Old game, some new rules

In response to Ethan’s question, the 5K game is not over, but it should become more transparent and adversarial. Of course, cooperation is now less valuable, if only because it is no longer the only realistic basis for a below-the-guidelines sentence. The game is not over, however, for a number of reasons. First, 18 U.S.C. 3553(e) still provides that a government “substantial assistance” motion is required before a judge can impose a sentence below the statutory minimum (as opposed to the guidelines minimum). Also, sentencing departures are not the only benefits available to cooperators: for example they can get charges dropped or reduced before they ever get to sentencing. Moreover, even after Gall/Kimbrough, judges still need to calculate the guidelines in setting sentences and so cooperation is likely to remain, at least for a while, a valuable commodity in persuading judges to impose lower sentences.

The immediate practical difference after Gall/Kimbrough, though, is that defense attorneys will have an expanded role in advocating for their cooperating clients. When 5K departures were tightly controlled by the government and the rigidity of the guidelines, defense counsel mostly had to hope that the government would move for a departure. Now defense lawyers can independently present their client’s cooperation, even when the government disagrees or does not want that information to come forward. This could be significant – a 1998 Sentencing Commission report estimated that fewer than half of all cooperators actually received 5K departures under the old rules. At the very least, the new rules should create a more contested, better airing of federal cooperation practices, which is good news for the public.

Before I forget, for those interested in informant-related issues, the ACLU has a new website with lots of links and resources. http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/search/informantabuse.html


Comments (2)

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While a change in the Federal mandatory minimums is overdue, to put it mildly, most people jailed for drugs fall under state laws, which are often far more draconian. In my state, possession of more than 200 grams of cocaine results in a mandatory 15 year sentence, with no parole and no time off for good behavior. The law essentially puts sentencing power in the hands of the police and district attorney. 200 grams may sound like a lot (c. 7 ounces), but a crack addict could blow through it in a week or two.

At least half of all the approximately 2 million state prison inmates in the U.S. are in for non-violent drug-related crimes. Probably 90 percent of those could be let out tomorrow with an electronic bracelet and a treatment schedule, and there wouldn't be a blip in the crime rate.

The many anecdotal tales of injustice in the federal drug courts highlight the problem. Not many people in jail are innocent, but the system has created a huge industry out of over-sentencing drug-related crime. And how many muggings, burlaries, break-ins, and robberies are instigated by the desire to get money for drugs? If one answered "all," it would be a close approximation. If we include alcohol-fueled crime, drugs account for at least 80 percent of all criminal behavior.

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Thanks Ms. Natapoff and LongTom-

I am a "doc" learning law thanks to people like you.

It seems the tide is slowly turning. MLK said "the arc of history bends toward justice"

My own statement- "Optimism is a moral imperative" (despite much evidence to the contrary)

Be Well,

Dr. Rick Lippin
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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