July 21, 2004 - The Miami Herald (FL)
Supreme Court Asked to Rule on Sentences
By Anne Gearan, Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration appealed to the
Supreme Court Wednesday to quickly rule on the constitutionality
of federal sentencing rules, a two-decade-old system that the
court placed in doubt with its ruling last month striking down
a similar state sentencing program.
The administration's top Supreme Court lawyer filed two rush
appeals involving federal drug cases, and asked the high court
to hear the cases as soon as September. The court gave lawyers
for the drug defendants a week to file paperwork in response.
"The federal sentencing system has fallen into a state
of deep uncertainty and disarray about the constitutional validity
of the federal sentencing guidelines system," Acting Solicitor
General Paul Clement wrote in asking the high court to move quickly.
The government appeals had been expected since the Supreme
Court ruled in June that juries, not judges, must consider any
factor that could lengthen a defendant's sentence beyond the
maximum set out in state sentencing guidelines.
Dissenting justices in the 5-4 ruling had warned that the
ruling would undermine if not destroy the 17-year-old federal
system, which was meant to make sentencing fairer by reducing
disparities among punishments handed out by different judges.
The Supreme Court is on its summer hiatus, but lawyers and
law professors predict the justices will agree within days to
add the new cases to its calendar for the fall. The justices
ordinarily return to work in October, but Clement suggested the
court could settle the sentencing question faster if they held
a special session in September, as they did last year in a complex
campaign finance case.
Clement noted that federal trial judges and appeals courts
have divided over whether the Supreme Court's ruling in Blakely
v. Washington invalidates the federal sentencing system,
with some judges concluding that they cannot continue sentencing
criminal defendants under the old rules.
"The number of cases potentially affected is staggering,"
Clement wrote. "There are approximately 64,000 federal criminal
defendants sentenced under the guidelines each year," which
breaks out to about 1,200 a week, he wrote.
"Given the current disarray, a very large percentage
of those cases may result in unlawful sentences."
The number of cases affected will only grow longer if the
high court waits to settle the question, Clement said.
Adding to the split in the circuits, the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, based in San Francisco, ruled Wednesday that
Blakely does apply to federal sentencing guidelines.
The nation's largest federal appeals court was meeting at
its annual conference in Monterey, Calif., when it issued its
ruling.
About an hour before the ruling was released, Deputy Attorney
General James Comey addressed the group and repeated the government
position that the Blakely ruling "did not reach the
federal sentencing guidelines."
Clement also defended the guidelines in the criminal cases
sent to the court Wednesday.
In one of the appeals, a panel of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in Chicago threw out a Wisconsin man's sentence because
a federal judge, acting alone, decided how much drugs were involved,
and that the man had obstructed justice.
The appeals court said that Freddie Booker was entitled to
have those decisions made by a jury, beyond a reasonable doubt.
Booker's appeal was pending at the Chicago court when the
Supreme Court ruled last month. The appeals court reheard arguments
in the case and ruled three days later that the federal guidelines,
as used in Booker's case, were unconstitutional.
The second case involves a Massachusetts man convicted in
Maine of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and set for sentencing
four days after the Blakely ruling was issued. The judge
in Ducan Fanfan's case was prepared to impose a sentence of between
15 years and 16 years, based in part on facts that were not part
of the jury trial.
The judge reconsidered because of the Supreme Court case,
and Fanfan was sentenced instead to about six years in prison.
The case is on appeal to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
in Boston, but Clement argued that the Supreme Court shouldn't
wait for that intermediate court to rule. In a highly unusual
move, Clement asked the high court to skip the appeals court
step and simply review the case now.
Also Wednesday, the Senate passed a unanimous, nonbinding
resolution asking the Supreme Court to resolve the sentencing
question quickly.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said
he would have preferred a stronger statement from Congress in
defense of the guidelines, but "we simply just ran out of
time."
Congress is near its summer recess.
|