Pubdate: Sun, 16 Jan 2005 Source: Bristol Herald Courier (VA) Copyright: 2005 Bristol Herald Courier Contact: http://www.bristolnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1211 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/federal+sentencing (Federal Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) RETHINKING CRIME AND PUNISHMENT Ready or not, a substantial change is coming to many of the nation's state and federal courtrooms. The U.S. Supreme Court - in a pair of decisions, one of which came just last week - said federal and state judges can no longer lengthen a criminal defendant's sentence based on evidence that was not presented to a jury. Now, if prosecutors want to ask for more time because a defendant was a criminal ringleader, a drug abuser, a wife-beater or a tax cheat, they have to prove those things to a jury. The only exception: Judges can still consider a defendant's past convictions in deciding an appropriate punishment without running them by a jury first. Whether the high court's decision is a good change or a bad one remains to be seen, and might depend, in part, on how it is implemented. If it leads to a return to sensible sentencing discretion for judges, that's a plus. Judges should be able to give defendants longer or shorter sentences based on their crime, their remorse and other facts specific to a single case. The Supreme Court first waded into the sentencing debate last summer with a ruling in a Washington case that had a ripple effect across the nation. Tennessee was among the states that suddenly found its method for sentencing criminals under scrutiny. As a result, the state legislature is likely to tinker with the sentencing code this year. Some prosecutors are advocating a return to jury sentencing - a system that works just fine in Virginia. In the meantime, Tennessee prosecutors and judges are coping with the high court's ruling by holding two-part trials. One part is to determine guilt; one part is to decide which aggravating factors apply in the case and should lead to a heftier sentence. It's a lengthy and cumbersome way to go, but one that complies with the court ruling. Federal judges could institute the same type of two-part proceedings on the heels of last week's ruling that came close to dismantling the two-decades-old federal sentencing guidelines. The guidelines have generated many complaints over the years, including an outcry against mandatory-minimum sentences in drug cases that have meant lengthy prison terms for some peripheral players in the nation's illegal drug trade. But this ruling doesn't do away with mandatory minimums, which are not always fair and might need to be revised. Instead, it might make it harder for prosecutors to seek longer prison terms for those who truly deserve them. Congress might weigh in on the federal sentencing issue later this year. Meanwhile, federal sentencing guidelines are now advisory, rather than mandatory. It might be best to keep them that way. The guidelines were meant to make sentences more uniform around the country, but uniformity isn't quite the same thing as fair and just. Some defendants deserve a break; most do not. Judges - with the help of juries - are in the best position to decide punishment in Tennessee and in the federal system. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake