A number of people sent me interesting emails about sentencing philosophy after reading yesterday's post. One reader sent me this
link to Judge Laurie Smith Camp's posted philosophy on sentencing, which ends this way:
As a judge, I do not consider my role to be that of an instrument of public vengeance. In the words of Clint Eastwood in “Unforgiven,” – “We all have it coming.” In the words of Dustin Hoffman in “Papillon” – “Blame is for God and small children.”
Meantime, another judge
found that the meth guidelines make no sense:
Sioux City-based U.S. District Judge Mark Bennett on Friday became one of a handful of U.S. judges to declare public opposition to federal sentencing guidelines for methamphetamine dealers.
He wrote that he considers them to be “fundamentally flawed,” not based on empirical data and too harsh for lower-level drug figures.
Bennett — declaring in a 44-page ruling that he has a “fundamental policy disagreement” with the methamphetamine portion of guidelines that federal judges are supposed to consider in sentencing criminals — cut the sentence of Sioux City drug dealer Willie Hayes to six years and three months from a possible 15 years, eight months.
And yesterday, the Supreme Court
ruled that applying a new version of a guideline violated the ex post facto clause if that guideline called for a higher sentence, even though the guidelines are now advisory.
What a mess.
The guidelines, and sentencing in general, has become a lot like the tax code. No one likes them, but no one has any really good ideas on how to fix them.
Sometimes, I think the solution is the state system, but then I see that Chad Ochocinco was sentenced to 30 days today even though the plea agreement called for no jail time because he congratulated his lawyer for the result by slapping his behind.
Maybe it's the Texas system where the jury issues the sentence...