Pubdate: Thu, 13 Dec 2007 Source: Naples Daily News (FL) Copyright: 2007 Naples Daily News. Contact: http://www.naplesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/284 Author: Editorial CRIME AND JUSTICE Letting Judges Be The Judge In two 7-2 cases, the Supreme Court has gone a long way toward restoring broad discretion in sentencing to federal judges in criminal and especially drug cases. The court effectively reaffirmed that federal sentencing guidelines are advisory and not mandatory. The justices did not deal with the constitutionality of widely disparate sentences for similar crimes, which figured parenthetically in one of the cases. The minimum sentence for the largely white users of powdered cocaine is five years for 500 grams. For the largely black users of crack cocaine it is five years for only 5 grams. A federal judge in Virginia called the disparity "ridiculous" and ignored the minimum in a crack-case sentence. The appeals court rejected the sentence, but the Supreme Court stood by the district judge's discretion in the case. The ruling is not a call for slap-on-the-wrist justice. The judge imposed a sentence of 15 years for cocaine distribution and gun-related charges instead of the 19-year minimum called for by the guidelines -- and that only because the defendant was a first-time offender and an honorably discharged veteran. Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that "due deference" must be paid to the judge's discretion and that just because the sentence is outside the range of the guidelines "the court may not apply a presumption of unreasonableness." In the other case, federal prosecutors appealed a judge's decision to give 36 months' probation instead of 30 months in jail to a master carpenter who had been briefly part of an ecstasy ring in college. He wasn't tracked down and arrested until years later and, in the meantime, had led an exemplary life. For some crimes, such as cocaine possession, the disparate sentences are part of the law, a discrepancy that Congress plans to address next year. The two decisions go a long way toward restoring judicial discretion and flexibility and recognize that uniformity in applying the law is not the same as one-size-fits-all. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath