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EXAM# 8830
PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM
1
TO: Governor of the State of Jefferson
FR: General Counsel, State of Jefferson
RE: Recommended Sentencing Reform Plan
“Clearly excessive.” These were the words uttered by an Arizona Superior Court Judge as
he handed down a sentence mandated by law. His own training and experience were constrained by
statute, he voiced a concern over one case that others are beginning to ask about in states across the
country about mandatory sentencing regimes. Across the country the vast majority of people
recognize that the current systems in place are not getting the job done. This is nowhere less clear
than in the State of Jefferson.
The sentencing reform solution that is proposed below is predicated on a 3-3-3 approach.
The first “3” is in regards to the three main actors that are going to have to work together for this
new system to be successful: Prosecutors, public defenders and judges. The second “3” is in
regards to the three main goals that this new system is designed to achieve. The first goal is that the
sentencing system be implemented in an honest way; that is, when a court enters a sentence of
imprisonment, there should be a reliable expectation that the offender will serve a substantial
majority of that term of imprisonment. The second goal is that the sentencing system should be
fair; that is, there should not be wide disparities in sentencing based on irrelevant factors, such as
judicial assignment, jurisdiction, wealth, or race. Similar offenders should receive similar
punishments based on the severity of their criminal behavior. The third and final goal is rational
sentencing. Jefferson needs a system that wisely uses our scarce prison resources to ensure that the
most dangerous offenders are incarcerated while lower risk offenders are punished through more
effective intermediate punishments, such as the community corrections and drug courts programs.
EXAM# 8830
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The current system in Jefferson is in need of a massive overhaul and fundamental
restructuring. Law enforcement officers throughout the State of Jefferson complain that the
sentencing and parole system is dishonest and arbitrary. Victim rights advocates also voice similar
concerns, in addition to complaints that victim restitution is a low priority. Judges and prosecutors
complain that their work seems to have little effect on ultimate punishments because of later
decisions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles and the administration of early release by the
Department of Corrections. The officials of those institutions in turn complain that their funding
and staffing are grossly inadequate. It is widely known that determinate and indeterminate
sentencing scheme extremes have many problems. The draconian solutions that often flow from
determinate sentencing can freeze out of the justice system a lot of hope of discerning between
individuals convicted of the same or similar crime.1 On the other hand, too much of a reliance on
indeterminate sentencing can lead to personal biases of judges creeping in and resulting in widely
differing sentences for similarly situated defendants.
Determinate sentencing’s principal goal has been the elimination of unwarranted disparity,
with legislatures seeking proportional punishment for different offenses and consistent punishment
for similar crimes.2 Current sentencing policy instead reflects a preference for retributive justice,
with punishment commensurate with the seriousness of each type of offense. While determinate
sentencing statutes seek proportionality by balancing multiple factors, mandatory sentencing
statutes generally provide that when a specified circumstance exists in connection with the
commission of a crime (1) the court must sentence the defendant to prison and (2) the duration of
1 WallaceM. Rudolph, Punishment or Cure: the Function of Criminal Law, 48 Tenn. 535 (1981).
2 Gary T. Lowenthal, Mandatory Sentencing Laws: Undermining the Effectiveness of Determinate Sentencing Reform,
81 Cal.L. Rev. 1 (1993).
EXAM# 8830
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3
the defendant’s incarceration will be substantially longer than it would have been in the absence of
the circumstance.3
A jurisdiction’s choice between charged-based and conduct-based sentencing in criminal
prosecutions influence the interaction between mandatory sentencing provisions and the criminal
process. In charge-based sentencing, the formal charges the state brings against the defendant must
contain the factual allegations that trigger the mandatory minimum sentence. In conduct-based
sentencing, the court imposes the enhancement sentence based on the defendant’s actual conduct
and criminal history, regardless of the charges for which she is convicted.4 The two approaches
differ in the extent to which prosecutorial plea bargaining practices influence judicial sentencing
discretion.
The current system in Jefferson is a strict and rigid determinative sentencing scheme. The
most problematic thing about this, from a purely theoretical perspective, is that the determinate
sentencing regime is an aberration of deterrence. At its most simplistic level, criminal punishment
is above all a method of deterrence. Determinate sentencing morphs the criminal justice system
into one focused solely on punishment, and this fails to take into account that not every criminal is
the same person. What may deter on individual from committing a crime again may be vastly
different from what deters the next individual. While a swing toward a more indeterminate
sentencing system may return common sense to criminal justice, by taking into account the fact that
just because two individuals were prosecuted under the same statute does not mean that they must
serve the exact same sentence, too much of a swing and the same problems of biases and
inconsistent results.
3 Id.
4 Id at 74
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Instead of a focus on one or the other a balance can be obtained in each case: the amount of
retribution through imprisonment or parole that the state requires, and the amount of punishment
necessary to deter the criminal in the future. The focus on determinative sentencing has removed
from the criminal justice system in Jefferson, something that has been gravely missing: variables.
The first variable is always the initial sentence, and the second the discretion of judges, parole
officers, and other penal authorities to vary how that sentence is served. Within these two variables,
however, Wallace Rudolph5 writes that a multitude of stop-gaps and releases could achieve a more
just legal system.
Without strict determinate sentencing, plea bargains can once again become more creative.
With increased awareness of the need for emotional or mental rehabilitation, innovative solutions
involving drug treatment or faith-based rehabilitation are back on the table. One of the little known
dangers is that often three-strike enhancements are not charged, but rather used as a bargaining chip
in plea negotiations. Ironically, despite the fact that Jefferson’s prison is spiraling out of control, it
could become astronomically worse if prosecutors found their hands more tied in the future with
increased pressure to use mandatory or automatic enhancements. In a system with less determined
sentences, the Judge will regain authority to take a more individualized approach to sentencing, thus
offering unique solutions for those who might need it. A less determinate sentencing system would
allow prisoners to once again “earn” their release. A more discretionary parole board will be able to
reward those prisoners and individuals whom actually make the effort to rehabilitate.
