Pubdate: Thu, 09 Oct 2003 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2003 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Gary Fields and Jess Bravin, Staff Reporters Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/ashcroft.htm (Ashcroft, John) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) SENTENCING PANEL LEAVES JUDGES WITH SOME ROOM FOR LENIENCY WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Sentencing Commission, under pressure from Congress and the Justice Department to restrict judges from handing down sentences milder than federal guidelines, recommended some new restrictions -- but stopped short of a blanket ban. Among the recommendations, which will go to Congress: Guilty pleas or plea bargains are no longer grounds for a sentence shorter than the guidelines dictate; nor are restitution to victims by the accused, community ties, mitigating circumstances or drug or alcohol dependence. But the Justice Department's representative, Eric Jaso, rebuked the panel and said the recommendations would have little or no effect on federal judges who ignore the guidelines. Even as the panel voted, staff members worked to clear pathways in the aisles of the commission's offices here, which are laden with hundreds of boxes of judges' sentencing-report records that have been coming in daily since Congress required more specific record keeping in April. The office gets about 5,000 new reports each month from judges. Attorney General John Ashcroft also has directed U.S. attorneys to file their own reports to Washington when judges depart downward from the sentencing guidelines. The commission's report was the latest round in an escalating battle among three branches of government, with some administration and congressional officials on one side and the federal judiciary on the other. After the Protect Act, adopted in April, required the commission to issue new limits on judges' discretion, judges voted last month to support counter legislation to restore more of their discretion in sentencing. "The problem in sentencing is that sentences are too high, not too low - -- time and time again, low-level, nonviolent drug offenders are sentenced to decades in prison," Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, the House Judiciary Committee's ranking Democrat, said through a spokesman. Phoenix federal public defender Jon Sands said "the commission went too far" in eliminating categories like restitution and mitigating circumstances. "Look at all the things they've taken off the table," he said. Congress can accept the recommendations without action, allowing them to become law, or it can reject them. Or Congress can pass new sentencing laws without the input of the commission, as it did earlier this year. It was clear at the public meeting Wednesday that it is likely the Justice Department would lobby Congress to go further. Mr. Jaso said in the meeting that "the commission has failed" in addressing its charge from Congress. He said he was doubtful the group, made up of seven presidentially appointed criminal-justice professionals including four sitting judges, would be given another chance -- noting Congress members already had flirted with a stronger ban on judges departing from the guidelines. "They have still left exceptions that a lenient judge can drive a truck through," said Rep. Tom Feeney, the Florida Republican who introduced legislation directing the Sentencing Commission to tighten the guidelines. He said he would push for a stronger ban. The tense nature of the commission's deliberations was evident. Though the recommendations passed 7-0, the chairwoman, U.S. Circuit Judge Diana E. Murphy of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, had to ask several times if any member of the panel would be the one to make a motion to accept them. Judge Murphy said after the meeting that the wide-ranging opposition from all sides "sums up the position of the Sentencing Commission in the world." The Protect Act has been responsible for a number of changes within the justice system, including mandating that Mr. Ashcroft order his prosecutors to oppose sentences shorter than guidelines through appeals and limit plea bargains. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin