Pubdate: Sun, 10 Aug 2003
Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA)
Copyright: 2003 Athens Newspapers Inc
Contact:  http://www.onlineathens.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535
Author: Anne Gearan

JUSTICE: JAIL TERMS 'TOO LONG'

Kennedy Speaks

SAN FRANCISCO - Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said Saturday that 
prison terms are too long and that he favors scrapping the practice of 
setting mandatory minimum sentences for some federal crimes.

''Our resources are misspent, our punishments too severe, our sentences too 
long,'' Kennedy said in remarks prepared for delivery to the annual meeting 
of the American Bar Association. '

'I can accept neither the necessity nor the wisdom of federal mandatory 
minimum sentences,'' Kennedy said. ''In too many cases, mandatory minimum 
sentences are unwise or unjust.''

Kennedy is a moderate conservative placed on the court by former President 
Ronald Reagan.

His criticism puts him at odds with Attorney General John Ashcroft, who 
wants prosecutors to closely monitor which judges impose more lenient 
sentences than federal guidelines recommend.

Such oversight, critics say, could limit judicial independence.

Kennedy said he agrees with the need for federal sentencing guidelines.

The 15-year-old system gives judges a range of possible punishments for 
most crimes and eliminates some of the disparities in terms imposed by 
different judges for the same crime.

Still, the guidelines lead to longer prison terms than were common before, 
Kennedy said. ''We should revisit this compromise,'' he said. ''The federal 
sentencing guidelines should be revised downward.''

Prosecutors often ask for sentences at or near the top of the guideline 
range, and defense lawyers ask for terms at or even below the bottom.

Judges have some freedom to ''downwardly depart,'' from the guidelines and 
hand down a lesser punishment. Ashcroft recently directed U.S. attorneys to 
promptly report to Justice Department headquarters any such departures that 
are not part of a plea agreement in exchange for cooperation.

''The Department of Justice has a solemn obligation to ensure that laws 
concerning criminal sentencing are faithfully, fairly and consistently 
enforced,'' Ashcroft wrote in a memo issued July 28.

Kennedy did not address Ashcroft's directive.

The justice asked the ABA to lobby Congress to repeal mandatory minimum 
sentence laws, even though they have withstood court scrutiny. '

'Courts may conclude the legislature is permitted to choose long sentences, 
but that does not mean long sentences are wise or just,'' Kennedy said.

Kennedy voted with the Supreme Court majority this year to uphold 
California's toughest-in-the-nation law mandating 25-year minimum prison 
terms for three-time felons. Kennedy also urged the ABA to consider working 
to extend pardons for state and federal prisoners serving harsh terms.

"The pardon process, of late, seems to have been drained of its moral 
force. Pardons are infrequent,'' Kennedy said. ''A people confident in its 
laws and institutions should not be ashamed of mercy.''

Kennedy asked lawyers to think about the consequences of the current prison 
system, including what he called its ''remarkable scale'' of about 2.1 
million people behind bars nationwide and the fact that about 40 percent of 
the prison population is black.

''It is no defense if our current system is more the product of neglect 
than of purpose,'' Kennedy said. ''Out of sight, out of mind is an 
unacceptable excuse for a prison system that incarcerates over 2 million 
human beings in the United States.''
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