Criminal filings have clearly exploded in Jefferson. If Jefferson is similar to most other
states, this likely began with the marijuana prosecutions in the late sixties and early seventies, and
continuing with the crack & cocaine prosecutions of the 80s and even today. Jefferson is likely
5 Rudolph at 540-543.
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seeing nearly exponential increases in its criminal prosecutions for drug related activities. The
numbers are staggering in California. The superior courts there which deal with felony
prosecutions, saw a 394% rise in their criminal cases. When the Determinate Sentencing Act was
passed, it decimated any hope drug offenders may have had for rehabilitation instead of
incarceration. The only power left was no longer in the judge’s hands, but the prosecutor, who had
charging discretion. A movement back towards less determinate sentencing may finally allow drug
prosecutions to guarantee that we are not blindly punishing the convicted, but getting the convicted
addicts the help they need.6
Determinate sentencing does not work. There is little to no research supporting the idea that
mandatory minimums, predetermined sentencing, or three strike laws reduce the crime rate at all.7
The threat of punishment has little impact on criminal behavior because most of the criminals
believe they will not be caught, they have little knowledge of what sentencing laws would apply to
them, or they commit crimes while intoxicated, angry, or high and thus are not rationally analyzing
the consequences of their behavior.8 An AP wire story out of Los Angles had the headline “Judges
Uphold 3-Strikes Term In Food Burglary”9 citing the case of Gregory Taylor, who tried to pry open
a church kitchen door, as a third-strike felon. In a story straight out of ‘Les Miserables’, Mr. Taylor
found himself with 2 robbery convictions from the 1980’s and an 1899 parole violation. His
sentence: 25 years to life. This is just one example of the rampant problems that are facing states
across this country because of their determinant sentencing systems. The sad fact is that there are
6 Harry N. Scheiber, Innovation, Resistance, and Change: A History of Judicial Reform and the California Courts, 1960-
1990.66. S. Cal.L. Rev. 2049,2065 (1993).
7 Michael Vitiello and Clark Kelso, A Proposal for a Wholesale Reform of California’s Sentencing Practice and Policy, 38
Loy. L.A. L. Rev. 903, 926 (2004).
8 Peter W. Greenwood, et al., Three Strikes and You’re Out: Estimated Benefits of California’s New Mandatory-
Sentencing Law, RAND, summary at xi,(1994).
9 See http://www.desertnews.com/article/693878/Judges-uphold-3-strikes-term-in-food-burglary.html
EXAM# 8830
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probably similar stories that are being written about defendants in our state even today. Such a fact
ought to shock the conscience. It is clear that some solutions are sorely needed.
SHORT-TERM SOLUTION (Implement 3-6 months)
There are some short-term solutions that can take immediate effect and are particularly
tailored to addressing the growing prison population. The first step involves modifying Jefferson’s
Penal Code to allow inmates to earn supplemental sentence reduction credits after they complete
specified education, vocational, or drug-treatment goals. Additionally, establish a program to
identify older inmates who could be safely released early from prison. The “quick-fixes” do not
propose radical changes to the determinative sentencing regime, but they can start the prison system
on a path where the rigid requirements of determinate sentencing no longer bind the state’s hands.
An “age-release” program is aimed at one goal: reducing the prison population. An at-capacity
prison has less space for rehabilitation programs and puts a straightjacket on management
flexibility. Another possible solution to free up more prison space would be an early non-violent
release program.10
Another short-term fix would involve a three step process of 1) to amend the laws of
property crimes to raise the felony thresholds and change the property values on which those laws
are based to reflect increases in inflation since the laws were last codified. 2) The second short-
term fix step would be to increase funding for probation and parole officers. 3) A third and final
short-term fix step would be to fund an intensive inpatient substance abuse treatment program for
offenders. These recommendations are driven by data that drug and property offenders are
overwhelming the sentencing system. The current system of locking away all drug offenders is not
10 See Excerpts from Reports on Corrections Reform Recommendations on: Parole,Sentence credits,Rehabilitation
and Community Supervision,CDCR.ca.gov
EXAM# 8830
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effective, as these same drug offenders will eventually be released to the streets, and the cycle
continues.
Rehabilitation for reduced sentencing is typically the reform met with the most opposition.
The most obvious critique is that allowing for reduced sentences after completion of certain
programs runs the very real risk of releasing dangerous offenders back into the population.11 Yet,
this ignores a shocking statistic. Amongst the current prison population, 90% will eventually be
released on parole. Of that huge group, nearly 50% will find themselves back in prison. So, for
those worried about releasing individuals back on the streets who will commit crimes again it must
be said: we are already doing it. Drug treatment, education, real reform; these are the only tools the
state has at its disposal to actually rehabilitate prisoners, and hopefully end their felonious
lifestyles.12 Above all, however, with determinate sentencing there is no reason to reform; prisoners
will be released on the same day regardless of whether or not they attempt to reform. Since other
authors will address rehabilitation more in-depth, it is appropriate to leave rehabilitation at this and
move on to actual sentencing reform.
MEDIUM-TERM SOLUTIONS: (Implement 1-5 Years)
The growing recognition of the need for major changes has led to some surprising
collaborations. This is clearly evident in the growing Right on Crime movement. An initiative of
the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF)13, it identifies itself as “the conservative case for
reform: fighting crime, prioritizing victims and protecting taxpayers.” Right on Crime arose from
its analysis of a failed reliance on a swinging pendulum that sought to address criminal activity:
emphasis on rehabilitation and social service programs versus high incarceration rates and prison-
11 Michael Vitiello, Reforming Three Strikes’ Excesses, 82 Wash.U. L. Q. 1, 4 (2004)
12 Id.
13 See http://www.rightoncrime.com
EXAM# 8830
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building. According to their organizers, neither approach, alone, has been able to achieve success.
In the same vein, neither rigidly strict determinant sentencing schemes nor loose laissez-faire
indeterminate sentencing schemes have achieved success.
One way to begin is with the idea of “justice reinvestment”.14 A new framework is a phrase
that many policymakers across the country use as they seek a collaborative way forward. One of
the biggest names in sentencing and other criminal justice issues is law professor, Doug Berman.15
In Berman’s16 estimation, national trends on the topic are not about spending less on public safety
but about wiser spending. He says, “Incarceration is a very expensive way to keep the public
safe.”17 Our own state of Jefferson is facing this very problem. As a result of the current rigid
determinative sentencing scheme, Jefferson’s prisons are overpopulated and overreaching into
Jefferson’s budget. While there may be a general consensus for that statement, like most problems
the hard part is in agreeing to a solution. As Berman asks, “How do we move off the inertia and the
status quo realities?”18 The fact remains that such inertia is reinforced because politicians rarely get
in trouble with the public for spending on public safety issues.
If reform success stories are available, but state adoption of these new strategies is low, who
is to blame? Part of the problem lies at the feet of those involved deeply in the creation of policy.
According to Berman, “The DNA of criminal justice reform is inhabited by horrific stories. It is
dangerously easy for the average politician to leverage the fear of the average voter that they will be
a crime victim.”19 There is much less of an emphasis on an understanding of how that same person
14 See http://www.csgjusticecenter.org/jr
15 Doug Berman. (He is a lawprofessor atThe Ohio State University Moritz Collegeof Law as well as the
creator/author of “Sentencing Law and Policy”,a legal blog)
16 Douglas A. Berman, Sentencing Law and Policy, (http://www.sentencing.typepad.com
17 Id.
18 Id.
19 Id.
EXAM# 8830
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can be caught up in an overreaching and dysfunctional system. The power and the salience of the
criminal anecdote and the fear that creates cannot be understated.20 It is clear that prosecutors
continue to be an important key to determining whether and how reform occurs. This is due to the
nature of the job of a prosecutor. Prosecutors are deeply involved with the system in a case-by-case
role and are ingrained with the belief that they can always mitigate or temper with mercy any part of
the system that they think has gone too far. In addition, ceding discretion and decision-making to
other stakeholders may be asking too much, and prosecutors fear it would have a snowball effect as
well as limit their control over ensuring justice.21 However, altering sentence lengths may not be
the area where Jefferson will see the most progress.
In terms of probation reform, the initial sentence is important. However, too much
of a focus on sentencing length skews the larger discussion. Criminal cases have many nuances,
and a discussion of prison reform should not begin at the end of the process that sets the inmate on
his ultimate path. Instead, criminal justice’s goals may be served in many ways beyond a focus on
the length of sentences. Furthermore, public safety and prison budgets are two entirely separate
concerns. If prison savings is put into the mix, that is an almost surefire way to guarantee a
decrease in public safety. Jefferson can be more creative in parole, probation and reentry initiatives.
Additionally, “techno-correction)—GPS tracking—efforts will allow the convicted to serve out
their terms in a limited area of their community.22 North Carolina may offer the most unique
solutions to Jefferson’s sentencing problems. The state currently offers “Deferred Prosecution” as a
way to combat prison overcrowding without increasing expenses. Deferred prosecution is a district
attorney’s decision to withhold prosecution in order for the offender to make amends. These
20 Marc L. Miller,A Map of Sentencing and a Compass for Judges: Sentencing Information Systems, Transparency, and
the Next Generation of Reform, 105 Colum. L. Rev. 1351 (2005).
21 Id.
22 U.S. Department of Justice– Officeof JusticePrograms, Sentencing & Corrections Issues for the 21st Century (No. 5
May 2000
EXAM# 8830
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conditions often include restitution or community service. North Carolina limits this option, which
is strictly supervised and requires court approval, to first time non-violent offenders. Despite the use
of this program for a few years now, North Carolina does not provide the total number of
defendants afforded this opportunity because “of the status of current records.”23
North Carolina also offers Drug Education Schools (DES)24 for misdemeanor drug
offenders. On average, this program reaches 25 year old first time offenders who are able to avoid a
prison sentence. DES is a community punishment program which is essentially a “scared-straight”
drug treatment course in which the very real dangers of drug use are explained in detail. Students of
DES must participate and attend the session, and will not be cleared until they identify a personal
plan reflective of informed self-assessment that will focus on preventing recidivism. One of the
more unique opportunities North Carolina offers is the Residential Center. This highly restrictive
probationary tactic allows offenders to live in a structured setting with privileges to leave for work
or activities such as drug treatment of community service. The North Carolina Department of
Correction operates several of these, but they all adopt the same basic structure: orientation,
treatment, reentry preparation, and aftercare release. It is this basic reentry preparation and post-
release supervision that is most lacking in today’s Jefferson’s Penal system. Another tactic that can
be used to make Jefferson’s drug policies more sensible and effective is regarding drug trace cases.
These cases should be treated as misdemeanors as such cases achieve nothing more than
overloading the dockets and wasting court time and money.
In Texas, the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation – an Austin-based think tank –
has been a leading advocate for ending “the tough on crime” mentality led to prison terms for
23 North Carolina Sentencingand Policy Advisory Commission,Compendium of Community Corrections Programs.
24 Id.
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people whose primary problem is addiction.25 Rightly so, Texas looked upon this problem as both a
fiscal and a moral problem. In 2007, the legislature responded with funding for alternative
programs designed to minimize the number of drug cases moving into the prison system. This
made it unnecessary to build more prisons, existing ones were closed, and the $200 million that was
authorized that year for diversion and new facilities was estimate to save 10 times that much in
construction costs alone. The prisons that were closed added even more savings.26
LONG-TERM SOLUTION: (Implement 5-10 years)
The new system would also need to be efficient and to that end, the development of a
Sentencing Information System (SIS) is recommended. The idea of a SIS is simple: Judges are
provided sufficient information to determine how other offenders like the offender in front of the
judge have been sentenced before. Judges are able to ask a series of “what if” questions by varying
each of the relevant factors to see how each variation changes the sentences others have imposed.
An even more complex SIS would allow these “what ifs” to vary over specified time periods (or to
show trends) and over different political units or groups, such as sentences by the same judge, by
other judges in the same courthouse, or by other judges in the same state. Unlike rigid sentencing
guidelines, an SIS does not tell judges what they must do or should do; it tells judges what others
have done, thus allowing a better-informed judgment in each case. An SIS allows for the
development and expression of social norms in ways akin to traditional common law reasoning by
analogy.27 An SIS would allow judges to answer the most basic question about sentencing in each
case. It would also have many other virtues. It would let judges know the distribution of actual
sentences in similar cases, including the distribution of sentences at high or low ends of available
25 Mike Tolson.Texas’ drug-sentencing reform could be model for U.S. Houston Chronicle.Local Section (2013).
26 Id.
27 Marc L. Miller,Sentencing Reform “Reform” Through Sentencing Information Systems, in the Future of
Imprisonment 121,129-35 (2004).
EXAM# 8830
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ranges and the use of available non-prison sanctions. An SIS would both illuminate and act as a
counterpoint to the rules themselves, suggesting the extent to which they are being followed and
how they are being applied.28 To the extent that state systems allow for judicial discretion—in fact-
finding within guideline ranges, or for departures—it could help to illuminate that exercise of
discretion. It should also help litigants shape sentencing arguments in each case.
Judges could look at sentences in similar cases that they had decided, that judges in the same
courthouse or district had decided, and that judges from the entire jurisdiction had decided.
Equipped with SIS information, judges could work more effectively with sentencing commissions
and legislatures to improve sentencing guidelines. From a reformer or scholar’s perspective, the
information revealed by an SIS could become a powerful basis for arguments for further reforms,
including development of sentencing rules and sentencing ranges. Unlike the rules of a structured
sentencing system, an SIS can provide information beyond that which is legally relevant to
individual sentences. The legally irrelevant information, such as sentences imposed in similar cases
in other jurisdictions or changes in the distribution of sanctions over time, can be highly relevant to
policymaking.29 Systems could allow factors and distinctions that should not have any binding
weight but which might nonetheless inform judges, reformers or scholars. An SIS that created some
procedures and presumptions about how the information should be used could more easily
distinguish between controlling, informing, and irrelevant information.
For example, Pennsylvania has implemented Sentencing Guideline Software (SGS) for use
by judges.30 The primary purposes of the SGS system are to help judges calculate prior record, to
28 David Tait,Judges and Jukeboxes: Sentencing Information Systems in the Court room, 6 Int’l J.L. & Info.Tech. 167,
186-87 (1998).
29 Marc Miller,Sentencing Reform: Reform Through Sentencing Information Systems in the Future of Imprisonment,
University of Arizona – James E. Rogers College of Law (2005).
30 See Pa. Comm'n on Sentencing, Sentencing GuidelineSoftware Web Version Users' Guide, Revision 2.2 (on filewith
the Columbia Law Review).
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assist in guideline calculations, and to dramatically increase the speed and lower the error rate for
entering information about each sentence.31 The SGS system also provides judges with information
about “conformity,” telling them whether--based on offender facts, prior record, offense facts, and
other information--the proposed sentence is in the standard range or in mitigated or aggravated
ranges.32 For some sentences significantly above or below the standard range (“Outside Below” or
“Outside Above”) the judge must provide reasons; for sentences that are considered “Aggravated”
or “Mitigated” the system requests (but does not require) such reasons.33
One substantial challenge faced by modern commission and guideline sentencing reform
efforts is the task of determining the proper role for the sentencing judge. Most guidelines systems
include statements retaining a central role for the sentencing judge, and most legislatures and
commissions have asserted that the opinions and suggestions of judges (both formal and informal)
will be used as feedback to improve the system. An SIS offers a dramatically different way of
depicting the sentencing judge’s role and perhaps could help to achieve the promise of more
principled sentencing while maintain a central role for sentencing judges. An SIS also responds to
the actual decisions of judges. Judges would play a stronger individual and collective role in such
systems than they do now in commission and guidelines systems that do not incorporate SISs.
ADDRESSING POTENTIAL CRITIQUES OF THE NEW SYSTEM
As mentioned earlier, the easiest part is agreeing that there is a problem, but the hard part is
getting a consensus as to the solution. Legislatures can deal with the rigidity issue even without
31 See Pa. Comm'n on Sentencing, Web-Based Sentencing Guidelines Software, at
http://pcs.la.psu.edu/SGS%20Web%CCC20Report%CCC20for%CCC20PCS%CCC20Web%% 20Page.htm (lastupdated
Mar. 8, 2002) (on filewith the Columbia Law Review) (“Users can calculateprior record and retrieve guideli ne
recommendations, review conformity and total sentence imposed, and submit all information electronically to the
Commission.”).
32 SGS Guide, supra note 96, at72.
33 Id.
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addressing the severity issue by providing that the sentences prescribed by such laws are
presumptive in nature, rather than required. This would permit a trial court to depart from an
unfairly severe sentence requirement in appropriate cases and instead choose a penalty from the
applicable sentencing range for the defendant’s offense without the enhancement factors. To
prevent unwarranted use of this authority, Jefferson’s legislature should follow the lead of several
states by authorizing downward sentence departures only when a court finds “substantial and
compelling” mitigating circumstances and states its findings on the record, with a prosecutorial
right to appeal. This could lead to the development of a common law of sentencing, informing trial
courts when departures from presumptive sentence enhancements are appropriate.
This reform will only be effective if a partnership between prosecutors, public defenders and
judges are created, fostered, and maintained. These are the big three (of the 3-3-3 proposal) with
the most influence as well as the most benefit to gain from meaningful sentencing reform.
Prosecutors will no longer feel constrained to using the mandatory sentences in an unfair way at the
plea bargaining stage, because there is more freedom and less restrictions allowing them to work
with the defense. Judges will have greater control over sentencing, while still having appellate and
legislative oversight, which will allow them to punish the perpetrator of the crime while tailoring
the punishment to the specific individual. Finally, the public defense attorneys will have a better
bargaining position at plea bargaining and will be able to make better informed decisions with their
clients. The only way for any reform to be successful is for all parties involved to work together. It
is not going to be easy, but we will do what Jeffersonians have always done: Survive, Adapt, and
Overcome.

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Plea and Sentencing Paper Writing Sample

  • 1. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 1 TO: Governor of the State of Jefferson FR: General Counsel, State of Jefferson RE: Recommended Sentencing Reform Plan “Clearly excessive.” These were the words uttered by an Arizona Superior Court Judge as he handed down a sentence mandated by law. His own training and experience were constrained by statute, he voiced a concern over one case that others are beginning to ask about in states across the country about mandatory sentencing regimes. Across the country the vast majority of people recognize that the current systems in place are not getting the job done. This is nowhere less clear than in the State of Jefferson. The sentencing reform solution that is proposed below is predicated on a 3-3-3 approach. The first “3” is in regards to the three main actors that are going to have to work together for this new system to be successful: Prosecutors, public defenders and judges. The second “3” is in regards to the three main goals that this new system is designed to achieve. The first goal is that the sentencing system be implemented in an honest way; that is, when a court enters a sentence of imprisonment, there should be a reliable expectation that the offender will serve a substantial majority of that term of imprisonment. The second goal is that the sentencing system should be fair; that is, there should not be wide disparities in sentencing based on irrelevant factors, such as judicial assignment, jurisdiction, wealth, or race. Similar offenders should receive similar punishments based on the severity of their criminal behavior. The third and final goal is rational sentencing. Jefferson needs a system that wisely uses our scarce prison resources to ensure that the most dangerous offenders are incarcerated while lower risk offenders are punished through more effective intermediate punishments, such as the community corrections and drug courts programs.
  • 2. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 2 The current system in Jefferson is in need of a massive overhaul and fundamental restructuring. Law enforcement officers throughout the State of Jefferson complain that the sentencing and parole system is dishonest and arbitrary. Victim rights advocates also voice similar concerns, in addition to complaints that victim restitution is a low priority. Judges and prosecutors complain that their work seems to have little effect on ultimate punishments because of later decisions of the Board of Pardons and Paroles and the administration of early release by the Department of Corrections. The officials of those institutions in turn complain that their funding and staffing are grossly inadequate. It is widely known that determinate and indeterminate sentencing scheme extremes have many problems. The draconian solutions that often flow from determinate sentencing can freeze out of the justice system a lot of hope of discerning between individuals convicted of the same or similar crime.1 On the other hand, too much of a reliance on indeterminate sentencing can lead to personal biases of judges creeping in and resulting in widely differing sentences for similarly situated defendants. Determinate sentencing’s principal goal has been the elimination of unwarranted disparity, with legislatures seeking proportional punishment for different offenses and consistent punishment for similar crimes.2 Current sentencing policy instead reflects a preference for retributive justice, with punishment commensurate with the seriousness of each type of offense. While determinate sentencing statutes seek proportionality by balancing multiple factors, mandatory sentencing statutes generally provide that when a specified circumstance exists in connection with the commission of a crime (1) the court must sentence the defendant to prison and (2) the duration of 1 WallaceM. Rudolph, Punishment or Cure: the Function of Criminal Law, 48 Tenn. 535 (1981). 2 Gary T. Lowenthal, Mandatory Sentencing Laws: Undermining the Effectiveness of Determinate Sentencing Reform, 81 Cal.L. Rev. 1 (1993).
  • 3. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 3 the defendant’s incarceration will be substantially longer than it would have been in the absence of the circumstance.3 A jurisdiction’s choice between charged-based and conduct-based sentencing in criminal prosecutions influence the interaction between mandatory sentencing provisions and the criminal process. In charge-based sentencing, the formal charges the state brings against the defendant must contain the factual allegations that trigger the mandatory minimum sentence. In conduct-based sentencing, the court imposes the enhancement sentence based on the defendant’s actual conduct and criminal history, regardless of the charges for which she is convicted.4 The two approaches differ in the extent to which prosecutorial plea bargaining practices influence judicial sentencing discretion. The current system in Jefferson is a strict and rigid determinative sentencing scheme. The most problematic thing about this, from a purely theoretical perspective, is that the determinate sentencing regime is an aberration of deterrence. At its most simplistic level, criminal punishment is above all a method of deterrence. Determinate sentencing morphs the criminal justice system into one focused solely on punishment, and this fails to take into account that not every criminal is the same person. What may deter on individual from committing a crime again may be vastly different from what deters the next individual. While a swing toward a more indeterminate sentencing system may return common sense to criminal justice, by taking into account the fact that just because two individuals were prosecuted under the same statute does not mean that they must serve the exact same sentence, too much of a swing and the same problems of biases and inconsistent results. 3 Id. 4 Id at 74
  • 4. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 4 Instead of a focus on one or the other a balance can be obtained in each case: the amount of retribution through imprisonment or parole that the state requires, and the amount of punishment necessary to deter the criminal in the future. The focus on determinative sentencing has removed from the criminal justice system in Jefferson, something that has been gravely missing: variables. The first variable is always the initial sentence, and the second the discretion of judges, parole officers, and other penal authorities to vary how that sentence is served. Within these two variables, however, Wallace Rudolph5 writes that a multitude of stop-gaps and releases could achieve a more just legal system. Without strict determinate sentencing, plea bargains can once again become more creative. With increased awareness of the need for emotional or mental rehabilitation, innovative solutions involving drug treatment or faith-based rehabilitation are back on the table. One of the little known dangers is that often three-strike enhancements are not charged, but rather used as a bargaining chip in plea negotiations. Ironically, despite the fact that Jefferson’s prison is spiraling out of control, it could become astronomically worse if prosecutors found their hands more tied in the future with increased pressure to use mandatory or automatic enhancements. In a system with less determined sentences, the Judge will regain authority to take a more individualized approach to sentencing, thus offering unique solutions for those who might need it. A less determinate sentencing system would allow prisoners to once again “earn” their release. A more discretionary parole board will be able to reward those prisoners and individuals whom actually make the effort to rehabilitate. Criminal filings have clearly exploded in Jefferson. If Jefferson is similar to most other states, this likely began with the marijuana prosecutions in the late sixties and early seventies, and continuing with the crack & cocaine prosecutions of the 80s and even today. Jefferson is likely 5 Rudolph at 540-543.
  • 5. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 5 seeing nearly exponential increases in its criminal prosecutions for drug related activities. The numbers are staggering in California. The superior courts there which deal with felony prosecutions, saw a 394% rise in their criminal cases. When the Determinate Sentencing Act was passed, it decimated any hope drug offenders may have had for rehabilitation instead of incarceration. The only power left was no longer in the judge’s hands, but the prosecutor, who had charging discretion. A movement back towards less determinate sentencing may finally allow drug prosecutions to guarantee that we are not blindly punishing the convicted, but getting the convicted addicts the help they need.6 Determinate sentencing does not work. There is little to no research supporting the idea that mandatory minimums, predetermined sentencing, or three strike laws reduce the crime rate at all.7 The threat of punishment has little impact on criminal behavior because most of the criminals believe they will not be caught, they have little knowledge of what sentencing laws would apply to them, or they commit crimes while intoxicated, angry, or high and thus are not rationally analyzing the consequences of their behavior.8 An AP wire story out of Los Angles had the headline “Judges Uphold 3-Strikes Term In Food Burglary”9 citing the case of Gregory Taylor, who tried to pry open a church kitchen door, as a third-strike felon. In a story straight out of ‘Les Miserables’, Mr. Taylor found himself with 2 robbery convictions from the 1980’s and an 1899 parole violation. His sentence: 25 years to life. This is just one example of the rampant problems that are facing states across this country because of their determinant sentencing systems. The sad fact is that there are 6 Harry N. Scheiber, Innovation, Resistance, and Change: A History of Judicial Reform and the California Courts, 1960- 1990.66. S. Cal.L. Rev. 2049,2065 (1993). 7 Michael Vitiello and Clark Kelso, A Proposal for a Wholesale Reform of California’s Sentencing Practice and Policy, 38 Loy. L.A. L. Rev. 903, 926 (2004). 8 Peter W. Greenwood, et al., Three Strikes and You’re Out: Estimated Benefits of California’s New Mandatory- Sentencing Law, RAND, summary at xi,(1994). 9 See http://www.desertnews.com/article/693878/Judges-uphold-3-strikes-term-in-food-burglary.html
  • 6. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 6 probably similar stories that are being written about defendants in our state even today. Such a fact ought to shock the conscience. It is clear that some solutions are sorely needed. SHORT-TERM SOLUTION (Implement 3-6 months) There are some short-term solutions that can take immediate effect and are particularly tailored to addressing the growing prison population. The first step involves modifying Jefferson’s Penal Code to allow inmates to earn supplemental sentence reduction credits after they complete specified education, vocational, or drug-treatment goals. Additionally, establish a program to identify older inmates who could be safely released early from prison. The “quick-fixes” do not propose radical changes to the determinative sentencing regime, but they can start the prison system on a path where the rigid requirements of determinate sentencing no longer bind the state’s hands. An “age-release” program is aimed at one goal: reducing the prison population. An at-capacity prison has less space for rehabilitation programs and puts a straightjacket on management flexibility. Another possible solution to free up more prison space would be an early non-violent release program.10 Another short-term fix would involve a three step process of 1) to amend the laws of property crimes to raise the felony thresholds and change the property values on which those laws are based to reflect increases in inflation since the laws were last codified. 2) The second short- term fix step would be to increase funding for probation and parole officers. 3) A third and final short-term fix step would be to fund an intensive inpatient substance abuse treatment program for offenders. These recommendations are driven by data that drug and property offenders are overwhelming the sentencing system. The current system of locking away all drug offenders is not 10 See Excerpts from Reports on Corrections Reform Recommendations on: Parole,Sentence credits,Rehabilitation and Community Supervision,CDCR.ca.gov
  • 7. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 7 effective, as these same drug offenders will eventually be released to the streets, and the cycle continues. Rehabilitation for reduced sentencing is typically the reform met with the most opposition. The most obvious critique is that allowing for reduced sentences after completion of certain programs runs the very real risk of releasing dangerous offenders back into the population.11 Yet, this ignores a shocking statistic. Amongst the current prison population, 90% will eventually be released on parole. Of that huge group, nearly 50% will find themselves back in prison. So, for those worried about releasing individuals back on the streets who will commit crimes again it must be said: we are already doing it. Drug treatment, education, real reform; these are the only tools the state has at its disposal to actually rehabilitate prisoners, and hopefully end their felonious lifestyles.12 Above all, however, with determinate sentencing there is no reason to reform; prisoners will be released on the same day regardless of whether or not they attempt to reform. Since other authors will address rehabilitation more in-depth, it is appropriate to leave rehabilitation at this and move on to actual sentencing reform. MEDIUM-TERM SOLUTIONS: (Implement 1-5 Years) The growing recognition of the need for major changes has led to some surprising collaborations. This is clearly evident in the growing Right on Crime movement. An initiative of the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF)13, it identifies itself as “the conservative case for reform: fighting crime, prioritizing victims and protecting taxpayers.” Right on Crime arose from its analysis of a failed reliance on a swinging pendulum that sought to address criminal activity: emphasis on rehabilitation and social service programs versus high incarceration rates and prison- 11 Michael Vitiello, Reforming Three Strikes’ Excesses, 82 Wash.U. L. Q. 1, 4 (2004) 12 Id. 13 See http://www.rightoncrime.com
  • 8. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 8 building. According to their organizers, neither approach, alone, has been able to achieve success. In the same vein, neither rigidly strict determinant sentencing schemes nor loose laissez-faire indeterminate sentencing schemes have achieved success. One way to begin is with the idea of “justice reinvestment”.14 A new framework is a phrase that many policymakers across the country use as they seek a collaborative way forward. One of the biggest names in sentencing and other criminal justice issues is law professor, Doug Berman.15 In Berman’s16 estimation, national trends on the topic are not about spending less on public safety but about wiser spending. He says, “Incarceration is a very expensive way to keep the public safe.”17 Our own state of Jefferson is facing this very problem. As a result of the current rigid determinative sentencing scheme, Jefferson’s prisons are overpopulated and overreaching into Jefferson’s budget. While there may be a general consensus for that statement, like most problems the hard part is in agreeing to a solution. As Berman asks, “How do we move off the inertia and the status quo realities?”18 The fact remains that such inertia is reinforced because politicians rarely get in trouble with the public for spending on public safety issues. If reform success stories are available, but state adoption of these new strategies is low, who is to blame? Part of the problem lies at the feet of those involved deeply in the creation of policy. According to Berman, “The DNA of criminal justice reform is inhabited by horrific stories. It is dangerously easy for the average politician to leverage the fear of the average voter that they will be a crime victim.”19 There is much less of an emphasis on an understanding of how that same person 14 See http://www.csgjusticecenter.org/jr 15 Doug Berman. (He is a lawprofessor atThe Ohio State University Moritz Collegeof Law as well as the creator/author of “Sentencing Law and Policy”,a legal blog) 16 Douglas A. Berman, Sentencing Law and Policy, (http://www.sentencing.typepad.com 17 Id. 18 Id. 19 Id.
