Pubdate: Mon, 20 Jan 2003 Source: Clarksburg Exponent-Telegram (WV) Contact: Clarksburg Publishing Company 2002 Website: http://www.exponent-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1667 Author: Matt Harvey, Asst. Managing Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) STATE SYSTEM FOR SENTENCING PEOPLE CONVICTED OF FELONIES NEEDS I may have written this before. But even if I have, I think it's important enough to repeat: The federal system for sentencing those convicted of felonies is better than the state system. Criminal history, acceptance of responsibility, cooperation and, in drug cases, amount of the drug all play a part in federal sentencing guidelines. A federal probation officer puts all these factors, and more, together, for the judge. The judge then gets a point total. Although I'm simplifying the process quite a bit here, this sets the potential sentence range. The judge usually hands down a sentence within that range. The federal system also has no parole. In state courts, like federal courts, judges get presentence reports from probation officers. But without a standard set of sentencing guidelines, the state system has too much leeway. For instance, a federal convict knows exactly how accepting responsibility, or cooperating with authorities, can affect his point total. In state court, the impact of these factors is murky at best. The methods used also put way too much discretion in the hands of prosecutors. And because there's no parole federally, it means more when a federal judge hands down a sentence. Because of the power of the parole board, as well as prison overcrowding, convicts in state court too often will serve only a fraction of the original sentence. [REMAINDER OF COLUMN NOT DRUG-POLICY RELATED] Assistant Managing Editor Matt Harvey can be reached at (304) 626-1442