June 25, 2004 - The New York Times (NY)
Justices, In 5-4 Vote, Raise Doubts On Sentencing Rules
By Linda Greenhouse
WASHINGTON, June 24 -- The Supreme Court invalidated
the criminal sentencing system of the State of Washington on
Thursday in a decision that also cast doubt on whether the 20-year-old
federal sentencing guidelines can survive a constitutional challenge.
Bitterly split in a 5-to-4 decision that cut across the court's
usual ideological lines, the justices continued a profound five-year-long
debate over the respective roles of judges and juries in criminal
sentencing. In this case, they ratcheted that debate up to a
new level that left the federal guidelines in constitutional
limbo and cast doubt on the validity of thousands of sentences,
at both the state and federal level.
Sentencing in about a dozen states is likely to be affected
by the ruling.
In a separate decision, the court rejected the retroactive
application of a 2002 death penalty ruling, placing as many as
100 inmates in five states back on death row.
In the Washington guidelines case, Justice Antonin Scalia's
majority opinion held that the Washington system, permitting
judges to make findings that increase a convicted defendant's
sentence beyond the ordinary range for the crime, violated the
right to trial by jury protected by the Sixth Amendment. The
facts supporting increased sentences must be found by a jury
beyond a reasonable doubt, Justice Scalia said.
While the federal system is considerably more complex, it
places judges in much the same role, empowering them to make
the factual findings that determine the ultimate sentence and
requiring nothing more to support those findings than a "preponderance
of the evidence." That is the legal system's lowest standard
of proof, while "beyond a reasonable doubt" is its
highest.
While Justice Scalia said that "the federal guidelines
are not before us, and we express no opinion on them," that
statement appeared to be simply marking time.
"There is nothing to suggest that the federal guidelines
would get different treatment," Stephanos Bibas, a former
federal prosecutor who is now a sentencing expert at the University
of Iowa law school, said in an interview.
In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor depicted
the federal guidelines as being now in peril. "What I have
feared most has now come to pass," Justice O'Connor said,
referring to her own dissenting positions in the recent precedents
that brought the court to this moment. "Over 20 years of
sentencing reform are all but lost, and tens of thousands of
criminal judgments are in jeopardy," she added.
The vote in this case, Blakely v. Washington, No. 02-1632,
was the same as the vote in Apprendi v. New Jersey, the
case the court decided almost precisely four years ago that began
the constitutional revolution in criminal sentencing that is
now playing out.
As it was then, the majority on Thursday was composed of Justices
John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter, Clarence Thomas and Ruth
Bader Ginsburg, in addition to Justice Scalia. The dissenters,
in addition to Justice O'Connor, were Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist and Justices Anthony M. Kennedy and Stephen G. Breyer,
the latter an author of the federal system when he worked for
the Senate Judiciary Committee as its chief counsel in the late
1970's. As a federal appeals court judge, he then served on the
United States Sentencing Commission.
In the Apprendi case, the court invalidated New Jersey's
hate-crime statute, which increased the sentence for an ordinary
crime if a judge found that the act was motivated by bias. Other
than a previous conviction, the Supreme Court ruled then, "any
fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed
statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury and proved beyond
a reasonable doubt."
As Justice Scalia elaborated on Thursday, the purpose of that
rule was "to give intelligible content to the right of jury
trial," which he said the Constitution's framers saw as
a "circuit breaker in the state's machinery of justice."
He said the Apprendi decision "carries out this design
by ensuring that the judge's authority to sentence derives wholly
from the jury's verdict."
In the case before the court on Thursday, a man pleaded guilty
to kidnapping his estranged wife, a crime that under Washington
law ordinarily carries a maximum sentence of 53 months. At sentencing,
however, the judge added an extra 37 months, based on his finding
that the defendant, Ralph H. Blakely, Jr., had acted with "deliberate
cruelty."
Washington's statutory maximum sentence for kidnapping is
10 years, well above what Mr. Blakely received. But the principle
of the Apprendi decision still invalidated his sentence, Justice
Scalia said, because it depended on a judicial rather than a
jury finding of a fact that added 70 percent to the sentence
Mr. Blakely would otherwise have received. Mr. Blakely had a
right to the lower sentence but for the judge's intervention,
Justice Scalia said.
Juries, rather than "a lone employee of the state,"
should make these decisions, Justice Scalia said.
The decision overturned a ruling by the Washington Supreme
Court, which had upheld the state system. While several high
courts in states with guidelines systems have likewise rejected
constitutional challenges based on the Apprendi precedent,
one court, the Supreme Court of Kansas, struck down its system,
which the state then quickly modified.
According to various lists, which may not be definitive, states
that use systems similar to Washington's are Alaska, Arkansas,
Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania
and Tennessee.
In her dissenting opinion, Justice O'Connor said the court
had entered "uncharted territory." She said the guidelines
systems represented an effort to treat like cases alike, giving
"guided discretion" to judges while eliminating wide
disparities in sentencing that turned on judicial "idiosyncrasies"
or racial bias.
"It is difficult for me to discern what principle besides
doctrinaire formalism actually motivates today's decision,"
she said.
Justice Breyer, in his dissenting opinion, said the criminal
justice system was now left with a range of unattractive options,
including such steps as separate jury trials for sentencing,
a system now reserved for death penalty cases. As a practical
matter, he said, such a system would be workable only because
most defendants forego trials and plead guilty.
Whether criminal defendants as a whole are likely to be helped
or hurt by the ruling is open to debate. The National Association
of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the American Civil Liberties
Union filed briefs on Mr. Blakely's behalf. But Justice Breyer
suggested that one legislative response to the ruling might be
"astronomically high sentences," from which judges
could depart downward at their discretion.
Justice Kennedy's brief dissenting opinion said the court
had both ignored principles of federalism and had failed to respect
the need for "the dynamic and fruitful dialogue between
the judicial and legislative branches of government that has
marked sentencing reform on both the state and the federal levels
for more than 20 years."
The wait for a resolution of the fate of the federal guidelines
may not be long. Defense lawyers are likely to be quick to challenge
the guidelines and federal judges, many of whom have disliked
the system, may be receptive to the arguments. Even before the
decision, a federal district judge in Massachusetts last week
issued an impassioned denunciation of the guidelines.
Once there is a district court decision that is suitable for
appeal, the Justice Department might well move to bring it directly
to the Supreme Court, under a permissible but rarely used procedure.
Any ruling will apply to all cases still on direct appeal,
but would not necessarily be retroactive. In a death penalty
case today, the court ruled that a 2002 decision invalidating
the death penalty laws of five states could not be applied retroactively
to death sentences that were already final when it was issued.
The 2002 decision, Ring v. Arizona, was itself an application
of the Apprendi decision to laws that permitted judges
rather than juries to make the finding that placed a murder defendant
in the category of those eligible for a death sentence. In addition
to Arizona, the states were Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Nebraska.
All quickly changed their laws to conform to Apprendi,
leaving in doubt the status of those inmates who had previously
been sentenced to death.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit then
ruled that the decision was retroactive, thus invalidating as
many as 100 death sentences. But the Supreme Court on Thursday
overturned that ruling, finding the retroactivity analysis incorrect.
Justice Scalia wrote the majority opinion in Schriro v. Summerlin,
No. 03-526. Justices Breyer, Stevens, Souter and Ginsburg dissented.
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