  • 9. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 9 can be caught up in an overreaching and dysfunctional system. The power and the salience of the criminal anecdote and the fear that creates cannot be understated.20 It is clear that prosecutors continue to be an important key to determining whether and how reform occurs. This is due to the nature of the job of a prosecutor. Prosecutors are deeply involved with the system in a case-by-case role and are ingrained with the belief that they can always mitigate or temper with mercy any part of the system that they think has gone too far. In addition, ceding discretion and decision-making to other stakeholders may be asking too much, and prosecutors fear it would have a snowball effect as well as limit their control over ensuring justice.21 However, altering sentence lengths may not be the area where Jefferson will see the most progress. In terms of probation reform, the initial sentence is important. However, too much of a focus on sentencing length skews the larger discussion. Criminal cases have many nuances, and a discussion of prison reform should not begin at the end of the process that sets the inmate on his ultimate path. Instead, criminal justice’s goals may be served in many ways beyond a focus on the length of sentences. Furthermore, public safety and prison budgets are two entirely separate concerns. If prison savings is put into the mix, that is an almost surefire way to guarantee a decrease in public safety. Jefferson can be more creative in parole, probation and reentry initiatives. Additionally, “techno-correction)—GPS tracking—efforts will allow the convicted to serve out their terms in a limited area of their community.22 North Carolina may offer the most unique solutions to Jefferson’s sentencing problems. The state currently offers “Deferred Prosecution” as a way to combat prison overcrowding without increasing expenses. Deferred prosecution is a district attorney’s decision to withhold prosecution in order for the offender to make amends. These 20 Marc L. Miller,A Map of Sentencing and a Compass for Judges: Sentencing Information Systems, Transparency, and the Next Generation of Reform, 105 Colum. L. Rev. 1351 (2005). 21 Id. 22 U.S. Department of Justice– Officeof JusticePrograms, Sentencing & Corrections Issues for the 21st Century (No. 5 May 2000
  • 10. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 10 conditions often include restitution or community service. North Carolina limits this option, which is strictly supervised and requires court approval, to first time non-violent offenders. Despite the use of this program for a few years now, North Carolina does not provide the total number of defendants afforded this opportunity because “of the status of current records.”23 North Carolina also offers Drug Education Schools (DES)24 for misdemeanor drug offenders. On average, this program reaches 25 year old first time offenders who are able to avoid a prison sentence. DES is a community punishment program which is essentially a “scared-straight” drug treatment course in which the very real dangers of drug use are explained in detail. Students of DES must participate and attend the session, and will not be cleared until they identify a personal plan reflective of informed self-assessment that will focus on preventing recidivism. One of the more unique opportunities North Carolina offers is the Residential Center. This highly restrictive probationary tactic allows offenders to live in a structured setting with privileges to leave for work or activities such as drug treatment of community service. The North Carolina Department of Correction operates several of these, but they all adopt the same basic structure: orientation, treatment, reentry preparation, and aftercare release. It is this basic reentry preparation and post- release supervision that is most lacking in today’s Jefferson’s Penal system. Another tactic that can be used to make Jefferson’s drug policies more sensible and effective is regarding drug trace cases. These cases should be treated as misdemeanors as such cases achieve nothing more than overloading the dockets and wasting court time and money. In Texas, the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation – an Austin-based think tank – has been a leading advocate for ending “the tough on crime” mentality led to prison terms for 23 North Carolina Sentencingand Policy Advisory Commission,Compendium of Community Corrections Programs. 24 Id.
  • 11. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 11 people whose primary problem is addiction.25 Rightly so, Texas looked upon this problem as both a fiscal and a moral problem. In 2007, the legislature responded with funding for alternative programs designed to minimize the number of drug cases moving into the prison system. This made it unnecessary to build more prisons, existing ones were closed, and the $200 million that was authorized that year for diversion and new facilities was estimate to save 10 times that much in construction costs alone. The prisons that were closed added even more savings.26 LONG-TERM SOLUTION: (Implement 5-10 years) The new system would also need to be efficient and to that end, the development of a Sentencing Information System (SIS) is recommended. The idea of a SIS is simple: Judges are provided sufficient information to determine how other offenders like the offender in front of the judge have been sentenced before. Judges are able to ask a series of “what if” questions by varying each of the relevant factors to see how each variation changes the sentences others have imposed. An even more complex SIS would allow these “what ifs” to vary over specified time periods (or to show trends) and over different political units or groups, such as sentences by the same judge, by other judges in the same courthouse, or by other judges in the same state. Unlike rigid sentencing guidelines, an SIS does not tell judges what they must do or should do; it tells judges what others have done, thus allowing a better-informed judgment in each case. An SIS allows for the development and expression of social norms in ways akin to traditional common law reasoning by analogy.27 An SIS would allow judges to answer the most basic question about sentencing in each case. It would also have many other virtues. It would let judges know the distribution of actual sentences in similar cases, including the distribution of sentences at high or low ends of available 25 Mike Tolson.Texas’ drug-sentencing reform could be model for U.S. Houston Chronicle.Local Section (2013). 26 Id. 27 Marc L. Miller,Sentencing Reform “Reform” Through Sentencing Information Systems, in the Future of Imprisonment 121,129-35 (2004).
