June 30, 2004 - The Charleston Gazette (WV)
Sentencing Ruling Delays Hearings
Supreme Court Limits Penalties To What Jury Hears
By Chris Wetterich, Staff writer
A U.S. Supreme Court decision handed down last week could
mean an overhaul of the way criminal cases are handled in the
federal court system as well as delayed sentencing hearings,
West Virginia federal judges and lawyers said Tuesday.
They are scrambling to make sense of last week's decision
by the court in Blakely v. Washington, a case that throws into
doubt the way convicts are sentenced at the federal level.
U.S. District Judge Robert Chambers canceled a sentencing
hearing Monday in Huntington to give attorneys time to study
the Supreme Court decision's impact. Other federal judges in
the state say the decision could mean delays in their courtrooms.
A judge cannot add time to a convict's sentence based upon
facts not considered by a jury, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
last week. While the case applies only to the state of Oregon's
sentencing laws, legal scholars believe it could also apply to
the federal sentencing system, which is similar to the one in
Oregon.
In West Virginia's state courts, a judge has the discretion
to sentence defendants to prison time between the minimum and
maximum lengths set by the state Legislature.
The federal system is much more complex. Congress also sets
minimum and maximum sentences but it also specifies rules for
federal judges to follow within the minimum and maximum. The
rules are an attempt to ensure that the same crimes carry the
same sentences no matter what part of the country a convict is
in.
Some drug crimes, for example, could carry a minimum sentence
of five years and a maximum sentence of 20 years. A federal judge
is further constrained by federal sentencing rules set by Congress.
Those sentencing rules set a range within a range, often depending
on the amount and type of "relevant conduct" for which
the convict is responsible.
If a defendant has a prior criminal record, used a gun while
committing a crime or had a certain amount of drugs, the range
within the range is often closer to the maximum set in the law.
In its ruling last week in Blakely v. Washington, the Supreme
Court said an Oregon court couldn't increase the sentence of
a man convicted of kidnapping based upon facts adopted by the
judge in the case. The court ruled that the facts must be run
past a jury before a judge can jack up a sentence based on them.
The ruling has judges and lawyers in West Virginia wondering
what to do.
"It's a huge decision that has enormous consequences,"
said U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin. "Every federal
judge in the country recognizes that this case presents substantial
and difficult issues that are pervasive. No judge approaches
sentencing now without being mindful of the potential impact."
On Thursday, Goodwin is scheduled to sentence two men, Terrence
Askew and Joshua Gray, who have pleaded guilty to drug crimes.
The sentence Goodwin passes down would normally take into account
their relevant conduct, said Askew's lawyer, Mark French of Charleston.
French was one of the lawyers who asked for a delay Monday
in a criminal sentencing case he had before Chambers, taking
into account the Supreme Court ruling. French said he asked for
the delay because he was not prepared to discuss the relevant
conduct issues in light of the decision.
U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver Jr. said he may be
forced to delay sentencing hearings where federal prosecutors
and defense attorneys cannot agree on the facts of relevant conducts.
Charleston attorney Troy Giatras, who handles federal criminal
cases at the same firm as French, said the decision might cork
the flow of cases through the federal system, in which more than
90 percent of criminal cases are handled through plea agreements
between defendants and prosecutors.
Giatras speculated on several possible changes in the way
federal courts operate, including:
Federal prosecutors would have to be more specific in crafting
indictments for federal grand juries to hand down against defendants.
The indictments may have to include relevant conduct, such as
the amounts of drugs present, in order for that information to
be taken into account at sentencing. Prosecutors could seek to
include relevant conduct information in plea agreements between
defendants and the U.S. attorney. Giatras said one assistant
U.S. attorney has already tried to insert relevant conduct in
a plea agreement between prosecutors and one of his clients.
"That's going to become problematic," Giatras said.
"It means we would have to prospectively concede points
that there may not be clear evidence of."
Judges could have to empanel a jury during sentencing - even
if a defendant has pleaded guilty - to decide the factual basis
of relevant conduct taken into account at sentence. Having a
jury for sentencing would be costly in both money and time. The
whole federal sentencing system itself could be declared unconstitutional
or at the least unworkable, given the time and expense of the
above options. No doubt many judges and defense attorneys would
prefer that outcome. Judges have been critical of the system
for years because it removes much of their discretion. "Internally,
it may shift powers within the three realms among prosecutors,
probation officers and judges," Giatras said. Probation
officers investigate convicts and prepare the presentence report
used by judges to determine relevant conduct.
Giatras said his firm is also combing through its past criminal
cases to determine which ones are ripe to take back to court
and possibly get a reduced sentence under the Blakely ruling.
U.S. Attorney Kasey Warner's office has declined to comment
on the impact of the Blakely case here. Defense attorneys at
the federal public defender's office have not returned telephone
calls over the last two days. The federal public defender's office
plans a seminar Thursday to discuss the Blakely case and its
impact.
For now, Goodwin plans to "go to the hearing Thursday
and see what happens." He said the situation will play out
in appellate courts across the country over the next few weeks
and months and it will become clearer what trial courts are supposed
to do.
|