|
Criminal Defense
- Notable Cases
Justices Restore Judges’ Control
Over Sentencing
in Crack Cocaine Cases
By LINDA GREENHOUSE
Published: December 11, 2007
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 — The Supreme
Court on Monday restored federal
judges to their traditional central
role in criminal sentencing.
In two
decisions, the court said federal
district judges had broad discretion
to impose what they think are
reasonable sentences, even if
federal guidelines call for
different sentences.
One
decision was particularly emphatic
in saying judges are free to
disagree with guidelines that call
for much longer sentences for
offenses involving crack cocaine
than for crimes involving an
equivalent amount of cocaine in
powdered form.
Both
cases, each decided by the same
7-to-2 alignment, chided federal
appeals courts for failing to give
district judges sufficient leeway.
The appeals court had in each case
overturned a sentence that was lower
than that provided by the
guidelines. The two dissenters were
Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel
A. Alito Jr.
Taken
together, the decisions reflected
the remarkable trajectory the court
has traveled in the seven years
since it overturned a New Jersey
hate-crime statute on the ground
that the law gave judges an
unconstitutional degree of authority
to make the crucial factual
determinations that added a
hate-crime “enhancement” to an
ordinary criminal sentence.
Along
with their diminished function under
the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984,
which set up the federal sentencing
guidelines system, federal judges
appeared to have been all but
ejected from their role at the heart
of criminal sentencing.
Judges
still may not impose sentences above
the range written into law by
Congress or state legislatures. But
the decision on Monday gives judges
broad discretion to impose sentences
higher or lower than the guidelines,
which are not statutes and are
issued by the United States
Sentencing Commission.
The
two decisions answered questions
left hanging in 2005, when the court
ruled in United States v. Booker
that the federal sentencing
guidelines could be constitutional
only if “advisory” rather than
mandatory. Appeals courts were to
review sentences for
“reasonableness,” the court said
then. But the court did not say what
it meant by either “advisory” or
“reasonableness.”
Last
June, in Rita v. United States, the
court ruled that appeals courts
could choose to presume that
sentences within the guidelines
range were reasonable, but that such
a presumption was not binding. But
that opinion was quite opaque and
said relatively little about the
trial judge’s role.
It is
now clear that while judges should
consult the guidelines, they are
just one factor among others and do
not carry any special weight. It is
also clear that an appeals court
must have a very good reason of its
own to displace the trial judge’s
judgment.
“The
guidelines should be the starting
point and the initial benchmark,”
Justice John Paul Stevens said in
one of the decisions on Monday, Gall
v. United States, No. 06-7949.
But
Justice Stevens went on to say that
the guidelines were just one factor
in the “individualized assessment”
that a judge must make in every
case. The judge “may not presume
that the guidelines range is
reasonable,” he said.
In
that case, Brian M. Gall, who had
briefly been involved in an Ecstasy
distribution ring while a college
student, received a sentence of
three years’ probation rather than
30 to 36 months in prison called for
by the guidelines.
The
United States Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit, in St. Louis,
ruled that such an “extraordinary”
variance from the guidelines range
required an equivalently
extraordinary justification.
That
judgment was erroneous, Justice
Stevens said, in failing to give
“due deference” to the district
judge’s “reasoned and reasonable
decision.” He added that “if the
sentence is outside the guidelines
range, the court may not apply a
presumption of unreasonableness.”
Nor,
he continued, should a sentence be
overturned just because the appeals
court “might reasonably have
concluded that a different sentence
was appropriate.”
The
defendant in the crack cocaine case,
Derrick Kimbrough, received 15 years
instead of 19 to 22 ½ for several
cocaine and gun-related offenses.
The sentence was the lowest
possible, given the statutory
mandatory minimum sentences.
The
trial judge said the higher
guidelines term would be
inappropriate for Mr. Kimbrough, a
Marine veteran of the Persian Gulf
war with an honorable discharge. The
judge also disagreed with the
relative treatment of crack and
powdered cocaine, a disparity that
he said led to “disproportionate and
unjust” results.
The
United States Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit, in Richmond,
Va., overturned the sentence on the
ground that it was “per se
unreasonable” for a judge to depart
from the guidelines “based on a
disagreement with the sentencing
disparity for crack and powder
cocaine offenses.”
The
Supreme Court took the unusual step
of reinstating the original lower
sentences, rather than simply
instructing the appeals courts to
reconsider the cases under an
appropriately deferential standard
of review.
Prof.
Douglas A. Berman of the Moritz
College of Law at Ohio State
University, an expert on sentencing,
called the decisions a “stinging
rebuke of circuit court
micromanagement of district court
discretion.”
The
decision in the crack cocaine case,
Kimbrough v. United States, No.
06-6330, was particularly pointed in
this regard. In her majority
opinion, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
said that ordinarily, “closer review
may be in order” when a judge’s
sentence is based on a policy
disagreement with the guidelines.
But
she went on to say that this higher
level of appellate scrutiny should
not apply to a sentence based on a
district judge’s critique of the
crack-powder disparity.
Justice Ginsburg’s opinion took
account of an important policy
development since the case was
argued on Oct. 2. On Nov. 1, amended
guidelines for crack cocaine that
the United States Sentencing
Commission had long advocated took
effect when Congress, which had the
power to block them, let the moment
pass without acting.
Justice Ginsburg said that “this
tacit acceptance” of the amendment
by Congress “undermines the
government’s position” that judges
should not have discretion to depart
from the guidelines themselves.
The
amendments put into effect a
relatively modest change that will
reduce sentences for crack by about
one-quarter, resulting in sentences
that are two to five times longer
than for equivalent amounts of
powdered cocaine.
The
commission was limited in what it
could accomplish on its own. A 1986
federal law, enacted at the height
of public concern about crack,
incorporated a 100 to one ratio into
mandatory minimum sentences — that
is, the same sentence was imposed
for a given amount of crack and 100
times that amount of powder.
The
Sentencing Commission guidelines
operated as an overlay on that
statutory framework. But as the
commission studied the impact, it
grew concerned. A 2002 report noted
that 85 percent of defendants
convicted of crack offenses were
black, a fact the commission warned
was leading to a loss of confidence
in the fairness of the system.
Bipartisan bills are pending in
Congress to address the disparity.
On Tuesday, the Sentencing
Commission will vote on whether to
make the Nov. 1 amendment
retroactive to the 19,500 inmates
imprisoned for crack offenses.
The
court’s endorsement of judges’
discretion raised the prospect that
higher sentences, not only lower
ones, would now be upheld on appeal.
Current statistics indicate that
defendants benefit the most when
judges depart from the guidelines.
Below-guidelines sentences have been
given in 11.9 percent of cases, and
above-guidelines sentences in 1.6
percent. Criminal defense lawyers
regarded the decision on Monday as
good news.
“The
court has taken the handcuffs off
and told judges that ‘you are free
to apply your mind,’” said Graham
Boyd, director of the Drug Law
Reform Project of the American Civil
Liberties Union.
Click Here to view this article on
the New York Times website.
Back
To Top
[ Up ] [ Justices Restore Judges Control Over Sentencing ] [ Congress Is Expected to Revisit Sentencing Laws ] [ States Growing Lenient Allowing Felons to Vote ] [ Turnbaugh Innocent - After Jury's 5 hr Deliberation ] [ State of VT v Robert Lawton ] [ State of VT v Roger Parker ]
|