Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2014 Source: Times Herald, The (Norristown, PA) Copyright: 2014 The Times Herald Contact: http://www.timesherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2689 Author: Michael P. Rellahan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) CHESTER COUNTY JUDGE REJECTS MANDATORY SENTENCING RULE FOR DRUG OFFENSE WEST CHESTER -- For the second time in a month, a Chester County Court judge has declared a mandatory sentencing provision inserted into a drug trafficking charge unconstitutional because it contradicts a U.S. Supreme Court decision handed down in June of last year. Common Pleas Court Judge Phyllis Streitel, in a one-page order issued April 29, said the provision that would set a prison term for the defendant, Demetrius Aaron Hardy of Las Vegas, Nev., at three years could not be applied to him in the formal charges leveled by the prosecution without butting up against the high court's decision. In a majority opinion written in 2013 by Justice Clarence Thomas, mandatory sentences were deemed to be a factor that only juries, and not judges, could take into account when deciding the guilt or innocence of a criminal defendant. The case of Alleyne v. United States, the defendant was charged with having a firearm in his possession while delivering illegal drugs, a fact which would trigger a minimum mandatory sentence. Alleyne has set prosecutors across the state, including in Chester County, scrambling to add the minimum mandatory provision to drug charges. It has also led to a slew of challenges to the moves, including an earlier county case that is now before the state Supreme Court. "It's a mess," said one veteran West Chester defense attorney familiar with the appeals but who spoke on the condition on anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the matter. "Most of the judges are finding these cases to be unconstitutional. It has go to be fixed by the legislature, or else there won't be any more mandatories." Mandatory sentences gained popularity in the 1980s and are now commonplace in many drug prosecutions. District attorneys appreciate them because they add a level of security in what sentence a particular defendant will receive. Judges are uncomfortable with them at times, because they remove a level of discretion they have in sentencing individual defendants. And defense attorneys bristle at them, because they give the prosecution added leverage during plea negotiations with the threat of imposing a mandatory minimum should the defendant seek to go to trial. In the case Streitel ruled in on Tuesday, Hardy, 35, was stopped by Coatesville police at 9:41 p.m. on Nov. 18 driving a Volkswagen in the city without its headlights on. When officer Joe Thompson checked Hardy's driver's license, he learned that Hardy was wanted on drug charges in New York. After the officer took Hardy into custody, Thompson searched his car and found a plastic sandwich bag containing 99 bags of crack cocaine. He was arrested the next day and charged with possession with intent to deliver crack cocaine, and possession of drug paraphernalia. In court Tuesday, Assistant District Attorney Kevin Pierce of the district attorney's drug unit asked Streitel to allow him to add an amended count to the charges against Hardy that included the mandatory minimum provision from the state's sentencing law. She approved the amendment. But Hardy's defense attorney, Joseph P. Green Jr. of West Chester, objected to the move, arguing that the mandatory minimum law in Pennsylvania specifically holds that it is not an "element" of a crime, and that its applicability can be determined only by a judge, not a jury, in opposition to the Alleyne decision. Thus, Green argued, the charge was unconstitutional. Streitel agreed, and soon afterwards issued her order dismissing that charge against Hardy. Pierce, in court, indicated that the prosecution would likely appeal her ruling, which was expected. Streitel issued a similar order on April 25 in the case of a 49-year-old West Nantmeal man, Dennis "Spanky" Alenovitz, who was arrested in early 2013 on charges that he sold methamphetamine to an confidential informant from his home on Pumpkin Hill Road over a two-month period. Alenovitz is also represented by Green. The weights of the methamphetamine Alenovitz is alleged to have sold would have, in the past, automatically set his mandatory prison terms at three or four years, depending on the transaction, should the prosecution ask the judge sentencing him to impose it. But under the Alleyne ruling, the weight of the drugs triggering those mandatory sentences would have to be determined by a jury hearing Alenovitz's case, not a judge, and be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, the district attorney's office in February similarly asked Streitel to amend the charges against him to include language about the mandatory sentencing provisions. In his motion asking Streitel to declare the new charge unconstitutional, Green wrote that the provisions that were added to the charges against this client "are unconstitutional because they specifically provide that their predicates are not an element of an offense and must be proved to the satisfaction of the court at sentencing by a preponderance of the evidence." That contradicts the requirements set forth by Thomas' ruling in Alleyne, he wrote. Green noted that in December, Judge David Bortner had already ruled in another county case that adding mandatory provision to a criminal charge was unconstitutional. That case, involving a Kennett Square man arrested by state police in April 2012, involves a mandatory sentence for selling drugs in a school zone. That case is currently before the state Supreme Court on appeal by the prosecution. It is among 11 such cases the court has agreed to hear to sort out the constitutionality of the provision, including ones from Montgomery and Luzerne counties. In the case Bortner decided, the prosecution argued that in order to meet the requirements of Alleyne, the court could simply add a special question on the jury's verdict slip to ask whether it determined that the sale had taken place within a certain distance of a school -- much like jurors in civil cases are routinely asked to do. But Bortner ruled that the state Superior Court has recently noted that such attempts would not meet the standards set by the U.S. Supreme Court. "In light of this comment," Bortner wrote in his decision, "we cannot confidently conclude that the use of a verdict slip special interrogatory would be effective to remedy an unconstitutional statute. We observe that this is a matter for the Pennsylvania legislature to address." The cases before the state Supreme Court for review will likely not be addressed until later this year, attorneys familiar with the caseload speculated. Thus, Green asked Streitel that she set a new bail for Hardy, who is currently being held in Chester County Prison on $100,000 cash bail. Pierce said he would not opposed an unsecured bail for Hardy. Whether or not the mandatory provisions added to the charges are upheld or thrown out, the cases against Hardy, Alenovitz, and the defendant in Bortner's case are not going to disappear; they will still be charged with selling drugs. If convicted, they would also still be subject to possible prison terms - even as long as the mandatory sentences the prosecution is seeking. But the eventual sentence in those cases would be up to a judge, not a prosecutor. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom