Abolish
'Sentencing Guidelines'
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
By
a 5-4 margin, the Supreme Court effectively put the U.S. Sentencing
Commission Guidelines out of their misery in January. The Guidelines
were originally set up in 1987 to ensure fairness and rational organization
in criminal sentencing. But they have failed, instead increasing
disparities and making an illogical hodgepodge of rules.
Critics
of the Guidelines have focused on its many eccentricities. For instance,
penalties for drug violations are based upon the weight rather than
the purity of the drugs (note to would be criminals: to minimize
jail, make sure the cocaine is pure and not diluted with baking
soda or sugar).
Yet,
a more basic problem exists. The Guidelines have created more sentencing
disparity because they focus solely on just one of the penalties
that criminals face: imprisonment. There are many other penalties
imposed on criminals, including lost professional and business licenses,
the inability to join some unions or work for the government, lost
retirement funds as well as fines and restitution. Prior to the
Guidelines going into effect, judges usually imposed lower prison
sentences on criminals who faced large other additional penalties.
Martha
Stewart’s recent case is a good example of the inequities created
by the guidelines. She was sentenced to 10 months confinement, but
she also suffered millions of dollars in lost salary, lower stock
market value of her company, and fines. A common criminal who was
similarly convicted of misleading authorities would only face the
prison term. In the absence of the guidelines, Martha Stewart’s
prison sentence would have been shorter and her case become one
of those "disparities" that people used to complain about twenty
years ago.
True
sentencing disparities for the same crime that motivated the Guidelines
were actually rare. A false impression usually arising simply from
a failure to recognize that most judges prior to the Guidelines
were balancing all the penalties born by the criminals.
For
many first-time criminals, these additional penalties are more important
than the imprisonment itself. To illustrate their importance, in
the mid-1980s, the average insider trader made $365,000 per year
in legitimate earnings prior to conviction, but only $14,000 per
year during the last year on probation or parole. Only a few percent
of these people faced prison and those terms were just a couple
of months long. While this example is extreme, not just white-collar
criminals face substantial cuts in income. Even the typical larcenist,
who faced about 4 months in jail, faced a reduction from $15,000
prior to conviction down to $10,000.
The
dissents by Justices Anthony Scalia and Clarence Thomas were right
in that all the Guidelines don’t have to be thrown out just because
a small section of the Guidelines that applied to some trials violated
Constitutional rights to a jury trial. Yet, the jabs Scalia pokes
at the majority’s seeming inability to grasp the inconsistency between
making the Guidelines voluntary and saving the guidelines’ mission
to reduce sentencing disparity missed a crucial point. The critique
only makes sense if the Guidelines actually reduced disparity.
In
part, Scalia’s assumptions about how the Guidelines work arise because,
according to him, "the Guidelines took pre-existing sentencing
practices into account." But, unfortunately, as people who
worked there like myself know, only a small part of the Guidelines
had anything to do with past practice and even that was quickly
done away with. Many crimes, such as insider trading, faced explicit
prohibitions within the commission against collecting any data on
past sentences.
For
bank larceny (the only category where Guidelines were originally
based on past practice), the revised 1989 guidelines, issued just
two years after the initial ones, eliminated any real link to past
practice. In order to increase penalties half the data sample was
dropped – the cases with the lowest prison terms. For other crimes
the sentences were based at best on guesses of what constituted
past practice.
With
a new battle to reform sentencing brewing in congress after the
court’s decision, hopefully congress will heed an earlier description
by Scalia of the commission as "a sort of junior-varsity Congress,"
that contained all the political weaknesses without the constraints.
Indeed, as the news media has focused on new stories over the years,
the Guidelines have responded and become an ever more complicated
patchwork quilt of often-inconsistent rules.
The
Guidelines overturned many sensible patterns of imposing legal penalties,
patterns that had arisen over decades. For example, in the past,
secretly dumping a small amount of oil illegally into water received
a much higher penalty relative to the damage done compared to a
major oil tanker running aground. From an economic point of view,
this makes perfect sense, as crimes that are difficult to detect
must be punished more severely. The Guidelines reversed these and
other long-time patterns.
The
court’s decision unfortunately may only provide a temporary respite.
Hopefully though, instead of merely keep on repeating the need for
fair sentencing, the new legislative push will actually adopt a
system that doesn’t again do the opposite.
February
8, 2005
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2005 John Lott
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