Sentencing:
Federal
Judges
More
Likely
to
Acquit
Than
Juries
7/28/06
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old/446/federal_judges_acquit_more_than_juries.shtml
Federal judges are much more likely to acquit defendants than juries are, according to a review of some 77,000 federal criminal trials between 1989 and 2002. Juries convicted 84% of defendants, while judges in bench trials convicted only about half. The phenomenon is recent, with judges and juries convicting at about the same rate from the 1960s through the 1980s, and prior to that, judges were much more likely to convict than juries.
The findings come from a paper published by University of Illinois College of Law professor Andrew Leipod, "Why Are Judges So Acquittal-Prone?," published in the Washington University Law Quarterly and discussed at some length at the Volokh Conspiracy blog. According to Leipold, he was puzzled at the shift and sought an answer.
"The core problem," he wrote, "is to find something about criminal trials that has changed since the late 1980s, something that would affect judges but not juries." The evidence suggests a likely culprit, Leipod argued. "I think the sentencing guidelines best fits this description. The guidelines took away a huge amount of sentencing discretion, which meant that judges were more often faced with cases where they knew that a conviction would result in a harsh - maybe too harsh - sentence. We don't have to say that judges were acting 'lawlessly' to reach the unremarkable conclusion that judges may hold the government even more tightly to its burden of proof when the stakes are high and unforgiving."
Because judges do not fill out forms showing what factors they weigh when they rule, any evidence of a link between conviction rates and the sentencing guidelines is necessarily indirect, but, Leipold notes, it is probably not coincidence that "with the Guidelines really hitting stride just as the judicial conviction rate started to slide." Many judges "were harshly critical of the how the guidelines made it harder for them to do justice in individual cases," he noted.
Editor's Note: One might suppose that mandatory minimum sentencing is also having this effect on federal judges -- an equally, sometimes harsher federal sentencing system that is parallel to and interlocks with the guidelines. Congress enacted mandatory minimums very hastily, two years after creating the sentencing guidelines, following the 1986 overdose death of University of Maryland basketball star Len Bias.
-- END --
Issue #446
-- 7/28/06
Editorial:It's
Time
to
Get
Real
About
Opium
in
Afghanistan
|
Feature:
Medical
Marijuana
Crisis
in
San
Diego
as
Feds,
Locals
Move
to
Shut
Down
Remaining
Dispensaries
|
Feature:
Bipartisan
Group
of
US
Senators
Introduce
Bill
to
Reduce
Cocaine
Sentencing
Disparities
|
Feature:
Holy
Smoke
Bust
Mobilizes
Interior
British
Columbia
Cannabis
Community
|
Law
Enforcement:
This
Week's
Corrupt
Cops
Stories
|
Sentencing:
Federal
Judges
More
Likely
to
Acquit
Than
Juries
|
Medical
Marijuana:
South
Dakota
Ballot
Description
Erroneous
and
Apparently
Illegal
|
Medical
Marijuana:
In
New
York
Democratic
Gubernatorial
Race,
Spitzer
Says
No,
Suozzi
Says
Yes
|
Search
and
Seizure:
Five-Day
Shackling
in
Colorado
Prison
to
Find
Swallowed
Drugs
Approaches
Torture
Level
|
Khat:
Feds
Arrest
62
in
Crackdown
on
Mild
East
African
Stimulant
Herb
|
Europe:
British
Conservatives
Call
For
Legal,
Licensed
Afghan
Opium
Production
As
Troop
Toll
Mounts
|
Web
Scan:
Tony
Papa
Debunks
Anti-RockReform
Report,
Horrendous
Nightline
Khat
Segment,
Drug
Reform
Candidates,
DrugTruth
Radio
|
Weekly:
This
Week
in
History
|
Announcement:
IJPD
Seeks
Article
Submissions
on
Women
and
Harm
Reduction
|
Errata:
Kershaw
Not
In
Kershaw
Anymore
|
Weekly:
The
Reformer's
Calendar
|
This issue -- main page
This issue -- single-file printer version
Drug War Chronicle -- main page
Chronicle archives
|
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