Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jan 2004 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2004 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) NO RUBBER-STAMP Chief Justice Rehnquist Again Sounds An Alarm Against A Law That Puts Independence And Integrity Of Judges In Jeopardy Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist was not sure Congress and Attorney General John Ashcroft heard him and the Judicial Conference of the United States the first time. It has been a little more than three months since the Rehnquist-led conference of federal judges voted unanimously to support repeal of a law promoted by Attorney General John Ashcroft that meddles dangerously with the independence of the judges. In his annual report on the federal judiciary, Rehnquist speaks up even louder against the Feeney Amendment, whose purpose is to give special scrutiny to and intimidate judges who give sentences that fall short of federal sentencing guidelines. In contrast to rubber-stamp justice, judges at times, in circumstances peculiar to individual cases, sentence defendants to shorter terms than minimums set forth in the federal guidelines. Rehnquist was especially irked last September, when the Ashcroft-supported law got enacted without any real evaluation by the Judicial Conference . The amendment attracted little original notice, in fact, when it got attached to the popular Amber Alert child protection measure. Lest there be any mistaking how he still feels about the Ashcroft power play, the chief justice's report says the Feeney Amendment "could appear to be an unwarranted and ill-considered effort to intimidate individual judges in the performance of their judicial duties." Could there be any real doubt about that? First, the amendment adopted last April made it easier for appellate courts to lengthen sentences shorter than in the guidelines. Second, the law put judges on notice they not only would be challenged on such sentences but also reported to Congress for handing them out. And the role of the U.S. Sentencing Commission has been all but usurped in the process. Yet, the Feeney Amendment alone didn't satisfy Ashcroft's taste for applying the hammer to the non-cookie cutter federal judges. In a late-summer directive to federal prosecutors, the attorney general directed them to report judges who make "downward departures" from the guidelines when reductions aren't tied to a defendant's cooperation in a case. Ashcroft also urged the attorneys to appeal such sentences in larger numbers. It was hardly a happy development for the appellate courts or for the federal prisons that have had a four-fold increase in population since 1987 -- more than half representing drug offenders. Most federal judges apparently agree that a range of possible punishments in federal guidelines has been helpful in reducing glaring disparities in sentencing. But they rightly resent a heavy-handed effort to drive them away from just, responsible sentencing and toward an inflexibility that is onerous to fair-minded people. The Rehnquist rebuke is a needed reminder to Congress and the Justice Department that in this instance they have gone much too far. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin