Pubdate: Mon, 26 May 2014
Source: Standard-Speaker (Hazleton, PA)
Copyright: 2014 Associated Press
Contact:  http://www.standardspeaker.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1085
Author: Joe Mandak, Associated Press
Page: A18
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)

U.S. SUPREME COURT RULING SNARLS SENTENCING MINIMUMS

PITTSBURGH (AP) - A U.S. Supreme Court decision last year has 
prompted dozens of appeals in criminal cases across Pennsylvania and 
left judges scratching their heads on how to apply state laws on 
mandatory minimum sentences.

The confusion has prompted meetings among judges, forced some judges 
to try out new jury instructions and even led some jurists to 
conclude that whole sections of state law are unconstitutional.

Legal experts say what happens next will be driven largely by cases 
already on appeal to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

"No appellate court in Pennsylvania has gotten around to definitively 
deciding the question, and everybody, it seems, is waiting for 
someone else to decide it," said St. Vincent College law professor 
Bruce Antkowiak, a former federal prosecutor and defense attorney.

The stumbling block is Alleyne v. United States, a high court 
decision stemming from a Virginia federal court case that found that 
juries, not judges, should decide whether a defendant committed 
crimes that trigger a mandatory minimum sentence.

But Pennsylvania law says a jury decides a person's guilt or 
innocence of the underlying crime, such as drug possession or 
robbery. A judge then uses a lower standard of proof to decide 
whether the mandatory sentencing "triggers" were proved - such as 
being in a school zone when drug dealing or brandishing a gun during 
the robbery.

Judges in at least one jurisdiction, Blair County in central 
Pennsylvania, recently decided to stop imposing mandatory minimum 
sentences altogether until the General Assembly rewrites the statutes.

The judges made the decision after hearing arguments from prosecutors 
and a defense attorney for two men facing five-year mandatory 
minimums - one accused of dealing drugs in a school zone; the other 
charged with having a weapon while in possession of marijuana.

"It's a sad day for victims. It is a sad day for law enforcement. It 
is a sad day for society," District Attorney Richard Consiglio told 
the Altoona Mirror at the time.

Consiglio declined to comment further while he considers whether to 
appeal the county judges' ruling.

Since the Alleyne ruling, some Pennsylvania judges have begun asking 
juries to determine whether certain mandatory minimum triggers have 
been proved, even though state law doesn't allow that. Other judges 
have ruled that Alleyne makes Pennsylvania criminal statutes 
containing mandatory minimum sentencing provisions unconstitutional 
in their entirety.

In eastern Pennsylvania, Lycoming County District Attorney Eric 
Linhardt said judges there first allowed juries to decide mandatory 
minimum sentences before reversing course and ruling the statutes illegal.

"Ten cases are presently on appeal, and many others will soon 
follow," Linhardt said, adding the impasse could affect 100 pending 
drug cases in his office.

Thomas Dickey, the defense attorney in the Blair County case, 
believes statutes with mandatory sentencing provisions are 
unconstitutional, likening them to, of all things, a deep fryer with 
a removable cord.

"If you lose that cord, you really can't use the deep fryer," Dickey 
said. "I guess you could put the deep fryer on top of a fire and get 
the grease hot enough to make french fries that way, but it's not 
what the instruction book calls for."

If the state's highest court agrees, the General Assembly could amend 
the statutes to let juries impose mandatory minimums or eliminate 
such sentences altogether. Antkowiak said that might intimidate some 
lawmakers who fear being labeled soft on crime.

But Allegheny County President Judge Manning said it wouldn't bother 
him or most other judges who generally feel that mandatory minimums 
take away the court's discretion.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom