as a persistent offender. That’s a choice that was made in the filing decision and the decision that went to trial. . . .
The arguments that I should arrest judgment are — quite frankly they were appealing to me. I said this young man is [36] years old ....
... 7 didn’t think you should go to prison the rest of your life and I don’t mind putting that on the record but I have no discretion at all.
TR (Sentencing) at 41-43 (emphasis added). This is an accurate statement of the law. Under Washington’s persistent offender statute, the trial court had no discretion to sentence Witherspoon to anything other than life imprisonment with no possibility of parole. RCW 9.94A.570 (“[n]otwithstanding the statutory maximum sentence or any other provision of this chapter, a persistent offender shall be sentenced to a term of total confinement for life without the possibility of release”).
II. For Purposes of Article I, Section 14 of the Washington State Constitution, Life without Parole Is a Harsher Penalty than Life with the Possibility of Parole; the Rivers Holding Ignores This Distinction and Is No Longer Good Law
¶49 The majority rejects Witherspoon’s article I, section 14 challenge primarily on the basis of this court’s decisions *898in State v. Rivers, 129 Wn.2d 697, 921 P.2d 495 (1996), State v. Manussier, 129 Wn.2d 652, 677, 921 P.2d 473 (1996), and State v. Lee, 87 Wn.2d 932, 558 P.2d 236 (1976). In so doing, the majority errs.
¶50 The first case on which the majority relies, Lee, 87 Wn.2d at 937, did not apply the Fain analysis at all because it predated Fain by four years. And the second case, Manussier, 129 Wn.2d at 678, declined to consider Fain’s third factor: the punishment the defendant would have received in other jurisdictions. In this case, the majority concedes that this factor weighs in favor of finding that Witherspoon’s sentence violated article I, section 14. Majority at 889.
¶51 The final case on which the majority relies, Rivers, 129 Wn.2d at 714, applied the third Fain factor incorrectly. It relied on this court’s decision in In re Personal Restraint of Grisby, 121 Wn.2d 419, 427, 853 P.2d 901 (1993), to conclude that life with and without the possibility of parole are indistinguishable for purposes of an article I, section 14 challenge. Rivers, 129 Wn.2d at 714. Thus, when the Rivers court considered what punishment Rivers would have received in other jurisdictions, it lumped together jurisdictions, like Washington, where the punishment was life without the possibility of parole, and jurisdictions where the punishment was life with the possibility of parole. 129 Wn.2d at 714 (“The penalties vary, but many include life sentences for three-time offenders. This court has held that the distinction between life sentences with and without parole is not significant.”).
¶52 By relying on Grisby this way, the Rivers court erred. To the extent that Grisby’s holding applies at all to SRA convictions,4 it is strictly limited to the Sixth Amendment context. Grisby, 121 Wn.2d at 430 (“The case before us is not an Eighth Amendment case [but] rather [] a Sixth *899Amendment case relating to a defendant’s right to a jury trial.”); U.S. Const. amends. VI, VIII. The petitioner in Grisby argued that the statute under which he had been sentenced to life without the possibility of parole violated the Sixth Amendment because it penalized him for invoking his right to a jury trial. Grisby, 121 Wn.2d at 421. That statute imposed a maximum penalty of life without parole on a defendant convicted of aggravated murder following a jury trial, but a maximum of life with parole for a defendant who pleaded guilty. Id. This court rejected Grisby’s Sixth Amendment argument on the basis that because parole is granted “ ‘strictly by grace through the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles,’ ” a defendant sentenced to life with the possibility of parole cannot actually expect to serve less than a life sentence. Id. at 426-27 (quoting State v. Frampton, 95 Wn.2d 469, 529, 627 P.2d 922 (1981) (Dimmick, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part)). That conclusion did not lead the Grisby court to hold that there is never a significant distinction between life with and without the possibility of parole. Rather, it led to the much narrower holding that the distinction was not significant enough to trigger the prohibition (under United States v. Jackson, 390 U.S. 570, 583, 88 S. Ct. 1209, 20 L. Ed. 2d 138 (1968)) against “ ‘needless encouragement of guilty pleas.’ ” Grisby, 121 Wn.2d at 427 (quoting Frampton, 95 Wn.2d at 530 (Dimmick, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part)).5
¶53 Despite the narrowness of that holding and its limitation to the Sixth Amendment context, the Rivers majority relied on Grisby to conclude that life with and without the possibility of parole are indistinguishable for *900purposes of an article I, section 14 challenge.6 The court reached that conclusion without analyzing Grisby’s relevance to article I, section 14 and Fain.
¶54 This court has never expressly overruled Rivers’ holding on the distinction between life with and without the possibility of parole. But it did so impliedly in State v. Thomas, 150 Wn.2d 821, 83 P.3d 970 (2004). Thomas held that there is a significant difference between life with and without the possibility of parole for purposes of the Apprendi rule.7 Id. at 847-48. After Thomas, a defendant convicted of murder under Washington’s SRA cannot be sentenced to life without parole unless aggravating factors are found by a jury, because a “sentence of life without parole is an increased sentence as compared to life with the possibility of parole in capital cases.” Id. at 848 (emphasis added).
¶55 I would therefore not resolve Witherspoon’s article I, section 14 argument by resurrecting Rivers — its application of the third Fain factor is no longer viable. To the extent Rivers held that there is no distinction between a sentence of life with and without parole, it is no longer good law. As this court acknowledged in Thomas, life without parole is a unique sentence, harsher and more punitive than life with the possibility of parole.8
*901¶56 Just as life without parole is harsher than life with parole, for purposes of article I, section 14, mandatory life without parole is harsher than discretionary life without parole. This is true as a factual matter: the trial judge in this case explicitly stated that he would not impose a life without parole sentence if it were not mandatory. It is also true as a legal matter; in Fain, we noted that “Washington [was then] one of only three states which still retains a habitual criminal statute imposing a mandatory life sentence after any three felonies.” Fain, 94 Wn.2d at 399 (emphasis added) (citing Rummel v. Estelle, 445 U.S. 263, 279, 100 S. Ct. 1133, 63 L. Ed. 2d 382 (1980); id. at 296 (Powell, J., dissenting)); see also Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U.S. 957, 996, 111 S. Ct. 2680, 115 L. Ed. 2d 836 (1991) (acknowledging that the petitioner’s sentence — life without the possibility of parole — was “unique in that it is the second most severe known to the law,” more severe than discretionary life without parole).9
*902¶57 As a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole, Witherspoon’s sentence is almost as unusual as the sentence imposed in Fain. Of the 47 jurisdictions that have habitual offender statutes, only 5 (including Washington) would impose a mandatory sentence of life without parole for a third strike conviction of second degree robbery. See infra Part III.3.
III. A Mandatory Sentence of Life without Parole Is Disproportionate to the Offense of Second Degree Robbery Committed as a “Third Strike”; Wither-spoon’s Sentence Thus Violates Article I, Section 14 of the Washington State Constitution
¶58 The proportionality analysis this court adopted in Fain requires us to consider four factors in an article I, section 14 challenge: (1) the legislative purpose behind the challenged statute, (2) the nature of the defendant’s offense, (3) the punishment the defendant would have received in other jurisdictions for the same offense, and (4) the punishment the defendant would have received in Washington for other offenses. Fain, 94 Wn.2d at 397 (citing Hart v. Coiner, 483 F.2d 136, 140-43 (4th Cir. 1973)). In light of these factors, a sentence of mandatory life without the possibility of parole violates article I, section 14 protections when imposed for a second degree robbery offense.
1. Legislative purpose behind the POAA
¶59 The POAA was enacted pursuant to popular initiative in 1993. Laws of 1994, ch. 1, § 2. Its statement of findings and intent identified four purposes served by the new law:
(2) By sentencing three-time, most serious offenders to prison for life without the possibility of parole, the people intend to:
(a) Improve public safety by placing the most dangerous criminals in prison.
*903(b) Reduce the number of serious, repeat offenders by tougher sentencing.
(c) Set proper and simplified sentencing practices that both the victims and persistent offenders can understand.
(d) Restore public trust in our criminal justice system by directly involving the people in the process.
Id. § 1 (emphasis added).
¶60 Washington’s POAA was the nation’s first “three strikes” law; it was passed in the wake of several high profile and horrific crimes committed by repeat offenders.10 Proponents of the POAA were motivated by the belief that harsh sentencing laws would effectively deter and incapacitate the “relatively small component of the offender population” who posed the greatest danger to public safety.11
¶61 As we acknowledged in State v. Lee, habitual offender statutes in general, including the one that predated the POAA in Washington, serve punitive as well as preventative purposes: “[t]he repetition of criminal conduct aggravates the guilt of the last conviction and justifies a heavier penalty for the crime.” 87 Wn.2d 932, 937, 558 P.2d 236 (1976) (citing State v. Miles, 34 Wn.2d 55, 61-62, 207 P.2d 1209 (1949)); accord State v. Manussier, 129 Wn.2d 652, 677 n.108, 921 P.2d 473 (1996) (citing Lee, 87 Wn.2d at 937). But the POAA differs from the prior habitual offender statute in its imposition of mandatory life sentences without parole. Laws of 1994, ch. 1, § 2(4).12 The legislative history indicates that the primary impetus for this change was the desire to protect the public by incapacitating the most dangerous offenders.
*904¶62 This factor would weigh in favor of upholding Witherspoon’s sentence if he were in “the relatively small component of the offender population” who are the most incorrigible, that is, the worst of the worst. But neither the victim nor the trial judge believed that he fell into that category. Thus, I cannot conclude that this factor weighs in favor of a finding of proportionality.
2. Nature of Witherspoon’s offense
¶63 Witherspoon’s two prior “strike” convictions were for first degree burglary and residential burglary with a firearm; his third strike conviction was for second degree robbery. These are serious offenses — certainly more serious than the “wholly nonviolent crimes involving small amounts of property” at issue in Fain. 94 Wn.2d at 402.
¶64 But Witherspoon’s final offense stands in stark contrast to those triggering the harshest penalties under Washington’s SRA. See infra Part III.4. As noted by the majority, Witherspoon’s victim did not realize that Wither-spoon had retained any of her property until after Wither-spoon was already driving away from her house. Majority at 884. Because of that fact, the dissenting judge in the Court of Appeals below concluded that Witherspoon had used stealth to accomplish the taking but had not employed the “force or fear” necessary to a robbery conviction under RCW 9A.56.190. See State v. Witherspoon, 171 Wn. App. 271, 320, 286 P.3d 996 (2012) (Armstrong, J. Pro Tern., dissenting). Indeed, the dissent concluded that it was “logically impossible” to find that Witherspoon used “force or fear” to prevent his victim from recovering her possessions, since Witherspoon was already leaving when the victim noticed that her possessions were in Witherspoon’s car and since she was not in fact prevented from giving chase. Id. at 321 (“It is logically impossible to find that Pittario had the will to retain or recover property that she did not know had been stolen. And the State offered no evidence that Witherspoon made any threat that Pittario should not follow them. Pit*905tario testified that she was not afraid, and, in fact, she gave chase.”).
¶65 I agree with the majority that the State need not prove the victim’s actual, subjective fear in order to sustain a robbery conviction, and I therefore disagree with the conclusion of the dissent below. But the fact that the State need not prove actual fear to sustain a robbery conviction shows how broadly the robbery statute sweeps. In Washington, as in many other states, a person can commit the crime of second degree robbery by means of brutal assault or — as in Witherspoon’s case — by an “implied threat” that the victim seems to have regarded as more confusing than frightening. Majority at 885; TR (Trial Day 1) at 42-49 (Pittario testimony).13 Thus, the nature of a second degree robbery offense may vary significantly from case to case.
¶66 Outside the POAA context, a court can consider the facts underlying a robbery conviction when imposing a sentence. It may impose a sentence anywhere within the standard sentence range; it may also depart from the standard range if mitigating circumstances are established. RCW 9.94A.535(1). This discretion is a crucial means of avoiding sentences that are “clearly excessive in light of the [SRA’s] purpose [s],” id. § (1)(g), which include ensuring that punishments are both “just” and “proportionate to the seriousness of the offense,” RCW 9.94A.010(2), (1).
¶67 Under the POAA, a court lacks that discretion. In this case, the result is severe: a defendant who neither injured nor frightened his victim received a sentence generally reserved for society’s most violent and predatory offenders. Thus, I cannot conclude that the nature of the *906offense factor weighs in favor of upholding this sentence under Fain’s second factor.
¶68 In fact, lack of discretion to depart from a habitual offender sentence is frequently cited by critics of habitual offender statutes.14 It has prompted courts in several jurisdictions to adopt sentencing procedures specifically designed to prevent the mandatory imposition of excessive punishments under recidivist statutes.15 Indeed, courts have done so in two of the three states with habitual offender statutes equivalent to Washington’s.16
¶69 As noted ábove, Washington’s POAA was enacted mainly in response to public safety concerns: it was designed to ensure that dangerous, violent offenders would be permanently segregated from society. Applied mechanically, the statute can exceed this purpose.
*907 3. Punishment in other jurisdictions for second degree robbery as a “third strike” offense
¶70 As noted above, Witherspoon’s sentence is almost as rare as the sentence this court overturned in Fain. Outside of Washington, there are only three states in which a conviction of second degree robbery as a “third strike” offense triggers a mandatory sentence of life without parole.17 In the vast majority of jurisdictions with habitual offender statutes — 34 out of 48 — such a conviction would result in a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years or less.18 Six states impose a mandatory minimum of 25 *908years or less for a third strike offense comparable to Witherspoon’s.19
¶71 This Fain factor clearly weighs in favor of a finding of disproportionality.
4. Punishment in Washington for other offenses
¶72 In the non-POAA context, Washington punishes only one crime with a sentence of mandatory life without parole: aggravated first degree murder. RCW 9.94A.510, .515. Aggravated first degree murder is a level 16 offense, the highest “seriousness level” in the SRA. RCW 9.94A.515. The next most serious level of offense, level 15, includes homicide by abuse and nonaggravated first degree murder. RCW 9.94A.515. In the non-POAA context, a person convicted of those crimes might serve as little as 20 years — far less than life without parole.20
¶73 In the non-POAA context, Washington imposes mandatory minimum sentences for only five offenses: aggravated and nonaggravated first degree murder, first degree assault involving “force or means likely to result in death or intended to kill the victim,” rape in the first degree, and sexually violent predator escape. RCW 9.94A.540(1)(b)-(d). A person convicted of first degree murder faces a 20-year mandatory minimum, while a person convicted of first degree rape, first degree assault, or sexually violent predator escape faces a mandatory minimum of 5 years. Id. For *909every other offense, the court may impose a sentence below the standard sentence range if “mitigating circumstances are established by a preponderance of the evidence.” RCW 9.94A.535.
¶74 The gravity of Witherspoon’s third strike offense must not be understated; it was deliberate, and the fact that his victim exhibited uncommon courage during the offense and extraordinary compassion thereafter does not minimize the crime. But neither should that offense be amplified beyond all recognition. To punish it with a sentence greater than that imposed for the most brutal crimes— homicide, first degree assault, and first degree rape — is to disregard two central purposes of the SRA: justice and proportionality. RCW 9.94A.010(1), (2).
¶75 Thus, this final Fain factor also weighs in favor of a finding of disproportionality.
5. The proper remedy for the constitutional violation in this case is remand for resentencing under the SRA guidelines
¶76 For the reasons given in the analysis above, RCW 9.94A.570 is unconstitutional as applied to the particular second degree robbery in this case. Article I, section 14 of the Washington Constitution does not permit the imposition of mandatory life without parole — the harshest penalty short of death- — on a second degree robber whose victim testified that he neither frightened nor threatened her. Because the POAA is unconstitutional as applied to Witherspoon, the proper remedy is to remand for resentencing under the SRA guidelines — without the application of the POAA. State v. Hunley, 175 Wn.2d 901, 916, 287 P.3d 584 (2012) (holding a statute unconstitutional as applied does not render it completely inoperable; rather, it prohibits the future application of the statute in a similar context).
¶77 At Witherspoon’s original sentencing hearing, the State characterized its charging decision as “suspenders and belt.” TR (Sentencing) at 30. The State is correct. Its *910second degree robbery charge also included the aggravating factor that “[t]he defendant has committed multiple current offenses and the defendant’s high offender score results in some of the current offenses going unpunished.” RCW 9.94A.535(2)(c). That statute places the determination of whether that aggravating factor exists, and whether it supports a sentence above the standard range, in the hands of the judge. Id. At the original sentencing, where the judge felt compelled to impose life without parole, the judge had no reason to address that aggravating factor. The court is free to address it at resentencing.
CONCLUSION
¶78 The question before us in this case is narrow. We are asked whether it is unconstitutional to force a trial court judge to impose a mandatory sentence of life without parole on a defendant whose third “strike” is a second degree robbery committed in a manner that did not cause physical harm or actual fear. The answer to that question is yes.
¶79 This answer is based on the legal description of the crime of second degree robbery (RCW 9A.56.190), the facts of its accomplishment in this case, and the mandatory nature of the penalty.
¶80 We have not been asked to rule on whether it would be unconstitutional to sentence a defendant to life without parole for a different crime, or for this crime committed in a different manner. The remedy I would impose is therefore particular to this case. The legislature, not this court, is the body with the power to draft a procedure that would be constitutional in all cases. I express no opinion as to what sort of procedure might comply with article I, section 14 protections. Pursuant to the Fain analysis conducted above, I conclude only that the current procedure, according to which a sentencing judge has no discretion to impose a sentence lower than life without parole, does not comply *911with state constitutional requirements.21 A different procedure certainly would.22
Fairhurst, Wiggins, and González, JJ., concur with Gordon McCloud, J.APPENDIX OF “PERSISTENT OFFENDER” LAWS
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I note that State v. Thomas explicitly distinguishes Grisby as a “pre-Sentencing Reform Act. . . case.” 150 Wn.2d 821, 848, 83 P.3d 970 (2004).
Notably, the Ninth Circuit granted Mr. Grisby’s petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging that sentencing decision and compelled the State to resentence him, precisely because it rejected our decision that there is no constitutional distinction between life with and without parole. Grisby v. Blodgett, 130 F.3d 365, 369-70 (9th Cir. 1997) (noting that federal precedent “establishes that, as a matter of law, a sentence of life without the possibility of parole is significantly different from a sentence of life with the possibility of parole” for purposes of the Jackson decision).
Rivers, 129 Wn.2d at 714 (“This court has held that the distinction between life sentences with and without parole is not significant.” (citing Grisby, 121 Wn.2d at 427)). In Fain, the State urged this court to proceed as if Jimmy Fain had not actually received a life sentence, since “the availability of parole and ‘good behavior’ credits” created “a likelihood” that Fain would actually serve far less than a lifetime behind bars. Fain, 94 Wn.2d at 393 (citing RCW 9.95.110, .070). We declined this invitation on the ground that a prisoner “has no right to parole, which is merely a privilege granted by [an] administrative body.” Id. at 394 (citing January v. Porter, 75 Wn.2d 768, 774, 453 P.2d 876 (1969)).
Under the Apprendi rule, “any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 490, 120 S. Ct. 2348, 147 L. Ed. 2d 435 (2000).
While the Thomas decision alone precludes the majority’s reliance on Grisby and Rivers to reject Witherspoon’s article I, section 14 challenge, it should be noted that that reliance is also inconsistent with United States Supreme Court precedent. In Graham v. Florida, the Court concluded that for purposes of the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishments, the sentence of life *901without parole has severe and punitive characteristics distinguishing it from a sentence of life with the possibility of parole. 560 U.S. 48, 69, 130 S. Ct. 2011, 176 L. Ed. 2d 825 (2010) (“The State does not execute the offender sentenced to life without parole, but the sentence alters the offender’s life by a forfeiture that is irrevocable.”). The Graham holding rested on those characteristics — not, as the majority would have it, on “the differences between children and adults,” majority at 890 — and on prior Eighth Amendment cases in which “the severity of sentences that deny convicts the possibility of parole” played an integral part in the Court’s decision. 560 U.S. at 69-70 (citing Rummel v. Estelle, 445 U.S. 263, 100 S. Ct. 1133, 63 L. Ed. 2d 382 (1980); Solem v. Helm, 463 U.S. 277, 103 S. Ct. 3001, 77 L. Ed. 2d 637 (1983)). In short, Graham unambiguously holds that the sentence of life without parole is more severe, for purposes of the Eighth Amendment, than the sentence of life with the possibility of parole.
As the majority acknowledges, article I, section 14 of the Washington Constitution is more protective of individual rights than the Eighth Amendment. Majority at 887 (citing Fain, 94 Wn.2d at 392). It follows that article I, section 14 must recognize the unique severity of life without parole. It cannot be that our more protective constitutional provision would fail to account for “harshness” that is dispositive in Eighth Amendment cases. Graham, 560 U.S. at 70.
In Harmelin, the majority rejected the argument that the Eighth Amendment requires a sentencing court to exercise discretion (to consider mitigating or aggravating circumstances) before imposing a sentence of life without parole. 501 U.S. at 994-95; id. at 1004 (Kennedy, J., concurring). The Court rejected that argument, however, because it declined to apply a proportionality analysis to the petitioner’s sentence. Id. at 994-95. In Fain, this court adopted the proportionality analysis endorsed by the dissenters in Harmelin. For purposes of that analysis, a *902mandatory sentence is more severe than a sentence that permits the trial court to consider the individual circumstances of a defendant’s offense.
Jennifer Cox Shapiro, Comment, Life in Prison for Stealing $48?: Rethinking Second-Degree Robbery as a Strike Offense in Washington State, 34 Seattle U. L. Rev. 935, 939-44 (2011).
Id. at 940 (quoting Edwin Meese III, Three-Strikes Laws Punish and Protect, 7 Fed. Sent’g Rep. 58, 58 (1994)).
See also id. at 939 & n.38 (describing the habitual offender statute that predated the POAA in Washington); Laws of 1992, ch. 145, § 8 (describing ways in which defendants sentenced to total confinement under the 1992 sentencing reform act can earn early release credits).
Ms. Pittario testified that she was not frightened by Mr. Witherspoon’s statement that he had a pistol concealed behind his back, that she in fact believed that he was scared during their brief encounter, and that Mr. Witherspoon never threatened her. TR (Trial Day 1) at 42 (“Q. So you must not have been concerned that [Mr. Witherspoon] had a pistol? A. No.”), 44 (“Q. Now, in fact, the man you saw, you thought he was scared didn’t you? A. Yes.”), 46 (“Q. But he never threatened you in any way? A. No.”), 48 (“Q. You didn’t fear any injury to yourself, your person? A. No.”).
See Robert G. Lawson, PFO Law Reform, A Crucial Step Toward Sentencing Sanity in Kentucky, 97 Ky. L.J. 1, 22 (2008-2009) (describing “typical” defendants in persistent felony offender case study as those who “suffered punishments grossly disproportionate to the seriousness of their crimes”); Michael Vitiello, Three Strikes: Can We Return to Rationality ?, 87 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 395, 396 & n.8 (1997) (collecting cases of “grossly disproportionate prison terms” imposed for “minor third strikes”); Erik G. Luna, Foreward: Three Strikes in a Nutshell, 20 T. Jefferson L. Rev. 1, 24 & n.177 (1998) (noting that “some judges have simply refused to apply [a three strikes] law when it would lead to a disproportionate and unfair sentence”).
State v. Dorthey, 623 So. 2d 1276, 1280-81 (La. 1993) (adopting rule for applying the state’s habitual offender statute whereby sentencing court must reduce the statutorily mandated minimum if it finds that that minimum “ ‘makes no measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment and is nothing more than the purposeful imposition of pain and suffering and is grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crime’ ” (quoting State v. Scott, 593 So. 2d 704, 710 (La. Ct. App. 1991); La. Rev. Stat. § 15:529.1)); State v. Barker, 186 W. Va. 73, 74-75, 410 S.E.2d 712 (1991) (explaining “procedure for analyzing a life recidivist sentence under [West Virginia’s] proportionality principle” and holding that life sentence for third strike offense of “forgery and uttering” violated state constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishments); Ashley v. State, 538 So. 2d 1181, 1184-85 (Miss. 1989) (trial court must perform proportionality analysis when imposing life without parole for third strike attempted robbery conviction; life without parole is unconstitutional as applied to defendant who stole three or four cans of sardines); People v. Anaya, 894 P.2d 28, 32 (Colo. App. 1994) (noting that defendant is automatically entitled to proportionality review when sentenced under that State’s habitual offender statute (citing People v. Mershon, 874 P.2d 1025 (Colo. 1994))).
