Pubdate: Tue, 18 Jan 2005 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2005 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/federal+sentencing (Federal Sentencing) MANDATORY SENTENCES NO MORE Restoring 6th Amendment's Respect for Judges, Juries At his sentencing in federal court two years ago, Freddie Booker could expect at least 10 years in prison. A jury had found him guilty of possessing some 92 grams of crack cocaine. Federal law calls for a 10-year sentence, but sentencing guidelines increase the punishment to at least 17 years and a maximum of 21 years. During the sentencing hearing, prosecutors told the judge that Booker had confessed to police to selling more than a pound of crack in the past. Hearing that, the judge increased Booker's sentence to 30 years, even though no jury had heard that evidence. Booker walked out of the courtroom expecting to be in prison until about 2033. Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Booker's sentence was unconstitutional. The Sixth Amendment says nothing about sentencing guidelines. Nor does it give judges the right to override juries at sentencing by increasing a defendant's punishment. Judges aren't barred from looking at prior criminal history when they decide what punishment to mete out. But they're limited to prior sentences resulting from convictions in court. Evidence that doesn't meet a jury conviction's "beyond reasonable doubt" standard is inadmissible at sentencing. The court's ruling is overdue. It restores to juries -- and judges -- the discretion Congress took away to decide what punishment best fits what crime. The ruling won't make too much difference for the likes of Booker. He might still serve at least the 17 years of a minimum sentence based on evidence on which the jury convicted him. But the ruling will make a difference for many of the 180,000 prisoners in federal penitentiaries, and the 60,000 sentenced to prison each year. Last November, for example, Weldon Angelos, a 25-year-old music executive in Oklahoma, and father of two, was sentenced to an absurd 55-year sentence because he dealt small amounts of marijuana to an undercover police officer - -- while wearing a firearm on his ankle. Minus the firearm, the offense would have cost him a few years (and at most nine years if sentenced in state court). The judge didn't want to sentence him to 55 years but was forced to by mandatory guidelines. The second part of the Supreme Court's ruling last week makes sentencing guidelines advisory only. That will give judges the discretion to prevent sentences such as Angelos'. Just as notably, it should not bring judges back to imposing arbitrary sentences, whether they be too lenient or too harsh. Sentencing guidelines were written with good intentions in the mid-1980s. Until then, two different judges could impose vastly different sentences for the same crime as long as they stayed within the range allowed by law. The disparities could be, and often were, unfair to defendants. In 1984 Congress created the U.S. Sentencing Commission, abolished parole for federal inmates, and developed federal sentencing guidelines that all but forced judges to impose specific sentences. The guidelines also gave judges discretion to increase (but not decrease) punishments should judges' own fact-finding warrant it. There's been a lot of fact-finding on judges' part, circumventing juries. For instance a judge rather than a jury would decide whether a drug dealer was an "organizer" or just a street-level seller, a difference that could add years to a sentence. Judges could also base their decisions on hearsay and other evidence that would be inadmissible in court. If the sentencing guidelines' intentions were good, their motive was not necessarily so. It was political, an attempt by Congress to look tough on crime. Their consequence has been a harsher kind of capricious justice the guidelines were designed to prevent. The Supreme Court's decision restores due process while (by making them advisory) preserving the guidelines' fairer intentions. The right balance is again between judges and juries. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake