Pubdate: Sun, 21 Nov 2004
Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY)
Copyright: 2004 Lexington Herald-Leader
Contact:  http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240
Author: Gina Holland, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)

SENTENCING PLAN IN WORKS

Legal Experts Revising Federal Guidelines

WASHINGTON - Judges and legal scholars are working on new federal
criminal sentencing guidelines, in anticipation that the Supreme Court
will strike down a 17-year-old system that has been challenged as
unconstitutional.

Since last June's high court decision raised questions about the
legality of the system, 30,000 cases have backed up. The court now is
considering whether the guidelines must be replaced because they call
for judges, not juries, to consider factors that can add years to
prison sentences.

A ruling is likely before the end of 2004, and experts helping a
federal panel draft alternatives were generally united in predicting
that at least part of the guidelines will be overturned.

The Justice Department weighed in Wednesday with an unofficial
endorsement of an alternative -- making slight changes to the current
system that would allow harsher penalties for convicted criminals.

The work is being done by the Sentencing Commission, a federal panel
that sets guidelines for federal judges who sentence more than 60,000
people each year.

Under the challenged system, juries consider guilt or innocence but
judges make decisions that affect prison time, such as the number of
victims in a fraud or whether someone used a gun in a crime.

Experts told commission members during public hearings Tuesday and
Wednesday that they have a chance to rewrite a flawed system,
regardless of the court's ruling.

"Start over," Nancy King, a law professor specializing in sentencing
at Vanderbilt University, told the commission.

Judges have been among the harshest critics of the rules. On Tuesday,
a Bush-appointed judge sentenced a first-time drug offender to 55
years in prison, which the judge said was more time than rapists,
murderers or airline hijackers get. U.S. District Judge Paul Cassell
said the sentence wasn't fair, but that he had no choice under the
guidelines.

Under the change recommended by the Justice Department, and appearing
to enjoy some support on the commission, minimum sentences will not
change. However, judges will have flexibility to give longer
sentences, up to the maximum defined by Congress. Judges could decide
on a long prison sentence, without adding extra time for specific
things like gun possession.

"Of all the legislative proposals being discussed as possible
solutions, this option adheres most closely to the principles of
sentencing reform -- truth-in-sentencing, certainty and fairness in
sentences, and the elimination of unwarranted sentencing disparities,"
Assistant Attorney General Christopher Wray said in testimony before
the commission.

Wray said the change, called by some the "topless" plan, would
"preserve the traditional roles of judges and juries in criminal
cases" and would be easy to get through Congress.

Critics, however, said it would eliminate the point of the guidelines,
approved nearly 20 years ago to make sentencing fairer by reducing
disparities among punishments handed out by different judges.

"There are judges in my district who will hammer you if you go to
trial," criminal defense attorney James Felman of Tampa, Fla., told
commissioners. "Sometimes it will depend on what they had for breakfast."

Indiana University law professor Frank Bowman drafted the plan
supported by the Justice Department. But Bowman said Wednesday that he
considered it only a temporary fix. "I think federal sentencing needs
a major overhaul," he said.

Questions were also raised about whether the plan would have
constitutional problems before the Supreme Court, and whether it gives
prosecutors too much power to plea bargain with defendants worried
about getting extremely long sentences.

At issue for the Supreme Court now is whether a defendant's Sixth
Amendment right to a jury trial also provides the right to demand that
every factor that could lengthen a sentence be put to a jury and
proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

Prosecutors have been instructed to change indictments to include
aggravating factors in indictments that could add time to prison
sentences, to be decided by a jury.

Several legal experts recommended that as a permanent solution, but
Wray said that the added work "would impose significant burdens on
every phase of the criminal justice system."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin