June 25, 2004 - The Washington Post (DC)
Jury Role In Raising Sentences Affirmed Ruling May Affect
States' Procedures
By Charles Lane, Washington Post Staff Writer
A bitterly divided Supreme Court ruled yesterday that only
juries, not judges, may increase criminal sentences beyond the
maximums suggested by statutory guidelines, a decision that throws
into doubt sentencing procedures used by nine states and possibly
the federal government.
By a vote of 5 to 4, the court said a trial judge in Washington
state violated the Constitution when he sentenced a convicted
kidnapper to 90 months in prison rather than the 53-month maximum
prescribed by state law. The judge was following a provision
of the law that permits judges to impose higher sentences when
they find that the facts warrant harsher punishment.
But the court said the Sixth Amendment guarantee of a jury
trial in felony cases means that any facts that would result
in a sentence above the range of sentences specifically mentioned
in the law must be found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
"When a judge inflicts a punishment that the jury's verdict
alone does not allow . . . the judge exceeds his proper authority,"
Justice Antonin Scalia wrote for the majority.
The ruling was the latest application of the court's 2000
ruling in Apprendi v. New Jersey, in which the court roiled
criminal law by holding for the first time that factual findings
a court uses to increase sentences must be made by a jury rather
than by a judge.
The court used Apprendi in 2002 to strike down state
laws that call for judges, rather than juries, to decide between
life imprisonment and death in capital cases. But in a separate
case yesterday, the court limited the impact of that ruling by
declaring that it would not apply retroactively.
The decision yesterday in Blakely v. Washington, No.
02-1632, may be Apprendi's most significant consequence
yet. It poses a direct challenge to the past quarter-century's
worth of sentencing reform at both the state and federal levels.
In response to concerns that similar crimes were being punished
much differently by judges in different courts, the federal government
and some states replaced previous sentencing systems, under which
juries determined defendants' guilt or innocence and judges determined
sentences pretty much as they saw fit.
The new sentencing guidelines typically established a range
of prison time for various crimes, with judges permitted to "depart
upward" from that range if they find "aggravating factors"
deserving of harsher punishment.
Federal sentencing guidelines were established in 1987, and
Washington is one of nine states that have similar systems. The
Bush administration supported Washington in the case, out of
concern that federal guidelines be kept intact.
"If defendants asserted the right this decision gives
them, a very large fraction of the sentences in federal criminal
cases and probably a sizable number of criminal cases in states
with state sentencing guidelines would be unconstitutional,"
said William J. Stuntz, a professor of law at Harvard University
who specializes in criminal issues.
In a strongly worded dissenting opinion, which she read from
the bench in what was, for her, an unusual display of disagreement
with the majority, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said that "the
practical consequences of today's decision may be disastrous."
"If the choice is between adopting a balanced case-by-case
approach that takes into consideration the values underlying
the Bill of Rights as well as the history of a particular sentencing
reform law, and adopting a rigid rule that destroys everything
in its path, I will choose the former," she wrote.
O'Connor listed Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas, Michigan,
Minnesota, Oregon and Pennsylvania as states with systems similar
to Washington's.
O'Connor and a fellow dissenter, Stephen G. Breyer-who participated
in drafting the federal sentencing guidelines before joining
the Supreme Court-predicted that the cost to the states of complying
with the court's ruling would spell the end of sentencing reform.
"The simple fact is that the design of any fair sentencing
system must involve efforts to make practical compromises among
competing goals," Breyer wrote. "The majority's reading
of the Sixth Amendment makes the effort to find those compromises-already
difficult-virtually impossible."
Scalia noted that the court's ruling does not necessarily
apply to the federal guidelines, which were not directly at issue
in the case. But Breyer wrote that he is "uncertain"
how to distinguish Washington state's system from the federal
system.
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justice Anthony M.
Kennedy also dissented.
In response to Breyer, Scalia wrote that "our decision
cannot turn on whether or to what degree trial by jury impairs
the efficiency or fairness of criminal justice."
Scalia suggested that sentencing guidelines are unfair to
defendants such as the kidnapper in Washington, Ralph H. Blakely
Jr. Blakely pleaded guilty in return for the prosecutor's recommendation
of a 53-month sentence, only to have the deal scrapped by a judge.
Increased costs could be mitigated, Scalia said, if prosecutors
negotiate plea agreements in which defendants waive their right
to jury sentencing.
"The framers would not have thought it too much to demand
that, before depriving a man of three more years of his liberty,
the State should suffer the modest inconvenience of submitting
its accusation to [a jury] rather than a lone employee of the
state," Scalia wrote.
His opinion was joined by Justices John Paul Stevens, Clarence
Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David H. Souter.
Seattle defense lawyer Jeff Fisher, who represented Blakely,
said the decision will strengthen defendants' bargaining power.
"I suppose it will cost [states] some money," he
said. "Obviously, abiding by the Constitution costs money
in various ways-but not an extraordinary amount of money."
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