  • 12. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 12 ranges and the use of available non-prison sanctions. An SIS would both illuminate and act as a counterpoint to the rules themselves, suggesting the extent to which they are being followed and how they are being applied.28 To the extent that state systems allow for judicial discretion—in fact- finding within guideline ranges, or for departures—it could help to illuminate that exercise of discretion. It should also help litigants shape sentencing arguments in each case. Judges could look at sentences in similar cases that they had decided, that judges in the same courthouse or district had decided, and that judges from the entire jurisdiction had decided. Equipped with SIS information, judges could work more effectively with sentencing commissions and legislatures to improve sentencing guidelines. From a reformer or scholar’s perspective, the information revealed by an SIS could become a powerful basis for arguments for further reforms, including development of sentencing rules and sentencing ranges. Unlike the rules of a structured sentencing system, an SIS can provide information beyond that which is legally relevant to individual sentences. The legally irrelevant information, such as sentences imposed in similar cases in other jurisdictions or changes in the distribution of sanctions over time, can be highly relevant to policymaking.29 Systems could allow factors and distinctions that should not have any binding weight but which might nonetheless inform judges, reformers or scholars. An SIS that created some procedures and presumptions about how the information should be used could more easily distinguish between controlling, informing, and irrelevant information. For example, Pennsylvania has implemented Sentencing Guideline Software (SGS) for use by judges.30 The primary purposes of the SGS system are to help judges calculate prior record, to 28 David Tait,Judges and Jukeboxes: Sentencing Information Systems in the Court room, 6 Int’l J.L. & Info.Tech. 167, 186-87 (1998). 29 Marc Miller,Sentencing Reform: Reform Through Sentencing Information Systems in the Future of Imprisonment, University of Arizona – James E. Rogers College of Law (2005). 30 See Pa. Comm'n on Sentencing, Sentencing GuidelineSoftware Web Version Users' Guide, Revision 2.2 (on filewith the Columbia Law Review).
  • 13. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 13 assist in guideline calculations, and to dramatically increase the speed and lower the error rate for entering information about each sentence.31 The SGS system also provides judges with information about “conformity,” telling them whether--based on offender facts, prior record, offense facts, and other information--the proposed sentence is in the standard range or in mitigated or aggravated ranges.32 For some sentences significantly above or below the standard range (“Outside Below” or “Outside Above”) the judge must provide reasons; for sentences that are considered “Aggravated” or “Mitigated” the system requests (but does not require) such reasons.33 One substantial challenge faced by modern commission and guideline sentencing reform efforts is the task of determining the proper role for the sentencing judge. Most guidelines systems include statements retaining a central role for the sentencing judge, and most legislatures and commissions have asserted that the opinions and suggestions of judges (both formal and informal) will be used as feedback to improve the system. An SIS offers a dramatically different way of depicting the sentencing judge’s role and perhaps could help to achieve the promise of more principled sentencing while maintain a central role for sentencing judges. An SIS also responds to the actual decisions of judges. Judges would play a stronger individual and collective role in such systems than they do now in commission and guidelines systems that do not incorporate SISs. ADDRESSING POTENTIAL CRITIQUES OF THE NEW SYSTEM As mentioned earlier, the easiest part is agreeing that there is a problem, but the hard part is getting a consensus as to the solution. Legislatures can deal with the rigidity issue even without 31 See Pa. Comm'n on Sentencing, Web-Based Sentencing Guidelines Software, at http://pcs.la.psu.edu/SGS%20Web%CCC20Report%CCC20for%CCC20PCS%CCC20Web%% 20Page.htm (lastupdated Mar. 8, 2002) (on filewith the Columbia Law Review) (“Users can calculateprior record and retrieve guideli ne recommendations, review conformity and total sentence imposed, and submit all information electronically to the Commission.”). 32 SGS Guide, supra note 96, at72. 33 Id.
  • 14. EXAM# 8830 PLEA ANDSENTENCING:TAKE-HOMEFINALEXAM 14 addressing the severity issue by providing that the sentences prescribed by such laws are presumptive in nature, rather than required. This would permit a trial court to depart from an unfairly severe sentence requirement in appropriate cases and instead choose a penalty from the applicable sentencing range for the defendant’s offense without the enhancement factors. To prevent unwarranted use of this authority, Jefferson’s legislature should follow the lead of several states by authorizing downward sentence departures only when a court finds “substantial and compelling” mitigating circumstances and states its findings on the record, with a prosecutorial right to appeal. This could lead to the development of a common law of sentencing, informing trial courts when departures from presumptive sentence enhancements are appropriate. This reform will only be effective if a partnership between prosecutors, public defenders and judges are created, fostered, and maintained. These are the big three (of the 3-3-3 proposal) with the most influence as well as the most benefit to gain from meaningful sentencing reform. Prosecutors will no longer feel constrained to using the mandatory sentences in an unfair way at the plea bargaining stage, because there is more freedom and less restrictions allowing them to work with the defense. Judges will have greater control over sentencing, while still having appellate and legislative oversight, which will allow them to punish the perpetrator of the crime while tailoring the punishment to the specific individual. Finally, the public defense attorneys will have a better bargaining position at plea bargaining and will be able to make better informed decisions with their clients. The only way for any reform to be successful is for all parties involved to work together. It is not going to be easy, but we will do what Jeffersonians have always done: Survive, Adapt, and Overcome.