Pubdate: June 26, 1998 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Author: Victoria Colliver, Emelyn Cruz Lat and Eric Brazil HIGH COURT OKS STIFF "3-STRIKES' SENTENCES Tough-on-crime law does not constitute double jeopardy The Supreme Court sharpened the teeth of California's "three strikes" law Friday, making it easier for states to stiffen sentences for repeat offenders based on past crimes. In a decision hailed by the law's author and criticized by San Francisco's chief deputy public defender, the justices ruled, 5-4, that the constitutional protection against being tried twice for the same crime does not apply to sentencing proceedings in non-death penalty cases. Therefore, the court said California's tough-on-crime three strikes law can be used to double what would have been a Pomona man's five-year prison term for selling marijuana. The court reached the same decision in the case as did the California Supreme Court in 1997. It does not apply to death penalty cases. "This is a really huge decision, not just for three strikes, but for law enforcement throughout the country," said Mike Reynolds of Fresno, author of the law. "It could have been catastrophic if it had come down against us," said Reynolds, whose 18-year-old daughter was murdered by two repeat offenders in 1993. Twenty-three states have adopted similar laws since California's three strikes measure went on the books in March, 1994, and a contrary decision would have triggered "a mass exodus of criminals throughout the country," he said. The defendant in the case decided by the Supreme Court had argued that once an appeals court ruled his prior conviction could not be used to increase his sentence, prosecutors could not seek a retrial of that issue. Peter Keane, chief deputy public defender for San Francisco, did not share Reynolds' jubilation. "It's a reflection of how three strikes laws in general have eaten away at many constitutional rights. The U.S. Supreme Court has taken protections related to double jeopardy and has driven a hole through that protection," Keane said. The decision was "unfortunate but not surprising," in view of recent Supreme Court decisions in cases involving three strikes laws, he said. It does not change the way the three strikes law is used in California, rather "it ratifies what prosecutors have been doing." Perhaps the greatest impact will be felt in other states, he said. "It opens the doors to stiffer sentences," Keane said. "If other states adopt three strikes laws, they would not have to put up with the kinds of legal fights California has put up with in order to sustain its constitutionality. The California Attorney General, with the U.S. Supreme Court's blessing, has blazed a path for them." In writing for the court, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said "many states have chosen to implement procedural safeguards to protect defendants who may face dramatic increases in their sentences . . . We do not believe that because the states have done so, we are compelled to extend the double jeopardy bar." Angel Jaime Monge's sentence for his 1995 conviction was doubled because his marijuana conviction was deemed a second strike - he had been convicted of assault with a deadly weapon in 1992. California's 1994 three strikes law results in sentences ranging from 25 years to life in prison for third felony convictions, and calls for a doubling of the prison sentence for second convictions. A state appeals court upheld Monge's marijuana conviction but threw out his doubled sentence after ruling there was insufficient proof that he had used a dangerous or deadly weapon during his 1992 crime. The appeals court also barred prosecutors' attempt to retry that aspect of the previous case. To do so, the appeals court said, would violate Monge's constitutional protection against being tried twice for the same crime. The Constitution's Fifth Amendment bars such double jeopardy. The state Supreme Court, however, cleared the way for just such a retrial by overturning the appeals court's ruling and stating that the double-jeopardy protection does not apply in such circumstances. In Friday's ruling, the nation's highest court said the state Supreme Court was correct. O'Connor noted the high court has previously ruled that double-jeopardy protection does apply in death-penalty cases. The court ruled in 1981 that states cannot seek the death penalty in a second sentencing proceeding after a defendant's first jury declined to impose a death sentence. But O'Connor said death penalty cases have unique circumstances and said that the court generally has ruled that double-jeopardy protections do not apply to sentencing proceedings. Her opinion was joined by Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Stephen Breyer. Dissenting were Justices John Paul Stevens, Antonin Scalia, David Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. 1998 San Francisco Examiner Page A 1 - --- Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"