WASHINGTON
- State and federal officials are scrambling to examine their
options
in the wake of a major ruling by the US Supreme Court that threatens to
undermine sentencing-guideline systems in several states and all
federal
courts.
At the same time, defense attorneys and defendants are gearing
up
for what could become a flood of appeals seeking reduced sentences
under the
new precedent.
In a case called Blakely v. Washington, the Supreme Court last
week
invalidated a 7-1/2-year sentence in a Washington State kidnapping case
because the majority justices said the punishment violated the
defendant's
Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial. While the decision was good news
for
defendant Ralph Howard Blakely Jr., it may represent a constitutional
death
knell for sentencing-guideline programs like Washington State's that
allow a
judge to use facts not considered by a jury at trial to boost a
defendant's
punishment.
Instead of a 53-month sentence, Mr. Blakely received a
90-month
sentence after the judge in his case determined - independent of any
jury -
that Blakely had acted with "deliberate cruelty."
"The court ignores the havoc it is about to wreak on trial
courts
across the country," said Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in a dissent to
the
5-to-4 decision. "Over 20 years of sentencing reform are all but lost,
and
tens of thousands of criminal judgments are in jeopardy."
Indeed, by declaring that Blakely's sentence violates the US
Constitution, the high court has set off a flurry of activity in other
states and within the federal government to determine if their own
systems
might also be unconstitutional. "There will be tremendous dislocation
in any
number of state systems and the federal system," says Kevin Reitz, a
professor at the University of Colorado School of Law in Boulder and an
expert on state sentencing-guideline systems.
Professor Reitz says roughly half of the 15 states with
guideline
systems will be affected by the Blakely decision. Oregon and North
Carolina
may be particularly vulnerable to challenges, he says. But most in
jeopardy
is the federal system with its large number of judicially enhanced
sentences, he says.
"Up to 90 percent of federal sentences will run afoul of
Blakely,
as opposed to 10 percent of sentences in state systems," he
says.
In her dissent, Justice O'Connor noted that within the past
four
years more than 270,000 defendants have been sentenced under the
federal
guidelines.
Sentencing guidelines are a cornerstone of reform efforts to
make
the way judges mete out punishment more fair. They do it by calculating
a
defendant's sentence through a matrix of characteristics of his or her
criminal activity and background. Without such guidelines, sentences
for
similar crimes could vary widely based on any biases or preferences of
the
judge.
On the other side of the equation, a sentencing system that
rigidly
mandates a particular sentence for a particular crime offers no
flexibility
for judges to attempt to tailor punishment to fit the individual
characteristics of the defendant or crime.
Sentencing-guideline systems are an attempt to strike a fair
balance. The Blakely decision affects only those facts that trigger
additional punishment, notes Nancy King, a sentencing expert at
Vanderbilt
University Law School in Nashville, Tenn. "Facts that might lead to
lower
punishment are not affected, nor are facts that trigger
mandatory-minimum
sentences."
One alternative for those seeking to maintain their guideline
systems is to follow the lead of Kansas, which created a two-tier trial
system with a separate sentencing phase to ensure that a jury, rather
than a
judge, decides all the factors that result in an enhanced
sentence.
This approach might be workable in some states, but analysts
say it
would probably be too expensive and cumbersome in the federal system.
Another alternative - presenting relevant sentencing details during the
trial - would probably make trials increasingly complex.
"The number of special findings [by a jury] that might be
required
would be enormous," warns US Solicitor General Theodore Olson in his
brief
to the court in the Blakely case.
Some experts say additional plea negotiations may solve many
of the
concerns raised by the Blakely decision. "Like everything else in
criminal
justice, these things are negotiable," says Richard Frase, a sentencing
expert at the University of Minnesota Law School in
Minneapolis.
Another alternative on the federal side, analysts say, may be
an
attempt by lawmakers to scrap sentencing-reform efforts. "There is a
very
real prospect that the current federal guidelines will be replaced with
a
matrix of mandatory penalties," says Reitz. "That would be worse for
judges,
for defendants, and for the public."
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