Kimbrough Decision Means What It Says
The Supreme Court's Kimbrough decision should have put an end to the argument that federal judges must impose sentences that treat crack cocaine as 100 times worse than powder cocaine by regarding a gram of crack as the equivalent of 100 grams of powder. Kimbrough held that judges are entitled to disagree with that Congressional policy -- a policy that most reasonable people regard as unwise and that even the Sentencing Commission rejects.
Some federal courts have nonetheless stubbornly clung to their own precedent, refusing to give effect to Kimbrough's holding. In a particularly egregious example, the Eighth Circuit vacated a sentence because it believed the judge had no power to substitute a 20:1 crack-to-powder ratio for the 100:1 ratio. After the Supreme Court ordered the Eighth Circuit to reconsider its decision in light of Kimbrough, it reached the same decision.
Today the Supreme Court delivered a smack down to the Eighth Circuit. [more ...]
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