Dorthey, 623 So. 2d at 1280-81; Ashley, 538 So. 2d at 1185.
These are Louisiana, Massachusetts, and Mississippi. See App. There was certainly some decision-making involved in my choice of sister-state robbery statutes to use in the appendix. I chose sister-state statutes with elements most nearly identical to the crime of which Mr. Witherspoon was convicted. That crime was second degree robbery in violation of RCW 9A.56.200 and .190, with no aggravating factor alleged (other than the “free crimes” factor, see RCW 9.94A-.535(2)(c)), which does not relate to the manner in which the robbery was committed).
I believe this is the required comparison for three reasons. First, it comports with Washington’s case law on “comparability under the SRA, which limits the comparability analysis to facts/elements actually admitted to or proved beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Thiefault, 160 Wn.2d 409, 414-15, 158 P.3d 580 (2007); In re Pers. Restraint of Lavery, 154 Wn.2d 249, 258, 111 P.3d 837 (2005). Second, it is consistent with the comparison undertaken in Fain, 94 Wn.2d at 399-400: a statute-to-statute, elements-based comparison. Third, as discussed in State v. Olsen, 180 Wn.2d 468, 825 P.3d 187 (2014), the problems inherent in comparing factual allegations, rather than proven factual elements, are virtually insurmountable when evaluating other states’ crimes.
Nevertheless, if I had compared certain uncharged facts underlying the State’s theory of how Witherspoon committed his third “strike” offense — the theory that this was a robbery based on a verbal threat involving a nonexistent gun — the results under the third Fain factor would be similar. That comparison would add only three states to the list of jurisdictions that punish unarmed robbery as a third strike with mandatory life without parole. (These are Delaware, New Jersey, and Wisconsin. Del. Code Ann. tit. 11, §§ 832(a)(2), 4214(b); N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 2C:15-1(a)(1), (b), 2C:43-7.1(b)(2); Wis. Stat. §§ 939.62(2m)(a)(2m), 943.32(2).)
There are 31 jurisdictions in which a third strike conviction for second degree robbery triggers an enhanced mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years or less. See App. These are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Washington, DC, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and Montana. Id. Montana imposes a mandatory life *908sentence on recidivist offenders in most cases, but not where (as in Witherspoon’s case) injury or threat of injury is an element of the third strike offense but no injury to the victim actually occurs. Id. In those cases, the sentence is discretionary. Id. In four other states (Delaware, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Vermont), habitual offender statutes exist but are not triggered by a third strike conviction for second degree robbery. Id.
These are California, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Nevada, and Oklahoma. See id.
For a defendant with no criminal history, the standard range sentence for homicide by abuse or nonaggravated murder is 240-320 months. RCW 9.94A.510. For a defendant with two violent prior offenses, the standard range sentence is 281-374 months. Id.; RCW 9.94A.525(9) (if present conviction is for a serious violent offense, count two points for each prior violent conviction and one point for each prior nonviolent felony conviction).
Other states have taken a variety of approaches to the problem of disproportionate sentencing in the “three strikes” context — there are no doubt multiple ways this problem could be resolved. In at least four states, persons convicted under habitual offender statutes are automatically entitled to a constitutional proportionality review upon sentencing. See supra note 16 (explaining sentencing procedures in Colorado, Louisiana, Mississippi, and West Virginia). In one state, third strike offenders receive mandatory life sentences in most cases but not where (as in Witherspoon’s case) injury or threat of injury is an element of the third strike offense but no injury to the victim actually occurs. Mont. Code Ann. §§ 46-18-219(1)(b), 46-18-222. In those cases, the sentence is discretionary. Mont. Code Ann. § 46-18-222. See also supra note 19, discussing the various penalties less harsh than mandatory life without parole, which are imposed for third strike second degree robbery convictions in the overwhelming majority of jurisdictions.
See State v. Pillatos, 159 Wn.2d 459, 470-76, 150 P.3d 1130 (2007) (applying new legislation, designed to fix the sentencing scheme declared unconstitutional in Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296, 124 S. Ct. 2531, 159 L. Ed. 2d 403 (2004), retroactively).