Injustice is blind: federal sentencing in flux.

AuthorSullum, Jacob
PositionCitings - Brief Article

LAST NOVEMBER Weldon Angelos, a 24-year-old record company executive with no prior convictions, was sentenced to 55 years in federal prison for selling a pound and a half of marijuana to an informant. The federal judge who imposed the sentence, Paul Cassell, urged President Bush to commute it, calling it "unjust, cruel, and irrational."

Such situations, in which a judge feels legally compelled to impose a sentence he considers unfair, could become less common as a result of the Supreme Court's January decision in U.S. v. Booker, which restored broad sentencing discretion to federal judges. Concluding that federal sentencing guidelines violated the Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury because they required sentences to be lengthened based on facts...

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