Wed, 06 Aug 2003 - Wall Street Journal (US)
Author: Laurie P. Cohen and Gary Fields
Ashcroft Intensifies Campaign Against Judges' Soft Sentences
Stepping up the Justice Department's battle with federal judges
over sentencing guidelines, Attorney General John Ashcroft has
directed government lawyers to report on judges who give out
softer sentences and to start appealing those sentences in far
higher numbers.
The move, circulated in an internal memo last week, was anticipated
under a measure known as the Feeney amendment, adopted by Congress
in April to strengthen judges' adherence to new, stricter sentencing
guidelines. Many judges, including U.S. Chief Justice
William Rehnquist, view the new rules as a further attack on
their independence.
"The Justice Department is telling us that every defendant
should be treated in the same way, that there should be no flexibility
to deal with individuals," says U.S. District Judge
John S. Martin Jr. of Manhattan. Judge Martin
announced his resignation from the bench in June, citing judges'
increasingly limited sentencing discretion.
Judges' criticism of the Justice Department and the Congress
has been at a fever pitch since President Bush signed the Feeney
amendment into law. The measure makes it easier for appeals
courts to lengthen sentences set by judges that are shorter than
those in the federal guidelines. It puts federal judges
on notice that they'll be challenged on such sentences and be
reported to Congress for giving them.
Congress gave the Justice Department, which championed and
wrote the legislation, 90 days to come up with a plan to enforce
the rules, a deadline that arrived last week. Lawmakers
gave the U.S. Sentencing Commission, an independent agency
created by Congress in 1987 to create federal sentencing policies
and practices, 180 days to formulate its own response.
Mr. Ashcroft's order directing U.S. attorneys to
appeal far more "downward departures" by judges --
meaning sentences shorter than the guidelines -- adds fuel to
an already bitter dispute between the federal judiciary and the
administration.
Mr. Rehnquist has warned that the Feeney amendment will
"seriously impair the ability of courts to impose just and
responsible sentences." But the Justice Department and members
of the House Judiciary Committee believe that judges have been
flouting sentencing guidelines for years and that legislation
was required to end the practice.
Judges' departures from the guidelines have risen in recent
years and vary sharply from state to state. For example,
judges in the Eastern District of New York, which includes Brooklyn,
issued sentences shorter than the guidelines in more than 25%
of all cases in fiscal 2001, while judges in South Carolina did
so in only 2% of all cases. The national rate in fiscal
2001, the last year for which statistics are available, was 18.3%.
"The whole purpose of the [sentencing commission] was
to minimize disparity among similarly situated defendants,"
says Bill Mercer, the Montana U.S. attorney and chairman
of Mr. Ashcroft's advisory committee on sentencing guidelines.
Many judges have voiced dissatisfaction with guidelines they
view as onerous, particularly those that establish mandatory
minimums for drug sales and possession. The guidelines are
widely credited with the four-fold increase in the federal prison
population since 1987. More than half of federal inmates
are now drug offenders.
While Congress is calling for ever-greater prison sentences
for almost all crimes, the trend in the states is going the opposite
way. Squeezed by tight budgets, many states have repealed
mandatory minimum sentences in the last three years.
Since 1987, Congress has rarely exercised its power to set
mandatory minimum sentences for federal crimes -- usually leaving
this practice to the U.S. Sentencing Commission, which was
created for the purpose. But the Republican majority in
Congress, along with the Justice Department, has been increasingly
uncomfortable with letting judges exercise discretion without
recourse. "Feeney brings the whole Sentencing Commission
closer to collapse," says Frank Bowman III, a professor
of law at the Indiana University School of Law. "It
is being set up as an agency that will do studies of judges who
depart from guidelines, rather than as a rational policy-making
body."
In February, the Senate considered and unanimously passed
a bill focused on enhancing prosecution of child pornographers. The
House took up the measure in March, adding a nationwide warning
system for abducted children known as "Amber Alert."
On March 27, Representative Tom Feeney, a Florida Republican,
proposed amending the bill to address what he called "long-standing
and increasing problems of downward departures from the Federal
Sentencing guidelines."
Members of the Sentencing Commission viewed the Feeney amendment
as an end-run around the independent agency, which was never
notified about it in advance. "Clearly, you'd like
to have had a lot more debate," says Commissioner Michael
O'Neill, a criminal law professor at George Mason University.
Mr. Ashcroft said in last week's memo that downward departures
should be a "rare occurrence" -- except in cases where
prosecutors are recommending them because of the cooperation
of the accused. Prosecutors are themselves responsible
for about half of all downward departures from sentencing guidelines. Prosecutors
frequently offer crimes carrying lesser sentences in exchange
for plea deals in a variety of criminal and immigration cases.
The Justice Department has rarely appealed downward departures
issued by federal district judges, especially since the Supreme
Court's 1996 Koon decision, which held that appeals courts should
defer to lower courts in departure cases.
For fiscal 2001, federal district judges departed downward
in 10,026 sentences, about as many as were sought by prosecutors
in connection with plea agreements in exchange for cooperation. The
Justice Department appealed fewer than 50 of the judges' departures
that year.
"We hope there'll be more objections" in cases where
judges have departed downward without the agreement of prosecutors
and "more cases brought to our attention," said a Justice
Department lawyer. Requests for appeal by federal prosecutors
must be approved by the Solicitor General's Office.
Judge Martin said so few departures are appealed because "most
assistant U.S. attorneys recognize they're appropriate,"
though they may argue otherwise.
Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, the Judiciary
Committee's senior Democrat, said through a spokesman, "John
Ashcroft seems to think Washington, D.C., can better determine
a fair sentence than a judge who heard the case or the prosecutor
who tried it. The effort by DOJ to compile an 'enemies list'
of judges it feels are too lenient is scary to say the least."
The memorandum, signed by Mr. Ashcroft, says department
attorneys "have an affirmative obligation to oppose any
sentencing adjustments, including downward departures, that are
not supported by the facts and the law. This obligation
extends to all such improper adjustments, whether requested by
the defendant or ... by the court."
Mr. Feeney himself says he was simply the "messenger"
of the amendment bearing his name, which was drafted by two Justice
Department officials, Associate Deputy Attorney General Daniel
Collins and Jay Apperson, counsel to the House Judiciary Committee. The
committee has tangled with several judges Republicans believe
have crossed the line, including U.S. District Judge James
Rosenbaum of Minnesota, who the Justice Department says has often
imposed sentences below mandatory minimums. House Judiciary
Committee members have threatened to subpoena sentencing records
from Judge Rosenbaum over the issue.
U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner of Massachusetts, a
state where downward departures exceed the national average,
calls the changes brought about by the Feeney amendment "very
sad" because of its role in "eliminating a judge's
role in checks and balances." She says the Justice Department
policies will surely burden appeals courts, which will then make
decisions based on "much more limited knowledge" of
individual cases than trial judges.
Jess Bravin contributed to this article.
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