Pubdate: Sun, 24 Nov 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Authors: Cary Spivak, & Don Bice TOUGH JUDGE'S SENTENCES OVER TOP, PANELS SAY If you thought the way Judge Jacqueline Schellinger treated jurors and lawyers was a little odd, check out what she does to drug-dealing defendants. Judges from two appellate court panels did recently, and they didn't like what they saw. The judges flagged Schellinger for piling on, saying she ordered unreasonable probation conditions against two felons. The court ordered that sentences for both men be changed. Schellinger's name, by the way, may sound familiar to you. She's the short-fused judge who fined a juror $500 for contempt in October and who, during the summer, apologized to a public defender for lashing out at him during an obscenity-laced tirade. "You gotta wonder," cracked one political wag, "is she auditioning for the 'Judge Jackie Show' ? " When it comes to doling out sentences to drug dealers, it's not her temper that causes problems. Rather, several courthouse sources said, she just lays the rules on way too thick. "She means well," said one defense lawyer. "But, even the people in the probation department roll their eyes when they get these things." Schellinger defended her sentencing style, noting that defense lawyers plead for probation to keep their clients out of prison. The judge said she imposes tough rules to help the convicts straighten out their lives. "So they have the opportunity to understand what structure is," she explained Friday. That makes some sense, and judges do enjoy broad authority in ordering probation. But, the appellate court basically told Schellinger "C'mon, Judge, you have to be reasonable." For example, ordering a childless convict to take a parenting class is over the top, one panel ruled. (Schellinger said the drug dealer may become a dad someday.) And, in a separate case, another panel said a judge can't order so many probation conditions that a criminal doesn't stand a chance of following all of them. "We conclude that these conditions are unreasonable in combination because the sheer number of hours they require will make compliance virtually impossible," the judges wrote in overturning the sentence Schellinger imposed last year on Richard Young, who pleaded guilty to selling a small amount of heroin. Here's what set off the appellate court. Young was sentenced to 20 years in prison, though Schellinger stayed that term and ordered him to serve 15 years' probation, with the first 12 months behind bars. Once out of jail, Schellinger said, Young must attend meetings of Narcotics Anonymous or a similar group six times a week for five years. All that's pretty routine, but Schellinger kept going. She demanded that Young get a job and be the perfect employee. "Young must never be late for work, never leave work early, never take longer breaks than those that are prescribed and never be absent from work unless he is 'so sick that a doctor has written an excuse that says (he) could not possibly go to work.' " Finally, Schellinger mandated that Young, who had custody of five young children, complete a parenting class, improve his reading skills or get a GED, complete a two-year course in vocational training and perform 1,000 hours of community service within five years. Conditions that tough even make staunch law & order types shake their heads in disbelief, said one prosecutor who had argued before Schellinger. "There has to be a line somewhere," he said, though he admitted that Schellinger's zealousness may score points with the public. "You have to pose conditions they could meet so you don't set them up for failure." And, those conditions must withstand an appeal, which those put on Young did not. "We question whether any person, much less a person struggling to overcome a drug addiction, could maintain the range of activities imposed by the court," wrote the three-judge panel, which includes Judge Pat Roggensack, a conservative running for the Supreme Court. "Even if Young were able to arrange a schedule that would successfully accommodate all of the activities, which seems doubtful, Young would be left with little or no time for family responsibilities, which the circuit court noted should be a priority for Young." So much for his parenting class. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake