September 28, 2004 - Dodge City Daily Globe (KS)
One-Size-Fits-All Sentences Create Judicial Muddle
By James D. Zirin
When U.S. District Judge Richard Owen of New York earlier
this month sentenced Frank Quattrone, the top technology banker
at Credit Suisse First Boston, to 18 months in jail for obstruction
of justice, it raised a few eyebrows in the legal community.
Although the federal sentencing guidelines called for a sentence
of 10 to 16 months, Owen chose to "enhance" that sentence,
saying he was moved to extra severity because he believed that
Quattrone had lied under oath when he took the stand in his own
defense.
In handing down an 18-month sentence, Owen not only departed
from the clearly established guidelines, he gave prison time
to Quattrone for conduct that had not been the subject of the
indictment, had not been tried by a jury and had not been proved
beyond a reasonable doubt.
In doing so, he waded into one of the most controversial areas
of the law at the moment, an area that is the subject of a 5-4
U.S. Supreme Court decision that has left unclear just how much
discretion a federal judge may exercise in a criminal case.
Until 20 years ago, it wouldn't have even been an issue. From
the birth of the American republic until 1984, federal judges
had broad discretion to impose criminal sentences within maximum
limits prescribed by Congress. The idea was that criminal sentences
would be imposed by a rational, competent federal judge who was
fully informed about the offense and well acquainted with the
defendant; it was expected that the judge would fashion a sentence
that tempered justice with mercy in the particular case.
The trouble with this system was sentence disparity. Sentence
disparity occurred when two defendants were convicted of the
same crime but one received a relatively lenient sentence from
one judge and the other received a relatively severe sentence
from another. This can happen if, say, one judge particularly
frowns on white-collar crime, believing that the privileged,
such as Quattrone - who, according to prosecutors, earned $120
million in 2002 - should be dealt with severely, but another
judge thinks it is street crime that requires especially tough
sentencing.
So Congress tried to make sure that all defendants got the
same sentence, within a specified range, for a given crime. Responding
largely to the 1972 book "Criminal Sentences: Law Without
Order," in which U.S. District Judge Marvin Frankel of New
York denounced sentence disparity, Congress enacted "guidelines"
that critics say have strengthened the hand of prosecutors and
straitjacketed the options available to judges.
The guidelines require that the maximum and minimum length
of potential prison terms fall into a mathematical range, or
grid, determined by a consideration of the charges against the
defendant and the existence of a prior criminal record. This
formula produces a point score that leads to the range of sentence.
But although the guidelines may have reduced sentence disparity,
they also led, in the years that followed, to harsher sentences.
Before the guidelines were adopted, Quattrone probably would
have received a sentence of six to eight months - instead of
18 with no prospect of parole.
And although the term "guidelines" may suggest a
measure of discretion, in fact, they were more modeled on the
Ten Commandments. Woe betide the judge who strays from the indicated
range for reasons not set forth in the guidelines themselves.
He or she will be summarily reversed by the appellate court.
Examples of prejudice sewn into the guidelines abound. An
obvious one is that, although extensive studies have shown that
there is no difference in the dangers posed by crack cocaine
and those of powdered cocaine, Congress insisted on a guideline
for crack cocaine that is 100 times greater than for the powder.
Because crack is the drug of choice for the black community,
the result is that a black defendant will often face a harsher
sentence than the Beverly Hills movie mogul caught with the same
quantity of more expensive powdered cocaine.
The regime became even more draconian in April 2003 when Congress
enacted amendments further reducing the ability of judges to
adjust sentences downward from guideline levels, while enhanced
sentences were authorized in certain cases for matters irrelevant
to the conviction, such as a defendant's bad character, indebtedness,
meretricious behavior or, as in Quattrone's case, false testimony
at trial.
Complicating the matter further, the U.S. Supreme Court got
into the act in June. In a 5-4 decision in Blakely v. Washington,
the court struck down the state of Washington's sentencing guidelines
as unconstitutional because they authorized an upward departure
based on extraneous factors not proved to a jury beyond a reasonable
doubt - the very constitutional infirmity that appears in the
Quattrone sentence.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers California,
and one other federal appeals court have ruled that the Blakely
decision applies federally, although another circuit has held
that it does not.
The Bush administration has urged the Supreme Court to act
swiftly to salvage the judicial shipwreck by upholding the constitutionality
of the federal guidelines, and the court is scheduled to hear
arguments on the issue early next month.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor made clear her dissent from the
view that the guidelines are unconstitutional. She told the 9th
Circuit judicial conference that she was "disgusted"
by the court's close ruling in Blakely, which she termed
a "No. 10 earthquake," rolling back 20 years of penal
reform.
If the majority of the Supreme Court agrees with her, the
guidelines may live out the year. But, as we all know, O'Connor
is but one of nine.
James D. Zirin is a lawyer in New York.
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